Thursday, September 02, 2010

Jaw Jaw

Even if there was little the Fed could have done policy wise, they could have, you know, said something.

Actually Greenspan did say something. This.


American consumers might benefit if lenders provided greater mortgage product alternatives to the traditional fixed-rate mortgage. To the degree that households are driven by fears of payment shocks but are willing to manage their own interest rate risks, the traditional fixed-rate mortgage may be an expensive method of financing a home.

Sure I Don't Drive Much These Days

But I think my lifetime record is 1 reckless driving (in lieu of speeding) ticket and one pulled over and let go for speeding because cop was nice. 20 tickets?

Thursday Is New Jobless Day

472K lucky duckies.


Still high.

Farewell

Via Ezra Klein's Wonkbook email, Christina Romer's departing words. (It's a pdf, not a big one).

It's hard not to wish there were people doing a Richard Clark imitation, hair on fire, running around, trying anything. Instead, she is measured, prudent, and sorta wistful:

The result of these powerful headwinds and recent developments is that the United States still faces a substantial shortfall of aggregate demand. GDP by most estimates is still about 6 percent below trend. This shortfall in demand, rather than structural changes in the composition of our output or a mismatch between worker skills and jobs, is the fundamental cause of our continued high unemployment. Firms aren’t producing and hiring at normal levels simply because there isn’t demand for a normal level of output.

In the long run, the transition to a higher-saving, higher-investment, higher-export economy can restore demand, and hence output and employment to normal. But at the moment, as the recent data emphasize, that process is operating painfully slowly.

The pressing question, then, is what can be done to increase demand and bring unemployment down more quickly. Failing to do so would cause millions of workers to suffer unnecessarily. It also runs the risk of making high unemployment permanent as workers’ skills deteriorate with lack of use and their labor force attachment weakens as hope of another job fades.

Policymakers should certainly try innovative, low-cost policies. The President’s National Export Initiative is an excellent example. Given the fixed costs associated with exporting to a new market, small investments in information provision and commercial diplomacy could bring about a substantial increase in our exports. Likewise, responsible new trade agreements can help to open markets and increase trade in both the short run and over time.

Policymakers should also take sensible actions to increase confidence. While some in the business community talk about regulatory uncertainty as one reason they are cautious about hiring and investing, I suspect that uncertainty about future sales is a much larger determinant of firms’ actions. We can, however, do more to highlight and codify our pragmatic approach to regulation. As OIRA Administrator Cass Sunstein detailed in his recent Congressional testimony, the estimated net benefits (that is, the benefits minus the costs) of the Obama Administration’s regulatory actions during its first year far surpass those of the first year of the two previous administrations. For the health of the economy, we should continue and trumpet this prudent regulatory approach.

While we would all love to find the inexpensive magic bullet to our economic troubles, the truth is, it almost surely doesn’t exist. The only surefire ways for policymakers to substantially increase aggregate demand in the short run are for the government to spend more and tax less. In my view, we should be moving forward on both fronts.


I don't think FDR would have called this liberalism. Not even sure Teddy would have called it progressive.

Dead of Morning: Lou Who?

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Late Night

Rock on.

Even More Thread

enjoy

Evening Thread

enjoy.

Crazy People Mostly Motivated By The Crazy

I'm sure I've been guilty of it myself at some point in the past, but the now standard race to define every violent nutcase as a right wing nut or a left wing nut is a bit depressing. Mostly nutters are driven by the fact that they're nuts, whatever ideological motives they channel their nuttiness through.

That Time Already

Government jobs numbers come out Friday, private estimate says...-10K private sector jobs (estimate does not look at public sector jobs). Consensus forecast for all jobs is -120K, due in part to continued Census job losses. I'll take the under...

He Doesn't Know Anything About Anything

So Simpson is perfect for an important job in Washington.

Getting It Right

As Krugman says, it isn't about "I told you so," it's about establishing the correct narrative about what happened which for bizarre reasons the administration isn't willing to do. The stimulus wasn't big enough. Had it been bigger things would at least be somewhat better.

Afternoon Thread

enjoy

Actually Michelle Plans To Put Crack Pipes On The Tree

Nice to see some things never change.

The most infamous of the Regnery titles is undoubtedly Gary Aldrich's Unlimited Access, which included such "revelations" as lesbian encounters in the White House's basement showers, Hillary Clinton ordering miniature crack pipes to hang on the White House Christmas tree, and the claim--backed by anonymous sources--that Clinton made frequent trips to the nearby Marriott to shack up with a mistress "who may be a celebrity." That last bit helped catapult Unlimited Access to the top of The New York Times's best-seller list, though Aldrich soon revealed to The New Yorker's Jane Mayer that the Marriott story was "not quite solid" and, indeed, was "hypothetical." But according to Aldrich, it was Regnery editor Richard Vigilante who had moved the Marriott bit out of the epilogue (where it had been presented as a "mock investigation") and into the middle of the book (where it was presented as an actual occurrence). Vigilante, Aldrich told Mayer, threatened not to publish the book if Aldrich didn't agree to the changes.

Let's Hope

The best part of Obama's speech was the suggestion that lighting trillions of dollars on fire in the service of killing random foreigners was perhaps not the best use of our limited resources.

But Roads Pay For Themselves!!

The most you can say (and this hasn't been true for some time either) is that the federal and some state highway systems are paid for by user fees (gas taxes, etc.), but basically the rest of the road system construction and repair costs are paid for with other tax money.

Standards

One reason that it's so expensive to build new passenger rail systems in this country is that there isn't much "off the shelf" stuff that can be bought. Given this and the lack of predictable stable demand for things like rail cars, manufacturers can't really benefit from economies of scale like auto manufacturers can. Hopefully new high speed rail system standards will improve this as intended...

Oh What a Lovely War

It's easy to beat up on the prime movers, but sadly, in general, elites, including many liberal ones, in this country will never accept that they supported and advocated for a pointless war based on lies which led to hundreds of thousands of deaths and the upheaval of millions of lives. Heckuva job.

Also, Good Luck Getting Credit

Banks have long histories of avoiding certain neighborhoods, whether through explicit policy or just actual practice.

Echoes

Glenzilla reminds us that somebody certainly could have knowed what the US was getting itself into.

Even aside from dirty hippies, like ex-Marine weapons-inspector Scott Ritter, there was no shortage of voices of sanity.

But I guess that is just looking backwards, which the Village only does in order to say nobody could have known. Unfortunate, perhaps, but what can you do?

Anyway, the war is over now. The President said so.