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Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly Elected Members of Congress
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Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch

Jeffrey FrankelHarpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth

Harvard University

Bipartisan Program for Newly Elected Members of Congress

Page 2: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

By some standard measures,the US economy has recently done better:

• Better since the recession of 2007-09, of course;• also better than Europe & Japan,• and better than most people think.

• E.g.,– GDP growth is up,– job growth up,– stock market up (all-time high in November),– budget deficit down (since 2009: sharpest fall in history).

Page 3: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Growth has been gradual since the recession’s endin June 2009: a slow 2% per annum during 2011-13,

but a little faster lately.

Source: Macroeconomic Advisers, Nov. 18, 2014; monthly numbers derived from US Bureau of Economic Analysis quarterly series.https://macroadvisers.bluematrix.com/sellside/EmailDocViewer?encrypt=a0739b1e-a7af-4c91-a588-b698c0a5a302&mime=pdf&co=macroadvisers&[email protected]&source=mail

GDP (Gross Domestic Product)

GDP growth = 4.2 % over last 2 quarters; 2.4 % over last 4 quarters > 2.1 % in 2011-13.

Page 4: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

The private sector has added 10.6 million jobsover 56 straight months of job growth, easily the longest streak on record;

and at least 200,000/mo. for nine consecutive months.

Page 5: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

The 2014 federal budget deficit is down to 2.8% of GDP. That is down more than 2/3 from 2009,

and below the average deficit since 1980 (3.2%).

Page 6: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Then why do Americans feel worse off?Real median household income

is still 8% below the 2007 pre-recession peak, and barely above its 1990 level.

Page 7: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

How to restore rising real incomes?

• Eight policies

– Some sound popular, some very unpopular;

– They all have in common:support from economists, regardless of party affilliation.

Page 8: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Eight policies• Universal pre-school education.• Infrastructure spending financed by cheap US borrowing now;

by a funded Highway Trust Fund in long run.

• Social security:– take steps today to put it on a sound footing for the long term.

• Address the long-term rise in household debt.• Tax reform (revenue-neutral: lower rates, but cut distorting deductions)

• Corporate income tax (curtail subsidies to oil, race horses, race tracks…)

• Personal income tax (curtail subsidies to mortgage lending).

• Allow fracking (but with careful regulation) and expedite LNG exports.

• Resume US global economic leadership.• Do No Harm:

No fiscal cliffs, shutdowns, debt standoffs or sequesters.

Page 9: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Appendices

• More graphs of recent economic performance– GDP growth (latest figures)

– Budget deficit (going back to post-WWII)

– Real household income (a more timely version)

– Policy uncertainty (the effect of dysfunctional fiscal politics)

• Specifics on some policy recommendations– Social security– Household debt– Global economic leadership.

Page 10: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

GDP growth turned positive after 2009, 2nd quarter, marking the end of the recession

Includes 11/24/2014 BEA revisions.

GDP growth = 4.2 % over last 2 quarters (= 4.6% + 3.9% /2)

Page 11: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

The budget deficit is down more than 2/3 from 2009, to 2.8% of GDP. That is below the 1980s (4%),

but above the average since 1947.

http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2014/10/08/the-federal-deficit-is-now-smaller-than-the-average-since-the-1980s/

Page 12: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Source: annual survey of the US Census Bureau,

made monthly by SentierResearch.com.

Why do Americans feel worse off?

Real household income is still well below the 2007 pre-recession peak,

though it finally started rising in 2013-14.

Page 13: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Dysfunctional fiscal politics hurt the economy in 2011-2013,

not just directly (e.g., through the sequester), but also indirectly through the risks for business created by policy uncertainty.

Page 14: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Policy specifics: Take steps today to put social security on a sound footing for the long term.

• Fiscal policy has been exactly backwards • The US fiscal problem is in future decades, not today.• We hurt the economy by cutting spending & raising taxes in 2011-13• while failing to address big future deficits in social security & medicare, • exactly the opposite of what we should have been doing:

allow deficits when the economy was weak, while taking long-term steps to address entitlements.

• Specific policies to put social security on sound footing:– Raise the retirement age (while accommodating blue collar workers);

– Slow the rate of growth of benefits for future retirees.– At the same time, we could make payroll taxes less regressive:

• Exempt low-income workers. (Much as we should expand the EITC.)

• Raise the maximum-income threshold (from $118,500 in 2015).

Page 15: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Address the long-term rise in household debt: housing, auto, & student loans

• Reduce the policy tilt toward getting American families up to their eyeballs in mortgage debt they can’t afford.– It drives up housing prices,

– without even much raising home ownership rates.

– Specific policies:• Require a serious minimum down payment, as other countries

do. • Require “skin in the game,” on the part of mortgage-originators.• Curtail tax deductibility of mortgage interest,

– which mainly benefits the well-off. » It generally saves less than $200 for households earning $65,000.

– Reduce deductions at upper end » as in Rep. Dave Camp’s proposal to lower ceiling from $1m to $500k,

– especially if used for something other than purchase of residence » i.e., 2nd home or home equity line of credit.

Page 16: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Address household debt: housing, auto & student loans, continued

• Auto dealers should not be exempted from the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau.

• Although most college educations are still a good deal, and worth going into debt for if that is the only way, some enterprises are bad deals.

• Government should expand student loans, • but require that the college or university have a decent

record regarding rates of graduation & employment.

Page 17: Domestic Economy: The Middle Class Crunch Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Harvard University Bipartisan Program for Newly.

Resume US global economic leadership:

• Pass Trade Promotion Authority (TPA)– To be used for WTO free trade agreements– and regional agreements• Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP)• Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership (TTIP).

• Pass IMF quota reform– Recognizes the rise of Emerging Market economies,– with no downside:• No loss of US power at the IMF; • No cost to the American taxpayer.