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There Could be a Green Lining in Those Dark Clouds of Recession

By Dean Baker, Comment Is Free. Posted January 17, 2008.


If policy-makers would think outside the box, a stimulus package to mitigate the recession might have a real impact.

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According to the business press, a near majority of economists are now predicting recessions. Economists don't predict recessions. Almost all of them missed both the 2001 and the 1990-1991 recessions. Economists' predictions of a recession are a lagging indicator showing that we are in fact in a recession. The economists' predictions go along with a large collection of other data - rising unemployment rates, crashing house sales and slumping retail sales - all of which indicate that the economy has likely entered a recession. The fact that even economists now recognise the economy's dire straights just seals the case.

Recessions, especially in election years, bring calls for stimulus, and we are hearing those calls now. The crew that managed to somehow overlook an $8 trillion housing bubble is running around calling for a "timely, targeted and temporary" stimulus package. The frequency with which this mantra is being repeated demonstrates that the collapse of the housing bubble has not yet increased the demand for original thinking in Washington policy circles.

But, those of us who keep a safe distance from these circles can still indulge. First, there should be no doubt that stimulus is needed, and almost certainly more than the $70-$100bn figure being tossed around. A reasonable target would be 1% of GDP, which would be almost $150bn in 2008. While any stimulus figure is somewhat arbitrary, the question is the relative risk of erring on the low or the high side. If we err on the low side, then we are not doing enough to support the economy and create jobs. If we err on the high side, ostensibly we would be creating too much demand and risking inflation.

House prices are currently falling at a rate that will destroy $2.2tn in value over the next year. This will not only wreak further havoc on the housing and mortgage market; it will also put a huge damper on consumer spending. Does anyone who knows the numbers believe that a stimulus equal to 1% of GDP will create excess demand in today's economy?

The second question is where to direct the stimulus. Some items are no-brainers. This list includes extending unemployment benefits to cover longer stretches of unemployment, aid to state and local governments to cover budget shortfalls and general tax rebates comparable to $300 per taxpayer check that was mailed out in the last recession.

However, we can also see the stimulus as a chance to get a foot in the door on advancing a green agenda designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. At the top of this list would be a generous tax credit for installing energy efficient improvements to homes or businesses. This one should also be a no-brainer since it could directly re-employ many of the workers laid off in the construction sector. While a similar programme had limited impact in 2004-2006, contractors will be far more energetic in pursuing this business now that the housing bubble has left them with few alternatives.

A second effective form of green stimulus would be to subsidise mass transit ridership. There are approximately 10 billion trips a year on buses, light rail or commuter rail trains. If the federal government gave transit agencies $10bn to reduce the average fare on these trips by $1, this would be a very quick way to get an additional $10bn into the hands of mass transit users. This would be a very progressive tax cut, which would also have the lasting benefit of promoting public transportation.

If we really want to think outside of the box, we can use some of the stimulus to promote pay-by-the-mile insurance policies. These insurance policies are green because they give drivers a strong disincentive to drive. If insurance were paid on a per mile basis, it would provide roughly the same disincentive to drive as a $2-per-gallon gas tax.

Suppose that the federal government paid a $300 subsidy for every pay-by-the-mile policy. This would give insurers a strong incentive to offer these policies and effectively put $300 in the pocket of every driver who switches to paying by the mile. While this policy would take somewhat longer to implement than the other two, the good news is that the recession is likely to be long enough that we could still benefit from the stimulus a year or two down the road.

There are many other ways to structure a stimulus so that it can help to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. If we just accept the idea that it is possible to walk and chew gum at the same time, we can structure a stimulus package that also produces real gains for the environment.

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See more stories tagged with: stimulus, green jobs, recession

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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pulsatillajanet
Posted by: pulsatillajanet on Jan 17, 2008 10:59 AM   
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Good ideas! I was concerned about the effect of recession on global warming: recessions tend to put environmental issues on a back burner.

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unevenly
Posted by: unevenly on Jan 17, 2008 12:13 PM   
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Of all the idiocies of the bush administration, it's original economic stimulus package was amongst the worst. At a time when we were drowning in investment capital, the administration's program was almost entirely aimed at increasing the amount of investment capital. The proper economic stimulus package would have been massive infrastructure investments, which create good jobs and widespread business activities, with long term future payoffs rather than more national debt.

One interesting green economic stimulus package would be a massive govt investment in making all federal buildings and facilities carbon neutral. This would create a market for solar systems, small scale local water- and wind- generating projects, etc.

Increasing the market for alternate energy systems and conservation will lower prices and promote innovation, and the sheer numbers of fed facilities would directly impact US carbon emissions.

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Anyone who knows what's coming knows that they stimulous package must be large and targeted to work
Posted by: yellow on Jan 18, 2008 12:05 PM   
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Nearly $200 billion in lost equity in home foreclosures, over $2 trillion in lost market house price value resulting in massive household indebtedness and $174 billion thus far in subprime writedowns are just some of the problems that have led to the current stock market declines and slowdown in the economy. Consumer spending has slowed due to growing uncertainty and non-residential investment has declined. Any stimulous package should be focused on the poor and middle classes. Tax cuts for the rich won't help the economy at this point if indeed they ever have in recent times.

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The problem with liberal economists ...
Posted by: CounterCorp on Jan 25, 2008 2:45 AM   
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... like Dean Baker is that they insist on using the same orthodox economics that conservatives used to get us into the current mess as the basis to both explain and supposedly solve the problem.

Case in point: Baker was one of the first economists to correctly observe that we were in a housing "bubble" — which, after all, is defined as an unwarranted and unsustainable over-valuation of assets caused by speculation.

In other words, it is an artificial valuation based on nothing more than in the greed of speculators — coupled with the psychology and ignorance of the those who follow after them, and in so doing actually help them bid up the price of the things that the speculators ultimately plan to sell to those come after them, at a profit.

And yet, now that the bubble has burst, he writes that "[h]ouse prices are currently falling at a rate that will destroy $2.2 trillion in value over the next year."

Excuse me? "Value"? Exactly what value is that? The kind of non-existent and thus ultimately unsustainable value that eventually and inevitably disappears when the bubble bursts, because it isn't based on anything real — other than real greed and ignorance?

How can so-called "value" that never existed anywhere but on paper be "destroyed"? What exactly was destroyed other than people's unsubstantiated belief in something that Baker himself said months ago was illusory, ephemeral, and fleeting?

The loss of that non-existent "value" is the same as if housing prices had never soared undeservedly, which they wouldn't have done in the first place if markets and lenders were regulated in the way that guys like Baker say they should be. So how can an end to a form of fraud in which speculators fool people into overpaying for something that was never worth that much be described as "destroying value"?

Baker then goes on to say that:

"This [loss of non-existent value] will not only wreak further havoc on the housing and mortgage market; it will also put a huge damper on consumer spending."

But is was precisely people using their over-valued houses as credit cards (by re-mortgaging them or getting loans against that over-speculated value) that has contributed to the current credit crisis and left the U.S. economy unsupported by any real assets underlying our spending. Buying stuff with credit based on inflated house prices should is hardly the basis for an economy, much less the biggest in the world.

Yet Baker tells us that the apparent end to this speculation-based spending binge will "wreak more havoc" on the housing market — by ending the soaring inflation that created the original havoc, and thus reverting housing prices to their true level!

Thus, according to Baker, the speculative housing bubble and the bursting of that bubble and the resultant return to pre-bubble prices that more accurately reflect reality are equally bad.

Similarly, the consumer spending binge financed by those inflated housing prices (along with other forms of "easy" credit) — which has artificially sustained an otherwise declining U.S. economy — and the end of that unsupported and unsustainable spending (and the resulting consumer debt crisis) are equally bad.

Keep spending or else, the orthodox economists tell us; an over-inflated and unsustainable economy can not be allowed to recede to a more realistic and natural level — because doing so would, um, hurt the economy. Brilliant.

Orthodox economics simply does not allow for the idea of sufficiency, or of a "steady state" economy in which people's needs and their productivity are allowed to achieve a natural, sustainable balance.

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