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The Redistribution Recession - How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy (Hardcover)
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The Redistribution Recession - How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy (Hardcover)
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Since 2007, many fundamental aspects of the economy and the labor
market have changed dramatically. With the exception of Medicaid,
subsidies flowing to the unemployed and financially distressed
households in the forms of loan forgiveness and government
transfers almost tripled. The generosity of mean-tested subsidies
like food stamps, and employment-tested subsidies like unemployment
insurance have steadily increased. Congress considered legislation
that would raise marginal income tax rates, and would present
Americans with new health benefits that would be phased out as a
function of income. Also, a large number of homeowners owed more on
their mortgages than their houses were worth, and many in both the
private and public sectors renegotiated their mortgage contracts.
And many others renegotiated business debts, consumer loans,
student loans, and tax debts. Labor economist Casey B. Mulligan
argues that because the way these trends have affected the labor
market, they deepened, if not caused, the recession. He explains
how progressive tax rates and binding minimum-wage laws reduce
labor usage, consumption, and investment, and how they increase
labor productivity. This means that while a small part of the
population actually works more, overall hours worked in the whole
economy are less. He explains and examines the pratical ways that
for many people during a recession it costs more to earn more, and
how people are working less because of it. One newly discovered
aspect of the costs on earning is the large portion of the labor
force renegotiating debt. Mulligan quantifies how borrowers can
expect their earnings to affect the amount that lenders will
forgive in debt renegotiation, and how this has acted as a massive
implicit tax on earning. He also measures the changes in market tax
rates that resulted directly from "social safety net" programs, and
quantifies these changes' effects on the labor market and the
economy. Mulligan argues that much of the decline in labor usage
since 2007 was a reaction to the combination of higher marginal tax
rates and a higher federal minimum wage, and that it is important
to understand why labor market distortions like these suddenly
increased, and to what degree those increases were caused by the
various measures enacted to boost the labor market. The
Redistribution Recession is a controversial, clear-cut, and
thoroughly researched analysis of the effects of various government
policies on the labor market during the recent recession.
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