[from Julie Matthaei]

Economists to Romney campaign: That’s not what our research says

By Ezra Klein , Updated: August 8, 2012

On Tuesday, the Romney campaign responded to the fire it’s taking from
economic analysts by unleashing some artillery of their own. They
released a paper by four decorated economists associated with the
campaign — Glenn Hubbard, Greg Mankiw, John Taylor, and Kevin Hassett
[where the last is coauthor of _Dow 36,000_, which made one of the
worst predictions in US economic history] — that tried to lend some
empirical backing to “The Romney Program for Economic Recovery,
Growth, and Jobs.”

Hubbard, Mankiw, Taylor and Hassett make three main points: The first
is that this recovery has been terribly slow, even by the standards of
post-financial crisis recoveries. The second is that the Obama
administration made a grievous error by relying on stimulus. And the
third is that Romney’s tax and economic plans would usher in an era of
rapid growth that would both be good for the country and provide the
boost to revenues and employment necessary to make their numbers work
out.

Each of these sections include supporting documents from independent
economists. And so I contacted some of the named economists to ask
what they thought of the Romney campaign’s interpretation of their
research. In every case, they responded with a polite version of
Marshall McLuhan’s famous riposte. The Romney campaign, they said,
knows little of their work. Or of their policy proposals.

“The historical record is clear,” write the Romney campaign’s
economists. “Our economy usually recovers quickly from recessions, and
the more severe the recession, the faster the subsequent catch-up
growth.” The paper they’re relying on here is “Deep Recessions, Fast
Recoveries, and Financial Crises: Evidence from the American Record,”
by Michael Bordo of Rutgers University and Joseph Haubrich of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. So I asked Bordo whether he agreed
that this recovery had been inexplicably sluggish, and whether a
different set of policies could have dramatically shortened it.

“This recession is really quite different,” Bordo said. But he didn’t
see government policy as the obvious cause. “We found that a lot of
the difference between what would’ve been predicted by the normal
behavior of recessions and what we observed now is explained by the
collapse of residential investment. Put another way, if residential
investment were what it was in a normal recovery, we would have
recovered already.”

That is to say, what Bordo found was fairly consistent with the rest
of the literature on this topic: Recessions associated with a housing
bust tend to have very slow recoveries. That’s rather different than
the Romney campaign’s interpretation of Bordo’s paper, which is that
the features of this particular recession couldn’t explain the slow
recovery, and thus you had to conclude that “America took a wrong turn
in economic policy in the past three years.”

The Romney campaign then turns to the Obama administration’s response
to the recession. “The negative effect of the administration’s
‘stimulus’ policies has been documented in a number of empirical
studies,” they write. When Dylan Matthews surveyed the literature, he
found 15 studies, of which 13 found the stimulus had a positive
effect. But the Romney campaign only names two studies. One is by John
Taylor, a Stanford economist who advises Romney and is, as luck would
have it, one of the economists the Romney campaign tapped to coauthor
this brief. That leaves one study that is not by a Romney-affiliated
economist: Amir Sufi and Atif Mian’s look at the “Cash for Clunkers”
program.

Sufi, an economist at the University of Chicago, is quick to point out
that his paper did not show a negative effect for “the
administration’s stimulus policies.” His paper was just about Cash for
Clunkers. “This was a $4 billion program. It’s nothing, basically. We
weren’t saying anything specific about broader stimulus programs, we
were just looking at these programs to bring forward purchases of
durable goods.”

So I asked Sufi what he thought of the stimulus more broadly. “Most of
the research is pretty positive on stimulus,” he said. In particular,
he pointed to a paper from Emi Nakamura and Jón Steinsson that used
“cross-sectional data that seems to indicate the fiscal multiplier is
quite large when you’re in a recession.”

I also asked him whether he thought the Romney campaign was right that
this recovery was unusually slow in a way that was best explained by
policy failures. “I strongly believe the evidence shows these private
debt overhangs are always longer, the recoveries always slower,” he
said. So that’s two strikes for the Romney campaign.

The key argument the Romney campaign makes for their candidate’s plan
comes toward the end, when they try and answer the criticism of the
vague tax-reform proposal. ”The Romney tax reform plan will increase
GDP growth by between 0.5 percent and 1 percent per year over the next
decade,” Romney’s economists write. “These long-run gains from tax and
budget reform have been the subject of significant study by
economists, as documented in the Appendix.”

So I turned to the appendix. Of the four studies mentioned, two of
them are co-authored by Berkeley economist Alan Auerbach. When I
looked deeper into the studies, however, they didn’t seem all that
applicable to Romney’s tax plan. The Romney campaign, for instance,
was using an estimate from a simulation Auerbach ran in which he
replaced the income tax with a consumption tax. If the Romney campaign
proposed such a policy, that would be very big news. But they have not
proposed such a policy.

So I e-mailed Auerbach the relevant quote from the Romney campaign’s
paper, and added two questions: “Given what we know and don’t know of
the Romney plan, is it reasonable to attach these kinds of dynamic
estimates to it? Do you think that reporters like me should assume
that the 0.5-1% gdp boost is a reliable base case?”

His response came quickly. “I did not see the [Romney campaign's]
paper, but from your description the basic answer to both of your
questions is ‘no’,” he replied. His paper looked at “a much bigger tax
change than Romney is proposing.” It also “assumed that all tax
changes were revenue-neutral on an annual basis; the size of the
Romney tax cuts makes this a questionable assumption.”

So, that’s three economists named in the Romney paper, not one of whom
would sign on to the interpretation the Romney paper gave to their
work.

There are interesting criticisms of the Obama campaign buried in the
work of the economists the Romney campaign cited — the problem is that
the Romney campaign doesn’t have the standing to make them.

Both Sufi and Bordo agree that the housing market was at the core of
this recession, and of the sluggish recovery that has succeeded it. So
one possible criticisms — which I’m sympathetic to — is that the Obama
administration bobbled the single most significant policy question
related to the recovery: What to do about housing.

But Sufi and Bordo disagree on what should have been done. “If the
problem is housing, then the market needs to clear, and when the
market needs to clear, it needs minimal amount of government
intervention,” says Bordo. But when I probed whether Bordo was
implicitly criticizing the Obama administration’s housing policies, he
essentially shrugged. “We didn’t have massive government intervention
in it anyway,” he says.

Sufi’s argument leads to a clearer critique of the Obama
administration. He points to a Bloomberg column where he argued that
“in both the data and the theory, the critical problem is the high
level of debt in the household sector. So why doesn’t macroeconomic
policy directly combat this problem?” Sufi goes on to advocate a
program of debt forgiveness, though he admits that designing such a
program effectively is very difficult. But while the Obama
administration has been tepidly supportive of plans to reduce
principal for underwater borrowers, the Romney campaign opposes it.

Indeed, the Romney campaign doesn’t have a housing policy at all.
“Housing” isn’t one of the issues on their Web site. The word is only
mentioned twice in their 160-page economic plan. There are no
recommendations in this paper. Indeed, Hubbard, one of the authors of
this paper and a key adviser to Romney, has advocated a large program
to encourage mortgage refinancing in the past, but Romney hasn’t
embraced it.

Indeed, as Nick Timiraos notes, Romney’s comments on housing have been
self-contradictory. At one point, his position was, “Don’t try to stop
the foreclosure process. Let it run its course and hit the bottom.”
Later, he said, “The idea that somehow this is going to cure itself by
itself is probably not real. There’s going to have to be a much more
concerted effort to work with the lending institutions and help them
take action, which is in their best interest and the best interest of
the homeowners.” But the campaign never released a formal policy
resolving these tensions.

Meanwhile, Auerbach added another interesting wrinkle to his analysis.
“Our paper didn’t take into account business-cycle considerations,” he
said. “To the extent that the Romney plan spurs a more rapid economic
recovery from our current state of high unemployment, that could make
a big difference in short-run growth estimates. These would basically
be demand-side stimulus effects.”  In other words, insofar as Romney’s
tax cuts act as a Keynesian stimulus package [just as Reagan's and
Dubya's putatively "supply-side" policies did}, they could do more for
the economy in the short-run than standard tax models would assume.
But that requires assuming that Keynesian stimulus works, which would
contradict the first section of the Romney campaign’s paper.

So even the studies that the Romney campaign’s economists handpicked
to bolster their case don’t prove what the Romney campaign says they
prove. And some of the key policy recommendations that flow from those
studies are anathema to the Romney campaign. And in perhaps the key
policy area highlighted by these studies, the Romney campaign doesn’t
have a formal policy. If this is the best they can do in support of
their economic plan, well, it’s not likely to quiet the critics.

© The Washington Post Company
-- 
Jim Devine / If you're going to support the lesser of two evils, you
should at least know the nature of that evil.
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