Eakinomics:
Biden’s Supply-Side No-Growth Policies
The president’s economic policies hinge on two risky bets. The first, at
the heart of his American Jobs Plan, is that the headwinds produced by
raising corporate taxes can be more than offset by the productivity
effects of the infrastructure spending. Gordon Gray and I took a look at
this proposition and concluded that the answer could be yes but
most likely was no.
The second bet is in the American Family Plan, where again the
administration is raising taxes – the top individual rate, capital gains
taxes, dividend taxes, and so forth – and spending the money on an array
of social safety-net programs. Notably, the programs include a paid-leave
program, a central component of the administration's intention of raising
labor force participation, especially among females. Thus, the bet is
that the increased participation, work, and income will offset the slower
growth produced by the taxes.
Will it work? Enter Isabel Soto and the aptly titled Paid Leave
and Female Labor Force Participation in the
United States and Europe. Soto takes a look at two
types of comparisons: (1) between the United States (no mandated paid
leave) and European countries (mandated paid leave), and (2) before
and after adoption of paid leave programs in U.S. states.
The picture below (stolen from Soto) summarizes the first comparisons. On
the vertical axis is the female labor force participation rate, while on
the horizontal axis is the length of the permitted paid leave. Labor
force participation in European countries is
sometimes higher and also sometimes lower than in the United
States, and bears essentially no relation to the length of the paid leave
allowed.
Turning to the states, 10 states have implemented (or are expecting to
implement) paid leave programs. California (2004) and New Jersey (2009)
are especially good test cases. Female participation was 57.6 percent
when the program was adopted; it was 55.2 in 2019. New Jersey
participation was at 60.8 percent in 2009, but it had declined to 59.1 in
2019.
In short, paid leave might increase
female labor force participation, but it also might not. In addition, the
paid leave is packaged in with child care subsidies that might promote
work, but also health subsidies and child subsidies that are very rich
and not contingent on work. In short, there is nothing about this that
looks like a sure bet.
One hears the president’s defenders emphasizing that he has a lot more
than demand stimulus in his proposals. But the supply-side elements
hardly look very potent.
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