16
Apr 13

Murder by Spreadsheet

The Twitters are full of discussion about something called “Reinhart-Rogoff”.

From the NYTimes:

An influential 2010 economics paper by Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff showed that countries with high levels of debt experienced significantly slower rates of growth – and became a justification for many countries to adopt austerity budgets to hold down their debt loads. Now a provocative new paper is arguing that the paper was seriously flawed, in part because of basic calculation errors in a spreadsheet.

The Next New Deal points out how it has been used:

This has been one of the most cited stats in the public debate during the Great Recession. Paul Ryan’s Path to Prosperity budget states their study “found conclusive empirical evidence that [debt] exceeding 90 percent of the economy has a significant negative effect on economic growth.” The Washington Post editorial board takes it as an economic consensus view, stating that ”debt-to-GDP could keep rising — and stick dangerously near the 90 percent mark that economists regard as a threat to sustainable economic growth.”

Quartz links to several instances of how Reinhart-Rogoff has influenced the austerity debate:

  • “[I]t is widely acknowledged, based on serious research, that when public debt levels rise about 90% they tend to have a negative economic dynamism, which translates into low growth for many years.” — European Commissioner Olli Rehn.

  • “Economists who have studied sovereign debt tell us that letting total debt rise above 90 percent of GDP creates a drag on economic growth and intensifies the risk of a debt-fueled economic crisis.” — House Budget Committee Chairman and former Republican vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan.

  • “It’s an excellent study, although in some ways what you’ve summarized understates the risks.”— Former US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. 

  • “[W]e would soon get to a situation in which a debt-to-GDP ratio would be 100%. As economists such as Reinhart and Rogoff have argued, that is the level at which the overall stock of debt becomes dangerous for the long-term growth of an economy. They would argue that that is why Japan has had such a bad time for such a long period. If deficits really solved long-term economic growth, Japan would not have been stranded in the situation in which it has been for such a long time.” Lord Lamont of Lerwick, former UK chancellor and sometime adviser to current chancellor George Osborne.

  • “The debt hurts the economy already. The canonical work of Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff and its successors carry a clear message: countries that have gross government debt in excess of 90% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) are in the debt danger zone. Entering the zone means slower economic growth.”— Doug Holtz-Eakin, Chairman of the American Action Forum.

Austerity has caused much more suffering globally than promised relief.  One of the contributing factors?  Microsoft Excel.

This error is needed to get the results they published, and it would go a long way to explaining why it has been impossible for others to replicate these results. If this error turns out to be an actual mistake Reinhart-Rogoff made, well, all I can hope is that future historians note that one of the core empirical points providing the intellectual foundation for the global move to austerity in the early 2010s was based on someone accidentally not updating a row formula in Excel.

Reinhart and Rogoff have offered the following response to the criticisms.


20
Sep 11

Not quite Krugman, but still…

At this here blog, in 2008:

In looking at the current scenario, the equality gap has shifted to the right. Those with the most have gotten the most. If anything, the cost of their wealth gains has been the increase of costs for those below them. In the last decade or so, health insurance costs have doubled, energy has nearly quadrupled, and inflation has exceeded increases in income. If it weren’t for our investments in the stock markets through our various retirement vehicles, I’d say we already suffered. Maybe we, the lower middle class will be fine? Maybe the middle and upper middle classes will be those that suffer, with their gains being evaporated. Even though that trillion-dollar bailout will likely do-nothing, and will severely tie the hands of the next President, maybe our inability to accumulate real wealth means we have very little to lose?


13
Aug 10

Dreaded Zepplin

Google Trends pointed to interest in the Hindenburg Omen [wiki].  Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge explains it thusly:

  1. That the daily number of NYSE new 52 Week Highs and the daily number of new 52 Week Lows must both be greater than 2.2 percent of total NYSE issues traded that day.
  2. That the smaller of these numbers is greater than or equal to 69 (68.772 is 2.2% of 3126). This is not a rule but more like a checksum. This condition is a function of the 2.2% of the total issues.
  3. That the NYSE 10 Week moving average is rising.
  4. That the McClellan Oscillator is negative on that same day.
  5. That new 52 Week Highs cannot be more than twice the new 52 Week Lows (however it is fine for new 52 Week Lows to be more than double new 52 Week Highs). This condition is absolutely mandatory.

This first occurrence of all five indicators in one day is an unconfirmed Hindenburg Omen.  A recurrence within a 36-day period is a confirmed Hindenburg Omen.   Looks like we’re in for some interesting days at the dog track.


18
Apr 10

There was a ‘Wall Street’ movie in 1929, 1987, and…gulp…in 2010?

The Business Insider says that there was a movie named ‘Wall Street’ released in 1929 [IMDB] and 1987 [IMDB].  The sequel to Oliver Stone’s 1987 Wall Street will be released in September 2010 [IMDB].  Contact your financial planner.


11
Mar 10

Slapped by the Invisible Hand

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234-years ago, Adam Smith published the Wealth of Nations.   While some see confirmation of Smith’s beliefs in the return of robber barons, others believe Smith did not mean what you think he meant.    We see that the Adam Smith we have come to know is actually only 60-years young, and came from Chicago:

…Lost Legacy has never been slow in criticizing the ‘Chicago Adam Smith’, a person with ideas that are far from the ideas of the Adam Smith born in Kirkcaldy in 1723.

George Stigler’s boast that “Adam Smith is alive and well and lives in Chicago  (1976) reflects to invention of the Adam Smith of the “invisible hand  (a mere metaphor for Adam Smith whose single use of it in Wealth Of Nations referred to the unintended consequences of the risk-avoidance of some, but not all merchants … who preferred the home trade), and had nothing to do, at least in Adam Smith’s mind, with how markets worked, … or how the price system worked.

The belief that the “invisible hand  was a significant ‘idea’, ‘concept’, ‘theory’, or ‘paradigm’ was wholly invented in the 1950s by neo-classical economists on the back of general equilibrium mathematics … and in support of a worthy criticism of Cold War, Soviet central planning. It is now taught in every economics 101 class as if it had historical validity, mainly by people who have never bothered to read Wealth Of Nations. …

Would the actual Adam Smith agree with Reagan that “Government was not the solution, Government was the problem ?   Would he worship the wealthy?   Would he have opposed the Stimulus Act?   Would he have cozied up to corporations?   Would Smith pass the litmus test of the teabaggers and the Mount Vernon Statement?   Would he have been a free-market deregulation ideologue?   Would he even recognize capitalism as we know it?