2021年8月10日 星期二

The hard case for soft investment

Concrete and steel get you only so far.
Heidi Kottas works with Teddy Lin, 3, center, and Adrian Figueroa, 4, in Union City, N.J.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
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By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

What a difference a few votes in Georgia made! Actually, about $4 trillion worth of difference. Upset victories in the January Senate runoffs gave Democrats narrow control of Congress, and they're exploiting that narrow control to push a hugely ambitious spending agenda. President Biden might not get all of the public investment and social spending he's asking for, but it looks likely that he'll get most of it.

Part of the spending will come via a bipartisan infrastructure bill that passed the Senate today. The rest will come via a much larger bill, whose outlines were laid out Monday, that Democrats plan to pass on a party-line vote that bypasses the filibuster.

This two-step legislative process is playacting, and everyone involved knows it — although voters might not. Republicans went along with some infrastructure spending to create the (false) impression that they aren't implacably opposed to anything Biden might propose. Biden chose to let them play that game to create the equally false impression that he really believes in the possibility of bipartisanship.

One thing that struck me, however, is the interesting dividing line between what Republicans were willing to vote for and what they won't even pretend to support. The bipartisan bill is pretty much all about "hard" infrastructure; it's all steel and concrete. The Democratic resolution has some of that, especially things like clean-energy technologies. But the bulk of the proposed investment spending seems to involve "soft" stuff like child tax credits, child care, universal pre-K and free community college.

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Why this division of playacting — I mean labor? Republicans appear to believe, or at least think their constituents believe, that only tangible, physical investment is real.

This is, however, an outmoded view. Maybe we once had an economy whose productive capacity depended on visible assets like factories and machinery; these days our most valuable companies derive their value mainly from knowledge rather than physical capacity, and spending on intangible intellectual property accounts for more than a third of business investment:

The private sector gets less physical.FRED

Beyond that, it's a somewhat surprising fact that we have much better evidence for high returns on public spending on people, especially children, than we have for high returns on infrastructure investment.

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Why? Assessing the payoff to infrastructure spending is surprisingly hard, because we don't get to observe the counterfactuals. We can surmise that America would be significantly poorer today if Eisenhower hadn't created the Interstate Highway System, but we can't directly measure that alternate history. We can guess that the New York metro area's economic prospects would look a lot better if Chris Christie hadn't killed plans for a new rail tunnel under the Hudson, but we'll never know for sure how much damage he did.

Analysts can and do try to assess the benefits from individual infrastructure projects, like Boston's Big Dig — and it's far better to engage in that kind of analysis than to leave things purely subjective. But even for an individual project, that kind of analysis tends to involve a lot of assumptions — how much worse would traffic have been without the project? How much value should we place on time lost to traffic jams? And assessing the returns on a national infrastructure program in the hundreds of billions is, at best, an educated guessing game.

When it comes to investment in people, by contrast, we often do get to observe the counterfactuals.

The food stamp program, for example, was rolled out gradually across America, not introduced immediately on a nationwide basis. So was Medicaid, which was also enhanced in a series of discrete steps in the decades after its creation.

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These gradual rollouts provide us with natural experiments. Economists can compare the life trajectories of Americans who received food stamps or Medicaid in their early years with those of otherwise similar Americans who didn't, or the experiences of those who benefited from Medicaid enhancements with the experiences of slightly older Americans who didn't.

And what these comparisons show are big positive effects of social spending. Children who had access to food stamps grew up into healthier, more productive adults than those who didn't — so much so that the government eventually recouped much, possibly all, of what it spent upfront in higher revenue and lower spending on things like disability payments. Basically, enhancing the social safety net for children is an investment in the future, and the available evidence suggests that it's an investment with high returns.

In the months ahead, I'm sure we'll hear many conservative denunciations of wasteful spending and probably mockery of progressives who talk about "human infrastructure." But the evidence for big returns on spending on people is actually a lot more concrete than the evidence for payoffs to spending on, well, concrete.

Quick Hits

Scott Adams may have gone off the deep end, but in its heyday "Dilbert" was brilliant.

Child care increases female employment.

Which is not to say that inadequate physical infrastructure isn't a big problem too.

For what it's worth, the Democratic agenda polls well.

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Facing the Music

More Americana from Norway.YouTube

Railways are infrastructure, right?

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On Tech: Tech can’t fix it

Climate change and other big problems won't be solved by tech alone.

Tech can't fix it

Climate change and other big problems won't be solved by tech alone.

Jinhwa Oh

I've been having a crisis of confidence in technology. Not because of the harm that people and companies do with technology, but because of all the ways that tech may not matter very much.

Think about some of the big issues that Americans are facing, in no particular order: the coronavirus pandemic, climate change, disagreements over the appropriate role of government, a reckoning over systemic racism, inequality in wealth and health, increases in homicides and other public safety threats and educational and social safety systems that fail many people.

Technology didn't cause these problems, nor should we put too much faith that technology can solve them. I worry that when we vilify or glorify what technology and tech companies do, it makes us lose focus on what's actually important.

Technology is part of the solution, perhaps, but mostly we have to find the answers through collective human will and effective action.

It's not Uber's fault alone that work can be precarious and many Americans have trouble making ends meet. Jeff Bezos may be delusional for wishing to move polluting industries to space, but Amazon is also not really responsible for warming the earth. And likewise, if Facebook intervened more in misleading online information, it wouldn't erase the root causes of Americans' doubts about vaccines, nor would our children be totally safe if schools had facial recognition cameras.

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We can see the ways that humans have deployed technology as tools for good, and we need to do more to mitigate the downsides of technology in our world. But I also fear that we — and me, too — overvalue technology's importance.

I'll give you a glimpse into my contradictory feelings about both the power and the impotence of technology.

There have been reflections in the last few days about how the U.S. government misled the public about the devastating effects of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 76 years ago.

That kind of official misdirection or denials about war and abuses still happens, but it is more difficult in part because of the prevalence of technology like phone cameras, Facebook and Twitter that enable anyone to show their truth to the world. Thinking about what has changed since World War II made me feel optimistic about the ways that technology has helped empower us with information and a voice.

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But I also worry about what technology can't really change. My colleague Somini Sengupta wrote this week that it is technologically feasible for the countries most responsible for spewing planet-warming gases into the atmosphere to shift faster to clean energy and stop destroying forests. But those choices are contentious, disruptive, expensive and difficult for many of us to accept.

Climate change and other deep-seated problems are hard to confront, and it's tempting to distract ourselves by hoping that technology can save the day. Unrealistic optimism about driverless car technology has made some policymakers think twice about transit projects or other measures to reduce emissions. My colleagues have written about concerns that the pursuit of technologies to suck large amounts of carbon from the air might allow industries to put off doing more to prevent harmful emissions in the first place.

Ambitious technologies can be part of the answer to our collective challenges, as long as we put them in perspective.

I am grateful for improved data-crunching that has helped scientists better understand the impacts of climate change. Tech advances including Tesla's electric cars make it more feasible for politicians and the public to imagine shifting transportation and energy grids.

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It's easy to misdiagnose the causes of our problems and hope for relatively painless solutions. But technology isn't magic and there are no quick fixes.

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Before we go …

  • How to lose friends in Washington the Facebook way: Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Cecilia Kang take us inside the White House, where officials grew annoyed over what they felt were Facebook's dodges of their efforts to understand how people's views on coronavirus vaccines were being shaped online.Related: There has been an increase in both new and recycled unsubstantiated online narratives about the coronavirus, my colleague Davey Alba found.
  • How to win Amazon shoppers the creepy way: In violation of the website's rules, some no-name merchants on Amazon try to persuade, bully or bribe unhappy customers to delete negative reviews, The Wall Street Journal writes. (Subscription required.) Amazon merchants do all sorts of wild things to improve their customer ratings.
  • How to Instagram the 2021 way: Posts with text often paired with low-quality oddball images are an emerging form of written expression on Instagram, my colleague Taylor Lorenz explains. Yes, it's weird.

Hugs to this

Just watch these waves lapping the shore for a few minutes. It's soothing. (I found this in the Daily Respite newsletter.)

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