Yellen's call to 'act big' reflects long re-think on big government debt
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[January 21, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - At U.S. Treasury
Secretary-designate Janet Yellen's confirmation hearing Tuesday she
nodded to the need for the federal debt to be put on a "sustainable"
path, at least eventually.
Her more extensive comments defending President Joe Biden's $1.9
trillion coronavirus spending plan, however, reflected a steady shift in
economists' thinking about the mountains of government debt across the
developed world that has been underway for a decade and has roots in the
near collapse of the euro zone.
Forget about the amount being borrowed, Yellen, a former Federal Reserve
chair, told members of the Senate Finance Committee. Focus instead on
the interest rate being paid and the returns it will generate, an
approach that argues the country's future economic potential can support
more borrowing today and makes the roughly $26.9 trillion in U.S. IOUs
seem less formidable.
"The interest burden of the debt as a share of (gross domestic product)
is no higher now than it was before the financial crisis in 2008, in
spite of the fact that our debt has escalated," Yellen said. "To avoid
doing what we need to do now to address the pandemic and the economic
damage that it is causing would likely leave us in a worse place ...
than taking the steps that are necessary and doing that through deficit
finance."
Federal government interest payments are now nearly $600 billion
annually, but historically low global interest rates have kept them
roughly stable as a share of the country's economic output since the
1990s.
That fact will be front and center when Congress debates Biden's
spending plan, and in particular will test whether Republicans remain
willing to spend more to battle the pandemic now that they've lost
control of both the White House and Congress to Democrats.
Coming on top of the more than $3.5 trillion borrowed in large part to
fund the coronavirus response last year, "when do we hit the point where
the thing starts to collapse? That's what really concerns me and nobody
is talking about it really in either party anymore," Senator John Thune,
a South Dakota Republican, said at Yellen's hearing.
For a graphic on Can the U.S. "act big" on spending?
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/DEBT/
xegvbeoqnpq/chart.png
DON'T GO GREEK
In fact, at least among Yellen's economic peers, there has been plenty
of talk about the issue since the 2007 to 2009 financial crisis and
recession, and the troubles in the euro zone that followed.
[to top of second column] |
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen speaks during a panel
discussion at the American Economic Association/Allied Social
Science Association (ASSA) 2019 meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.,
January 4, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Aluka Berry
When a group of smaller European countries, Greece in particular, ran into
trouble repaying their debts in the aftermath of the global financial crisis,
the response of larger euro zone members and the International Monetary Fund was
to insist those nations make deep cuts to government spending.
Instead of fostering a recovery, that harsh dose of austerity helped drive
Greece into an even deeper hole, and in fact made its deficits worse.
In hindsight, the IMF said it got it wrong. After extensive research, Olivier
Blanchard, then the IMF's chief economist, eventually concluded government
spending can have outsized benefits, particularly in moments of crisis when
overall demand for goods and services is weak - as is the case now.
Fast forward a few years. Previously unorthodox ideas, such as Modern Monetary
Theory, that see a broader, stabilizing role for government spending began
getting more attention, and mainstream economists began to rethink their views
about debt in more fundamental ways.
Blanchard, for one, started arguing that when interest rates are lower than an
economy's rate of growth - the case in many developed nations - countries
shouldn't hold back on well-conceived public investments.
Republican-allied economists like Michael Strain have argued that U.S. levels of
borrowing can't be ignored forever, but are a longer-term concern that should
not detract from any crisis response. Current Fed Chair Jerome Powell, a deficit
hawk when he worked on budget issues at a Washington think tank, has said the
same.
Democrats like Jason Furman, who chaired former President Barack Obama's Council
of Economic Advisers, have broadened the debate even further to frame the point
Yellen made on Tuesday - it is borrowing costs, not debt levels, that matter.
"There's no single metric that summarizes our overall fiscal situation, but one
metric I do think is useful to keep in mind is the interest burden," Yellen
said. "What we're seeing is that even though the amount of debt relative to the
economy is going up, the interest burden hasn't."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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