|
Eakinomics: The
Power of Targeting Relief
I continue to be puzzled by the economic and public
health logic underlying the Biden Administration's proposed $1.9 trillion
request for COVID-19 response. As I noted previously, “The bottom line
is that the Biden proposal is inconsistent with the current and projected
strength of the economy, ignores economic support that is in the pipeline,
spends over a trillion on problems that the vaccination program is intended
to solve, and contains numerous extraneous proposals. Any legislative
compromise that will pass Congress will have to be much better designed.”
Perhaps for these reasons, there are reports that House Democrats may
instead vote next week on a bill that contains only money for vaccinations
and $2,000 checks (or, more precisely, $1,400 added to the existing checks to
bring the total to $2,000). The former is a good idea, but the latter is a
wasteful solution in search of a problem. As I also noted previously, it will
not be effective stimulus.
If, instead, it is meant as relief for those financially burdened by the
pandemic, it should be targeted on those who face such difficulties. The
current checks go to individuals even if they did not miss a day of work or a
single paycheck. A simple way to better target the money would be to ask
state unemployment offices to report the names of those individuals who were
unemployed for, say, 4 months or longer in 2020. (Notice by focusing on the
past, there will be no poor incentives for labor market participation in
2021.) Checks could be targeted on this population.
Let’s do some math to get a notion of what is at stake. The Congressional
Budget Office estimates that the current checks
will cost $163 billion in 2021. Assuming that behavior is unchanged, topping
the checks up to $2,000 would cost an additional $380 billion. What happens
if we target this money on the unemployed? Well, the latest monthly employment report
indicated that there were 10.7 million people unemployed in December. One
could send every one of them a check for over $35,000 with
the same money that produces $2,000 checks. Of course, not all will have been
unemployed for very long. Indeed, the Labor Department data indicate that
nearly 4 million have been unemployed for 27 weeks or longer. That is a much
narrower base of the truly long-term unemployed. Each of them could receive a
check of over $96,000 with the same pool of money.
Obviously, I don’t envision Congress voting for $96,000 checks. For example,
$2,000 more to the long-term unemployed would cost only $8 billion. The real
message is that it makes a lot more fiscal sense to identify the population
genuinely in need and provide the appropriate support much more cheaply.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment