25.10.11

Οι "ρυθμίσεις" στην αγορά εργασίες φταίνε για την ανεργία, και λοιπές μπουρδολογίες...

Ένα άκρως ενδιαφέρον άρθρο του Dean Baker περί εργατικών ρυθμίσεων που δήθεν αυξάνουν την ανεργία...Πόσο με κουράζουν τα παπαγαλάκια που αναμασάνε την ακατάσχετη μπουρδολογία. Ο Baker είναι απόλυτα εύστοχος...

Regulation Is the Cause of Unemployment: Badge of Ignorance

By Dean Baker

Politicians pushing right-wing positions in public debate now operate with the assumption that they can get away with saying anything without getting serious scrutiny from the media. That is why right-wing politicians repeatedly blame government regulation for the failure of the economy to generate jobs. Even though there is no truth whatsoever to the claim, right-wing politicians know that the media will treat their nonsense respectfully in news coverage.

If political reporters did their job, they would make an effort to determine the validity of the regulation-killing-jobs story and expose the politicians making the claim as either ignorant or dishonest, just as if a politician was going around claiming that September 11th was an inside job. However, today’s reporters are either too lazy or incompetent to do their homework. What follows is a bit of a how-to manual to make reporters’ jobs easier.

The first step in assessing the right-wingers’ claim about regulation killing jobs is to figure out what it is. The argument is usually that companies have enough demand for labor that they would be hiring now, but because of existing or expected regulations, such as President Obama’s health care plan that mostly takes effect in January of 2014, they are declining to hire more workers.

Governor Romney was kind enough to spell this argument out explicitly in the presidential debate on the economy. He told the audience that businesses have to look 2 or 3 years ahead when they make hiring decisions, not just a few months.

With this in mind, there are some clear implications of the regulations-cost-jobs story. First, we would expect that firms would be looking to increase hours per workers as an alternative to hiring. If employers can’t hire more workers due to regulations, then they would look to get more labor out of each of the workers that they already have.

Second, employers would hire temporary workers as an alternative to hiring permanent employees. Temporary workers can be easily dismissed if regulations make it unprofitable to keep employees on staff.

Third, the companies that are most affected by the regulations should see the largest impact on their hiring. If costly regulations are keeping companies from hiring, then we should see that expect that the companies that are most affected by these regulations will have the sharpest reduction in employment.

Fourth, industries with longer term employment should have the greatest reduction in employment. It may make sense for a company to not to hire today because of a regulation that only kick in two years from now if they expect the new hires to still be with them in two years. However, if a company has frequent turnover, then hiring workers today will not increase their employment in two years, unless they decide to replace workers as they leave.

Finally, if regulations are preventing firms from hiring, then we would expect them to complain about regulation when asked in employer surveys.

If we look at the data, we find that none of these conditions hold. The length of the average workweek was 34.3 hours in September. This is up from 33.7 hours at the low-point of the downturn in 2009, but it is still down by 0.4 hours from its pre-recession peaks. With average workweeks still shorter than before the downturn, there is no evidence that employers are requiring each worker to put in longer hours as an alternative to hiring new workers.

The same story applies to temp workers. Temp employment is up by 550,000 from the trough of the downturn, but it is still down by almost 400,000 from its pre-recession peak. If employers are hesitant to hire because of regulations, they clearly are not turning to temps as alternative. They hired far more temp workers before the big bad Obama let the regulators run wild.

The third point is that we should see more of an impact on hiring in the firms that are most affected by the regulation. The right’s biggest villain here is Obamacare. This would have the greatest impact on hiring at mid-size firms. There is little in the legislation that affects firms of less than 50 and most of the biggest firms already provide care that exceeds what is required under the bill. So, we should see the largest falloff in hiring in firms that exceed the 50-employee limit but don’t already provide health care.

In fact it is impossible to find any clear pattern in hiring by firm size. In 2010, hiring by firms that employ 50-100 workers was down by 14.5 percent from pre-recession levels, while hiring by firms that employ 100-250 workers was down by 13.3 percent. By comparison, hiring by the largest firms (over 1000 workers) was down by only 11.4 percent, but hiring by firms that employ 10-19 workers was down by 15.8 percent.

There is a similar story when we look at industry groups. Manufacturing and health care, where industries workers often hold jobs for long periods of time, are both adding jobs more rapidly than before the downturn. By contrast, restaurants, where turnover is frequent, are adding jobs at just over half of their pre-recession pace.

Finally, employers themselves don’t list regulation as major factor when asked in surveys. The National Federation of Independent Businesses, an association of small businesses, has fielded a survey for close to three decades that asks its members what are the biggest obstacles they face. Only around 14 percent list regulation, not much different than in the years before President Obama was elected.

In short, there is no evidence that is consistent with the regulation-impeding-job-growth story. When politicians repeat this line, they are just making things up and reporters should call them on it.

--This article was originally published on October 21, 2011 by Al Jazeera.

2.10.11

Inflate the Debt (2)

Πρίν 6 μήνες είχαμε δημοσιεύσει την ανάρτηση που ισχυριζόμασταν ότι μία λύση για την μείωση των χρεών παγκοσμίως είναι με τον "πληθωρισμό του χρέους" και τη δημιουργία υψηλών αρνητικών επιτοκίων...Σήμερα οι P. Krugman και D. Baker λένε το ίδιο....

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/23/the-low-inflation-trap-slightly-wonkish/

The Low-Inflation Trap (Slightly Wonkish)

Looking at recent numbers, I’ve realized that there’s something else to worry about, beyond all the usual concerns. Let me call it the low-inflation trap; it’s something we’re very, very close to getting into.

Usually we worry about a deflationary trap, which comes about as follows: suppose that the economy is depressed, that as a result prices begin falling, and interest rates are up against the zero lower bound. Then as deflationary expectations take hold, the real interest rate rises even as the nominal rate stays pinned at zero — and this rising real rate helps keep the economy depressed. Japan has been in this trap for a long time.

But here’s what I’ve been thinking: we don’t have to get all the way to actual deflation for something like this to take hold. The key point is that long-term interest rates, which are what matter for spending, are effectively bounded some ways above zero. The reason is option value: the short rate could move up, but it can’t go down, so the yield curve has to be upward-sloping. Indeed, Japan’s 10-year rate is still 1 percent even though the short rate has been zero for many years and is likely to stay zero for years to come. (Yes, this is Keynes on liquidity preference).

And you can make a pretty good case that the US 10-year rate would have a hard time moving much lower than it is now, even if people believe that we’re in full Lesser Depression mode.

What this means is that much of any further decline in expected inflation — which has plunged lately — will translate into a rise in real interest rates. And that will be a drag on the economy, leading to further inflation declines. Basically, we can get into the functional equivalent of a deflationary trap long before we reach actual deflation. And it starts around now.

Just trying to cheer everyone up.


http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/cepr-blog/krugman-notes-that-low-inflation-is-a-problem

Krugman Notes That Low Inflation Is a Problem

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Written by Dean Baker
Sunday, 25 September 2011 08:32
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For far too long economists and economics reporters have fixated on the prospect of deflation, as though something really bad happens if the inflation rate falls below zero and becomes negative. This is another one of the ungodly silly things that otherwise intelligent people are inclined to believe.

Of course there is zero magic to zero. The problem is not a negative inflation rate per se, the problem is an inflation rate that is too low.

Given the weakness of the economy, we would like a large negative real interest rate. The federal funds rate is zero, which is as low as it could go, and even the long-term rate is approaching its lower limits. (People holding long-term bonds at very low interest rates risk large capital losses if interest rates rise at some future point.) This means that to get the real interest rate down, we need to get the inflation rate up.

One can dispute how large a negative real interest rate we would want (according to some measures of the Taylor Rule, it should be as high as - 6.0 percent), but the basic story is the higher the better. In this context a prolonged period of very low inflation is bad, even though a period of low deflation would be even worse. However, crossing zero is just a difference of quantity, not quality. There is no reason to be more upset about a drop in the inflation rate from 0.5 percent to -1.5 percent, than a drop from 1.5 percent to 0.5 percent.

Krugman essentially makes this point in his blogpost yesterday. Hopefully this will help to end the obsession with deflation. The point being that everything is not okay as long as the inflation rate just stays positive. Some of us have been saying this for a while (e.g. here, hereand here), but it helps hugely to have Krugman making this point.