We'd call this from Joe Stiglitz propaganda, not economics

It is, of course, possible to argue about the effects of economic changes. But we do think it helps to be reasonable about this. Which isn’t quite how we’d describe this assertion from Joe Stiglitz:

Given tax cuts that disproportionately benefit the ultra-rich and corporations, it should come as no surprise that there was no significant change in the median US household’s disposable income between 2017 and 2018 (again, the most recent year with good data).

The tax cuts were signed into law in late December 2017 and took effect for the tax year (which is in the US the calendar year) 2018. Now we do indeed believe in the healing power of money fructifying in the pockets of the populace but we’d perhaps think that that effects of a 1% of GDP change in tax revenues might take a teeny bit longer than that to come through.

Especially as the claimed and planned route is to be through higher business investment.

It’s possible to note that we lack the Nobel Joe has so whadda we know but a more reasonable conclusion here would be that Professor Stiglitz is indulging in a little bit of propaganda rather than economics. After all the standard New Keynesian models all do conclude that fiscal policy does take a finite amount of time to take effect.

Why not just stop trying to do impossible things?

The London Green Party tells us that it’s impossible to recycle everything correctly:

It is "impossible" to recycle household rubbish in London because of a "postcode lottery", the Green Party has said.

The capital's 32 borough councils were asked for their policies on recycling seven items, including a plastic bucket, crisp packet, ballpoint pen and a bicycle tyre.

None could recycle all seven items.

Our own attitude to such things is that if it’s impossible to do we should stop trying to do it.

More specifically here with recycling the aim is to reduce the use of resources. We’re cool with that, not just fine in fact but actively in favour. Using fewer resources to gain output makes us richer, for of course that means that we can then go on to produce more with those unused resources.

This does though mean all resources. Recycling is more expensive than holes in the ground or large furnaces. Therefore recycling - at this level at least, what does not consume more resources ends up not as recycling but as scrap - uses more resources. Given that our aim is to reduce resource use we should therefore be using the holes and the incinerators more.

As Hayek didn't quite point out about supranational governance

Hayek’s point, in The Pretence of Knowledge, was that the centre couldn’t possibly have the information to be able to plan or direct either an economy or society. Not in any detail at least. We might add a more modern coda to this, that the higher and more abstract the “centre” becomes as a source of governance the worse the problem becomes. Take this from the new head of the International Monetary Fund for example:

Speaking at the Peterson Institute of International Economics in Washington, Kristalina Georgieva said new IMF research, which compares the current economy to the “roaring 1920s” that culminated in the great market crash of 1929, revealed that a similar trend was already under way.

While the inequality gap between countries had closed in the last two decades, it had increased within countries, she said, singling out the UK for particular criticism.

“In the UK, for example, the top 10% now control nearly as much wealth as the bottom 50%. This situation is mirrored across much of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), where income and wealth inequality have reached, or are near, record highs.”

Leave aside differences of views here - we are not worried by inequality in the manner that is so fashionable these days. Rather, look at the facts being trotted out.

UK income inequality is lower than it was in 2008, lower than it was in 2001, lower than it was in 1990. This is not what we would associate with something rising to record highs.

The problem with any current measure of wealth inequality is that we don’t - unlike with income - include any of the things we do to reduce wealth inequality. The calculations deliberately exclude any political, government or state redistribution of wealth - this isn’t the way to see what needs to be done that’s the way to see what would be if we didn’t do anything already. It’s not even the way to measure what is, it’s to measure what might have been.

If international advice on governance is to be so divorced from reality then that international guidance isn’t going to be all that useful really. Something entirely predictable given that Nobel acceptance speech from Hayek. Those in the international institutions simply don’t have the knowledge to be able to tell us anything useful about what we should do.

Hong Kong and Santiago: Making Sense of the Two Protests

Protests in the streets of Santiago, Chile have been going on for several months. Thousands have been injured and at least 29 people have died in clashes with authorities. In Hong Kong, it’s been nearly a year. While the two bursts of demonstration overlap in time, they reveal very different psychologies.

Modern Hong Kong is a product of colonialism. Modern Chile is the product of dictatorship. The two countries have distinct stories that have shaped their respective cultures.

Benign Neglect

Hong Kong was won by the British in the nineteenth century as a consequence of the First Opium War. Institutional gene-splicing meant the island got British Common Law, but not much more was imposed. Policies of benign neglect in the fifty years prior to the 1997 handover resulted in stellar economic growth and relative autonomy. 

The results have been nothing short of miraculous: Hong Kong remains the crown jewel of Asia, with a per capita GDP of about $46,000. 

Hong Kongers thus see themselves as of a special kind, or at least they want to define themselves as something other than Chinese nationals. It’s no wonder: compared to the rest of the world, Hong Kong is a shining example of free and open markets. They have a strong commercial culture. And they view the People’s Republic and its Communist Party as authoritarian. Their protests are motivated by desperation to keep freedom, prosperity, and identity—despite a colonial past. 

Hong Kongers want self-government, but Chileans on the other hand... 

Shame and Bus Fare

While Chile has a rich history prior to the rule of Salvador Allende, his rise was an important catalyzing event. Allende, a socialist, came to power in 1970 and doubled down on land seizures that amounted to the state appropriating 59% of agricultural land. In response, general Augusto Pinochet led a 1973 military coup that brought down Allende. Pinochet was brutal in victory. He instituted a purge that meant death for thousands of political enemies. 

This has become Chile’s national shame. And yet Pinochet’s economic reforms were friendlier to private property and free markets—so much so that Chile has become the economic success story of South America, topping the list of countries in GDP per capita. So what are Chileans protesting?

A bus fare hike. 

Of course, the protesters see such transit cost increases as indicative of great wealth disparity in Chile, despite a slightly lower inequality score (Gini) than that of Hong Kong. Many Chileans view their comparative economic success as far too lopsided and linked to dictatorship. 

"[A]ll the measures the governments take are patches that do not end up helping anyone,” says 24-year-old medical student Natalia Torres, quoted at Business Insider. “They end up enriching the rich and impoverishing the poor.”

According to Foreign Policy, the association between today’s ruling elite and Pinochet is undeniable.

Many of the [conservative party’s] initial founders were in their late 20s and early 30s at the time of the transition and therefore still comprise an important component of the Chilean right. The country’s recently sacked interior minister, who initially tried to quell the protests with government repression, was one of the UDI’s founding leaders and earliest national deputies. Another early UDI leader, Hernán Larraín, still heads the Justice Ministry.

As long as Chileans see their problems as linked to the legacy of dictatorship, they are likely to overlook whatever economic progress Chile has made relative to the rest of South America.

Despite cashing Pinochet’s check, they know it had been signed in blood. Many Chileans then—especially the youth—have come to believe that to erase that historical stain, they must not only rid themselves of the dictator’s legacy, but return to socialism.

It’s ironic, then, that Transantiago fare increases sparked the protests. The once-solvent private transit system had, ironically, been socialized more than a decade prior.

Unhappy Endings

So what can we make of these two stories? The most troubling thing is that neither is likely to end well. 

In Hong Kong, the protestors are battling hard and keeping at it because they know the mainland government plays a long game. One protester, quoted in the The Atlantic, reflects a rather nihilistic sentiment among Hong Kongers: “We might as well go down fighting.” 

In a sense, Hong Kong is a city-state full of Tiananmen Square “tank men”. They want self-government. They want free markets without interference from Beijing. Indeed, pro-democracy candidates won landslides in recent district-council elections. But the mainland regime is likely to put its thumb on them and keep it there. It’s difficult to see any scenario in which the Communist Party ever lets go.

By contrast, socialism in South America is a persistent mind virus, especially as a response to pervasive corruption and cronyism. One can’t help but wonder whether Chile, in its efforts to wash away Pinochet’s legacy, will discard that degree of economic liberalism that has made it South America’s success story. Chile is by no means perfect, but it stands in stark contrast to experiments like that in Venezuela, or the irresponsible neighbor Argentina with its outsized debt and money printing.

Consent of the Governed

As one who is working in the area of international development, creating autonomous “prosperity zones,” I see much to admire in both Hong Kong and Chile. But beyond relatively free markets, the two protest movements seem to share only one thing in common; their unrest parallels the degree to which they view their operating rules and rulers as being imposed on them.

Rule by democratic majority is not always enough to quell unrest, especially when half the country imposes its rules on the other half. 

“It turns out there’s only one thing that guarantees production of good laws,” writes hedge fund manager Michael P. Gibson. “The people bound by the laws have to agree to be bound by them. … Consent must be real, transparent, and continuous.”

Most of the world fails to appreciate this insight. 

But there’s no getting around it: you need the consent of the goverened. Not hypothetical. Not tacitly. Real consent. A system of law that provides for regulation or expropriation on behalf of cronies, will create neither peace nor stability in the long run. State power destroys the foundations of voluntary cooperation. And in so doing it destroys what makes a society attractive, leading to eternal battles by constituency groups over favorable regulations and transfer payments.

Although neither Chile nor Hong Kong is a Utopia, each is a beacon. But if China’s socialist oppression and Chile’s socialist populism persists, they are likely to lose their edge as commercial centers. My hope is that the creation of new, special jurisdictions will allow for islands of economic freedom in the world.

I have dedicated my life to creating these niches, because freedom and free enterprise remain humanity’s best hope. Maybe Chileans and Hong Kongers will find some measure of peace beyond this chaos. Chile is a big country, they would have enough space to start a prosperity zone as an experiment in freedom. And if Hong Kong falls, then a New Hong Kong might be created in the region – but of course, outside of China. 

At the very least we can hope future generations learn something from their trials. Just maybe there will be somewhere on earth to go when socialism returns to each.

Titus Gebel is a German entrepreneur with a doctorate in law. He founded, among others, mining company Deutsche Rohstoff AG, and is the current CEO of Free Private Cities Inc., a company working on the creation of contract-based prosperity zones and private cities. Gebel is also the author of Free Private Cities: Making Governments Compete for You.

How glorious that Britain's green economy is shrinking

We can always trust The Guardian to get the wrong end of any economic stick:

Britain’s green economy has shrunk since 2014, heightening concerns that the government will miss targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions by the middle of the decade.

The number of people employed in the “low carbon and renewable energy economy” declined by more than 11,000 to 235,900 between 2014 and 2018, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Green businesses fared little better, seeing their numbers drop from an estimated 93,500 to 88,500 over the same four-year period.

This is something to glory in, not complain about.

All are agreed, even The Guardian, that UK emissions have fallen and are falling - yea whether we include emissions embedded in imports or not. Excellent, that’s the desired target. Well, as always when discussing this subject that’s what we’re told our desired target is.

The complaint here is that we’re reaching that target while using less human labour to do so. That not being something to complain about, that being something to marvel at, glory in the existence of.

For, as we keep having to remind people, jobs are a cost, not a benefit. Human labour is an input into the process, we like using fewer inputs to reach our goal than more - it means we’re being more productive, that ultimate underpinning of our standard of living.

After all, if one bloke with a magic machine could solve climate change just by flipping the switch then we’d all be delighted. Two blokes means a second person has to stop working in the NHS, providing us with ballet, producing vital grievance studies output, therefore the extra job means we’re poorer by some amount of health care, dance and or grievance. 11,000 people not providing us with green stuff is 11,000 more grievance lecturers and aren’t we the lucky ones?

Gaining our goal by using less human labour is something to be celebrated, not worried about. For the advance of civilisation comes from the process of killing jobs.

How nice of the NHS to prove the Laffer Curve

Out there further to our left we often enough see the insistence that the Laffer Curve simply does not exist. That there is no tax rate which causes people to reduce their supply of labour to the market, therefore there is no tax rate above which revenue collected actually falls.

So we should be grateful to the National Health Service for disabusing everyone of this notion:

Changes to pension rules mean that once workers earn more than £110,000 they face more stringent taxes on their contributions. Under the NHS scheme, in which contributions are calculated automatically and are outside the control of beneficiaries, senior consultants have been landed with unexpected tax bills of tens of thousands of pounds.

As doctors turned down extra shifts to avoid breaching the limit, the problem was said to have led to cancelled operations and lengthening NHS waits. A&E performance hit a record low last month, with one in five patients waiting more than four hours.

Excellent, we have now proved - as in shown to be true, not just tested - the contention that tax rates can be high enough that they lead to the withdrawal of labour.

True, we now need rather more work on exactly where that peak of the curve is (our best evidence, from varied independent empirical and theoretical sources is in the 50 to 55% of income range - note, not income tax, but taxes upon income so income tax plus national insurance or social security taxation and yes, all, nominally paid by employee or employer) but we can now relax on having to prove the base contention itself.

After all, the NHS is the Very Wonder of the World, all looking to it as that shining beacon on the hill. We should all be lauding the manner in which that Jerusalem we’ve built illuminates this slough of despond, no?

So that's another third off corporation tax then

Our reaction to this news is how excellent. For this means we can cut another one third off corporation tax:

Taxpayers plough £17bn a year into business support schemes which are often poorly designed, badly monitored and barely coordinated, the National Audit Office (NAO) has found.

The Government runs more than 100 programmes to help companies to grow, at a total cost of more than £17bn. These include targeted tax reliefs, advice services and grants to boost productivity.

But the money is at risk of being badly spent as results are not watched closely, the watchdog said, while poor coordination and marketing means the companies most in need of the aid may not know it exists or struggle to find it.

£17 billion a year is being micturated away simply because government is a bad manner of doing these things. Excellent, so, let’s stop government doing these things.

If we’re not to waste £17 billion a year on business then we can stop raising £17 billion a year from business too. Corporation tax raises some £51 billion a year at present.

Thus, stop wasting £17 billion a year, don’t raise £17 billion a year and cut the corporation tax rate by one third. Sometimes economics really is just this simple.

Taxing business to subsidise business is always a slightly odd proposition. Taxing business in order to waste the money is just silly.

Sure we should have four day working weeks - the US already does

One of those little ideas peering over the lip of the political punchbowl these days is that we should all be working 4 day weeks. After all, Keynes said we would by now so why not?

It being entirely true that as a society becomes richer we expect more of that greater wealth to be taken as leisure rather than as simply more stuff. The interesting question here being, well, how to bring it about? The answer being do and plan nothing.

Don’t have government tell everyone to do so, instead, this is an area where laissez faire really does work. For as we keep being told the US has very little regulation of working hours, employers are allowed to crack the whip in a manner just not possible in Europe. The next effect of this?

The average workweek for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls was unchanged at 34.3

hours in December. In manufacturing, the average workweek and overtime remained at 40.5

hours and 3.2 hours, respectively. The average workweek of private-sector production and

nonsupervisory employees held at 33.5 hours.

33.5 hours isn’t quite a 4 day work week but it’s a lot closer to it than a 40 hour one would be given an 8 hour working day. This isn’t because there are vast hordes stuck on undesired part time hours either:

The number of persons employed part time for economic reasons, at 4.1 million, changed

little in December but was down by 507,000 over the year. These individuals, who would

have preferred full-time employment, were working part time because their hours had been

reduced or they were unable to find full-time jobs.

Given the 160 million or so in the US labour force that’s an entirely trivial number with no great impact upon that average work week.

Leave people alone - both employers and employees - to decide the hours of paid labour and as a society gets richer people work less. This is therefore a problem that is solved, nothing more need be done. As is so often true of leaving people alone to work out how to live their own lives of course.

Or as we could put it, proper liberalism works.

We can see why they're doing the wrong thing

The European Union is to insist that every country sets the minimum wage at 60% of the median wage. This is the wrong thing to be doing:

The commission’s aim is to ensure member states set a minimum wage equivalent to 60% of the median salary in that country.

The why is obvious. Poverty is currently defined as - even though this is inequality, not poverty - less than 60% of median income. So, if the minimum wage is 60% of median income there will be no in work poverty. Huzzah!

The problem being that the ill effects of a minimum wage being “too high” don’t magically appear when it is set at 60% of median income. A more realistic estimate of when jobs and hours noticeably start disappearing is 45 to 50% of that median income. Thus the adoption of the target will lead to significant such effects.

We’re also absolutely certain that the EU will adopt the full year, full time, median income as its target. And as even the very pro-minimum wage Arindrajit Dube has pointed out - he being the American scholar of the minimum wage the UK government is using as an advisor - it is the blended part and full time, temporary and all year minimum wage that needs to be used. This being notably lower.

It’s a bad aim, the wrong target and it’ll not be helpful in the slightest.

There is also that other problem:

Of the 28 member states, only Denmark, Italy, Cyprus, Austria, Finland and Sweden do not have a statutory minimum wage.

Different places have different solutions to this same problem or point. This difference being an anathema to those who would rule a continent, for if places can sort things out without that centre being involved what’s the point of that centre?

Well, quite, what is the point of the EU insisting upon a particular approach to the minimum wage? How does this, in the words of Sr. Barroso, stop Germany invading France? Again?

This being the basic problem with international negotiations

Asked whether the EU would use its power to switch off the City’s ability to serve European clients to gain leverage in the coming negotiations with Britain, Plenković said: “I wouldn’t go into the vocabulary of weapons but what I have learned in international and European negotiations [is] that all arguments and considerations are treated as political.”

The aim here is to try and come to the correct economic decision. Yet the criteria to be used are the political ones.

We’re most unlikely to get to the right answer therefore.

This always being the problem with all of these international negotiations. It’s the politicians sitting around the tables discussing what would be good for politicians. With trade this problem is especially stark as the correct answer is that politics should play no part in why may trade what with whom.

But that’s the way it’s done and is the reason why international trade doesn’t boost our lifestyle as much as it should - political interference in who may trade what with whom.