Donald
Trump’s patented phrase “we aren’t winning anymore” lies beneath
the tidal wave of anti-establishment sentiment propelling his campaign
and, to some considerable degree, that of Bernie Sanders, too.
As we demonstrated in Part 1,
what’s winning is Washington, Wall Street and the bicoastal elites. The
latter prosper from finance, the LA and SF branches of entertainment (
movies/TV and social media, respectively) and the great rackets of the
Imperial City—including the military/industrial/surveillance complex,
the health and education cartels, the plaintiffs and patent bar, the tax
loophole farmers and the endless lesser K-Street racketeers.
But
most of America’s vast flyover zone has been left behind. Thus,
the bottom 90% of families have no more real net worth today than they
had 30 years ago and earn lower real household incomes and wages than
they did 25 years ago.
Needless
to say, the lack of good jobs lies at the bottom of the wealth and
income drought on main street, and this week’s April jobs report
provided still another reminder.
During the
last three months goods-producing jobs have been shrinking again, even
as the next recession knocks on the door. These manufacturing,
construction and energy/mining jobs are the highest paying in the US
economy and average about $56,000 per year in cash wages. Yet it appears
that the 30 year pattern shown in the graph below——lower lows and lower
highs with each business cycle—-is playing out once again.
So even as the broadest measure of the stock market—-the Wilshire 5000—–stands at 11X its 1989 level, there are actually 22% fewer goods producing jobs in the US than there were way back then.
This
begs the question, therefore, as to the rationale for the Jobs Deal
we referenced in Part 1, and why Donald Trump should embrace a massive
swap of the existing corporate and payroll taxes for new levies on
consumption and imports.
The
short answer is that Greenspan made a giant policy mistake 25 years ago
that has left main street households buried in debt and stranded with a
simultaneous plague of stagnant real incomes and uncompetitively high
nominal wages. It happened because at the time that Mr. Deng launched
China’s great mercantilist export machine during the early 1990s, Alan
Greenspan was more interested in being the toast of Washington than he
was in adhering to his lifelong convictions about the requisites of
sound money.
Indeed, he
apparently checked his gold standard monetary princples in the cloak
room when he entered the Eccles Building in August 1987. Not only did
he never reclaim the check, but, instead, embraced the self-serving
institutional anti-deflationism of the central bank.
This drastic betrayal and error resulted in a lethal cocktail of free trade and what amounted to free money.
It resulted in the hollowing out of the American economy because it
prevented American capitalism from adjusting to the tsunami of cheap
manufactures coming out of China and its east Asian supply chain.
So what would have happened in response to the so-called “china price” under a regime of sound money in the US?
The Fed’s Keynesian
economists and their Wall Street megaphones would never breath a word
of it, of course, because they have a vested interest in
perpetuating inflation. It gives inflation targeting central bankers the
pretext for massive intrusion in the financial markets and Wall Street
speculators endless bubble finance windfalls.
But
the truth is, sound money would have led to falling consumer prices,
high interest rates and an upsurge of household savings in response to
strong rewards for deferring current consumption. From that enhanced
flow of honest domestic savings the supply side of the American economy
could have been rebuilt with capital and technology designed to shrink
costs and catalyze productivity.
But
instead of consumer price deflation and a savings-based era of supply
side reinvestment, the Greenspan Fed opted for a comprehensive Inflation
Regime. That is, sustained inflation of consumer prices and nominal
wages, massive inflation of household debt and stupendous inflation of
financial assets.
To be sure,
the double-talking Greenspan actually bragged about his prowess in
generating something he called “disinflation”. But that’s a weasel
word. What he meant, in fact, was that the purchasing power of
increasingly uncompetitive nominal American wages was being reduced
slightly less rapidly than it had been in the 1980s.
Still, the consumer price level has more than doubled since 1987, meaning that prices of goods and services have risen at 2.5%
per year on average. Notwithstanding all the Fed’s palaver about
“low-flation” and undershooting its phony 2% target, American workers
have had to push their nominal wages higher and higher just to keep up
with the cost of living.
But in
a free trade economy the wage-price inflation treadmill of the
Greenspan/Fed was catastrophic. It drove a wider and wider wedge
between US wage rates and the marginal source of goods and
services supply in the global economy.
That
is, US production was originally off-shored owing to the China Price
with respect to manufactured goods. But with the passage of time and
spread of the central bank driven global credit boom, goods and
services were off-shored to places all over the EM. The high nominal
price of US labor enabled the India Price, for example, to capture
massive amounts of call center activity, engineering and architectural
support services, financial company back office activity and much more.
At
the end of the day, it was the Greenspan Fed which hollowed out the
American economy. Without the massive and continuous inflation it
injected into the US economy, nominal wages would have been far lower,
and on the margin far more competitive with the off-shore.
That’s
because there is a significant cost per labor hour premium for
off-shoring. The 12,000 mile supply pipeline gives rise to heavy
transportation charges, logistics control and complexity, increased
inventory carry in the supply chain, quality control and reputation
protection expenses, lower average productivity per worker, product
delivery and interruption risk and much more.
In
a sound money economy of falling nominal wages and even more rapidly
falling consumer prices, American workers would have had a fighting
chance to remain competitive, given this significant off-shoring premium.
But the demand-side Keynesians running policy at the Fed and US
treasury didn’t even notice that their wage and price inflation policy
functioned to override the off-shoring premium, and to thereby send
American production and jobs fleeing abroad.
Indeed,
they actually managed to twist this heavy outflow of goods and
services production into what they claimed to be an economic welfare
gain in the form of higher corporate profits and lower consumer costs.
Needless
to say, the basic law of economics—-Say’s Law of Supply—-says societal
welfare and wealth arise from production; spending and demand follow
output and income.
By
contrast, our Keynesian central bankers claim prosperity flows from
spending, and they had a ready solution for the gap in spending that
initially resulted when jobs and incomes were sent off-shore.
The
de facto solution of the Greenspan Fed was to supplant the
organic spending power of lost production and wages with a simulacrum of
demand issuing from an immense and contiunuous run-up of household
debt. Accordingly, what had been a steady 75-80% ratio of household debt
to wage and salary income before 1980 erupted to 220% by the time of
Peak Debt in 2007.
The nexus
between household debt inflation and the explosion of Chinese imports is
hard to miss. Today monthly Chinese imports are 75X largerthan the were when Greenspan took office in August 1987.
At
the same time, American households have buried themselves in debt,
which has rising from $2.7 trillion or about 80% of wage and salary
income to $14.2 trillion. Even after the financial crisis and supposed
resulting deleveraging, the household leverage ratio is still in the
nosebleed section of history at 180% of wage and salary earnings.
Stated
differently, had the household leverage ratio not been levitated in the
nearly parabolic fashion shown below, total household debt at the time
of the financial crisis would have been $6 trillion, not $14 trillion.
In effect, the inflationary policies of the Greenspan Fed and its
successors created a giant hole in the supply side of the US economy,
and then filled it with $8 trillionof incremental debt which remains an albatross on the main street economy to this day.
Then again, digging holes and refilling them is the essence of Keynesian economics.
At the
end of the day, the only policy compatible with Greenspan’s
inflationary monetary regime was reversion to completely managed trade
and a shift to historically high tariffs on imported goods and
services. That would have dramatically slowed the off-shoring of
production, and actually also would have remained faithful to the Great
Thinker’s economics. After all, in 1931 Keynes turned into a vociferous
protectionist and even wrote an ode to the virtues of “homespun goods”.
Alas,
inflation in one country behind protective trade barriers doesn’t work
either, as was demonstrated during the inflationary spiral of the late
1960s and 1970s. That’s because in a closed economy easy money does lead
to a spiral of rising domestic wages and prices owing to too much
credit based spending; and this spiral eventually soars out of control
in the absence of the discipline imposed by lower-priced foreign goods
and services.
In perverse
fashion, therefore, the Greenspan Fed operated a bread and circuses
economy. Unlimited imports massively displaced domestic production and
incomes—even as they imposed an upper boundary on the rate of CPI gains.
The
China Price for goods and India Price for services, in
effect, throttled domestic inflation and prevented a runaway
inflationary spiral. The ever increasing debt-funded US household demand
for goods and services, therefore, was channeled into import purchases
which drew upon virtually unlimited labor and production supply
available from the rice paddies and agricultural villages of the EM. In a
word, the Fed’s monetary inflation was exported.
Free trade also permitted many
companies to fatten their profits by arbitraging the wedge between
Greenspan’s inflated wages in the US and the rice paddy wages of the EM.
Indeed, the alliance of the Business Roundtable and the Keynesian Fed
in behalf of free money and free trade is one of history’s
most destructive arrangements of convenience.
In
any event, the graph below nails the story. During the 29 years since
Greenspan took office, the nominal wages of domestic production workers
have soared, rising from $9.22 per hour in August 1987 to $21.26per hour at present. It was this 2.3X leap in nominal wages, of course, that sent jobs packing for China, India and the EM.
At the same time, the inflation-adjusted wages of domestic workers who did retain there jobs went nowhere at all.
That’s
right. There were tens of millions of jobs off-shored, but in constant
dollars of purchasing power, the average production worker wage of $383 per week in mid-1987 has ended up at $380per week 29 years later.
During the span of that 29 year period the Fed’s balance sheet grew from $200billion to $4.5 trillion. That’s a 23Xgain
during less than an average working lifetime. Greenspan claimed he
was the nation’s savior for getting the CPI inflation rate down
to around 2% during his tenure; and Bernanke and Yellen have postured as
would be saviors owing to their strenuous money pumping efforts to keep
it from failing the target from below.
But
2% inflation is a fundamental Keynesian fallacy, and the massive
central bank balance sheet explosion which fueled it is the greatest
monetary travesty in history. Dunderheads like Bernanke and Yellen say
2% inflation is just fine because under their benign monetary management
everything comes out in the wash at the end——-wages, prices, rents,
profits, living costs and indexed social benefits all march higher
together with tolerable leads and lags.
No they don’t.
Jobs in their millions march away to the off-shore world when
nominal wages double and the purchasing power of the dollar is cut in
half over 29 years.
These academic fools apparently believe they live in Keynes’ imaginary homespun economy of 1931!
The
evident economic distress in the flyover zone of America and the Trump
voters now arising from it in their tens of millions are telling
establishment policy makers that they are full of it; that they have had
enough of free trade and free money.
What can be done now?
The
solution lies in the contra-factual to the Greenspan/Fed Inflation
Regime. Under sound money, the balance sheet of the Fed would still be
$200 billion, household debt would be a fraction of its current level,
the CPI would have shrunk 1-2% per year rather than the opposite and
nominal wages would have shrunk by slightly less.
Under
those circumstances, there would have been no explosion of US imports
because US suppliers would have remained far more competitive and
domestic demand for goods and services far more subdued. To wit, what
amounts to a statistical Trump Tower in our trade accounts——where total
imports exploded by 6X——- couldn’t have happened under a regime of sound money.
For
instance, if the CPI had shrunk by 1.5% annually since 1987 and nominal
wages by 0.5%, the average nominal production wage today would be $8
per hour, meaning that American labor would be dramatically more
competitive in the world economy versus the EM Price than it currently
is at $22 per hour.
But real
wages would be far higher at $500 per week compared to the actual of
$380 per week shown above. At the same time, solid breadwinner jobs in
both goods and services would be far more plentiful than reported last
Friday by the BLS.
Needless to
say, the clock cannot be turned back, and a resort to Keynes’
out-and-out protectionism in the context of an economy that suckles on
nearly $3 trillion of annual goods and services imports is a
non-starter. It would wreak havoc beyond imagination.
But
it is not too late to attempt the second best in the face of the giant
historical detour from sound money that has soured the practice of free
trade. To wit, public policy can undo some of the damage by sharply lowering the nominal price of domestic wages and salariesin order to reduce the cost wedge versus the rest of the world.
It is currently estimated that during 2016 Federal social insurance levies on employers and employees will add a staggering $1.1 trillionto the US wage bill. Most of that represents social security and medicare payroll taxes.
The
single greatest things that could be done to shrink the Greenspan/Fed
nominal wage wedge, therefore, is to rapidly phase out all
Federal payroll taxes, and thereby dramatically improve the terms of US
labor trade with China and the rest of the EM world. Given that the
nation’s total wage bill (including benefit costs) is about $10
trillion, elimination of Federal payroll taxes would amount to a 11% cut
in the cost of US labor.
On
the one hand, such a bold move would dramatically elevate main street
take-home pay owing to the fact that half of the payroll tax levy is
extracted from worker pay packets in advance. In the case of a rust belt
industrial worker making $25 per hour, for example, it would amount to
an additional $4,000 per year in take home pay.
Moreover, elimination
of payroll taxes would be far more efficacious from a political point
of view in Trump’s flyover zone constituencies than traditional
Reaganite income tax rate cuts. That’s because nearly 160 million
Americans pay social insurance taxes compared to less than 50 million
who actually pay any net Federal income taxes after deductions and
credits.
At the same time,
elimination of the employer share of Federal payroll taxes would reduce
the direct cost of labor to domestic business by upwards of $575 billionper year. And as we have proposed in the Jobs Deal, the simultaneous elimination of the corporate income taxwould reduce the burden on business by another $350 billion annually.
By
all fair accounts, the corporate income tax is the most irrational and
unproductive element of the US tax code. But as I learned working on its
replacement as a young aid on Capitol Hill in the early 1970s, it gets
demagogued by the political left and harvested for loopholes by the
K-Street lobbies in a never ending and pointless legislative joust.
Therefore,
when you hear mainstream politicians talking about reforming or cutting
the corporate tax rate because it is the highest in the world, yawn.
The nominal rate is 35% but the effective rate is under 20% and last
quarter the likes of IBM posted a negative rate. The difference
represents the lawyers, accountants, consultants and K-Street lobby full
employment act
Needless to
say, that is a mighty force of inertia, and in that sense is emblematic
of why the status quo is failing. It is no secret that the corporate
tax has always posed an insuperable challenge to match business income
and expense during any arbitrary tax period, but that in a globalized
economy in which capital is infinitely mobile on paper as well as in
fact, the attempt to collect corporate profits taxes in one country has
become pointless and impossible.
It
simply gives rise to massive accounting and legal maneuvers such as the
headline grapping tax inversions of recent years. Yet notwithstanding
75,000 pages of IRS code and multiples more of that in tax rulings and
litigation, corporate tax departments will always remain one step ahead
of the IRS. That is, the corporate tax generates immense deadweight
economic costs and dislocation—including a huge boost to off-shoring of
production to low tax havens——while generating a meager harvest of
actual revenues.
Last year, for
example, corporate tax collections amounted to just 1.8% of GDP
compared to upwards of 9% during the heyday of the American industrial
economy during the 1950s.
By
pairing elimination of the corporate tax with a giant increase in worker
take-home pay, however, the Donald might actually make some progress
where the GOP has tilted at windmills for decades.
Needless
to say, you don’t have to be a believer in supply side miracles to
agree that a nearly $1 trillion tax cut on American business from the
elimination of payroll and corporate income taxes would amount to the
mother of all jobs stimulus programs!
Self-evidently,
the approximate $1.5 trillion revenue loss at the Federal level from
eliminating these taxes would need to be replaced. We are not advocating
any Laffer Curve miracles here——although over time the re-shoring of
jobs that would result from this 11% labor tax cut would surely
generate a higher rate of growth than the anemic 1.3% annual GDP growth
rate the nation has experienced since the turn of the century.
In
the next section we will delve deeper into the tax swap proposed here.
But suffice it to say that with $3 trillion of imported goods and
services and $10 trillion of total household consumption, the thing to
tax would be exactly what we have too much of and which is the invalid
fruit of inflationary monetary policy in the first place.
To
wit, foregone payroll and corporate tax revenue should be extracted
from imports, consumption and foreign oil. An approximate 15% value
added tax and a variable levy designed to peg landed crude prices at $75
per barrel would more than do the job. And revive the US shale patch,
too.
Regards,
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