mike777 Posted November 6, 2010 Report Share Posted November 6, 2010 Is there a typo in the headline or is there a school called Havard (as opposed to Harvard)? The caption on the picture says Harvard but it is odd. Usually a caption actually gives the name of the person. Taken at face value the article quotes an unidentified professor at Havard and shows a picture of an unidentified professor at Harvard. Then we go on to the content. The whole think looks like a spoof article, something the Onion would probably reject. At any rate, if higher taxes would result in this gentleman not publishing anything else, I say let's hear it for higher taxes. Again if higher taxes will make you posters work longer hours, away from your family and loved ones...so be it. If higher taxes is the way to create more jobs...I am for it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N._Gregory_Mankiw Nicholas Gregory "Greg" Mankiw (pronounced /ˈmæn.kjuː/; born February 3, 1958) is an American macroeconomist. From 2003 to 2005, Mankiw was the chairman of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisors. His publications are ranked among the most influential of the over 22,000 economists registered with RePEc.[1] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
luke warm Posted November 6, 2010 Report Share Posted November 6, 2010 Nicholas Gregory "Greg" Mankiw (pronounced /ˈmæn.kjuː/; born February 3, 1958) is an American macroeconomist. From 2003 to 2005, Mankiw was the chairman of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisors. His publications are ranked among the most influential of the over 22,000 economists registered with RePEc.nonetheless, he (and friedman) have written and spoken in economic terms with which most posters seem to disagree (loads of crap, havard-educated, etc, don't ya know) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted November 6, 2010 Author Report Share Posted November 6, 2010 I am prepared to accept that he has considerable credentials. But in his little tale, he is not drawing on vast theory, he is telling a story that he thinks to be convincing. I suppose I shouldn't damn all economists by this one story but I often feel that they develop their theories based on unrealistic assumptions on human behavior. There was a time in my life when the first, perhaps the only, question I asked about a job was how much does it pay. I am happy to report that that time is now in the past. And so I would expect it to be for the Professor. As to building up a legacy to leave the kids, my kids have jobs and make their own money. No doubt they will accept and use any money that they inherit, but neither I nor they are making job decisions in anticipation of this. From time to time I take on jobs of various sorts since retirement. The thoughts that go into accepting the task fall along the lines of "Is it interesting/worthwhile?", "Do I have the time?", "Will I be able to do a good job of it?". I am certain that I have never consulted the tax rates to decide whether I should or should not accept the offered task. If the Prof, whose wealth no doubt considerably exceeds mine, really makes his decisions in the way he describes, I would find that amazing. It matters. He presents his story to explain his views on taxes. If the story he presents has no resemblance to how people of his wealth actually make their decisions, then it is useless except as propaganda. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
helene_t Posted November 6, 2010 Report Share Posted November 6, 2010 It matters. He presents his story to explain his views on taxes. If the story he presents has no resemblance to how people of his wealth actually make their decisions, then it is useless except as propaganda. It was thoughts like this that made me skip economics and go into biology instead. For an applied mathematician, economics sometimes feels like black magic. As applied mathematicians we are used to making strict distinction between the inference that can be made within our models (a subject in which we have authority) and the inference that can be made in the real world (on which we have much less authority). And working in a research lab, I usually have the luxury of having an audience (the scientists that make use of the models) that understand this distinction. Economists work with models that are (IMHO) in general further detached from the real world than the models of most other scientists are. At the same time, they have an audience who doesn't quite so well understand the distinction, and/or who need to make decision facing uncertainty. If a scientists is clueless, he just admits "sorry, I have no clue about this". This is a respectable position and free his time to go on to work on questions on which he does have a clue. If an economic decision maker is clueless he has to make some decision anyway. Defaulting to his gut feelings (or personal interests, maybe), but is always nice if the applied mathematicians can still supply him with some lip service. All this said: I think your attitude to work decisions are somewhat atypical. Consider, as the opposite extreme, a single mother on less-than-subsistence income, who is facing the decision of taking a regular job, the alternative being some combination of benefits, begging, crime, prostitution and some home decoration services which she doesn't report to the revenue service. I bet the amount of taxes she would have to pay on the regular income factors in for her. But ok, that may suggest that lowering taxes for low-income people is more effective than lowering it for high-income people. Which I think generally is the case but OK this belief is probably influenced by my preference for low income disparity. I could then give you another example: an entrepreneur in the online gambling industry who is considering to set up his business in Bahamas as opposed to Florida. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
luke warm Posted November 7, 2010 Report Share Posted November 7, 2010 I am prepared to accept that he has considerable credentials.me too, since (from the link), "His publications are ranked among the most influential of the over 22,000 economists registered with RePEc."... ranked by whom enters into this, i guess... one would suppose the ranking is by those 22,000, some of whom, i'm sure (or i hope), understand these things Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted November 7, 2010 Author Report Share Posted November 7, 2010 me too, since (from the link), "His publications are ranked among the most influential of the over 22,000 economists registered with RePEc."... ranked by whom enters into this, i guess... one would suppose the ranking is by those 22,000, some of whom, i'm sure (or i hope), understand these things Yes, and Harvard does not, for the most part, hire idiots. (I can't speak for Havard.) But then Krugman has a Nobel Prize. Ah yes, and so does Obama. What's a guy to do? Creds flying everywhere. It is simply not possible that everyone who has impressive credentials is correct. But credentials or not, right or not, I don't much care for his argument. I think Einstein once said something like "An explanation should be made as simple as possible but not more so". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 7, 2010 Report Share Posted November 7, 2010 A few disparate points: Everyone assumes that if you raise taxes you will get paid less, but it is not clear at all that this is the case. In a mobile job market it is more the case that a job requiring certain skills commands a certain salary, and you have to pay that salary regardless of the taxes, so taxes make each worker more expensive to the company, rather than resulting in people getting paid less. You can see this very clearly in things like post doctoral positions where it is common to move country. The salaries appear to vary widely, but once you take the local taxes into consideration they become quite similar. Obviously, not all workers are mobile, but the highly skilled tend to be. I know a lot of lawyers who have gone to offices in the USA (from England) and most offices here seem to have a number of foreigners working at them. The argument about rich people not spending efficiently is entirely spurious. The point is that rich people dont need to *spend* their money, they can *invest* it instead. Even if a rich person cares nothing about investing, they will keep their money in a bank who will invest it on their behalf. This is known as "capitalisation" - i.e. its generally a good thing if the citizens of your country accumulate wealth for investing, as then when new opportunities arise there are many people who have the potential to take advantage of it. Could go back to a farming analogy again: it takes peasant farmers a long time to save up for their first tractor, but then they make a lot more profit and can buy the second one quicker. Of course, quickest of all is if there happens to be a rich person who will lend them money to buy a tractor. Now the rich guy gets a share of the profits but the farmer is still better off than before, and the economy as a whole does better because the land is farmed more productively for longer. The argument that taxes inhibit growth is compelling. Essentially all growth comes from some kinda trade. I trade my specialised labour for someone elses etc. I undertake these trades if I think they are "profitable" where I have some way (not purely economic in general) of working out the "profit" in such a trade. All taxes will make some marginal trades go from "profitable" to "unprofitable". Of course, there are ways in which governments can enhance growth by, for example, infrastructure spending. But, it is unclear that in the absence of government spending these things would not happen anyway. All of Britain's railway network was originally built by private investors, and it has been in steady decline since the government nationalised it. Gregory mankiw has an interesting blog. He is america's second most cited economist after becker who also have an interesting blog. For those of you wondering why milton is not americas most cited economist, people didn't care nearly as much about citations in the good old days of academia, so citation counting strongly favours more recent economists (in the old days economists tended to publish fewer but better papers). http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com/http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PassedOut Posted November 7, 2010 Report Share Posted November 7, 2010 The argument about rich people not spending efficiently is entirely spurious. The point is that rich people dont need to *spend* their money, they can *invest* it instead.The velocity is lower compared to spending by folks with lower income. So the argument is not entirely spurious. The argument that taxes inhibit growth is compelling.My intuition tells me that also. But the argument would be even more compelling if the actual data didn't contradict it. And it's clear that if taxes get too low, economic growth will be inhibited as well. Government investments in infrastructure, education, safety, and health all promote economic growth, and those investment depend upon taxes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
helene_t Posted November 8, 2010 Report Share Posted November 8, 2010 Dunno why one would expect taxes to inhibit growth. If the government sucks up money that would otherwise be spent on consumption, and spend them on investment in infrastructure and education, I would expect it to stimulate growth. Of course there are obvious arguments for the opposite, I just don't see why one would necessarily expect the nett effect to be growth inhibition. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 8, 2010 Report Share Posted November 8, 2010 Dunno why one would expect taxes to inhibit growth. If the government sucks up money that would otherwise be spent on consumption, and spend them on investment in infrastructure and education, I would expect it to stimulate growth. Of course there are obvious arguments for the opposite, I just don't see why one would necessarily expect the nett effect to be growth inhibition. Government's typically spend very little of their budget on economically useful investments. E.g., only a few % of britians transport budget is spend on investment, the rest is a government subsidy. Most of the NHS budget is spent on retirees. One does not mean to say that these do not have value, they just don't have "economics" value. Decisions about how much to tax are always based on more than economic merit. Also, left to their own devices the private sector will normally do a significant amount of investment. However, once government makes it their job to invest in infrastructure private investment will dry up. At least, that is what has happened historically. It may be the case that the vast increase in the price of land, particularly in britian, has made infrastructure investment impractically expensive for private investors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PassedOut Posted November 8, 2010 Report Share Posted November 8, 2010 Government's typically spend very little of their budget on economically useful investments. E.g., only a few % of britians transport budget is spend on investment, the rest is a government subsidy. Most of the NHS budget is spent on retirees. One does not mean to say that these do not have value, they just don't have "economics" value. Decisions about how much to tax are always based on more than economic merit.Government subsidies to people who actually spend the money is certainly economically useful. Businesses use that money just as effectively as if it came from doctors or teachers. And in cases where the government performs a necessary function more efficiently than does the private sector, one cannot properly say that the government's doing so impedes growth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 8, 2010 Report Share Posted November 8, 2010 Government subsidies to people who actually spend the money is certainly economically useful. Businesses use that money just as effectively as if it came from doctors or teachers. And in cases where the government performs a necessary function more efficiently than does the private sector, one cannot properly say that the government's doing so impedes growth. government subsidies for useful activities are normally close to neutral - they just change who pays. Things like education are useful obviously, but tend to make up a small proportion of government spending. In england the government budget is about 640bn, 190bn for social security, 100bn for the NHS 40bn for defence, 60bn for education etc. It is clear that, for example, national defence is not particularly useful for growth, but is nevertheless necessary. All government spending is capital extracted from the economy, and the financial industry tends to make sure that capital never lies idle for long, so all government spending tends to be an alternative to private investment. Thus good government spending tends to be neutral, in that it just changes where the investment goes. Bad government spending is wasteful. Nevertheless there are a lot of things that only governments can do, and it would be facetious to say that one should maek taxation policy purely on the grounds of stimulating growth. I am not in favour of disantling the NHS! :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 My intuition tells me that also. But the argument would be even more compelling if the actual data didn't contradict it. Yes... a lot of famous economists have said that cutting taxes stimulates GDP growth. But the data simply doesn't support it. Sure, there could be other things going on that explain the seemingly positive correlation between a high top income tax rate and high GDP growth... but the correlation is pretty consistent over the last 60 years. If we look at the way the economy is functioning right now, there are actually a number of corporations making record profits (oil companies come to mind). Many of these companies are building up huge cash reserves -- apparently there's over a trillion dollars of this kind of cash built up. But these companies are not hiring... they're just sitting on their profits. Do we really think that if we gave these companies a big tax cut, such that they'd make even more billions in profits on top of the billions they already make, that they would suddenly start hiring people? I doubt it. Perhaps it would be better for the government to raise corporate tax rates (perhaps also instituting a big deduction for companies with large numbers of domestic employees), forcing these companies to choose between using their profits to hire more people, or giving a big chunk of their profits to the government so that the government can use it to hire more people. As for investing, it's certainly true that wealthy people often have investments. But there are a few reasons this doesn't necessarily stimulate the economy. One is that they can easily invest in overseas companies or commodities (which presumably stimulates other countries' economies but not ours). Another is that they often do have money sitting in savings accounts and the like, and that banks do have to maintain some percentage in capital, meaning that only part of their money is actually invested. Another is that the some investments help the economy more than others... investing in real businesses over the long term helps these companies to obtain capital, hire, and therefore grow the economy... but the type of trading that hedge funds do (very short term investments taking advantage of market fluctuations) does less to stimulate the economy... and this type of investment is pretty popular these days. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 "Sitting on profits". While its true that they are, that does not mean that the money is not being used usefully. It means that the oil companies have given their profits to banks. Companies "sitting on profits" is exactly what will help banks to recapitalise in the short term. In the long terms, that money will be invested by the banks. That is what the financial industry does. While it is true that the financial industry has to keep a fraction back to pay out should someone want to withdraw, nearly all money given to banks as savings ends up invested somewhere, often given out in small loans to business. If rich people give their money to banks, then it *is* invested, whether they bother to do so intentionally or not. Re overseas investment, that is true, but overseas investment is good in the long run, because it creates consumers for your goods etc. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mgoetze Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 "Sitting on profits". While its true that they are, that does not mean that the money is not being used usefully. It means that the oil companies have given their profits to banks. Companies "sitting on profits" is exactly what will help banks to recapitalise in the short term. Uhm, no. Recapitalising banks does not mean giving them more of other peoples' money to play with. It means giving them more money that actually belongs to them so that they are better placed if they play with other peoples' money in the wrong way. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 Uhm, no. Recapitalising banks does not mean giving them more of other peoples' money to play with. It means giving them more money that actually belongs to them so that they are better placed if they play with other peoples' money in the wrong way. there are not two separate pots of money, there is only money. Banks can wait for loan repayments without lending, that will recapitalise them slowly, or if people deposit money that will also recapitalise them. When you deposit money you agree to allow them to invest it on your behalf, that is why they pay interest. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PassedOut Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 there are not two separate pots of money, there is only money. Banks can wait for loan repayments without lending, that will recapitalise them slowly, or if people deposit money that will also recapitalise them.Remember that money itself is not the economy. Money is used to facilitate the transfer of goods and services. The faster that a given sum of money circulates (its velocity), the greater the impact that sum has on the growth of the economy. A big problem now is the large amount of money that is not available for fast circulation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mgoetze Posted November 9, 2010 Report Share Posted November 9, 2010 there are not two separate pots of money, there is only money. LOL. Sorry, you have fundamentally misunderstood something. But since you don't seem to be interested in getting a correct explanation I won't bother. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted November 10, 2010 Author Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 I suppose data rules here. But as always, I have opinions. I have some money in the bank. I don't really think of it as an investment, simply a place to put it. Of course the bank may do something with it but they seem to be quite cautious these days. Here is an amusing (not to the letter writer) example from the Post:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/05/AR2010110505627.html?nav=hcmoduletmv I also have been reading, in various sources not hard to find, that the total credit card debt has been shrinking over the past year. It's relevant, I think. I believe the total cc debt comes close to $3,000 per person, man woman and child. In these tough times, people are cutting back and if they get some cash they are, very sensibly imo, paying down their debt. This may mean that even getting money into the hands of the average Joe may not boost spending all that much. This is different from the past. There was a time when I had a car with a good engine and a bad body, I bought a similar model for 35 bucks with a good body and a bad engine, and did a transplant. Later, when my finances improved, I bought a new Dodge Dart. If it needed work (seldom, it was a good car) it went to a mechanic. I got more money, I spent more money. Now, people are in hock up to their eyebrows, and they are scared. They get more money, they pay off some debt. I remain in favor of them getting the money, but it may not have the same impact as it once did. So what I see is that the banks get money but they are very cautions. Joe Six-Pack gets more money, he pays off his credit card. I get more money, I stuff it in the bank. Boosting consumer demand will not be so easy. Incidentally If the Republicans want to insist that the tax cuts expire for everyone or for no one, I say let them expire for everyone. I have played chicken for real, I'm fine with a financial version. I recall one of these High Noon things they played with Clinton. It didn't work out so well for them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 10, 2010 Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 I suppose data rules here. But as always, I have opinions. I have some money in the bank. I don't really think of it as an investment, simply a place to put it. Of course the bank may do something with it but they seem to be quite cautious these days. In these tough times, people are cutting back and if they get some cash they are, very sensibly imo, paying down their debt. This may mean that even getting money into the hands of the average Joe may not boost spending all that much. So what I see is that the banks get money but they are very cautions. Joe Six-Pack gets more money, he pays off his credit card. I get more money, I stuff it in the bank. Individuals and banks have both been burned by excessive debt. We could see this another way though - its easy to see how debt can artificially inflate gdp, perhaps this recession is just returning consumer spending to a sustainable path, and a retail sector that expanded based on "overspending" by will be forced to shrink during the "underspend". Afterall, if no one had borrowed any money on their credit cards the retail sector would be considerably smaller than it is now - $3000 per person is a significant overspend. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted November 10, 2010 Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 I think this is a misperception. Most indv and banks were burned by the recession, a severe recession. At the very least banks did not have "excessive debt". The concern was that their assets were worthless or close to worthless. Note even today the complaint is banks dont lend(create assets) more, alot more. Note that inflation will make these assets(loans) worth even less. No one really understands what causes a recession. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 10, 2010 Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 I don't really think of it as an investment, simply a place to put it. Many people think this, but nothing could be further from the truth. At its heart, the financial industry is all about putting other peoples money to work. You deposit your savings, and the bank loans it out to a company who buys a new tractor so they can farm more efficiently, and everyone makes money. That, at least, is the idea. The reason the financial industry makes money is that it can allocate capital more efficiently than an individual saver, and it pays you a % of the profits for the use of your capital. At any given time a bank typically has between 4-10% of its balance sheet in "ready money" to pay out to people who want to withdraw and to make use of new investment opportunities. The other 90 odd % is "at work" one way or the other. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted November 10, 2010 Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 At the very least banks did not have "excessive debt". Note even today the complaint is banks dont lend more, alot more. By excessive debt, I really mean "excessive leverage" in the case of banks - but perhaps that does not even adequately express the problem. Banks allowed their capital cushions to shrink by lending too much, some were as low as 4%. Mostly because they felt that some of the items they were trading in could easily be converted into "ready money". At the moment, no one wants to buy complex financial instruments, and it is not (necessarily) very easy for a bank to turn its (other) investments back into ready cash. E.g. A lot of banking investments are in the forms of loans which are paid in instalments. As the instalments come in the investment reverts in stages back into ready cash. However, the bank cannot covert the full value into cash instantly - if it calls in its loans (which it may not be able to do legally anyway) often the firm cannot pay as they already used it to buy something. Banks seem to be aiming to have about 10% of their balance sheets in ready cash, since they are trying to increase their capital cushions, that necessarily means that they have to lend less (as that would shrink their capital cushions). Government want the banks to be "safe" (ie have more capital) but also to lend more (which would mean lending out the capital) and there is a clear tension between these goals. Its unclear how much personal debt is to blame for this recession, clearly a lot of people are paying down their debt, which will clearly make a recession worse, but how much? In generally its good policy to save up in good times in preparation for bad times - and if people in generally had done this then they would be in a much better position to weather the downturn, and it would likely have had a smaller effect on consumer spending. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted November 10, 2010 Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 Speaking of foreclosures, fwiw regarding munis: If, if the risk of a default spike at the low-quality end of the spectrum is very real there are several ways to short munis. 1) short etf's and closed-end muni funds. 2) muni credit default swaps...yes these are the things hedge funds made a killing on, see the Markit MCDX index. 3) short the stock of bond insurers,, mbia, ambac assured guaranty and berkshire hathaway. 4) short rating agencies stock....moody's, standard and poors, fitch 5) short stock owners and underwriters of munis; citigroup, state street, us bancorp, bofa, barclays,,,insurance companies such as aig or travelers insurance... Of course all of this means you must be willing to accept some risk. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted November 10, 2010 Author Report Share Posted November 10, 2010 As I am sure you would expect, I won't be investing in any of that stuff. I don't understand it and I am more than content with my ignorance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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