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- <text id=89TT0302>
- <link 93TG0006>
- <title>
- Jan. 30, 1989: Knitting New Notions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 30, 1989 The Bush Era Begins
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 46
- Knitting New Notions
- </hdr><body>
- <p>To fathom the boom-and-borrow Reagan years, chastened U.S.
- economists jettison rigid formulas and move toward a more
- pragmatic philosophy
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald
- </p>
- <p> "I was in search of a one-armed economist so that the guy
- could never make a statement and then say: `On the other hand .
- . .'"
- </p>
- <p> -- Harry Truman
- </p>
- <p> Ronald Reagan was luckier. He discovered a passel of
- single-minded, if not exactly single-armed, economists who
- called themselves supply-siders. They promised Reagan that he
- could cut taxes, rebuild U.S. military might and reduce the
- budget deficit, all at the same time. While the President
- eagerly followed the script, the deficit forgot its lines.
- Instead of shrinking each year, it added $1.3 trillion to the
- U.S. national debt during Reagan's two terms, more than
- doubling the total burden.
- </p>
- <p> When George Bush became President last week, he inherited
- that mountainous load, along with a 74-month economic boom, the
- longest peacetime expansion in the modern era. Bush, who once
- ridiculed Reagan's policies as "voodoo economics," must now
- confront both sides of the Reaganomics legacy. In doing so, he
- will turn for economic advice to a profession that is
- struggling to find new ways of understanding the unprecedented
- boom-and-borrow cycle of the past eight years.
- </p>
- <p> Frustrated by repeated failures to forecast accurately and
- wearied by years of feuding, economists are moving toward a more
- eclectic yet pragmatic philosophy. Going out the window are the
- overly rigid, dogmatic formulas for prosperity. Many academics
- are attacking their peers for getting so wrapped up in
- mathematical models that they cannot understand the
- unpredictable diversity of the real world. "We have learned
- that the various schools of thought all have important elements
- of truth in them," says Michael Boskin, designated chairman of
- the President's Council of Economic Advisers. "But none of them
- is by itself a sufficient explanation of what goes on in the
- economy."
- </p>
- <p> Like Boskin, economists of every stripe are grappling with
- the far-reaching changes that have swept the U.S. during the
- 1980s. Among them: the growing transformation of the world into a
- single, global marketplace in which the U.S. is just one player;
- the frightening decline of American competitiveness, which has
- helped turn the country into the world's biggest debtor; the
- runaway growth of U.S. service industries, which has made
- productivity and other important measures of the economy
- increasingly slippery to calculate.
- </p>
- <p> A disturbing sign of the new times popped up last week, when
- the Government reported that the U.S. trade deficit surged in
- November to $12.5 billion, up from $10.3 billion the previous
- month. The stalled progress in narrowing the trade gap brings
- into question a central assumption of U.S. trade strategy: that
- the weak dollar will continue to shrink the deficit by making
- U.S. exports cheaper overseas and imported goods more expensive
- for American shoppers. But U.S. imports just keep on rising.
- That partly reflects what some economists have begun to call
- "hysteresis" -- a fancy term for the notion that new habits,
- like old ones, are hard to break. Americans have learned to love
- Japanese cars, TVs and videocassette recorders, and are
- reluctant to give them up, regardless of price.
- </p>
- <p> Even before the figures came out, a Japanese official warned
- the U.S. against weakening the dollar as a trade-gap remedy.
- Makoto Utsumi, a senior executive in the Finance Ministry,
- declared that a further fall of the dollar against the yen would
- not close the trade gap because Japanese firms would lay off
- workers and take other steps to remain competitive. A cheaper
- dollar, said Utsumi, would simply "make America for sale."
- </p>
- <p> Stanford economist Ronald McKinnon, an expert on foreign
- trade and finance, concurred with that view. "A declining
- dollar is nothing more than a reflection of an easy-money
- policy," said he, adding that the excess of Government borrowing
- and spending increases U.S. demand for imported goods. At the
- same time, currencies that are strong in relation to the dollar
- have made American farms, factories and real estate tempting to
- foreign buyers, says McKinnon, "so we conduct something of a
- fire sale" to pay for imported merchandise.
- </p>
- <p> On Wall Street one new breed of economists looks at the same
- unexpected events and comes up with a rosier outlook on how the
- world works. In this view, the U.S. has entered an era of
- prosperity called the New Wave. "We are in one of the most
- revolutionary periods in our history," says Sam Nakagama,
- chairman of Nakagama & Wallace, an economic consulting firm in
- Manhattan. Nakagama and other New Wave advocates say the
- record expansion owes its strength and resilience to the
- openness of the U.S. economy during the past decade. With the
- global village linked by high-speed computers and communications
- satellites, they argue, U.S. executives easily hurdle obstacles
- like rising domestic interest rates by borrowing from other
- countries. In the same way, American manufacturers can escape
- high labor costs by opening factories abroad to add new
- capacity.
- </p>
- <p> New Wavers insist that this flexibility has all but
- abolished the traditional business cycle. While they
- acknowledge that slumps can still strike certain weak
- industries, they regard broad downturns as largely a thing of
- the past. Says Edward Yardeni, chief economist for
- Prudential-Bache Securities: "The economy is now so huge, so
- diverse and resilient that adjustments take place that prevent
- economy-wide recessions."
- </p>
- <p> Such new scenarios have arisen largely because real events
- so often confounded the old ones. Supply-siders, for instance,
- boasted that their policies would boost the U.S. savings rate
- and make Americans more productive. But, like the supply-side
- forecasts of smaller deficits, both promises failed to come
- true. The personal savings rate fell from 7.1% in 1980 to about
- 4% last year. At the same time, the growth of business
- productivity, or output per hour, averaged a meager 1.4% from
- 1980 to 1987, half the rate of the 1960s. Reason: the savings
- decline slowed investments in productive new equipment.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's proudest economic achievement, taming the inflation
- rate from 12.5% in 1980 to 4.4% last year, has also dealt a blow
- to some major schools of thought. Monetarists like Nobel
- laureate Milton Friedman, who believe that slow and steady
- growth of the money supply is the key to prosperity, expected
- inflation to shoot up when the Federal Reserve suddenly pumped
- cash into the economy to halt the recession of 1981-82. But
- inflation failed to ignite because the slump was so deep that it
- left the economy with plenty of room to grow without pushing up
- prices.
- </p>
- <p> Members of the rational-expectations school, which holds
- that people keep a sharp eye on government policies and then act
- accordingly, were also caught short by inflation's fall. "If you
- had listened to me eight years ago," says University of Chicago
- economist Robert Lucas, "I would have predicted an inflation
- rate of 25% with these deficits."
- </p>
- <p> Economists would have been less surprised if they had paid
- more careful attention to changes in the U.S. and world
- economies. The deregulation of foreign capital markets in the
- late 1970s and early 1980s enabled the U.S. to go on a global
- borrowing binge that counteracted the effects of the deficit.
- </p>
- <p> "Ten years ago, there weren't that many people we could
- borrow money from," notes Harvard's Jeffrey Sachs, a leading
- international economist. "We were reluctant to run deficits out
- of fear of creating sky-high inflation. Now there is a global
- bank-teller window that is open 24 hours a day, and we've been
- one of the most frequent customers." Sachs warns, however, that
- the bender cannot last. "We're faking it," he says. "Our living
- standard isn't being maintained by higher productivity or
- wages. It's maintained by foreign capital."
- </p>
- <p> That concern is echoed by resurgent Keynesian economists,
- who are trying to adapt their mostly liberal views to current
- conditions. Virtually counted out when inflation surged along
- with unemployment in the 1970s, the Keynesians now point out
- that Reagan borrowed from their philosophy in propelling his
- economic boom with deficit spending, which Keynesians have long
- advocated as a cure for slumps. "Keynesianism was vindicated by
- these last eight years," says Princeton economist Alan Blinder, a
- leading exponent of the school of thought. Blinder insists,
- however, that the deficits have got far out of hand.
- </p>
- <p> While economists may be more open to peaceful coexistence,
- they still tend to form battle lines over the importance of the
- budget deficits. Some economists contend that the deficit is no
- longer a menace because it has shrunk from more than 6% of the
- gross national product in 1983 to about 3% right now. That is
- lower than the level of deficit spending during 1975-76, for
- example, when the gap was widened by a recession. Friedman says
- he accepts the deficit because it has restrained federal
- spending. "Sometimes you have to choose the lesser of two
- evils," he says. While Friedman admits that "mine is not the
- majority view," he adds, "Everybody looks at the world through
- his own glasses, and those glasses mean more than the facts you
- are looking at."
- </p>
- <p> Many economists have been staring through a veil of
- mathematics that can further distort what they see. "Economics
- research has become more a game of chess than a search for
- understanding reality," says economist David Colander of
- Middlebury College in Vermont. Colander and Arjo Klamer, a
- visiting professor at the University of Iowa, surveyed more
- than 200 graduate students at six top economics departments.
- When the students were asked what it took to advance rapidly in
- the economics profession, an astonishing 68% said "a thorough
- knowledge of the economy" was unimportant. At the same time,
- 57% picked "excellence in mathematics" as the key to success.
- Said a bemused student: "You can walk in off the street and take
- the courses, and not know what the FORTUNE 500 is, and blaze
- through with flying colors."
- </p>
- <p> But many economists are not content to fiddle with
- mathematical models. They want to understand the FORTUNE 500
- corporations and the rest of the economy, in all its messy and
- ever changing complexity. That calls for using common sense as
- well as elegant formulas, and studying social and technological
- trends along with historical data. Writing about Adam Smith and
- other great economists, author Robert Heilbroner called them
- "worldly philosophers" who were "fascinated by the world about
- them" and "absorbed in the behavior of their fellow man."
- </p>
- <p> Modern worldly philosophers are needed in George Bush's
- Washington and everywhere else that economic decisions are made.
- They can provide what Donald McCloskey, a University of Iowa
- economic historian, calls "reality checks -- statements of what
- may happen as a result of policies." Such statements may not be
- the single-minded advice that Harry Truman longed for. But they
- will at least be grounded in the real world rather than in the
- airy realms of abstract mathematics and wishful thinking.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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