Dear Friends,

        The attached essay appeared today in the perspectives section of the 
San Jose Mercury News.

Best to all,  Jamie

***********************
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/editorial/11185309.htm

Posted on Sun, Mar. 20, 2005

`Ownership society' is hardly a new notion

By James K. Galbraith

When George W. Bush speaks of an ``ownership society,'' his words resonate. 
They sound bold, visionary and forward-looking. Yet they are not actually 
original. Indeed, they evoke some of the strongest and longest-running themes 
in our social history, from the Homestead Act through Huey Long, from populism 
to Peter Drucker, avatar of ``pension-fund socialism'' in mid-20th-century 
America.

Ownership has always been a progressive American goal. So much so that, on one 
occasion, the radical University of Texas economist Robert Montgomery, once a 
teacher to Lyndon Johnson, was hauled before the Texas Legislature to defend 
his views. According to legend, the entire hearing -- the shortest on record -- 
went like this:

Q
 Professor, do you believe in private property?

A
 Oh yes sir, senator, I believe in private property. I believe in it so 
strongly, I think everyone in Texas should have some.

The creation of an ``ownership society'' has distinguished American 
progressivism from the democratic socialism of the mainstream European left, 
which prides itself on the provision without charge of medical care, and on 
non-contributory (pay as you go) public pension schemes. But on the other side, 
Europeans largely live in apartments and rented homes. And although higher 
education in Europe is generally tuition-free, it also is restricted to a much 
smaller part of the population than is the case here.

In the United States, ownership starts with housing. We invented the 30-year 
mortgage and built the savings and loans, in the New Deal, precisely to take 
the risk out of borrowing to own a home. The Veterans Administration, Fannie 
Mae and Freddie Mac later helped pool the risk associated with lending. Most 
recently, the Tax Reform Act of 1986 set off a continuing rise in American 
ownership of homes, by favoring mortgages over other forms of debt. Today, 
about two-thirds of American families own their own homes, and middle-income 
Americans own about nine times as much housing as corporate stock.

Human capital

Americans own two other exceptional common assets. The first is what some 
economists call human capital: University educations are started by more than 
half of the adult population and have been completed by more than a quarter. In 
California -- the vanguard state in this respect -- the longstanding goal has 
been universal access to higher education, at qualities ranging up to the 
highest available anywhere in the world. This is the foundation of California's 
leadership role in the knowledge economy.

The other great asset owned by ordinary working Americans since 1935 is Social 
Security wealth. This is the present value of the income stream that today's 
working population can expect from Social Security, after they retire or become 
disabled -- or for their survivors if they die young. It is an enormous sum -- 
many trillions of dollars in capital value. And, because it is backed by the 
force of law, it is completely without financial risk. Social Security wealth 
is as good as any U.S. government bond, except of course for the purely 
political risk that future benefits may be cut -- as Bush and his allies are 
proposing.

But when Bush and his backers speak of an ``ownership society,'' they want 
Americans to forget about the assets they already own. Instead, their focus is 
on assets of which most people own relatively few -- corporate stocks. It is 
true that about half of Americans own some corporate stock (usually indirectly, 
through a mutual fund created as part of a pension plan, IRA or 401(k)). But 
well over 70 percent of the value of all stock is owned by 5 percent of 
American families, and for the other 95 percent, stocks form, for the most 
part, a minor backdrop to funds available for retirement and other goals.

Forty percent of all retirees aged 65 and higher live exclusively on Social 
Security; the bottom 60 percent of elderly people rely on that program for more 
than half their income. Only the top 40 percent of America's elderly can draw 
on assets (usually, via a pension) sufficient to double the modest benefit that 
Social Security provides.

Wide variation

And while they want us to associate ``ownership'' with ``stocks,'' the Bush 
administration, in proposing privatized Social Security stock accounts, would 
have us forget the most important feature of ownership of this type: risk. 
Stocks are intrinsically risky. They go up and they come down. This is true of 
individual portfolios, and it is true of the market as a whole.

Over even short periods of time, the variation in historical returns on the 
Standard & Poor's 500 is enormous. Under Social Security privatization, workers 
cashing in after 30 years as little as one or two years apart should expect 
large differences in their annuities depending purely on the state of the 
market when they retire. If the market crashes when you're 64 -- tough. Many 
would end up poor -- or in the laps of their children.

Meanwhile, risk is increasing in the ownership society we now have. In no 
sector has the risk gone up more than in the great asset that defines the 
American middle class: housing. And in no place, surely, more than in 
California.

Is California in a housing bubble? From anywhere else in the country it looks 
that way. The median sales price of Bay Area single-family houses hit a new 
monthly record in February, reaching $569,000. For Santa Clara County, the 
figure was $632,000, up 20 percent from a year earlier.

And it's certain that housing in California is in hock -- to an extent never 
before seen in our history and probably not in the history of any other place. 
It's clear, too, that American households as a whole are gradually coming to 
the limit of their willingness and ability to borrow against their homes to 
finance consumption expenditures of other types, from vacations to medical 
bills to college expenses to home furnishings -- all of which have helped the 
economy. Mortgage debt is now more than 80 percent of personal disposable 
income, up from about 60 percent in 1998 and from just 40 percent in 1984.

Last week, UCLA's quarterly Anderson Forecast warned that much of the 
prosperity found across California is coming from a real estate bubble, a 
situation those economists believe is unlikely to last much more than another 
year.

As long as interest rates remain low, any deflation of a housing bubble would 
be slow. A housing bubble is not like a stock bubble -- prices don't all 
collapse at once. Buyers notice long before sellers do. Unsold inventory 
accumulates in local housing markets. Residential construction slumps. And, 
without construction, the regional economy stagnates. It's not great, but it's 
not the end of the world. We saw as much in Texas, 20 years ago. It took more 
than half a decade to recover, but eventually Texas did.

Interest rate perils

But if interest rates rise, pushed up for any number of reasons by the Federal 
Reserve, then things might unravel more quickly. Would Alan Greenspan do that? 
Would he prick the bubble and crash the California housing market? To be sure, 
Greenspan let the stock bubble inflate for years. He has no special reason to 
care about the housing bubble. Outside of housing -- and also oil, an imported 
price -- there is virtually no inflation for the Fed to fight.

But today Greenspan has a weak dollar to defend. He has no way to defend it, 
except by raising short-term interest rates in the hopes of persuading the 
Chinese and Japanese to hold their dollars. He's been doing that for a year 
already. There is no sign he plans to stop.

So far, long-term interest rates haven't gone up. But if the Fed continues to 
tighten, they eventually will. And then housing, stocks, business investment 
and exports -- along with consumer spending -- could go down together.

Bush's ownership society won't be worth much if that happens. And Americans 
might remember, with a touch of nostalgia, that the days when we owned houses 
to live in, and had Social Security to retire on, weren't altogether bad.

JAMES K. GALBRAITH holds the Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business 
Relations at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, the University of 
Texas at Austin, and is a senior scholar of the Levy Economics Institute in New 
York. He wrote this article for Perspective.

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