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Greening Macroeconomics: New Thinking, New Teaching
Jonathan M. Harris and Joshua Uchitelle-Pierce
http://ase.tufts.edu/gdaeCopyright © 2014 Jonathan M. Harris
Teaching Macroeconomics: Missing Perspectives
Current texts (e.g. Mankiw, Principles of Economics) lack treatment of:
• Instability (assume classical long-run full-employment)• Inequality (no empirical assessment of increasing inequality,
no treatment of macro effects)• Environment/Resource limits (only brief mention) • Infrastructure and Social Investment (very limited treatment)
Limitations and biased policy implications arise from assumptions of Aggregate Supply/Aggregate Demand model
Source: Mankiw, Principles of Economics, 5th ed., Chapter 33
The assumption of a fixed Long-Run Aggregate Supply curve means that government policy is ineffective, affecting only the price level in the long run.
A New Approach to Teaching Macroeconomics
• Dynamic approach to AS/AD • Recognition of inherent instability• Active government policy responses• Importance of distribution and inequality• Consideration of resource and environmental
limits
Output (Y )
Infl
atio
n r
ate
(π )
Aggregate Supply (AS)
Maximum Capacity
Y*
Unemployment
Wage-Price Spiral
The Aggregate Supply CurveAs the economy approaches its maximum capacity, inflation levels tend to rise as excessive demand for workers, goods and services, and production inputs pushes up wages and prices.
Source: Goodwin et al., Macroeconomics in Context, 2nd ed., Chapter 13
Output (Y )
Infla
tion
rate
(π
) AS
Y*
AD1
AD0
E1
E0
Unemployment
Expansionary Fiscal Policy in Response to a RecessionAn expansion of government spending, as well as a program of tax cuts, shifts the AD curve to the right.
Source: Goodwin et al., Macroeconomics in Context, 2nd ed., Chapter 13
Factors affecting AD, AS
• AD: instability of investment, variability of consumption based on income distribution and debt, fiscal and monetary policy, trade in open economy
• AS: technology, natural resource and environmental constraints, institutions, infrastructure investment
• All of these factors are the proper domain of economic analysis and policy; cannot simply rely on “efficient markets”. Different equilibria, disequilibria, and varied growth paths exist
Brunei
United Arab Emirates
United States
India
China
Bahrain
Saudi Arabia
Kazakhstan
Gabon
Sweden Switzerland
Norway
CO2 emissions are correlated with GDP, but different growth paths exist, including low-carbon paths.
GDP AND CO2 Emissions
Top 10 Percent
Top 1 Percent
Inequality in the U.S. has risen to levels not seen since the 1920s, with macroeconomic consequences including increased debt and more unstable aggregate demand
INCOME SHARES OF TOP 10% AND TOP 1%
GD
P a
nd
GP
I P
er C
apit
a (2
000
US
$)
Gross Domestic Product
Genuine Progress Indicator
GDP AND THE GENUINE PROGRESS INDICATOR
Increasing GDP does not necessarily mean increasing well-being; other indicators may be needed.
2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 20350
50
100
150
200
250
300In
dex
(200
5=10
0)
Year
GDP/Capita
GHGUnemploymentPovertyDebt to GDP
PROJECTIONS FOR STABILIZED GDP/CAPITA IN CANADA
A macroeconomic model for Canada shows that GDP/capita can be stabilized while improving social indicators and lowering environmental impacts.
Source: Peter Victor, Managing Without Growth, 2008.
Greening Macroeconomics
• Revised National Income Accounts• “Green Keynesian” policies of Social
Investment for Full Employment• Carbon Tax, Resource Taxes• Limits to Growth
Examples of “Green” Macro Policy: U.S.• $787 billion dollar stimulus package included about $71 billion for specifically
“green” investments, plus $20 billion in “green” tax incentives.
• Energy efficiency in Federal buildings and DoD facilities -- $8.7 billion• Smart-grid infrastructure investment -- $11 billion• Energy and conservation grants to state and local governments -- $6.3 billion• Weatherization assistance -- $5 billion• Energy efficiency and renewable energy research -- 2.5 billion• Advanced battery manufacturing -- $2 billion• Loan guarantees for wind and solar projects -- $6 billion• Public transit and high-speed rail -- 17.7 billion• Environmental cleanup -- $14.6 billion• Environmental research -- $6.6 billion
Aggressive Federal policy action including “green” investments “probably averted what could have been called Great Depression 2.0 . . . without the government’s response, GDP in 2010 would be about 11.5% lower, payroll employment would be less by some 8 ½ million jobs, and the nation would now be experiencing deflation.” (Blinder and Zandi, “How the Great Recession was Brought to an End”, 2010).
Examples of “Green” Macro Policy: Portugal
• Portugal government-led transition from fossil fuels towards renewable power, with the percentage of renewable supply in Portugal’s grid up from 17 percent in 2005 to 45 percent in 2010.
• $22 billion investment in modernizing electrical grid and developing wind and hydropower facilities.
• Portugal will recoup some of its investment through European Union carbon credits, and will save about $2.3 billion a year on avoided natural gas imports.
“Portugal Gives Itself a Clean-Energy Makeover,” New York Times August 10, 2010.
Policies for Full Employment
• Increased hiring in public sector: teachers, police, transit and park workers, etc.
• Large-scale building retrofit publicly financed but carried out by private contractors
• Increased public R&D expenditures with accompanying higher education investment (“Sputnik” precedent)
• Major energy efficiency and renewables investment, partly public and partly incentivized private investment
• Investment in public transit and infrastructure
Policies For Climate Stabilization
• Carbon tax or equivalent (cap & trade with auction) – must be ≥ $100/MT C ($30/MT C02) and rise over time. (govt. estimates of social cost of carbon $21/t C02, Ackerman and Stanton $28-$893, rising to $64-$1550)
• Recycle revenues of ≥ $150 billion for energy efficiency, renewables, progressive rebates
• R&D investment ($3-12 billion)• Infrastructure investment – hi-speed rail, public transit, green
buildings• Efficiency standards for cars, machinery, buildings• Preferential credit or subsidy for energy efficiency
investments
Other relevant publications from Tufts University Global Development and Environment Institute