Policy Court

Supreme Court Rulings on Economic Policy

Archive for July, 2009

When The Shovels Arrive: A guide to stimulus

Posted by Policy Court On July - 27 - 2009

Opinion of the Court, delivered by David Lamb, signed by William Leich:

It’s what you might call a “perfect storm.”  In the midst of the worst recession in seven decades, America is also experiencing the most acute shovel shortage in its history.  At least that’s what some might have concluded in the seven weeks after President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)—a bill funding $787 billion of welfare provisions and “shovel-ready” infrastructure projects—and before any such construction projects began.

During those seven weeks, three things happened.  Unemployment jumped ten percent, GDP growth fell to lowest rate since the Great Depression, and, most troubling, Americans rediscovered the power of rhetoric; that “shovel-ready” was a euphemism, and a dangerously shortsighted one at that.  That getting the “shovels” was the hard part.

The truth is that any federal initiative involving states, including the ARRA which gives states money to finance construction projects, takes months to get money in the hands of Americans.  And that’s the root of economists’ debate over how to best legislate fiscal stimulus.

Since people tend to spend a larger fraction of money when its in the form of a reliable monthly paycheck rather than a onetime bonus, hiring new workers to complete projects should, at least in pure economic theory, provide a larger stimulus than distributing the same amount of money as tax rebates.  However the length of time it takes governments to plan projects, hire workers, and begin work may negate the stimulus advantage of employment programs.  After all, $200 billion in stimulus when the economy is risking recession will probably better excite growth than will $400 billion in stimulus two months later, when the economy has already entered recession.

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Tax, Don’t Cap and Trade

Posted by Policy Court On July - 7 - 2009
Opinion of the court, delivered by William Leich, signed by Nicole Adams:
Before recessing for the July 4th celebrations, the U.S. House narrowly passed an energy bill that seeks to tackle climate change through an emissions trading program.  The chief provision of the bill, dubbed the “cap-and-trade” program, is likely to put a cap on economic growth.
Under the plan the federal government releases emission permits—allocating 85% to companies at no cost and auctioning the rest—each of which allow recipients to emit a specified amount of greenhouse gases.  If companies need to emit more than their permits allow or do not need to emit as much as they are permitted to, they can exchange their credits to pollute on the open market.
This emissions capping system is a quantity instrument because it guarantees certain emission reductions each year.  And although quantity instruments are often more damaging to economic growth than price instruments, like taxes, they make sense for problems that are particularly sensitive to changes in pollution concentrations, like waste water or acid rain.
In the context of global warming, however, emitting three billion tons of carbon dioxide one year and seven billion the next, has a similar impact as releasing five billion tons both years.  Thus a price instrument that can flex with the business cycle makes more sense than cap-and-trade; what we need is a carbon tax.
Instead, America got an emissions cap whose impact on the economy will be varied, unpredictable, and easily exploited.
At the top of the business cycle, demand for the consumer goods that drive carbon emissions will be at its highest, and therefore emission credits will be highly sought-after and consequently very expensive.  This can drive up inflation, which is already—at least theoretically—at its highest during periods of high growth.
In an alternate scenario, a manufacturing company that recognizes emissions permits to be overvalued during growth could sell its permits and shut down its factories.  When companies are paid to produce nothing, items become scarce and price levels rise; this is exactly what Americans saw in the summer of 2008, when corn prices rose in the heyday of ethanol because production didn’t respond to price signals—a consequence of farm subsidies that pay farmers to leave fields unused.
Ultimately, both these phenomena will heighten inflation’s sensitivity to economic growth, which means when the economy expands too quickly inflation will result at a faster pace.  That alone, could trigger a slowdown.
When a recession does develop, the emissions trading program will hurt the economy and fail to deliver on its environmental promises.  Depressed demand for consumer goods during economic contraction will leave many companies with surplus emission credits; high supplies and low demand will make them, effectively, worthless.  Furthermore, companies may be able to cut costs  by reverting to less efficient means of production—thereby producing fewer goods but emitting the same amount of carbon since there will be no incentive not to.  Not only will a temporary movement away from environmental efficiency harm the environment, but it will also enable companies to produce goods at lower costs, heightening the risk of deflation during the part of the cycle when it’s already highest.
More troubling, the past six months have proven that deflation and recession can feed on each other.
As worthless emission credits during recession kill the financial incentive for carbon-efficient production methods, the motivation for environmental innovation will disappear.  In other words, company research funding will come and go with economic growth, making any environmental innovation difficult.
But other than problems with inflation sensitivity and fickle environmental benefits, the cap-and-trade system also raises the issues on taxing imports.  The energy bill passed by the House contains provisions that could tax imports from countries whose carbon emission guidelines Congress deems less rigorous.  Given the volatility in the cost of emission credits and the difficulty in measuring how much the cap-and-trade program actually costs American companies, tariffs on imported goods in the bill are likely to be larger than the effective tax of the program and thus protectionist.  Traditionally, protectionism at home is fought with protectionism abroad.  The result is usually globally recession.
Congress could avoid the pitfalls of emissions trading by substituting a greenhouse gas emission tax.
Taxing emissions would give consumers and businesses a more transparent view of the cost of polluting.  That way taxes on imports from countries without strict carbon emissions laws can be more fairly priced, preventing protectionist retaliation from big manufacturers like China and India.  Moreover, a tax would guarantee that the drive for efficiency is a constant one, not one that recedes at the bottom of the business cycle; meaning that companies can’t revert to old technologies during recession and innovation can be more easily achieved.
But most importantly, since a tax wouldn’t rise during expansion and fall during contraction the way the cost of the cap-and-trade system would, it won’t increase inflation’s sensitivity to growth.  The tax won’t create recessions and won’t deflate prices during them when they inevitably come.
The only environmental drawback of an emission tax would be the variability of annual greenhouse gas emissions, which will mirror economic activity.  Still, steady tax hikes would reign in long-term emissions as well as any credit trading program might.
Particularly in a time of turmoil, Congress ought to recognize that the economy doesn’t grow at a constant pace; rather it grows in spurts.  Their energy bill ought to reflect that.  It should allow for the ebb and flow of the business cycle without exacerbating its volatility.  And it can’t be an excuse for protectionism; we tried that in 1930.
David Lamb, concurring:
Just how to balance economic growth with environmental protection is a struggle that faced every president since Lyndon Johnson.  Climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, both because of its global nature and historically distant consequences, has always been a particularly thorny issue; after all, why should U.S. workers sacrifice their living standards for the sake of the planet if Chinese workers will get rich off of their competitive advantage that results from a domestic emissions law?
They shouldn’t.
But American workers also can’t disproportionately discriminate against imported goods.  The majority opinion handles the prospect of protectionism well, saying  that a tax more clearly shows the cost of domestic emissions and therefore tariffs on goods “from countries without strict carbon emissions laws can be more fairly priced.”
As the Senate looks to pass its own energy bill, it ought to implement a carbon tax for that reason, and add a clause that guarantees tariffs are proportional, per good, to the carbon tax.  This means the bill needs to require foreign companies to report their emissions, needs to ensure reported numbers are accurate, and needs to provide a means for foreign companies to appeal the tariff if it costs more than producing goods domestically and paying the carbon tax would.
Fairness in global trade is especially important because the Treasury needs China’s money; without it, low demand for Treasuries would drive yields too high to sustain.  If China, Japan, and other exporters, find Congress’ energy bill to be protectionist, they could raise their own tariffs, cutting off global trade and preventing Americans from reaping the competitive advantages of countries abroad.
I side with the majority, supporting that an emissions tax ought to replace the cap-and-trade system for the reasons the majority outlines, emphasizing only that the resulting “carbon tariffs” must ultimately be fair ones.

Opinion of the court, delivered by William Leich, signed by Nicole Adams:
Before recessing for the July 4th celebrations, the U.S. House narrowly passed an energy bill that seeks to tackle climate change through an emissions trading program.  The chief provision of the bill, dubbed the “cap-and-trade” program, is likely to put a cap on economic growth.

Under the plan the federal government releases emission permits—allocating 85% to companies at no cost and auctioning the rest—each of which allow recipients to emit a specified amount of greenhouse gases.  If companies need to emit more than their permits allow or do not need to emit as much as they are permitted to, they can exchange credits to pollute on the open market.

This emissions capping system is a quantity instrument because it guarantees certain emission reductions each year.  And although quantity instruments are often more damaging to economic growth than price instruments like taxes, they can solve environmental problems that are sensitive to changes in pollution concentrations, like waste water or acid rain.

In the context of global warming, however, emitting three billion tons of carbon dioxide one year and seven billion the next, has a similar impact to releasing five billion tons both years.  Thus a price instrument that can flex with the business cycle makes more sense than cap-and-trade; what we need is a carbon tax.

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Reforming Health Care

Posted by Policy Court On July - 3 - 2009

Opinion of the court, delivered by David Lamb:
The American health care system is a lot like Former President George W. Bush: it has a soft spot for the private sector, it costs the nation dearly, and it was a lot more popular seven years ago.

It’s also similar in that it exists in a world unburdened by basic economics; where the American system has a public program—Medicare—that will use federal money to treat cancer in a retired sixty-eight-year-old who no longer pays income taxes, it has no such program to help a fifteen-year-old buy antibiotics for pneumonia, even though local and state governments have invested tens of thousands of dollars in the fifteen-year-old’s education and even though the fifteen-year-old has decades of income taxes yet to pay.

It has been five months since Mr Bush fled from Washington, and yet the United States’ health insurance system, dreamed up by depression-era businessmen in rooms full of cigar and cigarette smoke, has continued to plague Americans like a self-induced lung cancer, that is, from the inside, out.

While President Obama’s proposed health care plan broadens eligibility standards for Medicaid—the public insurance program for low-income Americans—proposes another national plan to compete with private insurers, and mandates health insurance for children, it doesn’t socialize medicine, leaving the possibility that some citizens will remain uninsured. These people, who will be between eighteen and sixty-five, and in jobs which don’t provide health care benefits—often ones that pay below the national average—will be forced to pay more for health insurance if they want it.

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Assessing The 2010 Budget

Posted by Policy Court On July - 2 - 2009

Opinion of the court, delivered by Nicole Adams, signed by David Lamb:
Three decades ago, Alfred Kahn, then an economic advisor to President Carter, warned Americans that double-digit inflation and a stagnant economy might give rise to “the worst banana in forty-five years.”  Although Mr Kahn’s word choice was humorous—Mr Carter had instructed him to avoid the word “depression”—his message was entirely sincere; inflation can be a sign of waning faith in the domestic economy and a trigger to further erosion of faith in the economy and its currency.

The recent stock market rally of the past four months—only now beginning to falter—and results from the Federal Reserve’s bank “stress tests” in May have persuaded Treasury Secretary Geithner and Reserve Chairman Bernanke that America has avoided  the worst banana since the Great Depression.  Before passing such judgments, Mr Geithner ought to examine President Obama’s 2010 budget.

The budget resolutions currently in both houses of Congress are unlikely to reduce the $1.17 trillion deficit that Mr Obama’s plan forecasts.  If that federal deficit—the second largest nominal deficit ever—remains, it will be all but impossible to finance.

When the House and Senate settle differences in their budget resolutions and approve an identical plan, the budget will come into effect for the fiscal year that starts on the first of October and the Treasury will be responsible for bridging the gap between federal revenue and federal spending.  During normal times, faith in the U.S. government and an international need for secure investment allow the Treasury to finance the national debt through Treasury securities and government bonds with low interest rates.  This, however, will prove difficult if China isn’t a returning customer.

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