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The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy
发布日期:2015-07-02  浏览

The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy

[BOOK DESCRIPTION]

Since 2007, many fundamental aspects of the economy and the labor market have changed dramatically. With the exception of Medicaid, subsidies flowing to the unemployed and financially distressed households in the forms of loan forgiveness and government transfers almost tripled. The generosity of mean-tested subsidies like food stamps, and employment-tested subsidies like unemployment insurance have steadily increased. Congress considered legislation that would raise marginal income tax rates, and would present Americans with new health benefits that would be phased out as a function of income. Also, a large number of homeowners owed more on their mortgages than their houses were worth, and many in both the private and public sectors renegotiated their mortgage contracts. And many others renegotiated business debts, consumer loans, student loans, and tax debts. Labor economist Casey B. Mulligan argues that because the way these trends have affected the labor market, they deepened, if not caused, the recession. He explains how progressive tax rates and binding minimum-wage laws reduce labor usage, consumption, and investment, and how they increase labor productivity. This means that while a small part of the population actually works more, overall hours worked in the whole economy are less. He explains and examines the pratical ways that for many people during a recession it costs more to earn more, and how people are working less because of it. One newly discovered aspect of the costs on earning is the large portion of the labor force renegotiating debt. Mulligan quantifies how borrowers can expect their earnings to affect the amount that lenders will forgive in debt renegotiation, and how this has acted as a massive implicit tax on earning. He also measures the changes in market tax rates that resulted directly from "social safety net" programs, and quantifies these changes' effects on the labor market and the economy. Mulligan argues that much of the decline in labor usage since 2007 was a reaction to the combination of higher marginal tax rates and a higher federal minimum wage, and that it is important to understand why labor market distortions like these suddenly increased, and to what degree those increases were caused by the various measures enacted to boost the labor market. The Redistribution Recession is a controversial, clear-cut, and thoroughly researched analysis of the effects of various government policies on the labor market during the recent recession.

[TABLE OF CONTENTS]
Preface
Introduction
The Rise of Labor Productivity
Quarterly Indicators of Aggregate Economic Quantities
Movements Along an Aggregate Marginal Productivity Schedule
On Average, Real Wages did not Fall
Was It Customer Demand? Factor Reduction and Factor Substitution by Industry
Neither Wealth Effects nor Intertemporal Substitution Effects Explain the "Supply" Shift
Labor Market Distortions since 2007
Conclusion: Productivity Patterns Begin to Reveal the Recession's Causes
Productivity, Labor, and Residuals in Prior Downturns
Sensitivity Analysis
The Expanding Social Safety Net
A Framework for Quantifying the Generosity of the Safety Net as a Whole
Legislation Made the Safety Net Available to Millions More
Legislation Increased the Amount of Benefits Received per Program Participant
Most of the Increase in Government Safety Net Expenditure is the Direct Result of Program Rule Changes
Safety Net Rule Changes and Assistance for the Unemployed
Means-tested Loan Forgiveness
Conclusion: Replacement Rates for Aggregate Analysis
Calculation and Aggregation of Statutory Eligibility and Benefit Indices
Sensitivity Analysis
The Self-Reliance Rate Outlook
The Making Work Pay Tax Credit
Supply and Demand: Labor Market Consequences of Safety Net Expansions
The Income-Maximization Fallacy
Labor and Output Effects of Safety Net Expansions
Predictions for Consumption and Investment
Calibrating the Wage Elasticity of Aggregate Labor Supply
Conclusions and Interpretation
Comparative Advantage with Heterogeneous Effects of the Safety Net Expansions
Calibrating the Supply Elasticity from Unemployment Duration Studies
Safety Net Distortions Measured in Dollars per Year
Means-Tested Subsidies and Economic Dynamics since 2007
The Neoclassical Growth Model with Targeted Means-Tested Subsidies
Data and Simulation Results
Effects of the Safety Net Expansion
Interpreting the Residual Labor Market Distortions
An Investment Distortion by Itself does not Fit Actual Behavior
Conclusions
Calibration, Simulation, and Additional Sensitivity Analysis
Cross-Sectional Patterns of Employment and Hours Changes
Cross-sectional Patterns of Self-Reliance Rate Changes
Work Hours Changes by Demographic Group and Region
Program Participation Changes by Demographic Group
Conclusion: The Cross-Sectional Patterns of Employment and Hours Changes are as Expected from a Large Safety Net Expansion
Appendix: Summary Statistics and Additional Results
Keynesian and Other Models of Safety Net Stimulus
The Safety Net and Consumer Spending
Transfers and Government Purchases are not the Same
Labor Market Slack and the Marginal Effects of Supply
Sticky Prices, the Wage Elasticity of Labor Demand, and the Zero Lower Bound
An Econometric Model that Nests My Approach with the Slack Market and Sticky Price Hypotheses
Conclusion: Whether Labor Supply Matters More, or Less, during a Recession is an Empirical Question
Appendix: The Safety Net, Sticky Prices, and Monetary Policy
Recession-Era Effects of Factor Supply and Demand: Evidence from the Seasonal Cycle, the Construction Market, and Minimum Wage Hikes
The Christmas and the Academic Seasons as Demand and Supply Shifts
Christmas Demand in Recessions and Booms
The Summer Seasonal for Employment and Unemployment
Housing Investment Crowds Out Non-Residential Construction
The Employment Effects of Recent Minimum Wage Hikes Were No Less than Before
The Federal Minimum Wage Hikes Likely Reduced National Employment by Hundreds of Thousands, Especially Among the Young and Unskilled
Conclusion: Labor Supply Still Matters, About as Much as It Did in the Past
Incentives and Compliance under the Federal Mortgage Modification Guidelines
The Budget Set of a Borrower Facing the FDIC-HAMP Modification Guidelines
Borrower Reactions under Full Information and Full Compliance: Spend More and Work Less
Lender Incentives to Expand Modification Capacity
Conclusions
Principal Modifications and the Eligible Income Range
Marginal Tax Rates with Various Horizons and Discount Rates
Uncertainty, Redistribution, and the Labor Market
A Model of the Equity-Efficiency Tradeoff
Possible Changes in the Equity-Efficiency Tradeoff, and the Optimal Degree of Social Insurance
The Cost-Benefit Analysis of Safety Net Expansions: Necessary Ingredients
Conclusions
Conclusions
Incentives Matter
Was the Financial Collapse a Cause, or Effect?
Labor Supply and Demand Help Explain an Unhappy Situation
Bibliography

 

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