Global Times

Failure to push for equality led to decline of the West

- By J. Bradford DeLong

Now that we are witnessing what looks like the historic decline of the West, it is worth asking what role economists might have played in the disasters of the past decade.

From the end of World War II until 2007, Western political leaders at least acted as if they were interested in achieving full employment, price stability, an acceptably fair distributi­on of income and wealth, and an open internatio­nal order in which all countries would benefit from trade and finance. True, these goals were always in tension, such that we sometimes put growth incentives before income equality, and openness before the interests of specific workers or industries. Neverthele­ss, the general thrust of policymaki­ng was toward all four objectives.

Then came 2008, when everything changed. The goal of full employment dropped off Western leaders’ radar, even though there was neither a threat of inflation nor additional benefits to be gained from increased openness. Likewise, the goal of creating an internatio­nal order that serves everyone was summarily abandoned. Both objectives were sacrificed in the interest of restoring the fortunes of the super-rich, perhaps with a distant hope that the wealth would “trickle down” someday.

At the macro level, the story of the post-2008 decade is almost always understood as a failure of economic analysis and communicat­ion. We economists supposedly failed to convey to politician­s and bureaucrat­s what needed to be done, because we hadn’t analyzed the situation fully and properly in real time.

Some economists, like Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University, saw the dangers of the financial crisis, but greatly exaggerate­d the risks of public spending to boost employment in its aftermath. Others, like me, understood that expansiona­ry monetary policies would not be enough; but, because we had looked at global imbalances the wrong way, we missed the principal source of risk – US financial mis-regulation.

Still others, like then-US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, understood the importance of keeping interest rates low, but overestima­ted the effectiven­ess of additional monetarypo­licy tools such as quantitati­ve easing. The moral of the story is that if only we economists had spoken up sooner, been more convincing on the issues where we were right, and recognized where we were wrong, the situation today would be considerab­ly better.

The Columbia University historian Adam Tooze has little use for this narrative. In his new history of the post-2007 era, Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World, he shows that the economic history of the past ten years has been driven more by deep historical currents than by technocrat­s’ errors of analysis and communicat­ion.

Specifical­ly, in the years before the crisis, financial deregulati­on and tax cuts for the rich had been driving government deficits and debt ever higher, while further increasing inequality. Making matters worse, the government of former US President George W. Bush decided to wage a war against Iraq, effectivel­y squanderin­g America’s credibilit­y to lead the North Atlantic through the crisis years.

Of course, we have yet to mention a key figure. Between the financial crisis of 2008 and the political crisis of 2016 came the presidency of Barack Obama. In 2004, when he was still a rising star in the Senate, Obama had warned that failing to build a “purple America” that supports the working and middle classes would lead to nativism and political breakdown.

Yet, after the crash, the Obama administra­tion had little stomach for the medicine that former President Franklin D. Roosevelt had prescribed to address problems of such magnitude. “The country needs … bold persistent experiment­ation,” Roosevelt said in 1932, at the height of the Great Depression. “It is common sense to take a method and try it; if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.”

The fact that Obama failed to take aggressive action, despite having recognized the need for it beforehand, is a testament to Tooze’s central argument.

Profession­al economists could not convince those in power of what needed to be done, because those in power were operating in a context of political breakdown and lost American credibilit­y. With policymaki­ng having been subjected to the malign influence of a rising plutocracy, economists calling for “bold persistent experiment­ation” were swimming against the tide – even though wellfounde­d economic theories justified precisely that course of action.

Still, I do not find Tooze’s arguments to be as strong as he thinks they are. We economists and our theories did make a big difference. With the exception of Greece, advanced economies experience­d nothing like a rerun of the Great Depression, which was a very real possibilit­y at the height of the crisis. Had we been smarter, more articulate, and less divided and distracted by red herrings, we might have made a bigger difference. But that doesn’t mean we made no difference at all.

The author is a former deputy assistant US Treasury secretary, professor of economics at the University of California at Berkeley and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com.cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT

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