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The U.S. Economy, 2007 – Today: Collapse, Stimulus, Austerity, “Recovery” Robert Pollin Department of Economics and Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) University of Massachusetts-Amherst November 3, 2015
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Wall Street Hyper-speculation Caused the Great Recession Erosion of financial regulations over decades and formal repeal in 1998 led to massive bubble in U.S. housing market – Collapse of housing bubble was proximate cause of financial crisis and recession
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Collapse of U.S. Household Wealth
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Financial Market Collapse Transmitted to Real Economy Transmission begins immediately in U.S. economy, then moves to Europe
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Fall of U.S. Macro Indicators Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; OECD Statistics U.S. GDPU.S. Unemployment Narrow unemployment Broad unemployment 2007$14.9 Trillion4.6%8.8 (December) 2009$14.4 Trillion9.3%17.1 (December) Change from 2007 - 09 - 3.4% GDP Decline+ 4.7% rise in narrow unemployment +8.3% rise in broad unemployment
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Initial Response to Crisis: Large-Scale Countercyclical Interventions Three types of countercyclical interventions: – Fiscal Deficit Spending – Monetary Stimulus Targeting short-term interest rates Targeting long-term interest rates – Financial sector bailouts
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Federal Funds Rate After Crisis: Unprecedented Zero Interest Rate Policy 8
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Financial Market Bailouts U.S. Treasury Bailout of Banks – $800 billion Federal Reserve Bailout of Banks and Money Market – $2-3 trillion
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Bailout Operations Did Not Produce Immediate Recovery (of course) Shift in Priorities: – In mainstream circles, fundamental problem quickly becomes government debt, as opposed to mass unemployment, social crises Ascendency of Austerity Hawks
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Austerity Hawks as Variant on Neoliberalism Stimulus policies will create inflation and rising interest rates “Ricardian Equivalence” – Stimulus policies are always ineffective—R. Barro Public debt > 90% of GDP = growth collapse – Reinhart/Rogoff Austerity policies will be stimulus – Alberto Alisina—”confidence fairy” Capitalist economies are self-adjusting – Pigou effect/labor market flexibility
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Government Debt Grew but Interest Payments on Debt Reached Historic Lows 12
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No Rise in Inflation and Interest Rates 14
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But Weak Recovery 1: GDP Growth
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Weak Recovery 2: Unemployment
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Business Borrowing Rate Does Not Fall with Federal Funds Rate 17
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Credit Flows to Small Business Remains Weak 18
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Banks are Borrowing at Zero Interest Rate and Hoarding Cash 19
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U.S. Economy at Present Official unemployment down to 5.1%, but: – Including underemployed, labor market drop-outs, around 13% Wage stagnation and rising inequality – Top 1% received 91% of all income gains since 2009 Attack on Public Sector – Cuts in social services—food security cut for 47 million – Cut public sector worker wages – Attacks on public sector unions – Enable states to declare bankruptcy on public pension funds—Jeb Bush “Recovery “ as Neoliberal Restoration
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Alternatives to Austerity: Egalitarian Full Employment Agenda “People’s Quantitative Easing” Funding public investments through central bank municipal bond purchases – “Pulling on a String” – Employment expansion-1 Restore State and Municipal Government Spending: – Employment expansion--2 “Robin Hood” Financial Market Taxes Living Wages Green Growth
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