The coronavirus pandemic has shown that the trickle-down theory of economic growth is a fabrication

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by chrisdh79
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On the latest episode of the "Pitchfork Economics" podcast, Nick Hanauer and David Goldstein interviewed Ronald Klain, who served as the leader of the Obama administration's response team during the 2014 Ebola epidemic.

Klain said President Donald Trump's response measures sabotaged our ability to manage the coronavirus pandemic, largely because his administration doesn't believe the government can solve problems.

The belief in a trickle-down economy — or the idea that America's wealthy will foster a rebound by providing jobs to others — makes the pandemic worse and hinders an economic recovery.

Paul Constant is a writer at Civic Ventures, a cofounder of the Seattle Review of Books, and a frequent cohost of the "Pitchfork Economics" podcast with Hanauer and Goldstein.

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Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Sunday told Fox News' Chris Wallace that the American economy would "bounce back" from the coronavirus shutdown by this summer. "As businesses begin to open," Mnuchin promised, the "demand side of the economy" will "rebound."

Mnuchin was reiterating President Donald Trump's line on the economy — the idea that when social distancing ends, the economy will miraculously renew itself to pre-virus levels. "We're going to rebuild" the economy, Trump promised reporters last week, "and we're going to rebuild it better, and it's going to go faster than people think."

Trump and Mnuchin aren't the only ones predicting a strong recovery. Ross Walker, the chief UK economist at NatWest Markets, envisioned a V-shaped recovery. Carsten Brzeski, the chief economist at ING Research, believes the recovery will be more U-shaped, with a slight trough at the bottom before the economy bounces back to normal. At the end of March, Goldman Sachs economists predicted what CNBC's Jeff Cox characterized as "the fastest recovery in history." (Goldman has since tempered its rosiest expectations for the rest of the year, but its economists are still predicting an "unprecedented" recovery.)

But the longer this crisis goes on, the less likely a V- or U-shaped recovery becomes. Even in states like Georgia and Florida that are moving too quickly toward reopening, the consumer demand that drives the economy is likely to be suppressed by both massive unemployment numbers and a widespread unwillingness to gather with large groups of people for months to come. And in states with more science-based policies, the recovery will be intentionally slow: Restaurants will be serving customers at half capacity at best, stadiums (and their attendant businesses) won't reopen for many months, and air travel and tourism will continue at a greatly diminished capacity for the time being.

And all this is a best-case scenario; most experts predict that many parts of the country will have to reenter periods of more extreme social distancing when boomeranging outbreaks of the virus occur in the fall.

Why would so many members of the political and financial establishment misrepresent the realities of the economic recovery? It's easy to guess the motivations of the Trump administration and other Republican politicians: The election this fall will most likely hinge on the economic confidence of the average American, so it's in their interests to present a confident prediction in the hopes that voters will believe it.

But what about the economists? They work for investing firms and other market giants that are expected to offer canny, sensible advice for clients. Why are they promoting models for recovery that already seem to bear no relationship to reality?

It's really pretty obvious when you think about it: They're working with a neoliberal mindset that misunderstands some fundamental economic truths. Even the most progressive mainstream economists were probably educated within a trickle-down school of economic thought that CEOs and the wealthiest Americans are the true job creators and that prosperity rains down from them onto the rest of us.

Given that the wealthiest Americans have weathered the coronavirus downturn spectacularly well — many of them have even made more money since the pandemic began — these economists believe that once the economy has opened again, the wealthiest Americans will simply allow prosperity to trickle down in the form of jobs.

It's a simple, elegant theory, but it's wrong

The economic downturn that has marched in lockstep with the coronavirus pandemic has demonstrated that the trickle-down theory of economic growth is a fabrication. Wealthy people don't create jobs — you and I do.

Unemployment numbers in the US skyrocketed because consumer demand collapsed, and people aren't likely to find new jobs until consumer demand returns to previous levels. Wealth begins in our neighborhoods and flows through our communities. Until our streets are full of people spending money, working, creating small businesses, and participating broadly in the economy, our country won't fully recover.

It's more clear than ever that trickle-down, anti-government thinking will only make this economic disaster worse. And though nothing could have stopped the coronavirus from spreading around the world, a growing mountain of evidence proves that trickle-down thinking worsened the pandemic's effects in America.

In this week's episode of "Pitchfork Economics," Nick Hanauer and David Goldstein interviewed Ronald Klain, who served as the leader of the Obama administration's response team during the 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa.

Klain made the case that Trump's anti-government cuts — including eliminating the pandemic response team and other public-health measures established by the Obama administration — sabotaged our ability to effectively manage the pandemic. Because Trump and his staff have "a philosophy of not believing that government could solve problems," Klain said, they created a situation in which the government was unprepared for the biggest pandemic in a century.

Klain minced no words when it came to the Trump administration's pandemic response. "I think we will learn as this unfolds that at critical moments in February and March, the ideological bias in the White House against government led Jared Kushner and his allies to promote private-sector solutions when we needed public-sector solutions," he said.

"Disdain for government officials and government agencies led to a series of wrong choices about testing, and about equipment, and about use of the Defense Production Act, that really further exacerbated this disaster," he concluded.

America's outsize coronavirus death toll, he argued, was avoidable. It's our bad economic thinking that got us into this crisis. And that same warped trickle-down philosophy simply cannot imagine any other way to recover from this recession than tax cuts for the rich, lower wages for the working class, and deregulation for the powerful.

Until we shake off this wrongheaded belief that the answer to all of our problems rests in the hands of the wealthiest Americans, we're never going to be able to build the recovery that this economy sorely needs.

kvothe-da-raven on May 4th, 2020 at 14:41 UTC »

Also called horse and sparrow theory. If you feed a horse enough oats, some will pass through his digestive system and will get crapped out so the sparrows can eat. Can't think of a better analogy for trickle down economics. The horse has more food than any horse would need, enough that it can't even digest it all properly. The sparrows are left pecking at shit in the middle of the road.

BeheldaPaleHorse on May 4th, 2020 at 13:35 UTC »

Even after the taxes of the wealthy were cut, taxpayer funds were used to bail out their businesses and stock portfolios.

Thanks to the tax cuts, the burden of repayment of the bailout will fall out on the working class.

Meanwhile the working class are told to get back to work in hazardous conditions after most haven't even received unemployment yet.

Uberslaughter on May 4th, 2020 at 13:28 UTC »

We already knew that prior to this, but it's not stopping Republicans from including tax breaks for businesses and the ultra wealthy in every piece of Coronavirus support legislation that comes out.