Galbraith: Listen to Galbraith or the Economy Gets It!

by Will Wilkinson on March 19, 2009

James K. Galbraith’s Washington Monthly piece “No Return to Normal” is a mix of the completely sensible (propping up bad banks is a recipe for further looting by insiders and more stupid risk-taking) and a totally crazy conviction that modern states are economically magical institutions. That is, it is a James K. Galbraith piece. Here is some crazy:

Apart from cash—protected by deposit insurance and now desperately being conserved—the American middle class finds today that its major source of wealth is the implicit value of Social Security and Medicare—illiquid and intangible but real and inalienable in a way that home and equity values are not. And so it will remain, as long as future benefits are not cut.

Yes, 401(k)s are down, and Galbraith’s thesis seems to be that they always will be unless… guess what? But, okay, suppose he’s right and there is no recovery if we fail to embrace James K. Galbraithianism. In what crazy world does the economy both (a) fail to recover and (b) the government make good on already completely infeasible entitlement commitments? And how bizarre is it to say in the space of two sentences that a source of wealth is “real and inalienable” just as long as benefits are not cut through the democratic process — which of course they can be and probably must be if Galbraith is right about the likelihood of a no-recovery future. If voters can lose some portion of future government transfers by voting for politicians who vote them away, then those transfers are obviously alienable. (The courts clearly say there is no legal right whatsoever to these transfers.) And alienable future transfers from the government that are conditional on political will and economic feasibility are about as “real” as my future lovechild with Gisele Bundchen. Does anyone have an interpretation of Galbraith’s passage that makes sense?

He later goes on to claim, amazingly, that increasing spending on Social Security is “an economic recovery ace in the hole.” So the best I can do is guess that Galbraith is incoherently shuffling back and forth from a scenario in which we don’t use his “ace in the hole” (investments and home values worthless forever!) and one in which we do (Social Security checks good as gold.) But that’s hardly fair, is it? 

A main theme of Galbraith’s article is that things are so bad that mainstream economics can be of no assistance, so you’ve got to go heterodox. But he says nothing to clarify why, if we must abandon the consensus views of professional economics, one should prefer Galbraithianism over other departures from othodoxy. He seems to infer his own views from the alleged failure of standard views. It is rather gentle to note that that doesn’t follow. For example:

In short, if we are in a true collapse of finance, our models will not serve. It is then appropriate to reach back, past the postwar years, to the experience of the Great Depression. And this can only be done by qualitative and historical analysis. Our modern numerical models just don’t capture the key feature of that crisis—which is, precisely, the collapse of the financial system.

I largely agree about the inapplicability of many models, but it’s not at all obvious that the experience of the Great Depression is more rather than less applicable than those models. The Depression was a long time ago. The economy was a lot different then. If one is going to do “qualitative and historical analysis” then it seems that recent collpases in the financial systems of other countries are rather more germane. Why not look at those instead of reaching back “past the postwar years”? Because there’s some ineffable but essential Americanness to the American economy? Galbraith actually seems to think so, which is why one must look away from the examples of Argentina and Indonesia! This seems arbitrary and I don’t get it. Of course, if we go back to the Great Depression, we just become mired in competing “qualitative and historical” analyses, which in reality tends to sound a lot like “Must destroy Amity Shlaes!!!” And that’s obviously a lot more intellectually rigorous and helpful than stupid mainstream economists with their stupid mainstream models.

  • Mr. Econotarian
    Um, they have already reduced Social Security through taxing benefits. I am certain there will be more means-testing for Social Security in the future.
  • Graphite
    "the American middle class finds today that its major source of wealth is the implicit value of Social Security and Medicare"

    In other words, taxpayers are on the ropes and have no money, but they can at least look forward to being paid off by a program whose revenues are derived entirely from more burdensome taxation.

    Oh wait, I'm sorry, Social Security has that huge trust fund consisting of U.S. Treasury debt, which is *money good*, as long as enough income and wealth can be confiscated from future taxpayers (whether through higher tax rates or the Keynesian preferred, backdoor method of inflation).

    Sheesh ... this kind of economic reasoning does Rube Goldberg proud.
  • John V
    economics will forever be one of those disciplines whose complex discussions will always be a intricate weaving of economic analysis with personal assumptions.

    Sticking to plain ol' economics will always seem boring and incredibly obvious (if not a bit helpful in finding a hands-on solution) or overly technical and indigestible (if not bit unhelpful in finding a clear-cut and certain) solution.

    "a mix of the completely sensible (propping up bad banks is a recipe for further looting by insiders and more stupid risk-taking) and a totally crazy conviction that modern states are economically magical institutions."

    The social democrat pulsating below Galbraith's economist veneer cannot add much of anything new to the crisis discussion without gluing economics together with his assumptions. He may or may not even know he's doing it.

    I think it's difficult for any economist to leave certain ideological assumptions and priors aside when making economic commentary.
  • lxm
    Reading your article makes me think that James Galbraith must be Naomi Klein in drag!

    I never got that the first time through his article and, you know, second time through it still doesn't seem that way.

    What type of eyeglasses do you wear anyway?
  • Paul Zrimsek
    Calling SS and Medicare a source of wealth is a lot like calling hydrogen fuel a source of energy.
  • Kevin
    Because their isn't enough Hydrogen fuel? Or because Hydrogen fuel as actually a means of energy storage?
  • Paul Zrimsek
    Storage. If everything works out as planned, you get almost as much energy out as you put in.
  • uknowbetter
    Government as magic wand is a common trope of the left.

    They don't need resources, rationality, or anything else for that matter; if they have the magic wand and the "right people" in charge, then they just wave the wand, write words on a piece of paper, and it magically happens.
  • Okay, after reading more, I see that my confusion is partly related to the idea that he was referring to "middle class people who have just lost their jobs and are in financial ruin." Which leaves mainly your critique of "how can we pay more into these if the economy doesn't recover?"
  • "the American middle class finds today that its major source of wealth is the implicit value of Social Security and Medicare"

    What? Is this really true? I don't even know if I'm "middle class" or not, but I'm 28 and I have company-provided health insurance, so I don't see SS or medicare as really being part of my "wealth" -- rather they seem to be taking money out of my paycheck, which is what I do consider part of my "wealth". I'm willing to accept that I am ignorantly misunderstanding his comments, but then I'm just begging for someone to explain this to me.
  • The average American family has a net worth of around $50,000.

    The current average Social Security payment is $1,056.30/month.

    I believe the current value of your expected SS payments varies depending on how much you make and how old you are, but one annuity I found that would start paying me $1,056.30/month when I turned 65 was...$159,715.
  • I think Galbraith may be considering unemployment benefits and Temporary Assist for Needy Families as "social security", after I looked around. As opposed to just "the money you get at 65."

    The wikipedia article (disclaimer here) considers tthem part of SS:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Security_(U...)
  • I think Galbraith is talking about plain old Social Security, Brian.

    And I also think he's saying that one of the original reasons SS was set up, because Americans did such a poor job planning for retirement, is as true today as it was 60 years ago.

    A negative savings rate followed by a 50% drop in value for most families' primary investment is a recipe for reliance on government retirement programs.
  • He might be making an interesting argument, but to really look at it don't we need ... what would an economist look at, the "net present value" of future SS and MC to a 50 year old? Then compare that to average net worth in that demographic?

    Without that, I can't comment.

    I also expect that when he looks at SS as a short term growth engine, he is looking at near term payments which don't push up NPV.
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: