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<text id=89TT0302>
<link 93TG0006>
<title>
Jan. 30, 1989: Knitting New Notions
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Jan. 30, 1989 The Bush Era Begins
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 46
Knitting New Notions
</hdr><body>
<p>To fathom the boom-and-borrow Reagan years, chastened U.S.
economists jettison rigid formulas and move toward a more
pragmatic philosophy
</p>
<p>By John Greenwald
</p>
<p> "I was in search of a one-armed economist so that the guy
could never make a statement and then say: `On the other hand .
. .'"
</p>
<p> -- Harry Truman
</p>
<p> Ronald Reagan was luckier. He discovered a passel of
single-minded, if not exactly single-armed, economists who
called themselves supply-siders. They promised Reagan that he
could cut taxes, rebuild U.S. military might and reduce the
budget deficit, all at the same time. While the President
eagerly followed the script, the deficit forgot its lines.
Instead of shrinking each year, it added $1.3 trillion to the
U.S. national debt during Reagan's two terms, more than
doubling the total burden.
</p>
<p> When George Bush became President last week, he inherited
that mountainous load, along with a 74-month economic boom, the
longest peacetime expansion in the modern era. Bush, who once
ridiculed Reagan's policies as "voodoo economics," must now
confront both sides of the Reaganomics legacy. In doing so, he
will turn for economic advice to a profession that is
struggling to find new ways of understanding the unprecedented
boom-and-borrow cycle of the past eight years.
</p>
<p> Frustrated by repeated failures to forecast accurately and
wearied by years of feuding, economists are moving toward a more
eclectic yet pragmatic philosophy. Going out the window are the
overly rigid, dogmatic formulas for prosperity. Many academics
are attacking their peers for getting so wrapped up in
mathematical models that they cannot understand the
unpredictable diversity of the real world. "We have learned
that the various schools of thought all have important elements
of truth in them," says Michael Boskin, designated chairman of
the President's Council of Economic Advisers. "But none of them
is by itself a sufficient explanation of what goes on in the
economy."
</p>
<p> Like Boskin, economists of every stripe are grappling with
the far-reaching changes that have swept the U.S. during the
1980s. Among them: the growing transformation of the world into a
single, global marketplace in which the U.S. is just one player;
the frightening decline of American competitiveness, which has
helped turn the country into the world's biggest debtor; the
runaway growth of U.S. service industries, which has made
productivity and other important measures of the economy
increasingly slippery to calculate.
</p>
<p> A disturbing sign of the new times popped up last week, when
the Government reported that the U.S. trade deficit surged in
November to $12.5 billion, up from $10.3 billion the previous
month. The stalled progress in narrowing the trade gap brings
into question a central assumption of U.S. trade strategy: that
the weak dollar will continue to shrink the deficit by making
U.S. exports cheaper overseas and imported goods more expensive
for American shoppers. But U.S. imports just keep on rising.
That partly reflects what some economists have begun to call
"hysteresis" -- a fancy term for the notion that new habits,
like old ones, are hard to break. Americans have learned to love
Japanese cars, TVs and videocassette recorders, and are
reluctant to give them up, regardless of price.
</p>
<p> Even before the figures came out, a Japanese official warned
the U.S. against weakening the dollar as a trade-gap remedy.
Makoto Utsumi, a senior executive in the Finance Ministry,
declared that a further fall of the dollar against the yen would
not close the trade gap because Japanese firms would lay off
workers and take other steps to remain competitive. A cheaper
dollar, said Utsumi, would simply "make America for sale."
</p>
<p> Stanford economist Ronald McKinnon, an expert on foreign
trade and finance, concurred with that view. "A declining
dollar is nothing more than a reflection of an easy-money
policy," said he, adding that the excess of Government borrowing
and spending increases U.S. demand for imported goods. At the
same time, currencies that are strong in relation to the dollar
have made American farms, factories and real estate tempting to
foreign buyers, says McKinnon, "so we conduct something of a
fire sale" to pay for imported merchandise.
</p>
<p> On Wall Street one new breed of economists looks at the same
unexpected events and comes up with a rosier outlook on how the
world works. In this view, the U.S. has entered an era of
prosperity called the New Wave. "We are in one of the most
revolutionary periods in our history," says Sam Nakagama,
chairman of Nakagama & Wallace, an economic consulting firm in
Manhattan. Nakagama and other New Wave advocates say the
record expansion owes its strength and resilience to the
openness of the U.S. economy during the past decade. With the
global village linked by high-speed computers and communications
satellites, they argue, U.S. executives easily hurdle obstacles
like rising domestic interest rates by borrowing from other
countries. In the same way, American manufacturers can escape
high labor costs by opening factories abroad to add new
capacity.
</p>
<p> New Wavers insist that this flexibility has all but
abolished the traditional business cycle. While they
acknowledge that slumps can still strike certain weak
industries, they regard broad downturns as largely a thing of
the past. Says Edward Yardeni, chief economist for
Prudential-Bache Securities: "The economy is now so huge, so
diverse and resilient that adjustments take place that prevent
economy-wide recessions."
</p>
<p> Such new scenarios have arisen largely because real events
so often confounded the old ones. Supply-siders, for instance,
boasted that their policies would boost the U.S. savings rate
and make Americans more productive. But, like the supply-side
forecasts of smaller deficits, both promises failed to come
true. The personal savings rate fell from 7.1% in 1980 to about
4% last year. At the same time, the growth of business
productivity, or output per hour, averaged a meager 1.4% from
1980 to 1987, half the rate of the 1960s. Reason: the savings
decline slowed investments in productive new equipment.
</p>
<p> Reagan's proudest economic achievement, taming the inflation
rate from 12.5% in 1980 to 4.4% last year, has also dealt a blow
to some major schools of thought. Monetarists like Nobel
laureate Milton Friedman, who believe that slow and steady
growth of the money supply is the key to prosperity, expected
inflation to shoot up when the Federal Reserve suddenly pumped
cash into the economy to halt the recession of 1981-82. But
inflation failed to ignite because the slump was so deep that it
left the economy with plenty of room to grow without pushing up
prices.
</p>
<p> Members of the rational-expectations school, which holds
that people keep a sharp eye on government policies and then act
accordingly, were also caught short by inflation's fall. "If you
had listened to me eight years ago," says University of Chicago
economist Robert Lucas, "I would have predicted an inflation
rate of 25% with these deficits."
</p>
<p> Economists would have been less surprised if they had paid
more careful attention to changes in the U.S. and world
economies. The deregulation of foreign capital markets in the
late 1970s and early 1980s enabled the U.S. to go on a global
borrowing binge that counteracted the effects of the deficit.
</p>
<p> "Ten years ago, there weren't that many people we could
borrow money from," notes Harvard's Jeffrey Sachs, a leading
international economist. "We were reluctant to run deficits out
of fear of creating sky-high inflation. Now there is a global
bank-teller window that is open 24 hours a day, and we've been
one of the most frequent customers." Sachs warns, however, that
the bender cannot last. "We're faking it," he says. "Our living
standard isn't being maintained by higher productivity or
wages. It's maintained by foreign capital."
</p>
<p> That concern is echoed by resurgent Keynesian economists,
who are trying to adapt their mostly liberal views to current
conditions. Virtually counted out when inflation surged along
with unemployment in the 1970s, the Keynesians now point out
that Reagan borrowed from their philosophy in propelling his
economic boom with deficit spending, which Keynesians have long
advocated as a cure for slumps. "Keynesianism was vindicated by
these last eight years," says Princeton economist Alan Blinder, a
leading exponent of the school of thought. Blinder insists,
however, that the deficits have got far out of hand.
</p>
<p> While economists may be more open to peaceful coexistence,
they still tend to form battle lines over the importance of the
budget deficits. Some economists contend that the deficit is no
longer a menace because it has shrunk from more than 6% of the
gross national product in 1983 to about 3% right now. That is
lower than the level of deficit spending during 1975-76, for
example, when the gap was widened by a recession. Friedman says
he accepts the deficit because it has restrained federal
spending. "Sometimes you have to choose the lesser of two
evils," he says. While Friedman admits that "mine is not the
majority view," he adds, "Everybody looks at the world through
his own glasses, and those glasses mean more than the facts you
are looking at."
</p>
<p> Many economists have been staring through a veil of
mathematics that can further distort what they see. "Economics
research has become more a game of chess than a search for
understanding reality," says economist David Colander of
Middlebury College in Vermont. Colander and Arjo Klamer, a
visiting professor at the University of Iowa, surveyed more
than 200 graduate students at six top economics departments.
When the students were asked what it took to advance rapidly in
the economics profession, an astonishing 68% said "a thorough
knowledge of the economy" was unimportant. At the same time,
57% picked "excellence in mathematics" as the key to success.
Said a bemused student: "You can walk in off the street and take
the courses, and not know what the FORTUNE 500 is, and blaze
through with flying colors."
</p>
<p> But many economists are not content to fiddle with
mathematical models. They want to understand the FORTUNE 500
corporations and the rest of the economy, in all its messy and
ever changing complexity. That calls for using common sense as
well as elegant formulas, and studying social and technological
trends along with historical data. Writing about Adam Smith and
other great economists, author Robert Heilbroner called them
"worldly philosophers" who were "fascinated by the world about
them" and "absorbed in the behavior of their fellow man."
</p>
<p> Modern worldly philosophers are needed in George Bush's
Washington and everywhere else that economic decisions are made.
They can provide what Donald McCloskey, a University of Iowa
economic historian, calls "reality checks -- statements of what
may happen as a result of policies." Such statements may not be
the single-minded advice that Harry Truman longed for. But they
will at least be grounded in the real world rather than in the
airy realms of abstract mathematics and wishful thinking.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>