2021年7月30日 星期五

The Daily: Climate Chaos Is Avoidable. Here’s How.

The big changes that can still save us.

You might have read some dismal headlines this week: On Tuesday, enough ice melted in Greenland to cover Florida in two inches of water, fires are engulfing Northern California and parts of the Mediterranean, and Europe is still flooding.

Today in the newsletter, we're giving you the chance to learn more about your role in the climate crisis. Plus, we're wrapping up our latest season of Modern Love and sharing your favorite songs of the summer.

Why You Alone Can't Save the World

Coal and wind power in Mehrum, Germany, in August. Julian Stratenschulte/DPA, via Associated Press

When you think of ways to combat the climate crisis, you might think of the choices in your control: Taking shorter showers. Bringing your own thermos to Starbucks. Becoming a vegetarian.

This ethos of individual responsibility, that our world will stop warming if we can just stop using plastic straws and driving Suburbans, has pervaded the climate discourse for decades. But the idea has complicated origins, and in terms of impact, it isn't so simple.

Take one example: A study released this summer revealed how ExxonMobil, one of the biggest oil companies in the world, has spent years crafting and promoting a message of individual responsibility in combating the climate crisis. After spending decades denying the reality of climate change, Exxon, which is one of 20 companies responsible for one-third of all greenhouse gas emissions, has in recent years strategically tried to shift the responsibility for this pollution onto the consumer. Exxon is just meeting "demand," the company says, a claim that individualizes responsibility for the issue, deflects culpability and ignores the opportunity to shift to cleaner energy alternatives.

In a recent episode we talked to Somini Sengupta, our international climate correspondent, about the extreme, devastating weather patterns we're seeing around the world. We decided to focus instead on the paths to structural change, specifically Europe's wide-ranging proposals to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels, including eliminating sales of new gas- and diesel-powered cars in the next 14 years.

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"Somini reminded us that the window to implement climate solutions before things get really out of hand is rapidly closing. So from a solutions perspective you need to get lots of people on board with large-scale changes very quickly," Michael Simon Johnson, a producer for the episode, said.

The show sought to bring into relief that meaningfully reducing carbon emissions will require sweeping policy changes on the government level and an overhaul of the world's energy grids. And shifting the supply of clean energy will ultimately affect consumer demand downstream.

So while individual choices still contribute to overall emissions, understanding the nature and scope of emissions requires thinking more structurally. We asked Somini for her reading recommendations to develop a more holistic understanding of the problem — and the potential solutions.

  • Project Drawdown has compiled and ranked an extensive "table of solutions" to help mitigate climate chaos (you can review the full report here). The table makes clear that while individuals demanding more plant-rich, and less meat-heavy, diets is a crucial step in the right direction, ensuring food producers limit waste is just as important.
  • In "Saving Us: A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World," Katherine Hayhoe offers an optimistic view on why collective action is still possible — and how it can be realized.
  • "All We Can Save" is an anthology of writings by 60 women, edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katherine K. Wilkinson, sharing pioneering, gender-aware perspectives and solutions for the coming crisis.

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Cue Up the Summer Love

Brian Rea

The Modern Love podcast wrapped up last week after a season that explored everything from open marriages and a mysterious case of catfishing, to horoscopes and relationships across closed borders.

To get you in the spirit of summer love, the co-hosts of the podcast — Daniel Jones and Miya Lee — have selected five favorite episodes from recent seasons:

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  • "Why Do People Get Married?" Jake Maynard's grandma got married for the third time when she was in her 80s. Watching the ceremony unfold on a sticky June day, Jake wondered if marriage was about care, convention — or something else entirely.
  • "Meet Cute at Zero Years Old": Forty years ago, something near-magical happened in a maternity ward in the mountain town of Spalding, Jamaica. The two stories in this episode feel like fantasy, but are far from it. You might just gasp at the end.
  • "When His Shorts Are Just Too Tight": In August 2017, millions gathered around America to watch the moon cover the sun during a total solar eclipse. But one woman was jolted by another sight: her husband in "tight, blaze-orange nylon shorts that fit like hot pants." Was she embarrassed or envious?
  • "Dusty-Danger Dog": In the dog days of summer, one shelter dog in Austin, Texas, became a local legend. This story about a man and his four-legged companion is always a balm.
  • "She Left Me There": Kacey Vu Shap spent 25 years trying to forget the Vietnamese orphanage of his youth. But his three best friends encouraged him to visit it as an adult. "You saw the ugliest part of my life, yet you still didn't care," Kacey said to them in this episode about gratitude and friendship.

The Songs You Suggested

Many of you wrote to us in response to our annual summer playlist, sharing your own songs of the summer. We loved listening to them and added them to the playlist.

Tarrah from San Francisco recommended Forrest Nolan's "Summer Vibe," and Olivia Coffey from Austin, Texas, says Lorde's "Solar Power" has been giving her "bliss." Alan Clement from Kansas City has been listening to "Rawnald Gregory Erickson the Second" by STRFKR, and "Candy" by One Way Out has reminded Suz from Washington D.C., to "lose those toxic connections and focus on the people who bring you joy."

On The Daily This Week

Monday: Why are a growing number of vaccinated Americans testing positive for the coronavirus?

Tuesday: Mandating vaccinations is a politically difficult issue. Here's how the U.S. federal government has approached it.

Wednesday: The House committee investigating the storming of the Capitol is not the kind of body anyone originally wanted.

Friday: The story of Simone Biles — and her decision to drop out of the Tokyo Olympics.

That's it for The Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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Wonking Out: Keynesian Republicans, supply-side Democrats?

A weird — though not symmetric — role reversal on economic rhetoric.

By Paul Krugman

So Joe Biden appears to have his bipartisan infrastructure deal. Of course, progressives will be bitterly disappointed if that's the end of the story. But it probably won't be. In the end, Democrats will probably pass a second bill through reconciliation, adding several trillion dollars in "soft" investment — especially spending on children, which almost surely will have bigger economic payoffs than repairing roads and bridges, important as that is.

But today's newsletter won't be about legislative maneuvering. Instead, I want to talk about a funny thing that has happened to economic policy debate, detailed in a recent article by Jim Tankersley. Suddenly, Republicans have become Keynesians, while Democrats are talking about the supply side.

Traditionally, Democrats sought to justify big spending plans, like the Obama stimulus, by arguing that they were needed to boost demand in a weak economy. This was even true to a limited degree about the arguments made for the American Rescue Plan, the $1.9 trillion package Biden got enacted soon after taking office — although as its name suggests, the plan was pitched largely as disaster relief rather than as Keynesian stimulus.

Republicans, by contrast, derided Keynesian arguments. In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, they called for cutting spending, not increasing it, buying fully into the doctrine of "expansionary austerity" — the claim that spending cuts would actually increase demand by inspiring confidence (or as I put it, they believed in the confidence fairy).

When justifying their own plans for tax cuts, Republicans generally didn't argue that those cuts would increase demand. Instead, they invoked supposed supply-side effects: Reduced taxes, they claimed, would increase incentives to work and invest, expanding the economy's potential. Democrats generally ridiculed these claims.

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For what it's worth, the evidence suggests that Democrats were right and Republicans wrong on both counts. The case for expansionary austerity was overwhelmingly refuted by experience, especially in the euro area, while the Keynesian multiplier-type analysis was vindicated. Supply-side economics has yet to offer a single convincing success story; the underwhelming results of the 2017 Trump tax cut are just the latest entry in an unbroken record of failure.

But a funny thing has happened. Republicans are now warning that Biden's spending plans will cause the economy to overheat, feeding inflation — which is basically a Keynesian position, although it's being used to argue against government expenditure. I guess the confidence fairy has left the building. Or maybe G.O.P. economics is situational — Keynesian or not depending on which position can be used to argue against Democratic spending plans.

Democrats, on the other hand, are arguing that their spending plans, while partly about social justice, will also have positive supply-side effects, raising the economy's long-run potential.

What can we say about these claims on each side?

Concerns that Biden's long-term spending plans will pump up demand in an economy that we hope will already be more or less at full employment aren't entirely silly. It is, however, important to bear three things in mind.

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First, while the numbers being talked about are big, they're 10-year spending plans, so annual spending will be in the hundreds of billions, not trillions — and the U.S. economy is very big. Here's the Congressional Budget Office's projection of potential G.D.P. over the next decade:

It's a big, big, big, big economy.FRED

That cumulates to $295 trillion over the next 10 years, so even $4 trillion of spending is only 1.3 percent of G.D.P.

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Second, the spending will be paid for with taxes to a considerable extent, so that net stimulus will be smaller than the headline numbers. It's true that the pay-fors are likely to involve a lot of smoke and mirrors, and if that isn't the most budget wonk thing I've ever written, I don't know what is. Still, the "fiscal impulse" probably won't be very big. And though we obviously don't have details on most of what is likely to happen, we can look at the projected year-by-year deficit effects of the Biden budget proposal from earlier this year:

Not that stimulative.Office of Management and Budget

Even at its peak, this is a much smaller stimulus than the American Rescue Plan, which was around 8 percent of G.D.P.

Finally, there's good reason to argue that the U.S. economy needs sustained fiscal stimulus, even at full employment. The argument for secular stagnation — persistent weakness of demand, so that interest rates are very low even in good times — remains strong. This prospect raises concerns about future economic management: The Fed probably won't have enough room to cut rates to fight off future recessions. So some persistent deficit spending to give the Fed more room to act would actually be prudent.

In fact, I've said on a number of occasions that I'm concerned that Biden is being too fiscally responsible, that we could do with more deficit spending going forward than he seems to want.

Overall, then, the Republican case that Biden's proposals are dangerously inflationary — while not as bad as some of what comes out of that party — is pretty weak.

What about supply-side economics, Democrat-style? Unlike Republicans, who have consistently promised economic miracles that never arrive, Democrats are being very cautious about their supply-side claims. Nonetheless, progressive economists believe that there will be large long-term payoffs to spending more on infrastructure, research and especially aid to children.

And they expect fairly quick results if the reconciliation bill includes "family-friendly" policies like paid parental leave and child care, which they believe would increase female participation in the paid work force. I suspect that most Americans have no idea how much we've fallen behind on that front relative to other advanced countries with policies that make it easier for mothers to maintain their careers:

Women not at (paid) work.OECD

So there's a pretty good case that Democratic supply-side economics will actually work.

Anyway, the bottom line is that there has been a weird role reversal in how the parties talk about economic policy. Republicans have gone all Keynesian, while Democrats are talking about the supply side. However, only one of the parties seems to be making sense.

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