Stiglitz in The Times: A Study in Confusion
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
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In todays
New York Times, Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winner in
economics, has an article titled How
to Fix the Global Economy. Judging from his article, Stiglitz
appears to believe that the main problem of the global economy is
global financial imbalances. By this, he means Americas
enormous trade deficits, which he states are close to $3 billion
a day, and Chinas growing trade surplus of almost $500
million a day.
An indication
of the level of analysis to expect in the article is given in its
second paragraph, when he says that while the United States blames
Chinas undervalued currency for its trade deficit, the
rest of the world singles out the huge American fiscal and trade
deficits. The meaning of this statement, and of its acceptance
by Stiglitz without challenge, is that it is legitimate to argue
that what is to be blamed for Americas trade deficit is Americas
trade deficit at least in large part. Whether or not
this is Stiglitzs own view is irrelevant here. What is relevant
is that hes willing to let it go by as though it were legitimate
and required no comment.
In typical
Keynesian fashion, Stiglitz confuses saving with hoarding, as when
he says, No one seriously proposes that businesses save money
instead of investing in expanding production simply to correct the
problem of the trade deficit . . . . How can saving itself
not mean investment, unless the savings are hoarded? How can saving
be an alternative to investment, unless saving means simply
non-spending, i.e., hoarding? Indeed, Stiglitz makes no secret of
his Keynesianism. He concludes his article by urging the imposition
of an updated version of Keynes scheme for global credit expansion
based on a new global currency. Only that will allegedly solve the
fundamental structural problems with the global reserve system
and end the imbalances that threaten the financial stability
and economic well-being of us all.
Until then,
the best that we can do, according to Stiglitz, is impose a Keynesian-inspired
scheme of government expenditure cuts combined with an increase
in taxes on upper-income Americans and a reduction in taxes on lower-income
Americans. The expenditure cuts, says Stiglitz, would,
of course, by themselves reduce spending, but because poor individuals
consume a larger fraction of their income than the rich, the 'switch'
in taxes would, by itself, increase spending. If appropriately designed,
such a combination could simultaneously sustain the American economy
and reduce the deficit.
The content
of this last paragraph needs to be gone over carefully. The government
will cut its spending. (Amazing that Stiglitz would even consider
this.) This will not reduce overall, economy-wide spending, however,
because it will be accompanied by tax reductions. As the result
of reduced taxes, the taxpayers will spend more while the government
spends less. So much is true, and good for Stiglitz for recognizing
so much as the possibility of this happening. But Stiglitz thinks
its essential that the taxpayers be poor, low-income tax payers,
because only such taxpayers, he believes, engage in significant
spending. What do the richer, higher-income tax payers do with their
funds? All they do, Stiglitz thinks, is hoard them. Thats
why, when their taxes are increased, Stiglitz sees no fall in spending
anywhere. All he sees is funds coming into the hands of the government
and reducing its deficit funds that allegedly would otherwise
have been hoarded.
The fact is,
of course, as John Stuart Mill pointed out in the middle of the
19th Century, that what is saved, i.e., not spent in purchasing
consumers goods, is spent. But it is spent productively,
i.e., in buying capital goods and in paying the wages of workers
employed by business firms. These workers, of course, then consume
their wages.
Moreover, some
significant part of the funds that are saved is lent to consumers.
It should be realized that it is only on a foundation of savings,
partly their own, but mainly those of others, which they borrow,
that most people can afford to buy expensive consumers goods.
In this category are major appliances, automobiles, and, above all,
homes. Such consumers goods, which cost the income of months
or years, could not be purchased in any other way except on a foundation
of savings either those of the purchasers themselves or those
from whom the purchasers borrow.
Because their
funds are spent in these ways, taxing the rich to reduce the governments
deficit actually means reducing the spending of business firms for
capital goods and labor, the spending of businesss employees
for consumers goods, and the spending of all consumers for
expensive consumers goods.
Because what
is saved is spent, simply reducing government spending, and thus
the governments need to borrow, makes correspondingly more
funds available to business firms and consumers to be spent in these
ways. The savings the government would have absorbed through its
sale of securities are instead available for these vital purposes.
There is no need to complicate matters with accompanying tax decreases
and tax increases, especially when the tax increases have the negative
effects that Ive shown.
The point here
is that to reduce the governments budget deficit, all that
needs to be done is to reduce its spending, nothing more. It would
be a further improvement if government spending were reduced not
only to the point of eliminating its deficit, but to the point of
making possible the radical reduction, indeed, complete elimination,
of taxes that fall on savings and the greatest possible decrease
in taxes that fall on private consumption. In that way the demand
for capital goods and labor by business would be at a maximum consistent
with the citizens degree of time preference, and everyone
would enjoy as much as possible of the benefit of his own wealth
and income. The effect of the rise in saving and investment would
be a sharp increase in the rate of economic progress in the United
States. A further, indirect effect would be an increase in the size
of the American economy relative to that of the rest of the world.
It never occurs
to Stiglitz that Americas trade deficit is actually benign
and doesnt need to fixedby him or anyone
else. In part it is the result of the fact that the US dollar is
a global currency. As the supply of dollars is increased in the
US, a substantial proportion of them flows abroad, where they are
held by individuals and businesses who do not want to hold the more
rapidly inflated currencies of their own countries. These individuals
use these dollars to a considerable extent in making purchases in
their own countries, from other individuals who are eager to acquire
them. To the extent that these dollars leave the US in the purchase
of goods and services from abroad, they represent imports. The fact
that they are then held abroad and do not return, means that there
are no corresponding exports. Hence, the balances of trade and payments
are unfavorable.
Of course,
there is nothing really unfavorable to the United States
about such a situation. It exports paper dollars that cost it virtually
nothing to produce in exchange for actual goods and services. It
is in the position of a gold-mining country under an international
gold standard, with a principal difference being that it does not
incur the substantial costs of gold mining.
To be sure,
there is a major danger in this situation. And that is, that the
United States government will increase the supply of dollars rapidly
enough to deprive them of their desirability for being held abroad.
In that case, the dollars that have gone out will come rushing back
in. We will then have to exchange a mass of goods and services for
these little pieces of paper. Our economy will be impoverished,
but the goods and services leaving in exchange for the little pieces
of paper flooding back in will count as exports, and
so our balance of trade will turn from unfavorable to
favorable. Then, in the midst of impoverishment and
major inflation, we shall allegedly know the meaning of prosperity
Keynesian style.
It should be
obvious that the present unfavorable balance of trade
is much preferable to such a favorable balance of trade.
For the rest,
our unfavorable balance of trade is the result of nothing
more than the relative desirability of the United States as a country
in which to invest. Despite our substantial and continuing loss
of economic freedom and respect for property rights, the United
States still compares very favorably in these vital respects with
practically all other countries. The laws here still cannot be changed
at the whim of a government official. Contracts are almost always
still enforced. As a result, the United States continues to be the
best country in which to invest for enough people, enough of the
time so that each year substantially more capital enters the country
from abroad than leaves it. This net investment of foreign capital
is what mainly finances our continuing excess of imports over exports.
The way to
grasp the connection between foreign investment and our trade deficit,
in terms of principle, is to think back a few generations, to the
time when Western geologists first discovered vast oil reserves
in Saudi Arabia. At the time, that country was essentially an empty
desert. Oil wells, refineries, and pipelines did not yet exist there.
They first needed to be built. To do this, a mass of construction
equipment and construction materials needed to be brought into the
country, along with substantial supplies of consumers goods
for the Western construction workers required. All of these goods
coming in were imports. They were also the physical constituents
of the capital being invested in Saudi Arabia.
Could Saudi
Arabia possibly have avoided an unfavorable balance
of trade? It could not even if it had exported all of the sheep,
goats, tents, and camels in the country. In fact, of course, it
did not have to export anything to pay for these imports
not until the oil began flowing, and then it exported that. Its
unfavorable balance of trade and the accompanying foreign
investment were in fact as genuinely favorable an economic
development for that country as it is possible to imagine.
Like all foreign
investment, the foreign investment coming into the United States
today is necessarily in the form of an excess of imports over exports.
It and the capital accumulation it makes possible is no more genuinely
unfavorable to us than was the excess of imports over exports that
came into Saudi Arabia, and the capital accumulation it made possible.
Unfortunately,
today, in the United States, part of the foreign investment being
made finances our governments budget deficits. But in so doing
it prevents those deficits from stripping away savings and capital
from the rest of the economic system. It would certainly be much
more desirable if those deficits could be eliminated. Then that
foreign capital would simply add to the savings and capital invested
in our country, instead of, to a considerable extent, merely maintaining
it. Foreign investment and the excess of imports over exports that
it makes possible also serves to make up for the lack of savings
and capital accumulation on the part of the United States
own citizens. Our economy would be vastly worse off without it.
Such global
trade imbalances are not a problem. They are a profoundly
important means of preventing problems. What will cause a problem
is allowing wreckers, devoid of serious knowledge of economics,
to fix things.
October
5, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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