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Racial Resentment Is Impetus for Welfare Cuts but So Is Ignorance on Spending LevelsCEPR / May 31, 2018
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Marc Thiessen Says We Should Thank Republicans for Making it Easier for Drug Companies to Steal Us BlindCEPR / May 30, 2018
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When It Comes to Italy, NYT's Definition of Economic Logic Doesn't Fit the DataCEPR / May 30, 2018
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Who Could Have Imagined that Government Granted Patent Monopolies on Drugs Like OxyContin Could Lead to Abuses?CEPR / May 30, 2018
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The Patented Solution for Paying Off the National DebtDean Baker
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Unemployment and the Trade Deficit: It Really Isn't That ComplicatedFor some reason, there seems to be a big market in efforts to confuse the public about the relationship between unemployment and the trade deficit. Robert Samuelson gives us yet another example in his column today.
"By now, it must be obvious that US trade deficits are connected loosely, if at all, with the unemployment rate, which is now 3.9 percent — the lowest since 2000. Meanwhile, the US trade deficit in 2017 was $566 billion.
"The explanation for the apparent paradox is the dollar’s role as the major international currency, used to conduct trade and investment among many (non-US) countries. The extra demand for dollars raises its exchange rate, making U.S. exports costlier and imports cheaper. The result is a structural U.S. trade deficit."
This one makes pretty much zero sense. First of all, pointing to the low unemployment rate coinciding with a large trade deficit as evidence there is no link between unemployment and a trade deficit makes as much sense as pointing to a very underweight person suffering from the late stage cancer as an argument against any link between being seriously overweight and bad health.
This isn not a serious argument. A trade deficit reduces demand in the economy. It means that some of our spending is creating demand in Europe or Mexico, rather than in the United States. Other things equal, that means less demand in the United States and higher unemployment.
We can offset this lost demand with additional demand in the United States. We can have large budget deficits, as we do now. And we can have bubbles as we did in the late 1990s with the stock bubble and in the last decade with the housing bubble. That is why we can have a large trade deficit and low unemployment. It really is not hard.
CEPR / May 28, 2018
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Donald Trump’s Party of OneDean Baker
The Hankyoreh, May 27, 2018
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Elon Musk Wants Lots of Money for Running TeslaCEPR / May 27, 2018
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The Problem of Protectionism and the Broken US Health Care SystemCEPR / May 26, 2018
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In Trashing Elon Musk, Bret Stephens Indicates He Has Never Heard of ChinaCEPR / May 26, 2018
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Lessons for Washington Post on Obamacare Costs: Levels Matter, Not Just Rates of ChangeCEPR / May 25, 2018
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Washington Post Mistakenly Tells Readers There are Shortages of WorkersCEPR / May 23, 2018
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The Fed Has to Distinguish Between Leaning Against Bubbles and Leaning Against Rising Housing PricesCEPR / May 23, 2018