Time for Stabilization, Stimulus, Recovery,
and Growth
By Michael
Ettlinger | November 7, 2008
WASHINGTON,
DC—With so many economic problems hitting our nation at the same time,
the list of economic policies being implemented or under consideration may
be an all-time record. The list ranges from limited quick fixes to
expansive long-term reforms, including everything from immediately buying
stakes in the nation’s largest banks and rapidly expanding the social
safety net, to long-term regulatory reform. It is of course very important
that we get the mix right—serving our need for quick and effective
action as well as supporting our long-run economic goals.
Part of
getting that mix right is understanding that different goals require
different tools and that the policy tools chosen should reinforce each
other to serve both our short-term and long-term needs. The full set of
policies we need can be divided into four categories: stabilization,
stimulus, recovery, and growth—an agenda that will deliver the
prosperous economy we all desire.
Stabilization
Stabilizationpolicies
are for restoring our economy to basic, normal functioning—a necessary
foundational block on which to build a full economic recovery and
long-term economic growth. The country right now is experiencing something
beyond a business cycle downturn, or even a “normal” bubble burst. The
nation’s financial system is in disarray. Lenders aren’t lending and
there are massive financial commitments by important financial
institutions that they simply cannot meet.
The economy
will not get back on its feet until the situation is more settled—until
there is confidence that there are no new surprises around the corner and
no new financial institution failures looming, and until credit markets
are truly unfrozen and there is a cessation in the wild swings in stock
values, currency exchange rates, and interest rates. Economic growth
requires businesses and individuals having a set of basic expectations
they can rely on as they make investment and spending decisions.
Stabilization policies are aimed at restoring confidence by shoring up
financial institutions, and restoring the housing and mortgage markets.
A new
financial regulatory framework is also needed, but it cannot be created
overnight, especially as it involves international cooperation.
Stabilization, however, requires interim steps and a path to permanent
reform of our regulatory infrastructure to restore confidence in the
integrity of our financial and credit markets.
Stimulus
Stimulus
policies are designed to offer an immediate boost in confidence throughout
the economy. The fear in a recession is that it will turn into a downward
economic spiral where conditions keep getting worse and worse. The scary
scenario is that economic demand declines as consumers rein in their
spending, followed in turn by businesses reducing hiring and investment as
they lose faith there will be customers for their products. This behavior
by businesses then further reduces demand, which further saps business
interest in hiring and investing—and the economy just keeps
deteriorating.
The answer
is for government to step in to spur demand by increasing public spending,
by putting cash in private hands to encourage private spending, or by
creating incentives for the private sector to move savings into spending.
This breaks the downward spiral and primes the pump for recovery by
restoring the confidence of businesses and consumers. For this to be
effective, of course, there must be a net increase in demand and not
simply a shift in spending from one area to another—that’s why
government outlays for stimulus are paid for through government borrowing
(although, in theory, tapping government savings would also do the trick
if the government had any).
As a
practical matter, the best stimulus proposals can meet the overlapping
objectives of boosting demand, stopping job losses, helping those most in
need during bad times, and starting to make investments that have
long-term benefits. Extending unemployment compensation and measures
getting cash into the pockets of people who need it (and will spend it)
are examples of stimulus policies. Fast-moving infrastructure and
energy-related investments also fit the bill and are important to our
long-term economic needs.
Another
important set of stimulus policies are those that help states cope with
falling revenues that otherwise force them to lay off workers, cut
spending on critical safety-net programs, and shortchange areas of
long-term importance such as education, infrastructure investment, and
health care. The priority with stimulus is speed—spending that will flow
quickly to stop the economy from tumbling further downhill and restore
confidence so that the private sector can start the climb back to normal
economic conditions.
Recovery
Recovery
policies are those aimed at getting us out of the jobs hole we’re in. By
the end of 2008, we will almost certainly have lost 1 million jobs. Add in
normal population and workforce growth in 2008, and we will start 2009
with a shortfall of more than 2 million jobs. This weak labor market
brings down wages as well as hurting the unemployed—more job seekers in
search of fewer jobs puts downward pressure on compensation.
When
you’re in a hole, the first thing to do is stop digging—that is the
purpose of stimulus. But there is little question that we’re in for a
long slog back—even after the financial and housing markets are
stabilized and the fall is arrested. No source of jobs is poised to be
generated by the unaided private market to replace the jobs lost in home
construction, the financial sector, and the other areas dramatically
affected by the current recession. A set of policies aimed at creating
jobs over the next two years is needed to get the labor market back on
track.
The ideal
recovery policy creates jobs efficiently (many good jobs per dollar of
expenditure) while making investments that further our long-term economic
prospects. The Center for American Progress’ “Green Recovery” plan
does this by making a wide range of investments that efficiently produce
jobs in a range of sectors related to moving the country to a low-carbon
economy. Infrastructure investments, energy-related and otherwise, also
serve the purposes of recovery policies.
As a
practical matter, the distinction between “stimulus” and
“recovery” often gets blurred as specific policies span the range of
“short-term” and “medium-term.” One piece of legislation often
contains both stimulus and recovery measures. That’s entirely
appropriate as long as the legislation isn’t shortchanging either. We
need to both stop the immediate descent of the economy and start restoring
the jobs that have been lost.
Growth
Growth
policies are those aimed at growing our economy and creating a ladder of
economic opportunity and mobility for the long haul. True economic success
is only realized with a growing middle class and rising living standards
as both the measure of success and the fuel that propels it. The economy
has not performed well for almost nine years for most Americans. Job
growth has been weak; incomes have stagnated or fallen.
Even before
this period there were problems that had not been addressed. The economic
weakness of recent years was papered over by personal debt underpinned by
artificially high valuation of homes and other assets. This has proven to
be a recipe for calamity, not economic well-being. A lesson to be learned
from this period is that economic growth that is not buttressed by growing
middle-class incomes is illusory—a house of cards bound to collapse.
Well-designed
growth policies can address the nation’s longer-term problems, but will
take some time to work—which makes it all the more important to get
started. The Center for American Progress’s “Progressive Growth”plan
is aimed at producing economic growth with widely available opportunity
and a ladder of economic mobility through transforming to a low-carbon
economy, implementing health care reform and labor law reform, improving
education, spurring innovation, increasing national savings and private
sector investment, and addressing the challenges and opportunities of
globalization. These are the keys to America’s long-term prosperity.
Conclusion
A
comprehensive path to a better economy requires policies aimed at
stabilization, stimulus, recovery, and growth. Each element is necessary,
and none alone is enough. Stabilization policies get the financial markets
back in shape, but don’t restore the languishing economy beyond that.
Stimulus policies may stop the bleeding and nudge us down the road to a
better economy, but it’s just a nudge.
Recovery
policies get us jobs and push us down the road to a growing economy with a
thriving middle-class, but it leaves much of the job undone. Growth
policies are the most important for getting our nation on track
economically, but they don’t stop the immediate suffering and they need
stabilization, stimulus, and recovery to build on. While the policy
specifics may be subject for debate, the need for the full package, soon,
is hard to refute.
Michael
Ettlinger is Vice President for Economic Policy at the Center for American
Progress. To read his reports and analysis and those of other members of
his team, please go to the Economy page of our website.
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The Center
for American Progress is a nonpartisan research and educational institute
dedicated to promoting a strong, just and free America that ensures
opportunity for all. We believe that Americans are bound together by a
common commitment to these values and we aspire to ensure that our
national policies reflect these values. We work to find progressive and
pragmatic solutions to significant domestic and international problems and
develop policy proposals that foster a government that is "of the
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