Article Artículo
What's the Relationship Between Concern About Cheap Foreign Labor and Support for Immigration Reform?Dean Baker / February 07, 2013
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Specific Military Cuts Were Chosen by Panetta, Not "Forced" by SequesterDean Baker / February 07, 2013
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Corporate America: Saving the Twinkie but Not the WorkersDean Baker / February 06, 2013
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The Wall Street Big Boys Are Neanderthal ProtectionistsDean Baker / February 06, 2013
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The Post Couldn't Find CBO's Projection that Higher Interest Rates from the Fed Will be the Major Driver of DeficitsDean Baker / February 06, 2013
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Thomas Friedman Doesn't Read His Columns, Why Should You?Dean Baker / February 06, 2013
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The NYT Has Determined that the United States Has a Spending ProblemDean Baker / February 06, 2013
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Congressional Budget Office Is Pessimistic About the EconomyThe Congressional Budget Office (CBO) came out with its new projections for the budget today. There are not many surprises. It projects somewhat slower health care cost growth in recognition of the recent trend in the sector. It also projects continued high unemployment, with the unemployment rate not projected to fall below 6.0 percent until late in the year 2016.
One interesting item is the sharp projected increase in interest costs. In the baseline projections, outlays are projected to rise by 0.1 percentage points of GDP from 22.8 percent in 2012 to 22.9 percent in 2023. However interest costs are projected to rise by 1.9 percentage points, meaning that non-interest spending is projected to fall sharply over this period. (The baseline includes several assumptions that are unrealistic, so it is probably not the best set of projections.)
It is also worth noting that CBO has become very pessimistic about the economy's growth potential and the lower limit on the unemployment rate. It puts potential growth over the decade at just 2.2 percent annually. Part of the explanation is that it expects capital deepening (the increase in the ratio of capital to labor) to make less of a contribution to growth than in prior decades. This is a bit hard to understand since CBO projects that the cost of capital will be low compared to the 1980s and 1990s when capital made a considerably larger contribution to GDP growth.
Source: CBO, Federal Reserve Board, and Bureau of Economic Analysis.
The graph shows CBO's projection for the contribution of capital to growth. At 1.0 percentage point annually, the projected contribution of capital growth in the next decade is lower than in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
CEPR / February 06, 2013
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Sigue el festival de odio contra VenezuelaMark Weisbrot / February 05, 2013
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Latin America and the Caribbean
AP Investigation: U.S. Spends $20 Billion Over 10 Years on Increasingly Bloody Drug “War” in Latin America; Rejects Drug Policy ReformAlexander Main / February 05, 2013
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NYT and WAPO Can't Find Out About Franken Amendment on Bond Rating AgenciesDean Baker / February 05, 2013
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After 20 Years It’s Time for Paid FMLAEileen Appelbaum / February 04, 2013
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European Authorities Still Punishing Greece – Can They Be Stopped?Mark Weisbrot / February 04, 2013
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Tax Games and Redistributing Income UpwardDean Baker
Truthout, February 4, 2013
Dean Baker / February 04, 2013
Article Artículo
Larry Summers and the Davos ScamDean Baker
Al Jazeera English, February 4, 2013
Dean Baker / February 04, 2013
report informe
Reduced Work Hours as a Means of Slowing Climate ChangeDavid Rosnick and / February 04, 2013
Article Artículo
The Impact of the Upward Redistribution of Wage Income on Social Security SolvencyThe impact of the aging of the U.S. population on the finances of Social Security has been widely touted by the media and Washington pundits. While these demographics do raise costs for the program, this is hardly an unbearable burden and it certainly is not a surprise. We have known about the baby boom for more than 50 years.
What is newer and was less widely anticipated is the upward redistribution of income that we have seen over the last three decades. This affects the program in two ways. First it has a direct effect in that a larger share of wage income has gone over the taxable maximum (currently just over $113,000). In 1983, the Greenspan commission set the cap at a level where 90 percent of wage income would be subject to the tax, meaning that 10 percent would escape taxations.
Since that date, the upward redistribution of wages has increased the portion of wage income over the cap to 16.8 percent, with just 83.2 percent of wage income subject to the cap. The share going over the wage cap is projected to rise further, reaching 17.5 percent of wage income in a decade. In this way, the upward redistribution of income directly worsens the finances of the program.
However there is also an indirect effect. If wages had kept pace with productivity growth over the last three decades, the typical workers would be paid around 25 percent more than they are now getting. In an environment of growing wages the prospect of increased Social Security taxes may not seem as bleak as in the environment of stagnating wages that we now see. While it is difficult to know how the political situation would differ if wages had kept pace with inflation, it is worth noting that even now workers would prefer higher payroll taxes to cuts in benefits according to a recent poll by the National Academy for Social Insurance.
CEPR / February 03, 2013