The Punishment Cure
Paul Krugman |
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: December 8, 2013
Six years have passed since the United States economy entered the Great
Recession, four and a half since it officially began to recover, but
long-term unemployment remains disastrously high. And Republicans have a
theory about why this is happening. Their theory is, as it happens,
completely wrong. But they’re sticking to it — and as a result, 1.3
million American workers, many of them in desperate financial straits,
are set to lose unemployment benefits at the end of December.
Merry Christmas.
Now, the G.O.P.’s desire to punish the unemployed doesn’t arise solely
from bad economics; it’s part of a general pattern of afflicting the
afflicted while comforting the comfortable (no to food stamps, yes to
farm subsidies). But ideas do matter — as John Maynard Keynes famously wrote,
they are “dangerous for good or evil.” And the case of unemployment
benefits is an especially clear example of superficially plausible but
wrong economic ideas being dangerous for evil.
Here’s the world as many Republicans see it: Unemployment insurance, which generally pays eligible workers between 40 and 50 percent
of their previous pay, reduces the incentive to search for a new job.
As a result, the story goes, workers stay unemployed longer. In
particular, it’s claimed that the Emergency Unemployment Compensation
program, which lets workers collect benefits beyond the usual limit of
26 weeks, explains why there are four million long-term unemployed workers in America today, up from just one million in 2007.
Correspondingly, the G.O.P. answer to the problem of long-term
unemployment is to increase the pain of the long-term unemployed: Cut
off their benefits, and they’ll go out and find jobs. How, exactly, will
they find jobs when there are three times as many job-seekers as job vacancies? Details, details.
Proponents of this story like to cite academic research
— some of it from Democratic-leaning economists — that seemingly
confirms the idea that unemployment insurance causes unemployment.
They’re not equally fond of pointing out that this research is two or
more decades old, has not stood the test of time, and is irrelevant in
any case given our current economic situation.
The view of most labor economists
now is that unemployment benefits have only a modest negative effect on
job search — and in today’s economy have no negative effect at all on
overall employment. On the contrary, unemployment benefits help create
jobs, and cutting those benefits would depress the economy as a whole.
Ask yourself how, exactly, ending unemployment benefits would create
more jobs. It’s true that some of the currently unemployed, finding
themselves even more desperate than before, might manage to snatch jobs
away from those who currently have them. But what would give businesses a
reason to employ more workers as opposed to replacing existing workers?
You might be tempted to argue that more intense competition among
workers would lead to lower wages, and that cheap labor would encourage
hiring. But that argument involves a fallacy of composition. Cut the
wages of some workers relative to those of other workers, and those
accepting the wage cuts may gain a competitive edge. Cut everyone’s
wages, however, and nobody gains an edge. All that happens is a general
fall in income — which, among other things, increases the burden of
household debt, and is therefore a net negative for overall employment.
The point is that employment in today’s American economy is limited by
demand, not supply. Businesses aren’t failing to hire because they can’t
find willing workers; they’re failing to hire because they can’t find
enough customers. And slashing unemployment benefits — which would have
the side effect of reducing incomes and hence consumer spending — would
just make the situation worse.
Still, don’t expect prominent Republicans to change their views, except
maybe to come up with additional reasons to punish the unemployed. For
example, Senator Rand Paul recently cited research suggesting that the
long-term unemployed have a hard time re-entering the work force as a
reason to, you guessed it, cut off long-term unemployment benefits. You
see, those benefits are actually a “disservice” to the unemployed.
The good news, such as it is, is that the White House and Senate
Democrats are trying to make an issue of expiring unemployment benefits.
The bad news is that they don’t sound willing to make extending
benefits a precondition for a budget deal, which means that they aren’t really willing to make a stand.
So the odds, I’m sorry to say, are that the long-term unemployed will be
cut off, thanks to a perfect marriage of callousness — a complete lack
of empathy for the unfortunate — with bad economics. But then, hasn’t
that been the story of just about everything lately?
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