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Posts from February 2007

February 28, 2007

DeLong Smackdown Watch: Brad Setser

Brad Setser agrees with Jeff Faux that China's exports to the United States must be cut--but for very different reasons:

Brad Setser: DeLong’s position – that the US needs to position itself as a friend of China’s economic development -- is an appealing one. But it is also one that I suspect glosses over some big issues. Both the US and Europe... have done their part to support China’s development over the past few years. US imports from China have increased from $100 b in 2001 to $280b in 2006.... Eurozone imports from China have gone from 62b euros in 2002 to something like 130b euros, maybe a bit more, in 2006.... Both the US and Europe have supplied a lot of demand for Chinese goods over the past few years. The risk of a protectionist backlash is no doubt rising. But so far, the US hasn’t taken any policy actions that have really crimped the expansion of China’s exports – which is what I think worries DeLong.

Nor for that matter has the US government done much – if anything -- to help in the US whose living standards have been adversely affected by China’s export success. DeLong and Jeff Faux would both agree that tax cuts for the have-mores whose assets are worth even-more thanks to large financial inflows from China doesn’t count....

Since 2001, China’s exports have basically quadrupled, Chinese productivity has shot up, the set of products that China produces has expanded dramatically and the external purchasing power of the RMB has fallen. If China’s government stopped intervening and allowed the RMB to rise, the ratio between China’s market GDP and its PPP GDP to rise to a level more typical of other emerging economies with comparable levels of development. China’s government has had a policy of, in effect, subsidizing the use of Chinese labor for the production of goods for export.... China subsidizes – through its exchange rate intervention – the global consumption of Chinese goods, which leaves producers in other poor countries whose governments don’t offer a comparable subsidy at something of a disadvantage.

Chinese exports have increased from about around $265b in 2001 to about $1,000b in 2006 – and are poised to rise to $1,250b in 2007. Now you can argue that this policy of holding down the external purchasing power of China’s workers has worked. Real living standards in China are growing strongly.... China is a far richer place today than it was a few years ago....

But China’s policy of buying dollars (and to a smaller degree euros) also means that China is sinking a growing share of its national wealth into a set of assets that are almost certain to depreciate over time.... The sums involved are not trivial. China is now running a current account surplus of around 10% of its GDP. That implies that about 20% of China’s annual savings... is being invested in assets that are likely to depreciate.... China’s government effectively now has a policy of both holding China’s current living standards down and sinking a fairly large share of China’s savings into assets that are sure to lose value.... The capital losses could destroy the PBoC’s formal capital: borrowing in RMB, even at an artificially low rate, to buy depreciating dollars isn’t a winning financial strategy....

When the time comes for China to realize the losses that are now accumulating quietly on the PBoC’s balance sheet (and soon on the balance sheet of the state foreign investment company), I doubt China’s leaders will say, “you know, these losses were really incurred years ago, when we decided to sink a lot of Chinese savings into depreciating dollars in order to encourage our export sector and make it attractive for foreign firms to locate investment in China. We shouldn’t blame the US for the fact that China’s investments in the US haven’t done well. We were the ones who over-paid for US assets.”

I suspect China’s leaders will be somewhat less magnanimous. They will argue that the losses... [stem] from the failure of the US to adopt the policies needed to maintain the value of Chinese investment in the US....

I worry that at some point, China will conclude that investing so much of its savings in the non-tradable part of the US economy isn’t the best way of building Chinese wealth, and the flow of funds will stop. If that process is gradual, it will be for the best--but it if it is sudden, well ... a lot of US workers now employed in the non-tradables sector will need to shift into tradables production, pronto. DeLong:

In this alternative scenario, the U.S. has to move about ten million workers out of currently-favored sectors--construction, home-equity-credit financed consumer expenditures, and so on--into export and import-competing manufactures. How much structural unemployment does such a sectoral shift require, and how long does the structural unemployment last? Other countries have to shift up to forty million workers out of export manufactures into other industries, and to generate demand for the products of those industries...

If that process isn’t smooth, I rather suspect the US won’t say, “You know, we got an awful good deal from China for all these years. Rather than complaint about the costs of the transition that followed the end of Chinese financing, we should thank China for selling us so many goods at such generous prices, lending us so much on such generous terms, and for helping keep the profits of US firms up for so long by underpricing its labor.”...

DeLong has in the past argued that the US should aim to try to replicate its post-war success at creating a liberal international economic order. The new liberal international economic order though would extend beyond the US, Europe and a few islands in East Asia. It would in effect, draw in the big population centers of the Asian land mass as well. That is a very appealing vision--one that I think is very widely shared. By the party of Davos. But not just by the party of Davos.

I worry, though, that the conditions that allowed the US to construct a liberal international order after World War 2 no longer exist.... In a sense right now, rather than having a Marshall plan, where the US--at the time the US public sector--financed the reconstruction of Europe on very generous terms while opening its markets to European goods (creating the conditions that allowed Europe to repay the US loan), we have something that looks like a Marshall plan in reverse. Or maybe half the Marshall plan--China doesn't seem to have given much thought to how the US will pay it back.

China’s public sector is, as a matter of policy, providing subsidized financing to the US. The reverse comes because China, still a very poor country, is financing the still very rich US. Bretton Woods 2 is very, very different from Bretton Woods 1.

I am convinced the post-war analogy doesn’t quite fit. But I also don’t have a better one to suggest.

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-03-01

The Domestic Macroeconomic Outlook: February 28, 2007

It looks like I'm not going to get to give my short talk on the domestic macroeconomic outlook up at Lake Tahoe this weekend:

That's too bad, because such talks quickly grow stale.

One of the major points of my schtick is that the macroeconomic outlook rarely changes suddenly, so that 90% of the time it is perfectly OK to say, "things are like they were, only three months ago." Nevertheless such talks have a very short half life: people like to know how the most recent news affects things, even if the usual answer is "not much"--except, of course, for those turning points where things do change a great deal, and which we usually see clearly only in retrospect.

I was going to hit three points:

The Great Moderation:

  • The business cycle is smaller than it used to be
  • Fewer recessions in industrial production
    • Largely good luck
    • But are there structural causes--better financial intermediation, et cetera?
    • We don't really know
  • Shallower recessions in industrial production
    • The Federal Reserve is doing a much better job of responding to recessions in real time
    • In large part the Federal Reserve has not let itself get wedged into a situation where it feels it can't respond to recession because inflation is still uncomfortably high
    • Major but still low-probability risk: a steep fall in the dollar accompanied by substantial import price passthrough wedges the Federal Reserve
  • Industrial production matters less for the economy as a whole
    • It used to be that fluctuations in the harvest were a really big deal for the macroeconomy
    • Someday, somebody will write: "it used to be that fluctuations in industrial production were a really big deal for the macroeconomy"--but not today, not quite yet

Productivity and Its Contents

  • The alarmingly large productivity gains of the early 2000s appear to have been one-off benefits from restructuring
  • However, the Silicon Valley-driven productivity speedup of the 1990s is still with us, as strong as ever
    • In the late 1990s the gains went to established high-tech companies and to dot-commers and their VCs
    • Since 2000 the gains have gone to companies that use computers and communications, and as competition sets in to their customers
    • The productivity future looks like the recent past--and you don't have to say "biotech, nanotech" in order to reach that conclusion

Factor Shares and the Strength of the Labor Market:

  • Rising profit shares because the labor market has been weak
  • The unemployment rate has been giving bad signals of labor market relative strength
    • Lots of people not in the labor force nevertheless appear to be pretty easy to hire
    • Unless the Federal Reserve allows the unemployment rate to fall further, wage picture looks grim--which means profit picture looks very bright
    • Political implications of still further increases in income inequality
  • Any connection between globalization and labor market weakness?
    • Hard to build a sensible model in which there is
    • But that may reflect economists' limited imagination--lots of people out there in the world think they see it happening

Pictures from playing with Economagic: http://www.economagic.com/

The Interesting Thing Is That the Drop Was Not "Instantaneous"...

Today in journamalism:

Today's Markets - WSJ.com: Global stock markets remained weak on Wednesday, but the selling pressure that swamped Wall Street late yesterday eased.... U.S. stock markets suffered their worst one-day plunge on Tuesday since Sept. 17, 2001, the first day of stock trading after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. The broad selloff was encouraged by weakness on the Shanghai market, disappointing economic data, weakness in the subprime lending market and rising uncertainty about Iran and Afghanistan. The Dow industrials -- briefly down as much as 546.20 points after a nearly instantaneous drop of about 200 points -- ended the day down 416.02....

But the Dow Industrials did *not* instantaneously drop 200 points. The ticker ran behind because of volume, and they had to switch over to a backup system, and this created the appearance of a sudden 200-point drop--not the reality of such a drop.

The news is not that the DJIA instantaneously dropped 200 points. The news is that Dow Jones, Inc., has not invested enough in infrastructure to be able to produce a reliable real-time index. Plus it's a really lousy index, as indexes go.

GDP Revised Down to 2.2% Growth In 4th Quarter on Lower Inventories

Jeff Bater on the day's news:

GDP Revised Down to 2.2% Growth In 4th Quarter on Lower Inventories - WSJ.com: The U.S. economy didn't surge at the end of 2006 as originally thought, according to new government data showing a sharp downward adjustment to fourth-quarter growth partly because of lower business inventory investment.... Gross domestic product increased at a 2.2% annual rate October through December, the Commerce Department said Wednesday in its first revision to GDP growth during the last three months of 2006.... The chain-weighted GDP price index rose 1.7%, above the previously estimated 1.5% rise but below the third quarter's 1.9% climb. The government initially estimated GDP grew by 3.5% in the fourth quarter. The new estimate of a 2.2% seasonally adjusted gain meant the economy was just a little stronger than in the third quarter, when GDP rose 2.0%.

New-home sales plunged in January, falling to the lowest level in nearly four years after back-to-back increases.... Sales of single-family homes decreased 17% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 937,000, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. It was the weakest sales rate since 936,000 in February 2003.... The median estimate of 21 economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires and CNBC was for sales to fall by 3.6% to a 1.080 million annual rate in January. Commerce's report Wednesday showed new-home sales fell 19% in the Northeast, 8.1% in the Midwest, 9.7% in the South and 37.4% in the West.... The median price was $239,800, higher than the $239,400 in December. There were an estimated 536,000 homes for sale at the end of January, representing a 6.8 months' supply at the current sales rate...

We're now two quarters into a growth recession, and an investment recession, and an industrial recession. But I don't think we're in a real recession yet--still lots of demand for the service sectors.

The Crisis of the "Mixed Economy"

Econ 210a: Introduction to Economic History: February 28 Class: The Crisis of the Mixed Economy

In the mid-1960s economists thought that they had it right. Bretton Woods. Keynesian domestic demand management. Progressive tax and transfer systems. And perhaps a bit of public ownership of the "commanding heights" and of "indicative planning." The problems of economic management seemed--to some at least, in the first world at least--to be broadly solved. And people were looking forward to future eras in which the "economic problem" would not be allocating scarce resources among various productive uses but allocating abundant products in the interest of human well-being. What is the economic problem in an era in which we have enough food not to be hungry, enough clothing not to be cold, enough shelter not to be wet, and certainly enough diversions not to be bored?

But as a result of the 1970s and 1980s, consideration of these problems was pushed into the far future, because it became clear that economists did not have it right:

Readings:

The embarrassing question is: "What is this class doing in an economic history course?" I say: "Some ask 'why?' I say 'why not!'!"

Barry Eichengreen says that when he was on the job market, Zvi Griliches asked him: "You say you're an economic historian, and you study the 1920s and 1930s. How can that be? I lived through the 1920s and 1930s."

And after today (except for special fill-in and guest lectures, except for dissertation and thesis supervising, except for talking to students about their class papers and then grading them, except for seminars--but I don't have organizational responsibility for any this semester) I am off the teaching line...

February 27, 2007

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-28

Andrew Northrup Is a National Treasure...

He reminds us of Tom Friedman past:

The Poor Man: [A]t long last, someone in a respectable publication has pointed out that Glenn Reynolds is completely insane.... [Reynolds's] comment...--that the government should be murdering Iranian scientists and religious leaders, because we have been continuously at war with them for thirty years--was a bit blunt, but wasn't really unrepresentative of his views.

Why should this be getting attention all of a sudden? Fans of his oeuvre could probably think of a handful of crazier comments right off the top of their head--in fact, I immediately thought of that time in 2003 when Prof. Christmas opined that, seeing as we were already at war with France and all, we should probably start some nice proxy wars [against France] in Africa....

[Reynolds] was riffing on Thomas L. F------ Friedman, September 2003, NY Times:

It's time we Americans came to terms with something: France is not just our annoying ally. It is not just our jealous rival. France is becoming our enemy. If you add up how France behaved in the run-up to the Iraq war (making it impossible for the Security Council to put a real ultimatum to Saddam Hussein that might have avoided a war), and if you look at how France behaved during the war (when its foreign minister, Dominique de Villepin, refused to answer the question of whether he wanted Saddam or America to win in Iraq), and if you watch how France is behaving today (demanding some kind of loopy symbolic transfer of Iraqi sovereignty to some kind of hastily thrown together Iraqi provisional government, with the rest of Iraq's transition to democracy to be overseen more by a divided U.N. than by America), then there is only one conclusion one can draw: France wants America to fail in Iraq. France wants America to sink in a quagmire there in the crazy hope that a weakened U.S. will pave the way for France to assume its "rightful" place as America's equal, if not superior, in shaping world affairs....

Tom Friedman... was telling us at the time that we needed to invade Iraq because we just had to kill some Arabs. We just had to, OK? Something about a bubble or something, too--you had to be there, man, it all made perfect sense. I know it seems weird now, man, but it was this magical time... The Summer of War!--when we all just knew we were going to change the world. All that stuff our parents told us about Vietnam and all that s---? We were just going to blow that away, man, just tear down their world and build it all up new, like better than ever, like nothing you'd ever seen before!...

DeLong Smackdown Watch! (Nathan Newman Edition)

Nathan Newman comes to Jeff Faux's support, and inflicts heavy damage on DeLong:

Why Mexico is Not Enough | TPMCafe: It's the oddest thing that progressives demand higher wages for workers in the developing world and we get accused of wanting to keep them impoverished-- a neat trick by folks like Brad, admittedly. But here's the deal we should all want. Chinese workers should be able to demand higher wages to the point THEY WANT; if those WORKERS decide that trading off lowering wages for higher employment in the global economy is what they want, so be it. But right now, they are settling for low wages based on the decisions of Chinese and allied US CORPORATIONS and GOVERNMENT decisions.

So here's the global deal we should demand. Full trading rights for countries that honor the basic free speech rights of their workers to collectively organize. No trade rights for countries that don't. This isn't an argument for shutting down trade with China; it's a demand that they give free speech rights to their own employees as a condition of trade....

The question is not do We WANT Chinese workers to be poor and barefoot; the question is whether we are willing to fight seriously and consistently for them to have a voice to say what THEY WANT?

In Which I Carry Yet More Water for the Commissars-Turned-Capitalists of Shanghai

Over at TPM Cafe, I respond to the eloquent and dangerous Jeff Faux yet again:

Sailing into Harm's Way versus the Dangerously Eloquent Jeff Faux | TPMCafe:

I had written:

Is there a way to interpret Jeff other than as a call to keep China a society of poor subsistence rice farmers as long as possible--keep them poor, barefoot, uneducated, and by no means allow them to work at any of the high-value manufacturing occupations we want to keep in the United States?

Jeff Faux writes back:

Feb | TPMCafe: Brad missed the point. There are rich people in poor countries and poor people in rich countries. China is not just a society of poor, barefoot, uneducated peasants. At the top, China is a place of immense wealth.... Why is it that it is the responsibility of $40,000 year American working families to sacrifice their future in order to raise up the living standards of poor Chinese, when commissars turned capitalists ride around Shanghai in a different Rolls every day?...

I think it's time to put myself seriously in harm's way here...

I reply:

There aren't many commissars-turned-capitalists.

Scratching on the back of my envelope, I find that at current exchange rates, China's GDP per worker--and there are 800 million workers--is $3,000 per year. (In 1990 it was $1,100 of today's dollars per year.) According to Piketty and Qian's guesses, the top 0.1% of China's workers get an average of $30,000 per year at current exchange rates. This elite of some 800,000 do live considerably better in their homes in Shanghai than Americans with $30,000 do--unskilled labor and the services it provides are really cheap in Shanghai because China is still really poor (perhaps at a level equivalent to $100,000 per year if you like being waited on and having a household staff; much less if you don't). Redistribute all the income of the 800,000 commissars-turned-capitalists back to the masses, and you boost median standards of living in China by 1% above current levels.

In 1877, it was the United States that was the rising superpower across the ocean to the west of the world's industrial and military leader. Today it is China. In 1917 and again in 1941 it was greatly to Britain's benefit that America regarded it as a friend and an ally rather than as a competitor and an enemy. And since 1945 it has been greatly to Britain's benefit that America has regarded it as a trading partner rather than an industrial competitor.

There is a good chance that China is now on the same path to world preeminence that America walked 130 years ago. Come 2047 and again in 2071 and in the years after 2075, America is going to need China. There is nothing more dangerous for America's future national security and nothing more destructive to America's future prosperity than for Chinese schoolchildren to be taught in 2047 and 2071 and 2075 that America tried to keep the Chinese as poor as possible for as long as possible.

Speaking as a Water-Carrying Policy Intellectual...

Over at the coffeehouse that is TPM Cafe, I feel compelled to sail into harm's way vis-a-vis the eloquent and dangerous Jeff Faux:

A Question for Jeff Faux... | TPMCafe:

Jeff Faux is... confused, to put it politely. He opens:

Confronting Davos: The Class Politics of Global Governance | TPMCafe: it’s no surprise that a cross-border class politics has developed in the wake of the globalizing economy... a one-party system. Call it the Party of Davos, after the annual elite bash in the Swiss Alps that resembles the big-donor receptions at a political convention--corporate CEOs and world class investors, the people who carry their bags, and the politicians, pundits and policy intellectuals who carry their water...

Well, as one of the policy intellectuals who carries the water for the "corporate CEOS and world-class investors... people who carry their bags, and the politicians" I guess I should respond.

Jeff goes on:

[T]he economic challenge to Americans is not from China, per se, but from a business partnership between Chinese commissars who provide the cheap labor and American and other transnationals who provide the technology and financing--and whose lobbyists in Washington provided access to the US market.... [T]his reality is rarely if ever part of the mainstream discussion of globalization. It discomforts advertisers and campaign contributors. Better to define the issues with the abstract homilies of economics 101--“free-trade vs. protectionism.”...

[...]

Don’t think of your job, they tell anxious workers, think of the benefits of cheap prices.... [W]hatever numbers you want to believe, neither economic theory nor statistical calculation can determine whether the benefits of cheaper sneakers are worth the costs of lost jobs, disrupted lives and increased economic security. It is essentially a values question. In the context of the domestic economy, Progressives rightly reject the argument, even where true, that lower prices and greater employment generated by cheaper labor would justify the elimination of social protections and safety nets. Yet intimidated by the prospect of being labeled a “protectionist,” many support international trade regimes that are based on the same argument...

Let me respond with a question: Is there a way to interpret Jeff other than as a call to keep China a society of poor subsistence rice farmers as long as possible--keep them poor, barefoot, uneducated, and by no means allow them to work at any of the high-value manufacturing occupations we want to keep in the United States?

Pictures from Playing with Economagic...

Pictures from playing with Economagic: http://www.economagic.com/:

The last one is my favorite: it shows, in one picture, the seasonal cycle, the business cycle, and the long-term trend in American labor force participation coming from demography and feminism.

Comparing that figure with the one immediately above it shows the extraordinary year-to-year regularity of the seasonal cycle: you could set your watch by it. And the one above that shows the gradual deceleration of productivity growth from 1960-1995 and the acceleration since then. And the one above that provides an interesting look at the Great Moderation of the American business cycle since 1984: recessions come less frequently, and when they do come they involve a smaller increase in economic slack than 1974-75 or 1979-82.

Durable Goods Orders Down

Not a good macroeconomic sign. If we still had the manufacturing-based economy of the 1960s, we would now be in a recession. As it is...

Today's Markets - WSJ.com: Early Tuesday, the Commerce Department said January durable-goods orders fell 7.8% to a seasonally adjusted $203.90 billion. The decline in orders surprised economists, who expected a 3.2% drop. Timothy Rogers, chief economist at Briefing.com, pointed to a decrease in capital-goods orders, "the bread and butter of the manufacturing side," as an area of particular concern. "I think it's just a mid-cycle stall," he added. "The fundamentals are still strong."

If I were the Federal Reserve, I'd be a-cuttin interest rates next meeting...

February 26, 2007

Ezra Klein on the Employee Free Choice Act

Ezra Klein on labor unions:

Ezra Klein: A System of Checks and Balances (Working People Only): Steven Greenhouse has a very peculiarly written story (why isn't the bill named or described till halfway through?) on the coming clash over the Employee Free Choice Act.... Democrats can't break a Senate filibuster or overturn the promised presidential veto. Remarkable how our legislature found it so easy to heighten the obstacles for declaring bankruptcy but seems totally stymied when aiding workers who want to join a union....

Towards the end of the article we get back into the debate over whether card check -- wherein workers simply sign cards to join the union -- is a legitimate process, or if, by denying the employer a distinct NLRB vote it can intimidate and sabotage, it exposes workers to union intimidation. Happily, there's actually data.... [T]he Eagleton Research Center and Rutgers University surveyed workers to see how they compared.

22% of workers surveyed said management "coerced them a great deal" during union elections. 6% said unions did the same. During the NLRB election, 46% of workers complained of management pressure. During card check elections, 14% complained of union pressure. Workers in NLRB elections were twice as likely as workers in card check elections to report that management coerced them to oppose -- and even in card-check elections, 23% of workers complained of management coercion, more than complained of union coercion! Workers in NLRB elections were more than 53% as likely to report that management threatened to eliminate their jobs.

Even more interesting, fewer workers in card check campaigns said coworkers pressured them to join the union (17% to 22%). Workers in card check elections were more than twice as likely to report the employer took a neutral stance and let the workers decide. But, rather hilariously, anti-union Labor Secretary Elaine Chao concludes that, "a worker's right to a secret ballot election is an intrinsic right in our democracy that should not be legislated away at the behest of special interest groups." A worker's right to organize, conversely, can be swiftly sacrificed atop the altar of business interests.

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-27

Rui Pedro Esteves: Economic History Seminar: February 26, 2007

Rui Pedro Esteves (2007), "Between Imperialism and Capitalism: European Capital Exports Before 1914"

Abstract: An original database of German capital exports comparable to Stone's (1993) data for British was compiled for 1883-1913. Three classes of variables were tested as determinants of capital flows: political conditions in recipient countries, long-term growth prospects, and institutional characteristics. German capital flows responded to long-term growth prospects as much as British flows. This conclusion is robust after controlling for political affiliation. It suggests that the sharp distinction in the literature between "developmental" and "revenue" finance is probably a figment of the previous absence of detailed data on non-British capital exports.

Why Oh Why Can't We Have a Better Press Corps? (Yet Another Washington Post Edition)

Yes, because of David Broder, Glenn Greenwald is shrill:

Glenn Greenwald - Salon: Following up on the posts here about David Broder's most recent column -- in which he proclaimed that "President Bush is poised for a political comeback" and heaped all sorts of praise on the President -- the Post's Dan Froomkin highlights why Broder's columns are so significant and, more importantly, how they are used by an appreciative White House (see "Broder Speaks" section): Say what you will about Washington Post reporter and columnist David S. Broder, but he is the dean of the Washington press corps and his columns are often an accurate reflection of the temperament of Washington's top political reporters....

The White House press office was so delighted with Broder's column that it sent it out to the entire White House press corps this morning at 6:44 a.m., under the heading: "In Case You Missed It. Compare that fact to Broder's denial, during last week's " online chat," that he has helped to "prop up" the Bush presidency. Broder boasted: "You will find no one in the White House or on the Republican side of the House or Senate who thinks I have been propping up the Bush presidency." How about the White House official excitedly disseminating Broder's column?

There are invariably commenters and e-mailers who insist that these Beltway pundits can be ignored because they have no real following and nobody listens to them. It may be true that there are relatively few members of the public who listen directly to David Broder, but the shallow tripe he churns out is read -- and respected -- by most Beltway media elites, whose views are shaped by people like Broder and whose media coverage and mindset is as well.

Where Is the Budget Reporting?

Stan Collender writes:

http://nationaljournal.com/members/buzz/2007/budget/022707.htm: Like many Washington-based analysts, I generally believe that every word I utter not only is quotable but should be quoted. That's why this time of year is usually so ego fulfilling: the submission of the president's budget to Congress generally means I get calls from lots of people who want to hear what I have to say. That didn't happen this year.... At first I thought it was me.... I assumed that... I was over the hill....

But two days after the president's budget had been sent to Congress, at an informal monthly breakfast of budget analysts I've been attending for more than two decades, I found out that virtually everyone else who is usually quoted heavily this time of year also wasn't getting called. Because of this, the breakfast partly turned into a support group.... It was therapeutic....

It turns out that the reason for this change is actually quite simple: most major media outlets have decided that the budget is not much of a story this year and are not covering it....

On one hand, this is hard to understand. How is it possible that the federal budget -- with spending and revenues that are both nearly equal to one-fifth of the U.S. economy -- is not a significant story that deserves daily in-depth coverage?....

On the other hand, the lack of interest in the Bush FY08 budget and the overall federal budget debate is completely understandable.... Few people believe that there is anything Congress will be able to do to get George Bush to negotiate on budget issues....

Then, of course, there's the elephant that's always in the room in Washington these days: Iraq. The only thing that has been able to push that off the front pages is Anna Nicole Smith and Britney Spears and, no matter how much we might like it to be otherwise, the federal budget will never able to compete with that type of story.... Finally, the news coverage is far different than it used to be. Not only have the pages and minutes devoted to reporting and analysis generally decreased, but the audience has greatly changed as well.

I called several media friends.... The Washington bureau chief of a major financial outlet told me that he's not covering the budget... because he doesn't think much will happen. A senior Washington correspondent for a major daily newspaper told me she can't get anyone in the White House to talk in a meaningful way.... A producer of a Sunday talk show said that they were planning to cover Iraq and the 2008 election all the time from now on.

At least it's not me.

Why oh why can't we have a better press corps?

Inflation Expectations Are Now Nearly Static

From Greg Ip's February 26 article. Changes in actual inflation no longer fed through to changes in expected inflation--at least not yet. This makes the Federal Reserve's life much easier. And there is no sign that static inflation expectations have been disrupted by the replacement of Alan Greenspan by Ben Bernanke

February 25, 2007

Adverse Selection! What Does "Unlimited" Mean?

Bandwagon of http://ridethebandwagon.com/ estimated that the average iTunes user had some 30 to 60GB of stuff:

What does unlimited mean? - bandwagongroupie | Google Groups: Terence Pua: Based on survey data (months before launch), our research showed that most iTunes users have about 30 to 60GB...

Bandwagon of http://ridethebandwagon.com/ thought that if their average customer had some 39 to 60GB of stuff to back up, they could make money selling dynamic backup services for $99 a year.

But if you have 5GB of stuff, will you pay $100 a year to back it up when $100 will buy you two Western Digital 80GB hard drives? No.

What kind of people will spend $99 a year for dynamic backup services? Terence Pua found out:

However, in a little more than 24 hours after we opened the doors, unlimited means people have as much as 2TB of iTunes stuff! That is an outlier for sure but many people have over 100GB. As you know, we are currently using Amazon S3*, who charges $0.15/GB/month. We charge $99/year for Bandwagon. At that price, people who have over 55GB become a loss to us (and that's not including the bandwidth costs at $0.20/GB).

It's simple arithmetic that if we don't cover costs, we can't stay in business to serve your needs.... We'd like to have a fruitful community-based discussion to help us come up with a more long term pricing/model...

But they are getting some nice publicity out of this.

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-26

February 24, 2007

Memo to Self: My Best Work

Time to start compiling a list of what I think is my best work...

Academic Papers:

The Value of the Euro

The euro has risen further than I had realized since late 2000--albeit not since its start in 1999.

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-25

I Know I Said Israel's Government Was Blind to Reality, But This Is Ridiculous!

Is there any way Israeli defense minister Amir Peretz is keeping his job after this?

February 23, 2007

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-24

Econbrowser: Unwitting Investors in Amaranth

Jim Hamilton finds out that he, in his capacity as a San Diego County taxpayer, was an unwilling and unwitting investor in Amaranth:

Econbrowser: San Diego County pension fund: I have been developing concerns about the possibility that hedge fund investment flows have become a destabilizing force in world financial markets. Following the maxim "think globally, act locally," I decided to take a look at how the behavior of our local pension funds may be one small part of that phenomenom. And I have some recommendations to make on behalf of San Diego County residents and the world at large.

There are any number of financial instruments that would allow you to construct an investment portfolio that could show high returns with limited variability for many years in a row, even though the investment strategy could actually involve enormous risk or even negative expected returns.... Such financial instruments could be particularly problematic given a potential conflict between the incentives facing an individual pension fund manager and the best interests of the future retirees whose assets he or she is managing. If the manager can turn in well-above-market returns five years in a row, the manager is likely to be spectacularly rewarded over that period....

When I heard about the disastrously irresponsible investments made by the Amaranth hedge fund, my first reaction was, who would be so stupid to have put up the margin requirements for such a scheme? The answer turned out to be found in my own backyard-- the San Diego County Employees Retirement Association apparently donated over a hundred million dollars to this worthy cause.

I took a look at the 2006 SDCERA Annual Report to try to find out what was really going on. If you only look at the "summary of retirement portfolio by manager/asset type" on page 54, all appears healthy. Two billion dollars, or 27% of their $7.3 billion portfolio, were reported to have been held in the form of domestic equity, split among a dozen different large, diversified equity funds. There's another 25% in international equity, 26% in fixed income, and 10% for real estate and "alternative equity". There are some other categories such as "commodity swaps" and "overlay" that worry me a little, but these don't amount to that much of the total. So where do you squeeze a couple hundred million for Amaranth in there?

The really interesting stuff is to be found on page 55, which is labeled "summary of derivative financial instruments." Here Amaranth is included as one of a dozen entries in a group of "alpha engine managers." The total market value of these alpha engine managers comes to $1.5 billion, which would amount to 20% of SDCERA's net assets....

But as far as I'm aware, there's no place you can go to find an audited statement of the assets and liabilities of these "alpha fund managers", so there's no way to verify exactly what the nature and magnitude of the risk is that's being palmed off on the county. We have only the word of the county fund managers that they're doing something smart. They in turn are likely basing their own confidence primarily on the word of the alpha fund managers. At least in the case of Amaranth, we know how much that word is worth, and it ain't $233,830,268.

And that's just the San Diego County pension fund. The pension fund of the city of San Diego is an even more gruesome story, which perhaps I should take up another time...

February 22, 2007

Bookmarked at Del.icio.us for 2007-02-23

My Two Favorite New Yorker Cartoons of All Time