1. The cost of debt raised to support a given transfer program is just the future value of the cost of taxes to support the same transfer program.
2. The cost of taxes to support a given transfer program are distributional and incentive costs. These can of course have second order effects.
If you accept both 1 and 2, is it fair to say that unless you're taking an individual perspective - like the way a family looks at its debt - the only cost of debt is distributional and incentive costs (and their associated second order effects)?
And further, is it safe to say that we all agree that since our society is composed of borrowers (all of us, when it comes to public debt) and lenders (bondholders) it's best not to think about public debt the way we think of a family's debts?
I don't care about Krugman.
This is right, right?
UPDATE: OK, let me clarify #2 a little. We call taxing the rich to give to the poor "redistribution" and we talk about the distributional effects of taxation. Why is it then not right to call taxing a guy in period 6 to pay a bondholder in period 6 a "distributional issue"? Why is it not right to observe that all debt does is move this "distributional issue" forward in time?
I would agree with this in the sense that I think everyone has been a little wrong. 1. Pundits are wrong: public debt is not like (one) families debt. 2. Krugman and Baker are wrong to the extent they invoke Ricardian equivalence and don't mention the possibility of r greater than g and the politics of the debt: paying taxes to (still living) bondholders and the possibility of default. 3. Rowe and Murphy are wrong to the extent they claim "future generations" must be burdened (in their model) and "apples can travel back in time," when only still living bondholders must be burdened and (in that case) the transfer occurred in the past (when they acquired the bonds).
ReplyDeleteThis all elides the two most relevant points:
1. To what extent we should worry about this: regarding policy right now, given negative real interest rates and high unemployment (especially considering Krugman says he's a "deficit hawk" at full employment).
2. How monetary policy is any better (given current conditions and/or more generally) at not imposing burdens.