Why It’s So Hard to Figure Out What the Stimulus
Did<http://reason.com/blog/2014/02/18/why-its-so-hard-to-figure-out-what-the-s>

Peter Suderman <http://reason.com/people/peter-suderman/all>|Feb. 18, 2014
12:15 pm

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[image: Whitehouse.gov]Whitehouse.govFive years after the passage of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the biggest fiscal stimulus in the
nation’s history, the debate over its success hasn’t changed very much.

Democrats say it worked, providing a Keynesian jump-start to the economy is
a time of great distress. A White House report released on the anniversary
of the Act’s passage
touts<http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2014/02/17/fifth-anniversary-american-recovery-and-reinvestment-act>
millions
of jobs created, economic aid to families and individuals, and positive
long-term growth effects, among other gains.

Republicans say it was a waste of money with little to no helpful effect.
It hasn’t helped the middle class,
says<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2014/02/16/despite-stimulus-middle-class-still-struggles/>
the
GOP’s Senate Minority Leader, Mitch McConnell. The stimulus has “clearly
failed,” 
says<http://www.politico.com/story/2014/02/marco-rubio-economic-stimulus-103587.html>
Sen.
Marco Rubio (R-Fl.), who calls the law “proof that massive government
spending, particularly debt spending, is not the solution to our economic
growth problems.”

All of this should sound rather familiar to those who’ve followed the
stimulus debate, because it’s more or less what the two parties have been
saying for years. One reason why I suspect the debate has changed so little
is that it’s very hard to determine with great certainty what, exactly, the
stimulus really did.

That’s why I think the best way to judge the stimulus as a whole is to say
that we don’t really know how well it worked—but that it didn’t live up to
some of the promises that were made when it was passed.

In theory, fiscal stimulus juices the economy through a multiplier effect,
in which one dollar of borrowed government spending produces more than a
dollar of overall economic gain. With a multiplier of 1.5, a stimulus of
$100 million would produce $150 million in economic activity. A multiplier
of 2.0 would result in double the economic jolt of the initial cash
infusion. The higher the multiplier, the bigger the boost.

The problem, as I noted in my April 2013
story<http://reason.com/archives/2013/04/15/down-the-drain/print> on
the stimulus, is that no one really knows what multiplier effect of fiscal
stimulus is. Reputable economists don’t even really agree about the
possible range for the multiplier. Some economists think it could be in the
range of 3.0 or even higher, given the right circumstances. The
Congressional Budget Office puts the estimated multiplier for government
purchases at somewhere between 0.5 and 2.5. A broad survey of estimates by
University of California San Diego economist Valerie Ramey found that the
range was usually between 0.8 and 1.5, although the data could support
anywhere from 0.5 to 2.0.

Dig a little deeper into the data and it gets more complex. Estimates vary
based on the timing, the economic conditions, and the particular way the
stimulus funds are spent. And it’s practically impossible to verify
empirically, because economists can’t run controlled experiments on an
entire economy. They end up having to tease out the possible effects of
stimulus indirectly.

You’ll notice that some of those multiplier ranges actually dip below the
1.0 mark. What that means is that the economic activity created by stimulus
is less than the original money spent, potentially as low as 50 cents on
the dollar. Not much of a boost.

Despite the wide uncertainty surrounding these estimates, they end up
playing a major role in estimates of the stimulus’ effects. That’s because
when economists at the White House or the Congressional Budget Office
attempted to gauge the results of the stimulus, they relied heavily on
measurements of inputs rather than outputs, and then used the multipliers
to work from there. In other words, they looked at the amount of money
spent on stimulus and then ran that through a model that included an
estimated multiplier.

If you build a model that assumes a high multiplier effect, then your
results will reveal that stimulus spending has a high multiplier effect.
What you won’t have done is prove that stimulus spending has a high
multiplier. But that’s how the government estimates of stimulus effects on
jobs and economic growth work: Rather than measure real-world results, they
count the spending, assume a multiplier, and then report the output.

And what if the real-world effects were, in reality, radically different?
Would that show up in the reported estimates? No. When CBO Director Douglas
Elmendorf was asked, “If the stimulus bill did not do what it was
originally forecast to do, then that would not have been detected by the
subsequent analysis?” his response was: “That’s right. That’s right.”

What we have then are highly uncertain, hard-to-pin-down multiplier
estimates being used not to measure the results of stimulus, but to
estimate what the results might be if those highly uncertain estimates
happen to be correct. That’s not a clear failure, but it’s hardly proof of
the unambiguous success the White House and its allies have claimed.

So, it’s hard to say what, exactly, the stimulus did accomplish. But we can
say some of what it didn’t.

Most notably, it failed to hit the employment targets drawn up by White
House economic advisers prior to the Act’s passage. In a January
2009<http://otrans.3cdn.net/45593e8ecbd339d074_l3m6bt1te.pdf> report
titled “The Job Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan,”
administration economists projected that with no stimulus in place,
unemployment would continue rising through 2010, topping out around 9
percent and holding there for much of the year. With the stimulus, however,
unemployment would peak in the third quarter of 2009, then begin to fall,
dropping below 6 percent.

The stimulus passed, but unemployment rose higher and faster than the
administration’s no-stimulus track had projected. Unemployment began to
fall by early 2010, but not nearly as rapidly as the administration’s
estimates suggested.

Via Jim Pethokoukis of the American Enterprise Institute, here’s a
comparison between what the administration predicted, with and without the
stimulus, and what actually happened:

[image: AEI/Jim Pethokoukis]AEI/Jim Pethokoukis

The administration’s defenders counter that the estimate was made before
the breadth and depth of the recession became clear, and that a bigger
stimulus was needed. But that only reveals how hard it is to transform
academic theory into practical political reality, and how easily
macroeconomic turmoil is misdiagnosed by politicians and their advisers.
It’s hard to have confidence in their solutions when they admit they did
not understand the problem. And as Pethokoukis has
noted<http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/01/that-bernstein-romer-jobs-chart-a-final-appraisal/>,
when you factor in the dramatic decline in labor force participation, the
administration projection looks even rosier.

No doubt the political back and forth over the merits of stimulus will
continue, and the declarations of success and failure will end up as fodder
in fights over possible future fiscal policy boosts. Not much will change.
That’s too bad. Because if there’s anything we should have learned from the
fight over the nation’s biggest fiscal stimulus, it’s that we’ve been
asking the wrong question. It’s not whether the stimulus did or did not
fail, it’s whether we can ever know one way or another—and whether it's
worth spending hundreds of billions of dollars on economic interventions
whose results are likely to remain uncertain.
On Thursday, May 8, 2014, <[email protected]> wrote:

>  In a message dated 5/8/2014 12:57:13 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
> [email protected] <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>writes:
>
> *It does seem logical that ...* *because of the regressive domino effects
> of bureaucratic interventionism, more than one job is lost for every one
> the State “creates”.*
>
>
>
> *--bob  *
>
>
> Bob&lou Wynman:
>
>     That may seem "logical" to someone with a firm religious belief in 
> *"regressive
> domino effects"*.  But might you have any DATA to support your religious
> belief?  Or is it just an article of faith as part of your hatred of
> government?
>

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