Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Austerity vs. Growth: Lessons for the U.S. Economy

On Friday, March 1, 2013, the University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law will host a timely and important symposium "Austerity vs. Growth: Lessons for the U.S. Economy."  Utah Law Professor Christian Johnson has organized a conference that will examine austerity measures as employed in Europe and the implications of those measures on the United States.  "'Given the current fiscal debate going on Washington and that the sequestration budget cuts are scheduled to begin on March 1, there has never been a program that is more timely,' said conference organizer Professor Christian Johnson. 'The program has been geared to enable everyone from the expert to the neophyte to understand the key debates and issues that need to be decided at this time.  The key note and panel discussions should provide welcome clarity to the difficult fiscal and economic decisions that our country has to make at this time.' According to Johnson, the all-day event will generally ask whether austerity policies will help or harm the U.S. economy."

The keynote lecture will be delivered by Kern Alexander, Chair of Law and Finance at the University of Zurich. Panelists include Clay Lowery, former Assistant Secretary for International Affairs at the U.S. Treasury Department; Dr. Tim Kane, Chief Economist at the Hudson Institute, Dr. Tara Rice, Chief, Global Financial Institutions, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, George Sutton, Partner, Jones Waldo Holbrook & McDonough, Professor Jeffrey Schwartz, University of Utah College of Law, Professor Steven Ramirez, Loyola University School of Law, Director Corporate Law Center, Professor Christian Johnson, University of Utah College of Law, Professor Jose Gabilondo, Florida International University School of Law, and Professor andre douglas pond cummings, Indiana Tech Law School.

The event will take place in the Sutherland Moot Court Room at the S.J. Quinney College of Law and is free and open to the public, though registration is required.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Troubling News (Again) Out of Arizona

Arpaio speaking at a Tea Party rally
The Corporate Justice Blog has tackled the prison industrial complex in the past and new news out of Arizona seems to indicate more troubling policies for those interested in sane and safe prison and police policies in the United States.  Controversial Sheriff Joe Arpaio is now sending volunteer law enforcement "posse's" out into communities his agency is sworn to protect in order to patrol near elementary, middle and high schools, none of which requested these additional patrols.  Perhaps most troubling in this new posse policy, is that these volunteer members are neither paid nor trained well before being deployed, some with guns on hip, to administer Arpaio's often unconstitutional policies.

Salon's Chris Feliciano Arnold describes this new mess in great detail in "Sheriff Joe's Posse Invades Guadalupe: The Controversial Sheriff Puts His 'Good Guys' With Guns Around Arizona Schools - They Might Be The Real Threat."  Sheriff Arpaio is currently being sued by the Department of Justice for alleged civil rights violations and other routine unconstitutional activity.


[photo courtesy of Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons]

Friday, February 1, 2013

The Cost of LAWLESS CAPITALISM


Recent weeks revealed new depths of lawlessness at the apex of the American economy. First, in early December we learned in connection with HSBC criminality that the Department of Justice will not prosecute financial criminals working at megabanks. Second, in mid-January we learned from Frontline that former prosecutors at DOJ confirm what white collar crime expert Bill Black first said last fall: that DOJ did not even conduct significant grand jury investigations into criminality at the megabanks in connection with the subprime meltdown of 2007-2009.   

These developments mean that some ill-defined class of powerful corporate elites may engage in criminality for profit with immunity from prosecution. If one of these titans can garner millions through some fraudulent scheme (like this one used at Goldman, Chase, and Citi) they will now face incentives to do so regardless of losses of many times their profits borne by their firms (like this securities fraud by Angelo Mozilo), investors, or the general economy.


So what is the cost of this new government policy of criminal immunity for those that control trillions in economic wealth? Finding the answer to that question is difficult, particularly looking into future of an unprecedented era of lawlessness.

Nevertheless, we do have one important experience--the cost of the subprime debacle. I wrote in Lawless Capitalism that the core cause of the crisis was the power of corporate and financial elites to dominate the law and rig market outcomes. That level of lawlessness is one notch less noxious than the leak to the New York Times on 12/11/12 that elites at megabanks now enjoy near-express criminal immunity for even grand criminality.

So, what were the costs of the subprime debacle? It can be broken into three categories that comprehensively express the costs. First, the costs in terms of forgone GDP. Second, the increased debt incurred by the government as a result of the crisis. Third, the loss in household net worth during the crisis. By any reckoning the cost amounts to trillions in losses, but let me try to roughly calculate how many trillions we are talking about.

1. FORGONE GDP

The graph below, from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, shows real GDP since 1997:

FRED GraphClearly, the crisis of 2007-2009 triggered an irreversible loss of GDP that still has not been halted by a return to prior trend-line growth. Thus, the costs still mount. Nevertheless, real GDP trended towards $14 trillion prior to the crisis and would have reached that point in 2010. Actual real GDP in 2012 still amounted to only $13.59 trillion--at least $410 billion short. 2011 came up at least $680 billion short, and 2010 came up $750 billion short. Those three years total $1.84 trillion in forgone real GDP (2005 dollars). The most brutal years of GDP contraction were 2008 and 2009. To be conservative, those years should be compared to 2007, and real GDP losses total another $450 billion during those two years. In all, it appears that a rough estimate of lost real GDP today totals at least $2.3 trillion (and counting). This number is consistent with economists' analyses suggesting that severe crises such as the subprime debacle lead to output losses of about 25-30 percent of GDP--or about $3.2 trillion in the case of the US.

2. MORE GOVERNMENT DEBT

FRED GraphAs the chart, left, shows, the federal deficit increased dramatically as a result of the subprime debacle, and has not recovered. The Bush tax cuts of 2001-2003 (and unfunded wars) built-in structural deficits of about $300 billion per annum. Still, since 2008, additional deficits of trillions of dollars piled-on to those structural deficits. In 2008, the deficit was $459 billion; it expanded to $1.4 trillion in 2009; and most recently in 2012 narrowed to $1 trillion. So, the national debt stood at $9 trillion at the end of 2007 and today stands at $16 trillion. At least $5 trillion of this additional debt is directly attributable to the financial crisis whether from constricted revenues from forgone GDP, the stimulus bill or various and sundry bailouts. These deficits are the cost of a financial crisis requiring a government response without precedent.

3. LOST HOUSEHOLD WEALTH

Recently, a group of Federal Reserve economists estimated the loss to household net worth arising from the subprime crisis of 2007-2009. They found that the mean loss to household wealth was $114,000 per family for those two years. It is unclear how many families there are in the US, but the Census Bureau counts about 110 households. Multiplying the mean loss by the number of households yields a total loss to household net worth of $12 trillion.

That number seemed high until I found this line from the President's Budget Message in 2010: "household net worth fell from the third quarter of 2007 to the first quarter of 2009 by $17.5 trillion or 26.5 percent, which is the equivalent to more than one year’s GDP." Thus, the peak net worth loss was $17.5 trillion but as markets recovered in late 2009, it moderated a bit to that $12 trillion number.

But that $12 trillion is more durable. Housing, which forms the basis of most American net worth still has not recovered. Further, the S&P 500 has still not reclaimed its its peak in 2007--especially adjusted for inflation.  And, in real terms recent gains in net worth are far less impressive. In sum net worth too is still well below the long term pre-crisis trend.

Based upon the foregoing, Lawless Capitalism is enormously expensive. The crisis cost Americans at least $15-20 trillion in economic costs. The fact that some of the costs have been placed upon the government or is in the form of lost net worth does not mitigate the ultimate economic pain associated with the crisis. We now have a government that will have to do less and tax more far into the future. Households have less money for college, retirement, and future consumption. These factors will continue to burden real GDP growth for years to come.

There are other costs to Lawless Capitalism. For example, consider what many call the "freeloader" society. We cannot expect the masses to bear the burden of shared sacrifice when those at the top in our society act so manifestly contrary to any notion of responsible and ethical leadership. Indeed, perhaps the greatest cost of lawless capitalism is impossible to quantify: a society riven with a selfish and unethical ethos of greed. How does one quantify the loss of social cohesion from lawlessness at the apex of society?

I am all ears if anyone can improve on the analysis above.  But, in all events, this lawlessness costs every American tens of thousands of dollars. And, the new lawlessness continues at an ever increasing level, unmitigated by the Dodd-Frank Act.