Farewell to Bill
Bill Clinton is clearly the most talented politician of our era. It is difficult to imagine Clinton losing an election to any of the people who have run for office in the last two decades. But his skills as a politician should not prevent us from understanding the track record of his economic policies. In fact, until we get a clear understanding of these policies, it unlikely that we will be able to restore the economy to a path of sound economic growth.
The mythology of Clintonomics is that Clinton took the hard steps to bring the deficit down. He cut spending and raised taxes. This supposedly shifted the budget from large deficits to large surpluses and led to a booming economy. In the late 90s we had the lowest unemployment in three decades, and we saw real wage growth up and down the income ladder for the first time since the early 70s. There was in fact much here to celebrate.
However the reality is quite different from the mythology. The reduction in the deficit was supposed to lead to an increase in investment and a fall in the trade deficit. These are the two components of GDP that increase our wealth for the long-term, the former by increasing out productive capacity and the latter by giving us ownership of more foreign assets.
It turns out that the investment components of GDP actually did not increase in the Clinton boom. After we adjust for a technical issue associated with a surge in car leasing in the 90s (leased cars count as investment in the national accounts, purchased cars are treated as consumption), investment as a share of GDP increased by just 1.2 percentage points from their late 80s level.
However this was more than offset by a 2.2 percentage point increase in the size of the trade deficit. As a result, at the height of the Clinton boom in 2000 these wealth increasing components of GDP were 1.0 percentage point smaller as a share of GDP than in the high deficit 1980s.
Instead, the component driving the economy in the late 1990s was consumption. The stock bubble led to a surge in consumption, which rose by 3.0 percentage points as a share of GDP as savings hit what was at the time a record low.
The problem with this stock bubble boom was that it was destined to go bust. There are a limited number of fools with money. At some point there was no one left to pay billions of dollars for shares of Internet start-ups that didn’t even know how they could make a profit.
This reversed the irrational exuberance that had sent the market soaring. The market tanked and the economy and the budget surpluses went with it. The recession of 2001 was officially short and mild, ending just seven months after it started. However the picture was much worse for most people in the country. The economy did not start to create jobs again until September of 2003, almost two years after the official end of the recession.
The 2001 recession was hard to recover from because it was the result of the collapse of an asset bubble, just like the current recession. It is easier to recover from a normal recession, because a typical recession is brought on by the Federal Reserve Board raising interest rates to slow the economy.
Higher interest rates lead people to delay buying homes and cars. This means that when the Fed wants to get the economy going again it can just lower interest rates and spark a surge in home and car buying. That sort of boost isn’t possible when the downturn is caused by the collapse of an asset bubble.
When the economy did finally start creating jobs again after the 2001 recession, it was on the back of the housing bubble, which drove growth in the last decade. In effect, we used the growth of one bubble to overcome the wreckage created by the collapse of another bubble, just as an alcoholic seeks to cure one hangover by starting on the next.
There is another important part of the Clinton legacy that is impeding growth. When Robert Rubin became Treasury Secretary in 1995 he pushed a high dollar policy. He put muscle behind this policy with his control of the IMF in setting the ground rules for the bailout from the East Asian financial crisis.
The harsh terms of the bailout led countries throughout the developing world to demand massive amounts of dollars. Their reserves of dollars were an insurance policy to keep them ever being in the same position as the East Asian countries. This increased demand for dollars pushed up the value of the dollar and lead to the massive trade deficits that we have seen in the last dozen years.
We will not be able to get to a sustainable growth path until we reverse the high dollar policy. The dollar has to be pushed down to a level where U.S. goods are again competitive in international markets. This is a central part of the adjustment from the period of bubble driven growth.
In short, the Clinton-era policies sent the U.S. economy on a seriously wrong path. They created an absurd obsession with budget deficits, a pattern of bubble-driven growth, an incredibly bloated financial sector and an unsustainable trade deficit.
The next time he has occasion to address the country it would be great if President Clinton could explain these facts to the American people. Now that would be a speech worth watching.
CONNECT














13 comments on "Farewell to Bill"
September 12, 2012 2:49pm
Tragically, our sound-bite culture has made it almost impossible for a generation to grasp how Clinton's policies -- especially NAFTA and welfare "reform" -- have served so powerfully to shrink the middle class while deeply pitting Americans against each other. Try to wrap your mind around the consequences of shipping out a massive number of jobs while, at the same time, creating a Third World replacement workforce (mandatory, super-cheap/no rights workfare labor). Far fewer jobs, far more people absolutely desperate for jobs = perfect formula for wiping out a century of labor progress. These two policies, Clinton's Great Achievements, have caused extreme class disparities that ensure the end of the US as we knew it.
September 12, 2012 7:22am
Clinton lost my respect completely once caught lying about his extra marital adulterous affair with Monica Lewinsky. How does one give honor or any sort of respect to a liar much less an impeached president? (rhetorical, unless you were raised an ignorant fool).
September 11, 2012 2:42pm
Damn I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. The Congress did most of what you seem to be crediting Clinton with...A Republican Congress. Glass steagle was a toss to the greedy Wall Street bankers. The FED was the true culpret you all seem to be over looking here. Go watch a very good article from PBS about the entire mess. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/meltdown/
September 12, 2012 10:25am
HarleyBud: I agree with you fully that it was the efforts of Congress, but during the Administration of Clinton, that got us to where we are today (e.g., repeal of Glass-Steagall). Just as it was 'W' whose Administration (and his Congress) that got us into the collapse of 2008. Obama is accountable, too, for his actions once in office, though, to his credit, Congress locked onto a 'one-term' attitude so early, they have done a good job undermining Obama's effectiveness.
From my perspective, Fox is an example of some of the media that has added to the impasse; driven mostly by racism and greed (they prove there is still lots of money to be made agitating deeply-rooted racist attitudes).
Looking forward (as we must, with an election), it seems clear we need to opt out on Romney, as he clearly wants to aid the wealthiest fraction, further undermining the Middle Class, and Mitt will proceed with full indifference to global climate change (the issue that WILL kick us all in the butt, within the next couple decades).
September 11, 2012 2:17pm
This article misleadingly looks just at gross 'investment' dollars as a percentage of dollar GDP. It does not make a crucial qualitative distinction, between hi-value and low-value investment. The article says nothing about the dot-com bubble - which was not entirely a bubble but in fact drove some truly effective (for the future) telecom investment. At the time it seemed like over-investment, and perhaps (if you believe this article) it amounted to a tiny fraction of GDP. However now - thanks to that investment - we don't need to devote anywhere as much GDP (in dollars and time equivalents) as we formerly did to all sorts of clerical, info, and management tasks. In dollars we look poorer: in actual living standard we're richer.
September 11, 2012 1:07pm
Dean,
Your Clinton analysis is impeccable, but your prescription for improvement is flawed by the growth argument. There's no more extractive growth of any significance to be had for at least the rest of this century. Just the opposite, it's to be contraction, and the sooner we realize this, the sooner we can get on devising a quality of life that could and probably will be even higher than the past and certainly today.
Read the Hedges article that is a companion to your article at "Nation of Change" today:
http://www.nationofchange.org/growth-problem-1347370654
September 11, 2012 12:23pm
The takeaway I got from this article is the downside of policies passed during the Clinton Administration. Much good, but much bad, too. NAFTA, repeal of Glass-Steagal, tax changes, etc. And done via a bipartisan, personal greed driven effort. Clinton spoke well last week; he could help us a lot more, if he took his gift and helped us all come together to fix this mess.
We continue to kick the can down the road, dressing a dirty wound. At some point infection will attack other organs. We all need to see what is evolving, and we all need to responsibly speak up and act up, to help fix this.
Thanks for the article, Dean. Keep up the good writing.
September 11, 2012 12:23pm
The takeaway I got from this article is the downside of policies passed during the Clinton Administration. Much good, but much bad, too. NAFTA, repeal of Glass-Steagal, tax changes, etc. And done via a bipartisan, personal greed driven effort. Clinton spoke well last week; he could help us a lot more, if he took his gift and helped us all come together to fix this mess.
We continue to kick the can down the road, dressing a dirty wound. At some point infection will attack other organs. We all need to see what is evolving, and we all need to responsibly speak up and act up, to help fix this.
Thanks for the article, Dean. Keep up the good writing.
September 11, 2012 11:57am
Baker's analysis seems spot on but left out the repeal of Glass Steigal as Clinton's crowning obligation to Wall Street. The basics, under any monetary-economic system are that you have to produce some sort of real goods or services for sale in order to have a real economy where people work and receive compensation for their labours. Bubbles are fraudulant by nature causing mass transfers of wealth by fraud and economic collapse when they burst under any monetary-economic system.
September 11, 2012 11:49am
NAFTA and GATT were instituted during the Clinton Administration. During his convention speech he was correctly berating the republicans about wanting to outsource everything but it seems to me that NAFTA and GATT were very much instrumental in creating this situation. I too wish to refer the author to a much more relevant article by Chris Hedges concerning what no one wants to face - that growth is our downfall and we had better prepare for the end of it instead of keeping our heads firmly planted in the illusion of endless growth as our savior.
September 11, 2012 11:06am
What goods? Gas eater cars and i- phones?. We don't make anything anymore!
September 11, 2012 10:50am
May I refer you to a more important article:
http://www.nationofchange.org/growth-problem-1347370654
September 11, 2012 10:49am
When are you "dismal scientists" going to recognize the limits to "growth" as your economics defines it? The ONLY way to "grow" the current Ponzi-Scheme laughingly called an "economy" is to create new bubbles.
I would suggest that the run-up in the stock market over the last 3 years (thanks to the Fed's low interest rates FORCING people into that crap-shoot) and the banksters going back to creating esoteric financial instruments that they barely understand and treating them as commodities is the beginning of the next bubble.
If you want to engage in something useful, begin building relocalized steady-state REAL economies with the few stray resources we have left before it's too late.