The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs

The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs

The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs

The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs

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Overview

Foreword by President George W. Bush

With contributions from world renowned economists and Nobel prizewinners, The 4% Solution is a blueprint for restoring America’s economic health

 
The United States is reaching a pivotal point in its economic history. Millions of Americans owe more on their homes than they are worth, long-term unemployment is alarmingly high, and the Congressional Budget Office is projecting a sustainable growth rate of only 2.3%—a full percentage point below the average for the past sixty years. Unless a turnaround comes quickly, the United States could be mired in debt for years to come and millions of Americans will be pushed to the sidelines of the economy.
 
The 4% Solution offers clear and unflinching ideas on how to revive America’s economy. It sets a positive economic goal and asks some of the top economic minds on how to achieve it. With a focus on removing government constraints, The 4% Solution defines the policies that will allow Americans to save, invest, and create the jobs that the United States needs.
 
The 4% Solution draws on the best minds in the business, including five Nobel laureates:
 
·         Robert E. Lucas, Jr., on the history and future of economic growth
·         Gary S. Becker on why we need immigrants in order to grow
·         Edward Prescott on the cost (to growth) of the welfare state
·         Vernon Smith on why housing leads us into and out of recessions
·         Myron Scholes on why we need to innovate in order to grow the economy

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307986146
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 07/17/2012
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.44(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.27(d)

About the Author

The George W. Bush Institute is the policy research arm of the Bush Presidential Center and Library in Dallas, Texas.  

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1

Why We Grow

By Brendan Miniter

Economic growth is not an issue normally associated with the Pentagon. But on January 23, 2006, in a little-noticed ceremony, officials there handed the Defense Department’s Distinguished Public Service Award to then outgoing Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan. The reason for the award: He helped unleash tremendous economic growth that had strengthened the country, led to new advances in science and technology, and demonstrated the power of a free and open economic system.

The importance of economic prosperity is hard to overstate. A growing economy produces jobs that allow workers to provide for their families, live comfortable and stable lives, and give back to their communities. A growing economy creates new opportunities for entrepreneurs. And it also creates the capital needed to support innovation and research in science and the arts. America’s economy has long produced the types of jobs that have enabled Americans to enjoy comfortable middle-class lives.

From the end of World War II until our recent “Great Recession,” the United States economy grew, on average, at a little more than 3% annually. At that rate the size of the economy doubles roughly every generation. There were, of course, recessions during that period. But nearly every economic downturn was followed by a period of significant growth. Over the past seventy years, the American economy has grown at 4% or greater about two-fifths of the time. The result has been a rapid transformation. Today most Americans have a substantially higher standard of living than previous generations. And they also carry with them an expectation for growth. Americans hold the optimistic view that it is natural for the economy to grow at a rapid pace year in and year out.

But survey the historical data stretching back long before World War II and you may be surprised to see that economic growth is a relatively new phenomenon. In an essay1 published before he won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1995, Robert Lucas outlined the history of economic growth. His findings show that prior to the industrial revolution in the middle of the 18th century, per capita gross domestic product (GDP) growth had largely been flat around the world. Technological advancement had occurred, but the economic gains that were made were essentially offset by increases in population.

However, with the advent of the industrial revolution, economic growth managed to outrun population (industrialized economies grew, while birthrates declined) and the result was the rise of a middle class. Lucas calculates that the world economy grew at a fraction of 1% annually through the latter half of the 18th century, at about 1% annually on average through the 19th century, at about 2.4% for the first sixty years of the 20th century, and at about 4% annually after that.

Modern growth theory—the theory that looks at innovation and human ingenuity as engines for expanding the economy—is itself relatively new. Robert M. Solow, the economist often credited with advancing modern economic thought in this area, did much of his groundbreaking work in the 1950s and ’60s. Others, such as Lucas, have since developed alternative growth models, which have sparked research and debate among economists about the role of human capital, entrepreneurship, and other factors in economic growth. The short of it is that these are exciting times to be thinking about economics, growth, and the outer limits of human potential. There is a lot of cutting-edge work being done now. And it is reshaping what we know to be possible, while also forcing us to realize that much of what we have done in the past may have actually hamstrung the economy.

Consider the work of another economist who hasn’t won the Nobel Prize, but likely deserves such high honors: Gordon Tullock. Half a century ago, he worked closely with economist James Buchanan, who went on to win the Nobel for his work on something called public choice theory—a body of ideas that argues that rather than being driven by altruistic motives, government policies are often driven by hidden incentives. For example, government agencies have a strong incentive to spend all the money in their budgets, even if they have to spend it in wasteful ways, because not spending the money can lead lawmakers to cut those agencies’ budgets the following year.

The combined contributions of Tullock and Buchanan can be found in an often cited volume, The Calculus of Consent, which sorts through incentives that drive democratic systems and offers reasons why, for example, a legislature might back public policies that are not widely popular and may not even serve the greater public good. But perhaps Tullock’s most relevant work to discussions of economic growth has to do with what has been called “rent seekers”—those who seek special payment or privilege, usually from the government. His insight, accessible in a volume titled The Rent-Seeking Society, is simply that individuals or institutions often seek to profit by tilting the political landscape in their direction, rather than by creating real value.

This concept is critical to understand in today’s environment of large federal deficits and a stumbling economy. It’s often assumed that federal spending will stimulate the economy—after all, it pumps money into the system. But Tullock’s insight offers us an explanation into why government spending can actually be harmful to economic growth. Spending is funded by taxes, which pulls capital out of the productive economy. The destructive power of taxes is something that has been long discussed and seems to be well understood. Collecting taxes, however, is only part of the harm that public policies can cause. Rent seekers, as Tullock discovered, profit through the political process, not by producing a better or cheaper product. Their aim is to receive payment (or privilege) through government policy.

In some cases, rent seekers can look to gain privilege by lobbying for new regulations that, if imposed, would harm their competitors. In other cases, rent seekers can look to profit by receiving government payments or inflated prices thanks to government policies. Donald Boudreaux, an economics professor at George Mason University, brilliantly illustrated Tullock’s insight in the Christian Science Monitor in late 2008 by looking at Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich. At the time, Blagojevich was at the center of a corruption story involving naming someone to fill a vacant Senate seat.2 Boudreaux concluded that when the government can bestow a privilege or profit on someone there is a strong incentive for entrepreneurial people to spend their time figuring out how to profit off the government. “As Tullock first recognized (in a paper published in 1967),” Boudreaux wrote, “enormous amounts of resources—including human talent—are wasted in pursuit of government privileges.”

Not all payments or privileges provided by the government are problematic or even wasteful. But since the government uses a political process to decide whom it pays and how much, there is little incentive for rent seekers to push for greater efficiency or innovation. This is a problem in part because the public and the private sectors compete for the same financial and human capital. That is to say, they compete for the same pile of money and the same group of innovative entrepreneurs. So when the government spends a large volume of money, there is that much less money in the system for private entrepreneurs. And when the government has a wide variety of programs that businesses can profit from, without being efficient producers, it drains away talented entrepreneurs who would otherwise put their talents to work in the private economy. Think of it this way: When profits are relatively easy to make in government contract work, there are fewer innovators willing to spend their time and their capital developing the next new innovation that could revolutionize an entire industry.

If we place Tullock’s work next to the insights offered by Lucas, Solow, and Buchanan (among others), it is possible to imagine that the era of significant economic growth is only just beginning. If sustained economic growth is relatively new to human history, if many of the theories explaining growth are still being refined, and if Tullock is right that public policies can create incentives that hurt economic growth, then we may not yet know our full economic potential. We haven’t yet found out how fast the economy can run on a sustained basis if public policy is lined up with the right incentives to grow the economy.

There isn’t a clear consensus on the rate of growth that the country should shoot for. As this book came together, Lucas said to me in an email that he didn’t support the idea that sustained long-term 4% growth was possible for the United States. I understood his point to be that the world as a whole might grow at 4% or faster and some countries—including China—could far exceed that growth rate. But that was because many countries are racing to catch up to the United States. They are experiencing catch‑up growth, which is much easier to achieve because it involves adopting technologies and practices that others have already developed. It’s much harder to grow at an accelerated rate when you are leading the pack—when you are the one developing new technologies that everyone else will copy.

And he’s right to think so. The United States is much more likely to achieve the average growth rate it maintained from the end of World War II to the most recent economic downturn—a rate of about 3%—than it is to accelerate to a new long-term economic growth rate of 4%. That doesn’t mean that in the short run, the country won’t exceed that annual average—indeed it will have to grow at a rate that exceeds its long-term average rate of growth for a period of time just to return to the trend line it has adhered to for decades. The question is, will the United States be able to grow at a faster rate than its long-term trend? Is 4% sustained annual growth possible?

The difference between the long-term trend of 3% and 4% may not seem very big. As Lucas put it to me, the difference we’re talking about is one percentage point, and what’s that “among friends”? “A lot, for a growth theorist,” he wrote. The safe money, and the evidence he has amassed, is on the long-term trend of 3% (or less) holding steady once the United States recovers from its current recession.

But then innovation is, by its nature, disruptive. As new technologies and new practices come into being, is it possible to know how fast the economy can grow for a sustained period of time if we find new ways to unleash the creative potential of our entrepreneurs? The Bush Institute has set an intentionally provocative target in part because one way to find out what is actually attainable is to stretch for a goal that is seemingly just beyond one’s reach.

In any case, given the state of its economy, the United States needs to push hard and reach for new ways to unleash the creativity of its people. The challenges facing the country today are significant. As this book went to press, unemployment had exceeded 8% for nearly three years, and there was little sign that a new jobs boom was on the horizon. American businesses, unwilling to deploy capital in an uncertain economy, were sitting on approximately $2 trillion in cash on their balance sheets. And an unprecedented wave of federal stimulus spending had washed through the system without doing much to lift the nation’s economy.

There is little doubt that the American economy is undergoing a transformation. For decades, the number of jobs in manufacturing has fallen. Textile, assembly-line, and other well-paid manual labor jobs that supported the middle class in years past are simply no longer available to many Americans entering the workforce today. In their place, an information economy—which requires highly skilled, highly educated, and often highly mobile individuals—has taken shape and has become a key driver of economic growth. This new economy offers the prospect of greater prosperity than what it is replacing, but it comes with a catch. To take advantage of the new economy, many Americans will have to retool with new skills and a new approach to their careers.

The result is that today the United States must not only restart its economic engines, it must do so while simultaneously pulling millions of Americans into productive jobs in a new economy. If, instead, it stumbles into a prolonged period of little or no economic growth, it risks allowing millions of Americans who lack skills for the new economy to be pushed permanently to the economic sidelines through unemployment or underemployment. Thus, how to fix the flagging economy is one of the most important social issues the country faces today.

Many of the chapters that follow will offer specific ideas for how to spark immediate and substantial economic growth as well as outline aspects of the economy that are not usually covered in the press. But before we turn to them, let’s first consider one important aspect to growth not factored into economic arguments often enough.

Economic growth isn’t an end unto itself. Growing the economy is a vital task for this generation because of what economic growth produces: a better life for millions upon millions of Americans and hundreds of millions of people across the globe. There is a certain virtue to prosperity. It inspires people, removes pressures that lead to embitterment and division, and allows us all to step back and get a healthy perspective on what is actually important in life.

Today, there is a vigorous debate over how best to lift people out of poverty. In an era of high unemployment, economic uncertainty, and falling expectations of what is possible in the future, this debate has taken on added significance. This country may be at a crossroads, where its next steps could determine whether its future will be dominated by how it has decided to address poverty, unemployment, and economic distress of the middle class.

So let us step, for a moment, beyond the economic arguments and the ramifications of government debt, and address the underlying fundamental question of how we respond when our fellow citizens are being battered by vicious economic trends. Do we turn to government to provide for the people? Or do we turn to the people by empowering them to help themselves and each other?

If we care about poverty and if we care about enlivening the souls of our fellow citizens by freeing them from the economic despair of joblessness, we need to recognize that there is a moral component, and even a moral imperative, to a free economy. It has been said that there is dignity in having a job, but economics is about more than allowing people to have a modicum of dignity and self-worth inside the confines of what we collectively allow them to have. To be successful, economic policy can’t be thought of as charity. If it is to achieve its aim, it needs to allow an individual to live up to his potential. To thrive in a free society, people need to form strong bonds that connect them to others. Merchants must build trust among their customers, and individuals must build a community with their neighbors. We can only weaken those bonds when we take away the necessity and the imperative of forming them.

1 Robert E. Lucas Jr., “The Industrial Revolution: Past and Future,” The Region, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, May 2004, http://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications_papers/pub_display.cfm?id=3333.

2 Donald J. Boudreaux, “Corruption’s Cost, Beyond Blagojevich,” Christian Science Monitor, December 23, 2008, http://mercatus.org/media_clipping/corruptions-cost-beyond-blagojevich.

Table of Contents

Authors vii

Foreword George W. Bush xi

Introduction: We Can Do it James K. Glassman xv

Chapter 1 Why We Grow Brendan Miniter 1

Chapter 2 Incentives W. Michael Cox Richard Alm 8

Chapter 3 The History and Future of Economic Growth Robert E. Lucas 27

Chapter 4 More Time on the Job Edward C. Prescott 42

Chapter 5 At Home in the Great Recession Steven Gjerstad Vernon L. Smith 50

Chapter 6 Spending, Taxes, and Certainty: A Road Map to 4% Kevin Hassett 80

Chapter 7 Sound Money, Sound Policy David Malpass 94

Chapter 8 Not All Growth Is Good Myron Scholes 108

Chapter 9 Entrepreneurs and Creative Destruction Peter G. Klein 116

Chapter 10 Baseball's Answer to Growth Robert Litan 127

Chapter 11 The Role of Intangibles Nick Schulz 144

Chapter 12 The Virtuous Cycle Maria Minniti 159

Chapter 13 Growth Needs Trade Carlos Gutierrez 174

Chapter 14 Market-Friendly Energy Steven F. Hayward Kenneth P. Green 189

Chapter 15 Social Security Reform and Economic Growth Charles Blahous Jason J. Fiehtner 204

Chapter 16 Education Quality and Economic Growth Eric A. Hanushek 226

Chapter 17 When Illegals Stop Crossing the Border Gary S. Becker 240

Chapter 18 Immigration and Growth Pia M. Orrenius Madeline Zavodny 245

Chapter 19 How Technology Can Lead a Boom Floyd Kvamme 261

Chapter 20 Growth Lessons from Calvin Coolidge Amity Shlaes 279

Chapter 21 The Moral Imperative of a Free Economy Michael Novak 287

Notes 301

Index 327

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