Don’t try to reform
Wall Street, or even criticize its abuses; you’ll hurt the plutocrats’
feelings, and that will lead to plunging markets. Don’t try to fight
unemployment with higher government spending; if you do, interest rates
will skyrocket.
And, of course, do slash Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid right
away, or the markets will punish you for your presumption.
By the way, I’m not just talking about the hard right; a fair number of
self-proclaimed centrists play the same game. For example, two years
ago, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson warned us to expect an attack of
the bond vigilantes within, um, two years unless we adopted, you guessed
it, Simpson-Bowles.
So what the bad predictions tell us is that we are, in effect, dealing
with priests who demand human sacrifices to appease their angry gods —
but who actually have no insight whatsoever into what those gods
actually want, and are simply projecting their own preferences onto the
alleged mind of the market.
What, then, are the markets actually telling us?
I wish I could say that it’s all good news, but it isn’t. Those low
interest rates are the sign of an economy that is nowhere near to a full
recovery from the financial crisis of 2008, while the high level of
stock prices shouldn’t be cause for celebration; it is, in large part, a
reflection of the growing disconnect between productivity and wages.
The interest-rate story is fairly simple. As some of us have been trying
to explain for four years and more, the financial crisis and the
bursting of the housing bubble created a situation in which almost all
of the economy’s major players are simultaneously trying to pay down
debt by spending less than their income. Since my spending is your
income and your spending is my income, this means a deeply depressed
economy. It also means low interest rates, because another way to look
at our situation is, to put it loosely, that right now everyone wants to
save and nobody wants to invest. So we’re awash in desired savings with
no place to go, and those excess savings are driving down borrowing
costs.
Under these conditions, of course, the government should ignore its
short-run deficit and ramp up spending to support the economy.
Unfortunately, policy makers have been intimidated by those false
priests, who have convinced them that they must pursue austerity or face
the wrath of the invisible market gods.
Meanwhile, about the stock market: Stocks are high, in part, because
bond yields are so low, and investors have to put their money somewhere.
It’s also true, however, that while the economy remains deeply
depressed, corporate profits have staged a strong recovery. And that’s a
bad thing! Not only are workers failing to share in the fruits of their
own rising productivity, hundreds of billions of dollars are piling up
in the treasuries of corporations that, facing weak consumer demand, see
no reason to put those dollars to work.
So the message from the markets is by no means a happy one. What the
markets are clearly saying, however, is that the fears and prejudices
that have dominated Washington discussion for years are entirely
misguided. And they’re also telling us that the people who have been
feeding those fears and peddling those prejudices don’t have a clue
about how the economy actually works.
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