Showing posts with label Elizabeth Warren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Warren. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

MODERN MONEY ILLUSION

Money is an abstraction, a political confection, a set of castles built on air. ~Sebastian Mallaby  

The aura of money has existed for a very, very long time. Ecclesiastes 10:19 asserts: Money answereth all things. During the course of human history many objects have been used as money to transact sales and pursue commerce including cocoa beans (in Mesoamerica) and cowrie shells (in Africa, India and China). Paleo-economists believe the first precious-metal coins were used as money in several places about the same time, around 600-500BC; in China’s Yellow River valley, in India’s Ganges River valley and by the king of Lydia in western Asia Minor (modern Turkey). In 1024, the Chinese government started issuing paper notes in standard denominations, which showed that banknotes (paper currency) could be a viable and facile form of money. The first European banknotes were issued in late 17th century Sweden.
But what about money here in the United States (US)? Glad you asked. In the 17th and much of the 18th centuries each of the original 13 American colonies issued their own banknotes (paper money). Thus, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island each had their own distinct currencies. Understandably, this was a hindrance to trade between the colonies, probably promoting a fair amount of barter exchange. Foreign coins, including the Spanish dollar, were also widely used as currency in the US until 1857. After a previous and unsuccessful attempt to create a useful, single currency for the new country, the US Continental Congress authorized the issuance of the US dollar in July 1785, backed by gold and silver.
US Federal banknotes were issued as the currency of our nation in 1863 to finance the Civil War. We finally discarded the Gold Standard in August 1971; meaning the government no longer officially backed its banknotes with gold bullion stored at Fort Knox and the New York Federal Reserve Bank. Somehow, we’ve survived much to the surprise of the gold “bugs.” After 1971, the only “promise” the government offers for your $20 Hamilton bill is another $20 bill.
Naturally, not everyone was happy about this lack of precious metal “backing.” Remember William Jennings Bryan’s “Cross of Gold” speech? It’s what’s lurking somewhere behind Martin Amis’ quote: Money is a fiction, an addiction and a tacit conspiracy. So it goes…
In January 2020, the US economy has $1.75 trillion circulating as Federal Reserve banknotes and about $245 million in coins. Interestingly, the $100 bill – with the almost-smiling Ben Franklin on its front side – is the most common bill now in circulation, just ahead of George Washington’s $1 bill. There were 13.4 billion $100 bills circulating at the end of 2018, representing over 75% of the total value of our currency.
As much as 80% of all our Ben Franklins is being used outside the US, making them one of our largest, and unreported, exports. Economically-ruptured Venezuela is the latest nation to become more “dollarized,” given that its peso is next-to-worthless. In fact, Ecuador and Zimbabwe officially use US dollars (especially $100 bills) as their currency. Other countries, including Panama, Cambodia, and the Bahamas, use the US dollar alongside their own currencies. Ben Franklin has taken many foreign excursions.
Now there’s a panoply of alternative “currencies” beyond cash, including credit cards (the pioneering Diners Club card was first used in 1950), debit cards and various electronic forms, including the (in)famous Bitcoin, as well as Apple Pay. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, US consumers use credit and debit cards for 34% of their purchases, electronic payments for 34%, checks for 20% and cash for only 9% of (mostly low-value) purchases.
Because money is such an elemental part of any economy, economists have spent lots of time thinking about it over the years and examining how the amount of it and its use affects economic conditions. Concepts such as the “velocity of money” and “money illusion” have sprouted from lofty ivory towers. We’ve come a long way from just using cowrie shells and precious-metal coins.
Money illusion was first discussed over 90 years ago by Yale professor Irving Fisher who observed that most people believe the illusion that the face value of their money (say the $20 value of Hamilton’s bill; the bill’s “nominal value” in econ-speak) represents its actual purchasing power. That’s not necessarily true. Such people aren’t aware that money’s purchasing power depends on general price level changes, the $20 bill’s “real value.” If overall prices rise due to inflationary forces, the $20 bill’s actual purchasing power is reduced; it doesn’t buy as much as it used to. Thus, this money illusion is present if there’s underlying broad pressure affecting many goods’ prices, but not (yet) changing people’s income/wage levels.
After 1990 the US average annual inflation rate has been very low, 1.6% per year, despite the vociferous, misguided fears of many conservatives. That’s in stark contrast to 1974 and 1980 when the OPEC-induced oil price shocks pushed our annual inflation rate to 11.0% and 13.5%, respectively. Those were the days. Not.
I believe there is a newer version of Prof. Fisher’s money illusion. It has arrived along-side several progressive Democrats’ plans for dramatically changing the scope and operations of the federal government.
Bernie Sanders and, to a lesser degree, Elizabeth Warren have expansive ideas about reprioritizing domestic policies to guarantee every man, woman and child their “basic economic rights” (BERs). Bernie has stated, “We must take up the unfinished business of the New Deal.” His unfinished BERs consist of:
Quality health care
As much education as needed to succeed
A good job paying a living wage with 12-weeks family leave
Affordable housing
Living in a clean environment
A secure retirement
The possible costs of providing Medicare for All, “free” college tuition, elimination of student loan debt, government-guaranteed jobs, increased Social Security payments, renewed environmental protection and other, unstinting progressive programs have been dutifully estimated. One guesstimate stated these programs could cost $42.5 trillion (T) over the first decade.
This titanic sum, $42.5T, would almost double the size of the federal government’s current expenditures. In the current fiscal year the government has budgeted $4.75T for all its expenditures, which represents about 21% of our GDP. Possibly doubling the size of the government over a fairly short period would be a very big deal that so far doesn’t seem to have garnered very much real (or nominal) discussion; it’s an illusory topic.
In a sense, because these costs are so profuse, and in the future, we seemingly don’t have to worry now. This thinking is consistent with the liberal Modern Money Theory which suggests that the government can pay for its expenditures and achieve full employment by issuing more money.
The above sum does not include undertaking the extensive Green New Deal (GND) programs announced last February by Rep. Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Markley. If implemented, the GND endorses a “ten-year mobilization” that would include large-scale, national social programs like universal health care, food security and government-guaranteed jobs as the “new deal” portion of the GND. Its substantial Green initiatives portion would include creating net zero emissions energy production from both a thoroughly updated, totally non-fossil-fueled national electricity grid and an electrified national transportation network.
Ten-year cost estimates for the GND programs by Doug Holtz-Eakin, previously director of the Congressional Budget Office and very familiar with government fiscal programs and expenditures, are $52T to $93T. Mr. Holtz-Eakin believes the bulk of the estimated costs would be faced in implementing the GND’s new deal programs, although the Green initiatives would also have a very substantial price tag due to their inclusive scope and tight schedule.
The trillions of dollar sums for the progressives’ programs and the GND are unimaginably large, and thus subject to a more modern type of money illusion, principally because of these programs’ size, complexity and span.
If we arbitrarily assume there’s a 25% overlap between the GND’s new deal programs and Bernie’s BERs programs and use the mid-point of the mentioned GND cost estimates, the grand total of the combined efforts of the GND and BERs for ten-years would be $97,000,000,000,000 or ninety-seven trillion dollars. It’s nearly five times as big as our current GDP, the world’s largest.
To get a better visual sense of just how large $97T is, imagine Ben Franklin $100 bills that have been tightly stacked upright on their long side, so we can answer the question; gee, how long a heap of such Franklin $100s would equal $97 trillion? Not how large is $97T; how long is it? This stack would go around the world about 2¼ times at its circumference; a bit more than 56,400 miles of $100 bills. That’s a lot of money.
Our inability to sense just how large these numbers (and the programs’ expenditures/activities) could be is likely why we can’t fathom exactly what is being proposed. It’s a next-to-impossible illusion to imagine in much detail because it’s so big. Certainly, the Law of Unintended Consequences will be functioning throughout these efforts, as always.
This very progressive political vision would be very distinct from others that are now being promoted by different candidates. But should we as a nation try it? That’s what the true left-field progressives pretty much demand. When asked, how can we afford this? They evasively reply, how can we not afford it; continuing the illusion. Our collective answer is what this year’s primaries and election, in a mere 285 days, will hopefully help decide. The inaugural Democratic caucuses and primaries begin in a mere 12 days across farmy Iowa. 
Not to worry if you don’t get to Des Moines in time. After Iowa there are 56 more Dems primaries and/or caucuses, including the Northern Mariana Island caucuses, the Democrats Abroad primary and last but certainly not least, the US Virgin Island caucuses on June 6. No wonder we call it a party. I hope our money and programmatic illusions will be at least partially dispelled after mid-July’s convention. As Adam Smith aptly stated, all money is a matter of belief. So is politics.




Friday, May 24, 2019

CAVEAT EMPTOR POLITICO

In politics, absurdity is not a handicap. ~ Napoleon 


Promising a multitude of equality-filled rainbows when they’re elected, virtually all of the 23 fervent Democratic presidential candidates have been campaigning for a brighter future, come Nov 3, 2020. That’s a mere 529 days away. Given recent trends and Trump’s example (he formally began his reelection campaign on his Jan 20, 2017 inauguration); I expect the 2024 campaigns to begin just after we’ve finished 2020’s Thanksgiving stuffing. Oh, my.
As long as one anointed Dem is successful, a brighter future isn’t terribly hard to imagine, given our Drama-King president’s continuing record of fear-based ukases and misinformed, damaging policies covering all substantive issues.
What is hard now for every one of these candidates is first getting anyone to care what they are saying, including Iowans, where the earliest Democratic caucuses are but 255 days away. And second, for a specific candidate in the 22andMe throng, does anyone know I’m in the race and how can I distinguish my positions from everyone else’s, assuming somebody cares? At this point, it’s the very rare person outside of the political-media complex or the Washington DC beltway that cares at all.
Nevertheless, the media is overflowing with a plethora of “latest polls.” RealClear Politics lists 58 political polls being undertaken over just the past two weeks. At this neonatal state of the presidential campaign such polls hardly mean anything beyond whether the polled somebodies have ever heard of the candidate. Have you heard of Marianne Williamson or Wayne Messam? No matter who you now might possibly favor for president in 2020, there’s at least one extant poll that will support your choice in some fashion. Current polls about who’s winning the contest for the Dems’ candidate are essentially chaff, not kernels of worthwhile wheat. What else is excessive?
As of Apr 15, when there were only 15 announced candidates (not including Joe Biden), they had already raised $118.5 million. Bernie Sanders has the biggest war chest with $20.7M in his coffers (probably including the $6.1M left over from his 2016 campaign); Juan Castro was last at $1.1M. Naturally, the political-media complex has been reaping large sums of money from the candidates’ ads in this nascent stage of campaigning. According to the Federal Election Commission’s first-quarter filing, 12 of the Dem candidates spent $6.7 million on online advertising and assembling their digital strategy. Each and every Dem candidate is now in full, 24/7 primary voter acquisition mode. Realistically, the vast majority of these 23 candidates are at best competing for consideration as vice president, senator or governor in the Nov 2020 elections.  
These Dem candidates imply that ordinary people, together with their acolytes, won’t be paying any taxes for their plans, only the rich will be. Now they’re simply summarizing what their policies will somehow accomplish, like end inequality, perfect healthcare, put everyone back to work, pay reparations, provide debt- and tuition-free college education, reduce the voting age to 16 years and rapidly clean-up our environment. Such programs will require raising beaucoup government revenues, through increased taxes and public debt financing. Only a few candidates admit these fiscal consequences.
Meanwhile our strategy-free, solipsistic president persists in telling us that China has been paying for his tariffs (I’d give him 4 Pinocchios, adopting the Washington Post’s fact-checker icon) and that the Dems, especially these presidential candidates, are extreme socialists (another 4 Pinocchios), along with his ever-growing multitude of other fact-free fictions. His campaign now has $65.7M to spend, far exceeding that raised by any Dem. L
The Dem campaigns’ diminutive fiscal standing, together with our economy’s sustained strength (3.6% unemployment, 3.2% increase in average worker’s earnings, with 3.2% real GDP growth), represent ample challenges that any Dem will be facing to conquer #45. Defeating Trump will require victories in enough states beyond the coastal true blue ones so the winning Dem graduates triumphantly from the Electoral College, although probably not debt-free.
With rare exception, no candidate has revealed how their programs will specifically work or how they’ll be funded. However, Sen. Elizabeth Warren bravely stated in January that if elected, she would implement a new wealth tax imposed on the top 0.1% of income-earners and later added a new, larger corporate profits tax to finance several of her proposed pro-equality programs. Her policies would reduce student debt, provide free tuition and fees for students in public colleges and offer universal child care and early-childhood education. In making these and other definitive proposals she has positioned herself as the early race’s wonky, “I’ve got a plan” leader in the Dem candidate flock. Consequently, she has twice the number of paid campaign staff as Sen. Sanders. She needs such intellectual firepower to keep churning out thorough position/policy papers like no other candidate.
Actually implementing such wealth and profits taxes is far more problematic. Effecting such new taxes as federal statutes assumes the Dems keep control of the House, gain control of the Senate with her in the White House. Her proposed wealth tax will also need to overcome a number of legal and execution issues that have contributed to eight OECD nations getting rid of their existing wealth taxes. No matter; they are clever ideas that distinguish her from all other candidates. Successful politicians are rarely criticized for under-promising during their campaigns.
It’s quite safe for a progressive Dem like Sen. Warren to propose a wealth tax, because the people she’s casting votes for (progressives for sure, millennials and maybe folks who shower after, not before they work) rightly don’t consider themselves rich enough to be subject to her wealth tax. Her appeals for new government programs, like those of other Dem candidates, are portrayed as basically costless for their targeted potential primary voters. Other folks, the rich ones across the proverbial freeway or tracks will pick up the tax tab, not them. Each candidate knows a “free” program beats all others.
Progressive Dems are proposing momentous, major programs that, if enacted, will have substantial effects, including many unforeseen ones, on our economy and us. This is the “revolution” that Bernie et al. are focused on creating. Programs like Medicare for All and the Green New Deal will influence virtually every aspect of our lives. By voting for either Michael, Joe, Bill, Cory, Steve, Pete, Julian, John, Tulsi, Kirsten, Kamela, John, Jay, Amy, Wayne, Seth, Beto, Tim, Bernie, Eric, Elizabeth, Marianne, Andrew or even another Dem (are there any?), we expect our lives will be significantly improved and nirvana will move much closer to us.
At this point we consumers, taxpayers and eventual voters are mostly left in the dark about how these candidates’ policies and programs will actually affect our lives and what they will cost us. With such evidence we can make more knowledgeable decisions when we’re deciding who to vote for by also knowing how this person’s proposed programs will affect us. Such particulars can illuminate how a candidate’s policies will influence us individually and collectively.
As the Dems canter around their political race course and the field inevitably narrows, starting after the first debates on June 26 and 27, we will hopefully start receiving additional details so we can make more-informed judgements in the voting booth.
Knowing such details matters. Bernie’s single-payer Medicare for All Plan (M4A) has been endorsed by at least five other Dem candidates: Cory, Tulsi, Kirsten, Kamela and Elizabeth. When polls asking about his M4A state that it will eliminate all private health insurance and will increase individuals’ taxes, this program’s support drops dramatically to just 13%. Most published polls show a small majority of respondents favoring M4A; these polls never state the very likely (and unpopular) consequences in their questions.
Thus, we citizens should demand more details, the sooner the better, as well as abide by caveat emptor politico, denoting let the voter beware (my fractured alteration of the well-known 500-year old Latin phrase).