Friday, November 16, 2012

BARRON'S NEWSPAPER ASKS (and answers) the question: Are We Headed For A Recession?

The eye-catching front page of the November 12, 2012 edition of Barron's features a drawing of a sports car being driven by a steely-eyed Barak Obama (both hands are on the steering wheel), eyes looking a little bit to the left, with passenger House Speaker John boehner, arms folded, a defiant glint in his eyes which appear looking left, and set in resolve (rather than set in focus).  The car is hurtling in mid air, having been driven off a cliff (ostensibly by the driver, Obama).

A large font headline (all caps asks):

ARE WE HEADED
FOR A RECESSION?

in slightly smaller font is a side bar commentary which reads:

If President Obama and

House speaker Boehner
don't reach a deal
on spending and taxes
by Jan. 1, the economy
could swing from its
current 2% growth rate
to a 1% decline in the
first half of next year.
Get readyfor the
recession of 2013.
COVER STORY

The so-called fiscal cliff has all to do with tax increases and almost
nothing to do with spending cuts.  Can the economy survive?

SHOCK TREATMENT

by Gene Epstein

When Ben Bernanke gets concerned, the rest of us should start worrying.  "If the fiscal cliff isn't addressed," warned the Federal Reserve chairman in a Sept. 13 appearance before the Senate Finance Committee, "I don't think our tools are strong enough to offset the effects."  After thus disavowing central-bank responsibility if the U.S. Economy falls [off {can't believe it, Barron's proof readers let "of the cliff" through!}] the fiscall, Bernanke plaintively added, "So I think it's really important for the fiscalpolicy makers to, you know, work together and find a solution."

Nearly two months later--and just days after the presidential electiion--policy makers have yet to find a solution, mainly for lack of trying.  On Friday, Republican House Speaker John boehner and newly re-elected PResdent Barack Obama declared their intention to try to work together to avert the fiscal cliff.  If they fail, the Congressional Budget Office has warned of a "contraction in output in the fist half of 2013 [that] would probably be judged to be a recession."  From real growth in gross domestic product in the second half of this year that is likely running at an annual rate of 2%, the CBO projects a contraction in the first half at an annual rate of 1%.

More optimistically, Barron's put the odds of an outright contraction at even money, a risk no responsible policy maker should want to take.  than recession would be a return of that ugly economist's neologism, a "growth recession," in which economic growth continues, but at such a subdued pace that the unemployment rate rises.  That's because the nation's jobs growth wouldn't be enough to offset the growth in the labor force.

The fiscal cliff is far less about spending cuts than it is about tax increases.  As commonly defined, the fiscal cliff refers to an unusual combination of federal tax hikes coinciding with reductions in federal spending, all of them coming on Jan. 1, 2013.  Indeed, a Wall Street Journal front-page story last week spoke, for example, of "deep, automatic federal-spending cuts and tax increases."

Wrong.  While the tax increases will ceretainly be steep, the "deep" spending cuts are much shallower.  More impoartant, the spending cuts will be more than offset by inexorable increases in the cost of entitlement programs.  The net result will be no reduction in federal spending. The cuts popularly cited mainly consist of automatic reductions undere the 2011 Budget Conbtrol Act that require equal dollar cuts in defense and nondefense programs starting in fiscal 2012, through an action known as sequestration.  Painful as those cuts may be, however, they are not enough to cause the government's overall spending to decline.  Projections by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and the WHite House's Office of Management and Budget both show that overall dollar spending won't decrease in calendar year 2013.  Wat all the projections do show is a much slower rate of increase.

That's partly because the huge influx of aging baby boomers will be laying just claim to their Social Security benefits right on schedule.  So we are again dealing with the budgetary newspeak of decreases in spending that are really just a reduction in the increase.

Even that smaller-than-usual increase might be somewhat understated.  Both CBO and OMB might have erred on the side of optimism about one wild card in federal spending, the cost of servicing the burgeoning federal debt.  Since the federal budget will still be running a deficit, the outstanding debt will grow.  But OMG and CBO both project only a modest increase in servicing cost based on the assumtion that interest costs will stay at their hostorical lows.  If not, total federal spending will increase by even more.

Those senssitive to the nuances of fiscal policy might still argue that even a slow-down in the rate of increase in spending still have dampening effects on the economy.  But that sin of omission should still have much less of an impact than the far larger sin of commission on the tax side.

The CBP projects nearly a hal-trillion-dollar jump in tax revenue in calendar 2013 that has no offseets.  Accodring to CBO estimates, that will mean aa 2.7% increase in tax as a share ofo GDP.  To put that figure in perspective, there has not been a single year since 1970 when an increase in federal tax revenue ran even as high as 1%, with just three years of +0.9%.  The last year comparable to this one was 1969, when the rise in tax revenue as a share of  nominal GDP ran 2.1%.  By fourth quarter 1969, the economy had slipped into recession.

FOR STARTERS, IT'S CLEAR that, if spending and investing power proportionate to 2.7% of GDP is drained from consumers and business over the course of a year thgough higher taxes, there is likely to be a slow-down in economic activity.  Whether the result will be outrightg recession depends on somehting more difficult to guage--the extent to which the tax hikes really do shock, taking consumers and business by surprise.  When consumers and business are relatively unprepared, the slowdown in economic activity is likely to be grfeater.

As for any shock and surprise on the spending side, half the spending cuts mandated by the 2011 Budget Control Act will fall on defense, and were probably anticipated.  It's unclear how much shock will be caused by the tax increases.

The looming fiscal cliff has gotten so much play in the media that it already has probably placed a damper on economic activity.  And to the degree that it has, one saving grace is that consumers and business will be better prepared for the cliff's effects.

As Stanford University economist John Taylor recently pointed out in his blog, "The fiscal cliff was not created by aliens from outer space.  It is another poor government policy created in Washington."  When we look on the tax side [(see chart below)], we see an odd asorment of inadvertent reversals of tax cuts all converging at the same time.

TAX SHOCK

Federal tax revenue is due to jump by almost $500 billion in calendar year 2013, while spending will remain flat.  This tax shock raises the risk of recession in 2013.  The shock is due not to a surging economy, but rather to a unique convergence of tax increases that legislators could still reverse of mitigate.  Items on the list, totalijng nearly $475 billion in 2013, are key drivers of the tax shock.
___________________________________________________________
$161 billion: Rollback of Bush tax cuts on income
$66 billion: for incomes in excess of $250K ($200K if single)
$38 billion: Reinstate 36% and 39.6% top rates; also reinstate personal exemption phase-out and limit on itemized deductions
$22 billion: Dividends taxed as ordinary income, instead of "qualified" taxed at 15%
$6 billion: Long-term capital gains at 20%, not 15%
$95 billion: for all other incomes
*  $114 billion:  Not indexing alternative minimum tax for inflation
*  $120 billion:  Rollback of the two-percentage-point cut in the payroll tax
*   $14 billion:  Rollback of cuts in estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes
*   $23 billion:  Tax hikes under Obamacare
*   $41 billion:  Rollback of stimulus cuts and "tax extender"
Source:  Office of Management and Budget, Congressional Budget Office, Heritage Foundation

__________________________________________________________________________

In his address Friday, President Obama made it clear that he wants to retain the tax cuts on the first $200,000 of taxable income for individuals and $250,000 for couples.  It turns out that most of the pending increases in terms of sheer dollars will fall on these "non-rich."  So the president should have a natural desire to strike a deal.

The largest impact ($161 billion) consists of the still-pending rollback of the tax cuts passed under former President George W. Bush.  According to Obama's own Office of MAnagement and Budget, nearly 60% or $95 billion will do a lot to blunt the tax shock.

The president made it clear Friday taht he plans to restore these taxes on the richest 2%, which will raise the remaining $66 billion.  A substantial portion of that ($28 billion) is expected to fall on their dividends and capital gains.  Boehner, however, made it equally clear that he's against raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans."

Regarding the $66 billion that OMB estimates could be realized [through - Barron's article had this word as "though"] higher taxes on the top 2%, the estimated $28 billion from dividends and capital gains could be too high.  Steeper tax rates can alter behavior, especially investment behavior.  The full realization of that $28 billion depends on the size of the dividendds received and capital gains realized.

Investors now face a neutral trade-off between dividends and long-term capital gains, since both are taxes at 15%.  With the rollback of the tax cuts, the level playing field will be tilted once again, with capital gains taxes at 20% and dividends taxes as ordinary income, with rates as high as 39.6%.  That sort of differential will mean a return of the perverse desire by investors to have companies reinvest earnings rather than distribute them as dividends, in the hope that the reinvested earning will turn into more highly taxed capital gains.  The result will be what economists have referred to as a :lock-in" effect, with harm to economic efficiency.

Another tax that falls mianly on the non-rich is the alternative minimum tax ($114 billion).  Each year, a taxpayer is supposed to pay the AMT of a regular tax, whichever is greater.  But since the AMT was hurting middle-income taxpayers, an exemption roughly indexed to inflation, called a "patch," has been protectding them against its effects.  The last exemption expired in December 2011, however, which means income earned in 2012 could feel like the influence of the AMT.  Since the bad news will be learned by taxpayers when they file theri returns, the CBO projects that the huge sums will be paid almost entirely in 2013.

It seems likely, however, that the patch on the AMT will have a good chance of getting extended.  Less likely--so far, at least--will be the coninuance of the cut in the payroll tax on employees by two percentage points (worth $120 billion), instituted in January 2011.  That payroll-tax holiday, which is technically hurting the solvency of Social Security, doesn't seem popular with the White House.

BUT IF POLICY MAKERS do take Fed Chairman Bernanke's warning seriously, everything should be on the table.  That would mean rescinding many of the tax hikes, while less happily reversing the spending cuts, thus allowing federal spending to increase faster than planned.  No matter which way it gets done, the result would be a widening of the fiscal deficit.

That might set off alarms.  For those deficit hawks concerned about red ink vitually without end, why not sit back and celebrate the fiscal contraction otherwise known as the fiscal cliff?

The standard drug-addict analogy helps answer that question.  Much as we might have opposed shooting up the economic patient with such huge doses of fiscal-deficit heroin to begin with--much as we might welcome the ultimate return to balanced-budget sobriety--we might still fear the consequences of withdrawal if the dose gets cut so drastically in so shurt a time.

The economy's deficit habit must be abandoned, or the build-up in debt will cause a major crash.  But the fiscal cliff, or tax shock, poses a great risk to economic growth in 2013.  Our leaders must therefore kick the deficit-reduction can down the road yet one more time.  We might take comfort in knowing that they have a talent for that sort of activity.