That is my last publish on Cecilia Rouse’s speak final Thursday on Biden’s Financial insurance policies. Half I is right here and Half II is right here.
30:00: Many individuals say that the elevated little one care tax credit score and the improved unemployment advantages have been a disincentive to work. “The proof on that isn’t as sturdy as one may assume, at the very least theoretically. I’m not going to say that there was no affect on labor provide.” However, she added, the proof on the impact of enhanced unemployment insurance coverage is “pretty blended.” “In any occasion,” she added, “that’s been gone since September.”
I’m skeptical.
She additionally thinks that restoring the elevated little one care tax credit score, which expired in December, is “an funding in youngsters” and doesn’t scale back labor provide a lot except essentially the most excessive estimates of labor provide elasticity are the suitable ones. In brief, she admits that the elevated little one care tax credit score may considerably scale back labor provide.
31:00: The incapacity system, which Professor Duggan has checked out, could possibly be taking part in a task in damping down labor provide, particularly for males.
Sure, Duggan has finished some good work on this.
32:10: Ukraine; sanctions in Russia.
33:00: We’re already seeing affect on fuel costs. My query: affect of what? She doesn’t say. Isn’t it the affect, partially, of U.S. and different governments’ restrictions of oil from Russia, which actually have lowered the world provide of oil, opposite to my preliminary thought that the Russians would reply by promoting it elsewhere?
33:15: She says that 70% of final month’s improve in CPI is because of power and that’s attributable to Russia’s incursion into Ukraine. Actually? How did that scale back provide? She doesn’t appear to wish to admit that it was the U.S. and different governments’ actions in response to the Russian invasion lowered that offer.
33:30: The sanctions could also be taking part in a task right here. So she lastly admits it.
34:10: “The President believes” that that is about standing up for democracy. I’m questioning if Rouse is doing what I did after I was requested what I believed and it was totally different from the views of my boss, former CEA chair, Martin Feldstein, believed. I answered, “The chairman believes.”
35:00: Involved about starvation and famine, given the discount in meals output from Ukraine and Russia.
35:20: Her rationalization about why she thinks there’s a “market failure” with regard to youngsters that requires authorities assist. Fairly iffy.
39:40: The Paycheck Safety Program was a small a part of CARES. Hmm. After I look on line, I see that it was $659 billion. That strikes as a considerable a part of the CARES Act.
40:50: “The pace with which we shut down this economic system was beautiful.” I want she hadn’t mentioned it with what gave the impression to be such satisfaction.
45:50: The price range deficit. Mark Zandi has tried to estimate what would have occurred [I think she means to GDP, not debt and deficits] with out Trump’s CARES Act and Biden’s American Rescue Plan, and “that doesn’t look very fairly in any respect.”
46:08: Tax reform in 2017 “was not very useful.” I mentioned this in my Half I.
50:00: She lays out a central planner’s perspective on the place we place the wind farms, the charging stations, how do assist the auto business so the employees displaced from gasoline-powered autos are those who’re making electrical autos.
My response: Yikes! That’s loads of central planning.
50:25: “That includes extra industrial coverage than economists are used to enthusiastic about.”
Isn’t it extra that it includes extra industrial coverage than economists assume is sweet? We’ve considered it–and most of us have rejected it.
53:50: “We have to have an FDA that may extra readily approve the brand new generations of vaccines.” Yay, Cecilia!
1:01:17: “This authorities likes to need to intervene; it provides them one thing to do.”
What she’s getting at is that we’d like extra automated stabilizers in our fiscal coverage reasonably than having Congress and the President modify with lags.
I name this the George Shultz mistake. If I recall accurately, when he was Secretary of Labor, he seen that Congress added unemployment insurance coverage advantages throughout recessions. He thought it made sense to have a few of these advantages kick in when the unemployment charge or the insured unemployment charge (I’ve forgotten which) hit at a sure degree. Once more, IIRC, he persuaded Nixon to push for such a change and Congress handed it.
Little drawback: Return to what Cecilia mentioned: The federal government likes to intervene. So in future recessions, the automated kicking in of prolonged unemployment insurance coverage advantages turned the baseline and Congress, which likes to do issues and likes being seen to do issues, did issues: specifically, add much more weeks of unemployment advantages.(I’m saying all this from reminiscence of what I noticed up shut after I was within the Reagan Labor Division within the first half of 1982,which was the worst a part of the recession.)