Wednesday, January 23, 2008
A modest proposal
Monday, January 7, 2008
English pounds and Eskimo pence
The supposed shift in "living standards" is actually an artifact of the dollar's depreciation. The article admits this, which just makes it even stupider. Think about it: The dollar has fallen about 25% against the pound since 2000. Do you feel 25% poorer than you were eight years ago? Swings in exchange rates are only marginally related to living standards.
Suppose the dollar fell 50%. Imports make up less than 15% of what we buy. Holding all other things equal and assuming that in response import prices rose by 50% (they wouldn't: we'd switch from imports to domestic goods and foreign companies would cut their prices to stay in the US market), our standard of living would fall about 7%. A 25% dollar drop would cause a 3.5% fall in living standards. And with the actual behavior of import prices, the fall would in fact be a lot less than 3.5%.
No, the right way to do this sort of thing is to strip out the effect of exchange rates by converting pounds to dollars using purchasing power parity (PPP). Wikipedia has a nice chart which shows that, according to IMF data, in 2006 the UK's GDP per capita was about 22% lower than ours and that number hasn't changed much since then. (Although, just because they're poorer, doesn't mean they don't have lots of rich people to ruin London.)
Of course, if you really want to measure living standards -- taking into account the potential leisure as well as the potential consumption that an economy generates -- then you'd look at the value of what we produce per hour of labor (a.k.a the level of labor productivity, a.k.a. GDP per hour worked). Here the UK lags behind us by 18%.
In France, on the other hand, the level of labor productivity is 2.5% higher than it is here. Which makes it puzzling why Obama's economics guru closed his recent New York Times commentary about American productivity with the following apropos-of-nothing quip: "The world economy may be tough on your industry but look on the bright side: you could be French."
Under President Obama, we'll be eating freedom fries - but with such idealism!
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
These are my principles. If you don’t like them, I have 37 policy proposals.
So many interesting things are being said about why the new progressive movement is, or is not, fucked. I hope I’m not violating some cosmic blog law by responding to comments with a fresh post. If I am, at least let it be said that I feel terrible about it.
6. But there’s still that lingering question of whether an ideology is even necessary for success. I can’t prove that it is. But I’ll say this. In the long term, politics only really changes because of passionate minorities. Only superficially is it affected by the average median swing voter. When passionate minorities take shape – sociologists call them social movements – they exert a powerful, gravitational force on the rest of the public.
Ordinary, day-to-day politics is about politicians and parties vying over who most faithfully embodies the electorate’s conventional wisdom. Social movements change the conventional wisdom. In fact, at any given moment, the conventional wisdom of the day is nothing more than a sedimented accretion of ideas that were once propagated by previous social movements. There are a limited number of social movements in U.S. history, but the main examples include the Republican/antislavery insurgency of the 1840’s-1850’s; the Populist movement, 1885-1896; the CIO organizing upsurge of 1935-38; the civil rights movement; and the conservative movement of the 1960’s.
We are living in an era whose conventional wisdom was largely scripted by that movement. And that will not fundamentally change unless a new social movement of some kind materializes. If it doesn’t, Mitt Romney might still lose in 2008 -- but I guarantee you another Mitt Romney will come along and win a few years later. And with just a touch of incompetence and a debt to his base, it will be more or less a repeat of the Bush years.
Here’s my point: There has never in history been such a thing as a genuine movement committed to pragmatism and throwing the bums out. It can only happen with an ideology, a creed.
No ideology, no movement. No movement, no change in conventional wisdom.
No change in conventional wisdom and we will be alternating between Bushism and Clintonism – between 2002 and 1997 -- for the rest of our lives.