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  • Working Paper No.995 03 November 2021

    The Employer of Last Resort Scheme and the Energy Transition

    Giuliano Toshiro Yajima
    Abstract

    The health and economic crises of 2020–21 have revived the debate on fiscal policy as a major tool for stabilization and meeting long-term goals. The massive surge in unemployment, due to the economic disruption of the lockdown measures, has increased the interest in policies that target employment directly instead of trying to achieve it via a general “demand push.” One of the proposals currently under debate is the job guarantee. Under such a policy the government would act as an “employer of last resort” by offering a job to everyone that is able and wants to work but cannot find a job in the private sector. This paper argues that a carefully designed scheme of direct employment and public provision by the state—addressing both the low- and high-skill workforce—can have permanent effects and promote the economy’s structural transformation, in particular by fostering energy transition and a lower carbon footprint. Starting from this point, a stock-flow consistent model is developed to study the long-run effect of the job guarantee’s implementation, inspired by the work of Godin (2013) and Sawyer and Passarella (2021).

    Download Working Paper No. 995 PDF (1.12 MB)
  • One Pager No.68 01 November 2021

    Are Concerns over Growing Federal Government Debt Misplaced?

    L. Randall Wray
    Abstract

    With the US Treasury cutting checks totaling approximately $5 trillion to deal with the COVID-19 crisis, Senior Scholar L. Randall Wray argues that when it comes to the federal government, concerns about affordability and solvency can both be laid to rest. According to Wray, the question is never whether the federal government can spend more, but whether it should. And while there are still strongly held beliefs about the negative impacts of deficits and debt on inflation, interest rates, growth, and exchange rates, with two centuries of experience the evidence for these concerns is mixed at best.

    Download One-Pager No. 68 PDF (106.37 KB)
  • Working Paper No.994 26 October 2021

    Production Function Estimation

    Aashish Mehta, Jesus Felipe, Donna Faye Bajaro and John McCombie
    Abstract

    The possible endogeneity of labor and capital in production functions, and the consequent bias of the estimated elasticities, has been discussed and addressed in the literature in different ways since the 1940s. This paper revisits an argument first outlined in the 1950s, which questioned production function estimations. This argument is that output, capital, and employment are linked through a distribution accounting identity, a key point that the recent literature has overlooked. This identity can be rewritten as a form that resembles a production function (Cobb-Douglas, CES, translog). We show that this happens because the data used in empirical exercises are value (monetary) data, not physical quantities. The argument has clear predictions about the size of the factor elasticities and about what is commonly interpreted as the bias of the estimated elasticities. To test these predictions, we estimate a typical Cobb-Douglas function using five estimators and show that: (i) the identity is responsible for the fact that the elasticities must be the factor shares; (ii) the bias of the estimated elasticities (i.e., departure from the factor shares) is, in reality, caused by the omission of a term in the identity. However, unlike in the standard omitted-variable bias problem, here the omitted term is known; and (iii) the estimation method is a second-order issue. Estimation methods that theoretically deal with endogeneity, including the most recent ones, cannot solve this problem. We conclude that the use of monetary values rather than physical data poses an insoluble problem for the estimation of production functions. This is, consequently, far more serious than any supposed endogeneity problems.

    Download Working Paper No. 994 PDF (952.82 KB)
  • Working Paper No.993 03 September 2021

    The Sraffian Supermultiplier and Cycles

    Michalis Nikiforos, Marcio Santetti and Rudiger von Arnim
    Abstract

    This paper provides a theoretical and empirical reassessment of supermultiplier theory. First, we show that, as a result of the passive role it assigns to investment, the Sraffian supermultiplier (SSM) predicts that the rate of utilization leads the investment share in a dampened cycle or, equivalently,  that a convergent cyclical motion in the utilization-investment share plane would be counterclockwise. Second, impulse response functions from standard recursive vector autoregressions (VAR) for postwar US samples strongly indicate that the investment share leads the rate of utilization, or that these cycles are clockwise. These results raise questions about the key mechanism underlying supermultiplier theory.

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  • Working Paper No.992 31 August 2021

    Modeling Monopoly Money

    Sam Levey
    Abstract

    Many of the claims put forth by Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) center around the state’s monopoly over its own currency. In this paper I interrogate the plausibility of two claims: 1) MMT’s theory of the price level—that the price level is a function of prices paid by government when it spends—and 2) the claim that the cause of deficient effective demand is the state’s failure to supply government liabilities so as to meet the demand for net financial assets. I do so by building a model of “monopoly money” capable of producing these two outcomes.

    Download Working Paper No. 992 PDF (1.93 MB)
  • Working Paper No.991 12 July 2021

    Multifactor Keynesian Models of the Long-Term Interest Rate

    Tanweer Akram
    Abstract

    This paper presents multifactor Keynesian models of the long-term interest rate. In recent years there have been a proliferation of empirical studies based on the Keynesian approach to interest rate modeling. However, standard multifactor models of the long-term interest rate in quantitative finance have not been yet incorporated Keynes’s insights about interest rate dynamics. Keynes’s insights about the influence of the current short-term interest rate are introduced in two different multifactor models of the long-term interest rate to illustrate how the long-term interest rate relates to the short-term interest rate, the central bank’s policy rate, inflation expectations, the central bank’s inflation target, volatility in financial markets, and Wiener processes.

    Download Working Paper No. 991 PDF (245.33 KB)
  • Research Project Report 08 July 2021

    Scope and Effects of Reducing Time Deficits via Intrahousehold Redistribution of Household Production

    Ajit Zacharias, Thomas Masterson, Fernando Rios-Avila and Abena D. Oduro
    Abstract

    Gender disparity in the division of responsibilities for unpaid care and domestic work (household production) is a central and pervasive component of inequalities between men and women and boys and girls. Reducing disparity in household production figures as one element of the goal of gender equality enshrined in the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and feminist scholars and political activists have articulated that the redistribution of household production responsibilities from females to males is important for its own sake, as well as for achieving gender equality in labor market outcomes. A cursory examination of available cross-country data indicates that higher per capita GDP—the neoliberal panacea for most societal malaise—provides little bulwark against the gender inequality in household production.
     
    Ajit Zacharias, Thomas Masterson, Fernando Rios-Avila, and Abena D. Oduro contribute to the literature on the intrahousehold distribution of household production by placing the question within a framework of analyzing deprivation, applying that framework to better understand the interactions between poverty and the gendered division of labor in four sub-Saharan African nations: Ethiopia, Ghana, South Africa, and Tanzania. Central to their framework is the notion that attaining a minimal standard of living requires command over an adequate basket of commodities and sufficient time to be spent on home production, where meeting those requirements produces benefits for all—including those beyond the household.
     
    Their findings motivate questions regarding the feasibility and effectiveness of redistribution of household responsibilities to alleviate time deficits and their impoverishing effects. By developing a framework to assess the mechanics of redistribution among family members and applying it to gender-based redistribution, they derive the maximum extent to which redistribution—either among all family members, between sexes, or between husbands and wives—can lower the incidence of time deficits. The conclude with a discussion of alternative principles of distributing household production responsibilities among family members and examine their impact on the Levy Institute Measure of Time and Income Poverty (LIMTCP) and discuss some policy questions in light of their findings.

    Download Research Project Report, July 2021 PDF (3.95 MB)
  • Working Paper No.990 02 July 2021

    Ecological Fiscal Transfers and State-level Budgetary Spending in India

    Divy Rangan, Lekha S. Chakraborty, Amandeep Kaur and Ranjan Kumar Mohanty
    Abstract

    Using panel data models, we analyze the flypaper effects—whether intergovernmental fiscal transfers or states’ own income determine expenditure commitments—on ecological fiscal spending in India. The econometric results show that the unconditional fiscal transfers, rather than the states’ own income, determine ecological expenditure in the forestry sector at subnational levels in India. The results hold when the models are controlled for ecological outcomes and demographic variables.

    Download Working Paper No. 990 PDF (370.86 KB)
  • Public Policy Brief No.155 30 June 2021

    Can Biden Build Back Better?

    L. Randall Wray and Yeva Nersisyan
    Abstract

    President Biden’s proposals for investing in social and physical infrastructure signal a return to a budget-neutral policymaking framework that has largely been set aside since the outbreak of the COVID-19 crisis. According Yeva Nersisyan and L. Randall Wray, this focus on ensuring revenues keep pace with spending increases can undermine the goals internal to both the public investment and tax components of the administration’s plans: the “pay for” approach limits our spending on progressive policy to what we can raise through taxes, and we will only tax the amount we need to spend.

    Nersisyan and Wray propose an alternative approach to budgeting for large-scale public expenditure programs. In their view, policymakers should evaluate spending and tax proposals on their own terms, according to the goals each is intended to meet. If the purpose of taxing corporations and wealthy individuals is to reduce inequality, then the tax changes should be formulated to accomplish that—not to “raise funds” to finance proposed spending. And while it is possible that general tax hikes might be needed to prevent public investment programs from fueling inflation, they argue that the kinds of taxes proposed by the administration would do little to relieve inflationary pressures should they arise. Under current economic circumstances, however, the president’s proposed infrastructure spending should not require budgetary offsets or other measures to control inflation in their estimation.

    Download Public Policy Brief No. 155 PDF (984.38 KB)
  • Strategic Analysis 17 June 2021

    The Pandemic, the Stimulus, and the Future Prospects for the US Economy

    Dimitri B. Papadimitriou, Gennaro Zezza and Michalis Nikiforos
    Abstract

    In this report, Institute President Dimitri B. Papadimitriou and Research Scholars Michalis Nikiforos and Gennaro Zezza analyze how the US economy was affected by the pandemic and its prospects for recovery.
     
    Their baseline simulation using the Institute’s stock-flow macroeconometric model shows a significant pickup in the growth rate in 2021 as a result of the American Rescue Plan Act. The report includes two additional scenarios simulated on top of the baseline, finding that President Biden’s infrastructure and families plans—whether paired with offsetting tax increases on high-earners or “deficit financed”—would have positive macroeconomic effects. Additionally, Papadimitriou, Nikiforos, and Zezza warn that if US policymakers do not prioritize decreasing the trade deficit, maintaining growth will require either continuous and very high government deficits or the private sector once again becoming a net borrower.
     
    Finally, they argue that concerns about a sharp increase in inflation spurred by the fiscal stimulus are unwarranted: the US economy was not close to full employment or full utilization of resources before the pandemic, and the propagation mechanisms that could lead to accelerating inflation are not in place.

    Download Strategic Analysis, June 2021 PDF (1.64 MB)
  • Working Paper No.989 17 June 2021

    The Endogeneity-to-Demand of the National Emergency Utilization Rate

    Michalis Nikiforos
    Abstract

    The paper provides an empirical discussion of the national emergency utilization rate (NEUR), which is based on a “national emergency” definition of potential output and is published by the US Census Bureau. Over the peak-to-peak period 1989–2019, the NEUR decreased by 14.2 percent. The paper examines the trajectory of potential determinants of capacity utilization over the same period as specified in the related theory, namely: capital intensity, relative prices of labor and capital, shift differentials, rhythmic variations in demand, industry concentration, and aggregate demand. It shows that most of them have moved in a direction that would lead to an increase in utilization. The main factor that can explain the decrease in the NEUR is aggregate demand, while the increase in industry concentration might have also played a small role.

    Download Working Paper No. 989 PDF (715.15 KB)
  • Policy Notes No.3 08 June 2021

    Why President Biden Should Eliminate Corporate Taxes to Build Back Better

    L. Randall Wray and Edward Lane
    Abstract

    Edward Lane and L. Randall Wray explain how federal taxes on corporate profits are not well suited to either containing inflationary pressures or reducing inequality. They are not only a poor complement to President Biden’s proposed infrastructure plans, but are inefficient and ineffective taxes more broadly, according to Lane and Wray. The authors follow Hyman Minsky in recommending the elimination of corporate taxes, and they outline a replacement centered on the taxation of unrealized capital gains.

    Download Policy Note 2021/3 PDF (353.00 KB)
  • One Pager No.67 07 June 2021

    Should Corporate Tax Hikes Be Included in Biden’s “Build Back Better” Plans?

    L. Randall Wray and Edward Lane
    Abstract

    President Biden has proposed pairing his American Jobs Plan with an increase in federal corporate income taxes. Leaving aside the issue of whether any tax increases are needed to “pay for” the plan, Edward Lane and L. Randall Wray assess the proposed corporate profits tax hike in terms of its ability to meet two objectives: (1) fighting potential inflation that might result from the new Jobs Plan (and all the other relief and stimulus plans enacted), and (2) taxing the rich to reduce inequality. They argue the federal corporate income tax is far less effective at combating inflation and inequality than what many might think, and propose replacing corporate taxation with taxes on individuals that would ensure the burden is mostly imposed on high earners.

    Download One-Pager No. 67 PDF (115.38 KB)
  • Working Paper No.988 04 June 2021

    A Keynesian Approach to Modeling the Long-Term Interest Rate

    Tanweer Akram
    Abstract

    There are several widely used benchmark models of the long-term interest rate in quantitative finance. However, these models have yet to incorporate Keynes’s valuable insights about interest rate dynamics. The Keynesian approach to interest rate dynamics can be readily incorporated in the benchmark models of the long-term interest rate. This paper modifies several benchmark interest rate models. In these modified models the long-term interest rate is related to the short-term interest rate and a Wiener process. The Keynesian approach to interest rate dynamics can be useful in addressing theoretical and policy issues.

    Download Working Paper No. 988 PDF (264.17 KB)
  • Strategic Analysis 25 May 2021

    Επανεκκινηση της Ελληνικης Οικονομιας;

    Dimitri B. Papadimitriou, Gennaro Zezza and Nikolaos Rodousakis
    Abstract

    Tελευταία έκθεση Στρατηγικών Αναλύσεων του Levy Economics Institute που αφορά στις προοπτικές και την επανεκκίνηση της ελληνικής οικονομίας στην μετά-COVID-19 εποχή.Σύμφωνα με τα εμπειρικά ευρήματα η οικονομική μεγένθυση της ελληνικής οικονομίας, αναφορικά με το βασικό σενάριο, εκτιμάται ότι θα είναι 3,4% το 2021 και 4,9% 2022. Τα ευρήματα αυτά δείχνουν ότι η ελληνική οικονομία δεν θα μπορέσει να επιστρέψει στο προ πανδημίας επίπεδο του ΑΕΠ, αν δεν υπάρξουν αποτελεσματικές παρεμβάσεις. Κατά την άποψή μας, ενδεχόμενη ασθενική ανάκαμψη του ΑΕΠ θα οφείλεται αποκλειστικά στην απουσία δημοσιονομικής επέκτασης.Το οικονομικό και κοινωνικό κόστος της πανδημίας είναι σημαντικό και η ζημιά που έχει προκαλέσει σε άτομα, οικογένειες, επιχειρήσεις και σε ολόκληρες οικονομίες αποτυπώνετα σε κάθε οκονομικό δείκτη. Η πτώση του ΑΕΠ της ελληνικής οικονομίας ήταν μία από τις μεγαλύτερες ανάμεσα στα κράτη-μέλη της Ευρωζώνης και της ΕΕ, με την Ελλάδα να έχει ήδη ένα από τα υψηλότερα ποσοστά ανεργίας και υποαπασχόλησης του εργατικού δυναμικού και με τον τουρισμό, που αποτελεί τη βασική κινητήρια δύναμη των εξαγωγών, της οικονομικής δραστηριότητας και απασχόλησης, να μειώνεται κατα 25% σε σχέση με το επίπεδο του 2019.

    Download Στρατηγικη Αναλυση, Μάιος 2021 PDF (737.07 KB)
  • Strategic Analysis 25 May 2021

    Restarting the Greek Economy?

    Dimitri B. Papadimitriou, Gennaro Zezza and Nikolaos Rodousakis
    Abstract

    The Greek economy—still fragile due to the lingering effects of the 2009–10 crisis—was hit particularly hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Greece’s 2020 GDP decline was one of the worst among the group of EU and eurozone member states, along with the highest levels of unemployment and underemployment.

    Dimitri B. Papadimitriou, Christos Pierros, Nikos Rodousakis, and Gennaro Zezza update their analysis of the state of the Greek economy on the basis of recently released provisional data for 2020Q4, and model three projections through 2023: (1) a baseline scenario in which no agreement is reached on the disbursement of EU funds (the Recovery and Resilience Facility); (2) a scenario in which EU grants and loans are distributed in a timely manner; and (3) an additional scenario that pairs EU funds with implementation of an employer-of-last resort program. The second scenario would see Greece’s GDP growth return to its pre-pandemic trend—albeit still leaving the economy below the level of real GDP it reached in 2008. The third scenario has the most favorable impact on growth and employment—raising real GDP above its pre-pandemic trend. Failure to achieve a proper recovery of GDP in Greece would be directly related to an absence of fiscal policy expansion.

    This Strategic Analysis is the joint product of the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College and INE-GSEE (Athens, Greece). It is simultaneously issued in both English and Greek.

    Download Strategic Analysis, May 2021 PDF (982.26 KB)
  • Policy Notes No.2 13 May 2021

    Gender and Race in the Spotlight during the COVID-19 Pandemic

    Luiza Nassif Pires, Luísa Cardoso and Ana Luíza Matos de Oliveira
    Abstract

    Research Scholar Luiza Nassif-Pires, Luísa Cardoso, and Ana Luíza Matos de Oliveira analyze the importance of the “emergency benefit” (Auxílio Emergencial) in containing the increase in poverty and extreme poverty in Brazil during the COVID-19 pandemic. They find the emergency benefit mitigated the loss of income, brought the poverty rate to historically low levels, and reduced inequality: poverty gaps in terms of gender and (to a lesser degree) race narrowed in 2020. However, their simulations show that a planned reduction in transfer levels for 2021 will result in the emergency benefit providing substantially less social protection against loss of income than its more robust 2020 version.

    Download Policy Note 2021/2 PDF (406.94 KB)
  • One Pager No.66 01 April 2021

    Anatomy of a Stock Market Bubble

    Frank Veneroso
    Abstract

    According to Frank Veneroso, a broad subset of today’s US stock market has become what he calls a “pure price-chasing bubble.” Examination of the history of comparable pure price-chasing bubbles shows there has been a set of key causal factors that contributed to these rare market events. The most extreme such case was an over-the-counter market in Kuwait called the “Souk al-Manakh.” This exemplar of a pure price-chasing phenomenon may shed light—albeit unflattering—on the current US equity market, Veneroso contends.

    Download One-Pager No. 66 PDF (103.04 KB)
  • Working Paper No.987 22 March 2021

    The Souk Al-Manakh

    Frank Veneroso and Mark Pasquali
    Abstract

    It is widely agreed that the Nasdaq during the dot-com era 20 years ago was a full-fledged stock market bubble. Recently, the US stock market according to many metrics has become significantly more speculative and overvalued than it was at the dot-com peak 20 years ago. In both instances, a very broad subset of stocks became so highly valued that speculation in them had to be untethered from all fundamentals: the essence of what we call a “pure price-chasing bubble.”
     
    This paper, drawn from a book in progress, examines the history of stock markets for comparable pure price-chasing bubbles, finding nine or so which have ever reached such a speculative extreme, with an over-the-counter market in Kuwait in the early 1980s called the “Souk al-Manakh” representing the most extreme example. Based on personal exposure to this Souk al-Manakh almost 40 years ago, we describe this anatomy and thereby make transparent the recurrent dynamics—on the way up and on the way down—of these greatest asset bubbles in human history. When one applies this framework to the current US stock market, one sees that the stock market in the US today will likely follow the disastrous path of the dot-com market.

    Download Working Paper No. 987 PDF (1.18 MB)
  • Working Paper No.986 10 March 2021

    Keynes’s Theories of the Business Cycle

    Pablo Gabriel Bortz
    Abstract

    This paper traces the evolution of John Maynard Keynes’s theory of the business cycle from his early writings in 1913 to his policy prescriptions for the control of fluctuations in the early 1940s. The paper identifies six different “theories” of business fluctuations. With different theoretical frameworks in a 30-year span, the driver of fluctuations—namely cyclical changes in expectations about future returns—remained substantially the same. The banking system also played a pivotal role throughout the different versions, by financing and influencing the behavior of return expectations. There are four major changes in the evolution of Keynes’s business cycle theories: a) the saving–investment framework to understand changes in economic fluctuations; b) the capabilities of the banking system to moderate the business cycle; c) the effectiveness of monetary policy to fine tune the business cycle through the control of the short-term interest rate or credit conditions; and d) the role of a comprehensive fiscal policy and investment policy to attenuate fluctuations. Finally, some conclusions are drawn about the present relevance of the policy mix Keynes promoted for ensuring macroeconomic stability.

    Download Working Paper No. 986 PDF (297.71 KB)
  • One Pager No.65 17 February 2021

    COVID Relief and the Inflation Warriors

    L. Randall Wray and Yeva Nersisyan
    Abstract

    With the unveiling of President Biden’s nearly $2 trillion proposal for addressing the COVID-19 crisis, Democrats appear keen to avoid repeating the mistakes of the Great Recession—most notably the inadequate fiscal response.

    Yeva Nersisyan and L. Randall Wray observe that while Democrats are not falling for the “deficit bogeyman” this time, critics have pushed the idea that the increase in government spending will cause inflation. Nersisyan and Wray argue that the current fiscal package should be evaluated as a set of relief measures, not stimulus, and that the objections of the inflation worriers should not stand in the way of taking needed action.

    Download One-Pager No. 65 PDF (129.56 KB)
  • Working Paper No.985 08 February 2021

    Has Japan Been Following Modern Money Theory Without Recognizing It?

    L. Randall Wray and Yeva Nersisyan
    Abstract

    Modern Money Theory (MMT) economists have used Japan as an example of a country that demonstrates that high deficits and debt do not lead to insolvency, high interest rates, or inflation. MMT insists that governments that issue their own sovereign currency cannot be forced into insolvency, that they can make all payments as they come due, and that they do not really spend tax revenue or borrow in their own currency—with Japan serving as an example of a country that does not face financial budget constraints as normally defined. In this paper we evaluate whether Japan is the poster child of MMT and argue that policy-wise Japan is not following MMT recommendations; in fact, it is generally adopting policies that are precisely the opposite of those proposed by MMT, consistently adopting the path of stop-go fiscal measures and engaging in inadequate and temporary fiscal stimuli in the face of recessions, followed by austerity whenever the economy has seemed to recover.

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  • Working Paper No.984 05 February 2021

    The Empirics of Long-Term Mexican Government Bond Yields

    Tanweer Akram and Syed Al-Helal Uddin
    Abstract

    This paper presents empirical models of Mexican government bond (MGB) yields based on monthly macroeconomic data. The current short-term interest rate has a decisive influence on MGB yields, after controlling for inflation and growth in industrial production. John Maynard Keynes claimed that government bond yields move in lockstep with the short-term interest rate. The models presented in the paper show that Keynes’s claim holds for MGB yields. This has important policy implications for Mexico. The empirical findings of the paper are also relevant for ongoing debates in macroeconomics.

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  • Working Paper No.983 05 February 2021

    Intrahousehold Allocation of Household Production

    Fernando Rios-Avila, Luiza Nassif Pires and Abena D. Oduro
    Abstract

    In this working paper, we analyze factors that may explain gender differences in the allocation of time to household production in sub-Saharan Africa. The study uses time use survey data to analyze the determinants of time spent on household production by husbands and wives in nuclear families in Ethiopia, Ghana, Tanzania, and South Africa. We assume that the time spent by each spouse is a function of personal and household characteristics. A bivariate Tobit model is used to estimate the marginal impact of a set of key variables that figure recurrently in the literature on time allocation. We observe a high degree of variability in the results for the set of countries, which does not allow us to draw hard general conclusions. We do find some weak evidence that supports time availability and gender ideology theory as well as for the hypothesis that bargaining power plays a role in explaining the intrahousehold allocation of household production.

    Download Working Paper No. 983 PDF (1.03 MB)