Green Reconstruction vs. Speculative Capital

How a Green Economy

Is an Antidote to

Casino Capitalism


By Robert Pollin

New Labor Forum

April 2, 2009 - The convergence of a profound economic crisis and the inauguration of Barack Obama as President has created both tremendous challenges and opportunities for progressives in the United States. Two of the overarching economic issues around which progressives will need to struggle are: first, how to build a clean energy economy, creating millions of good jobs in the process; and second, how to create a financial system focused on channeling money toward productive investment as opposed to destabilizing speculation.

In fact, the link between these matters becomes clear once we pose the simple question: how can we pay for the transition to a clean energy economy? Realistically, there is no way to construct a clean energy economy -- driven by solar, wind, and geothermal power and biomass fuels, and operating at dramatically higher levels of energy efficiency -- unless trillions of dollars are channeled into this project over the next 20 years.

Considered on an annual basis, it is reasonable to assume that a green investment program should be in the range of $150 billion per year. This is roughly equal to 1 percent of the United States gross domestic product (GDP) or equal to the current level of our spending on the Iraq war. A green investment program of this size would create about 2.5 million new jobs within the U.S. economy. But as long as Wall Street continues to squander trillions chasing speculative profits and generating financial bubbles -- i.e. variations on the housing market, stock market, and emerging economy bubbles that we experienced just over the past decade alone -- there will not be enough money available to adequately finance a clean energy transformation.

There are only two possible ways to finance a clean energy transition -- public funding, with money coming from either the U.S. or individual states’ treasuries; or private funding, with money coming from private businesses and households. We often think about large-scale economic policy initiatives as necessarily being funded by the federal government. In fact, both public and private sources of funds will be needed to build a clean energy economy. But the key will be to ensure that private funds are channeled into green investments and away from fossil fuels.

Public Funding

With public funding, the two ways to raise funds are through increasing revenues or taking money out of existing government programs. Government borrowing to finance green investments -- i.e. deficit spending -- is a perfectly viable strategy in the short term. Indeed, in the current economic slump, government deficit spending is the most effective approach to inject new spending into the economy, targeted at green investments and jobs. But beyond the short run, government borrowing must be repaid with interest.

This brings us back to the two basic funding sources, increasing revenues or transferring funds from existing programs. Both possibilities should be pursued. But as we will see, it will be difficult to find enough money -- reaching to the $150 billion per year level -- from any combination of public sources. A more realistic figure for public funding may be closer to about $50 billion, i.e. one-third of the total needed.

In terms of increasing revenues, the most widely discussed proposal is the so-called cap-and-trade system that I discussed my last New Labor Forum column. This would set limits on total carbon emissions. Energy companies would receive permits from the government establishing how much fossil fuel energy they could produce. The government can raise money through a cap-and-trade system by selling the permits at an auction. This would enable only those companies paying top dollar to have the legal right to produce oil, natural gas, or coal.

The carbon permit auctioning system could be a major new source of revenue for the U.S. Treasury. Estimates range between $75 and $200 billion per year generated by a measure similar to that which Congress debated last year (before being killed by Senate Republicans).

However, setting limits on the production of oil, natural gas, and coal through the cap-and-trade system will also mean that energy companies will raise prices for consumers. The government could compensate consumers for the higher gas and coal prices by rebating the cap-and-trade revenues back to them. This would be an eminently fair use of the auction revenues. People working in the oil, gas, and coal industries would also have fair claims to significant adjustment support, after the cap-and-trade requirements forced these industries to contract. These demands on the cap-and-trade auction revenues would then deplete the public funds available to finance clean energy investments. The amount left over to finance green investments would almost certainly fall significantly below $50 billion.

In terms of funds available from already existing spending areas, the military budget is the most obvious pot to raid. The military budget now amounts to about $600 billion, of which Iraq alone accounts for $150 billion. Ending the Iraq war and creating a peace dividend would be good politics, good economics, and good ethics. But it is not clear that it will be politically feasible under the Obama administration, especially as it appears committed to escalating military spending levels in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Even if it were politically viable to capture a $150 billion peace dividend by ending the Iraq war, we cannot assume that all the newly available funds should be channeled into clean energy investments. Some significant share of any such funds would have to be devoted to financing universal national health insurance, education, poverty reduction, and non-energy- related infrastructure projects, including major upgrades of our stock of bridges and levees.

Private Funding

The idea of mobilizing private credit markets to support social objectives is hardly original. As one major example, the very idea of middle- and working-class families owning their own homes became a reality only during the New Deal, after the U.S. government created a highly subsidized and regulated market for individual-family mortgages. As with the old housing finance system, a combination of regulations and subsidies -- sticks and carrots -- can provide a major source of funding to finance the clean energy transition. The stick would be asset-based reserve requirements, while loan guarantees would be the carrot. How would they operate in tandem?

      • Asset-based reserve requirements. These are regulations that require financial institutions to maintain a supply of cash as a reserve fund in proportion to other assets they hold in their portfolios. Such requirements can serve both to discourage financial market investors from holding an excessive amount of high-risk speculative assets, and as a cash cushion for the investors to draw upon when market downturns occur. The same policy instrument can also be used to push financial institutions to channel credit to projects that advance social welfare, such as those promoting green investments. Policymakers could stipulate that, say, at least 5 percent of financial institutions’ loan portfolios should be channeled to green investment projects. If the financial institutions fail to reach this 5 percent quota of loans for green investments, they would then be required to hold this same amount of their total assets in cash.

      As of 2007, total borrowing by U.S. households and businesses was approximately $2 trillion. This means that, if 5 percent of total borrowing were designated for green investments, that would amount to $100 billion a year -- an amount covering about two-thirds of the $150 billion annual green investment program.

      • Loan guarantees. The purpose of offering loan guarantees would be to significantly lower the risks of borrowing for green investment projects. This would then also significantly lower the interest rates that borrowers would have to pay when they seek funds to finance green investments. The U.S. government is already committed to offering $10 billion in loan guarantees for clean energy investments. Let’s assume that the full $100 billion of green investment loans stipulated by the asset reserve requirements also operated under the loan guarantee system.

      Let’s now also allow that the level of government guarantee is 75 percent of the total principal on these loans. Note, crucially, that under such an arrangement, private lenders would still face significant risk -- i.e., on 25 percent of the credit they had extended -- and would therefore have to evaluate investment proposals based on their potential for profitability.

      How much would this loan guarantee program cost the government? As with any other insurance policy, the government’s costs would be zero as long as borrowers do not default on their guaranteed loans. But of course some borrowers will default; the key question is how many. If we assume a default rate of 4 percent -- roughly equal to the rate of the government’s existing loan guarantee programs -- the total payouts that the government would have to make would amount to about $3 billion per year. This is less than 1 percent of total federal spending.

How it Hangs Together

Overall, we can roughly envision the financial requirements for the epoch-making project before us, of building a clean energy economy, and generating millions of good jobs in the process. Thinking of this as an annual investment project of about $150 billion, a feasible financing breakdown would be about $50 billion coming out of public funds, and the other $100 billion coming from private investments. The $100 billion in heavily regulated and subsidized private lending would also represent one important step toward transforming our financial system -- to raise the level of support for productive investment in the U.S., and to move Wall Street away from the casino logic that has been dominant for a generation. By itself, a subsidized and regulated private green investment segment of the U.S. financial market, operating at a level of about $100 billion per year, will represent only a modest step toward stabilizing the overall $2 trillion U.S. credit market, to say nothing of the additional sectors of the financial markets engaged in trading stocks, bonds, and derivative instruments.

Nevertheless, establishing a well-functioning green investment sector can serve as both a reminder and an example: it will remind us of the positive investment opportunities being lost by allowing financial markets to operate without significant regulations; and as an example of the broader approach needed to restore the principle that the capital development of the U.S. economy can no longer be guided by the logic of the casino.

© 2009 New Labor Forum All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/134434/



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5 Responses to “Green Reconstruction vs. Speculative Capital”

  1. Kevin Carson says:

    I think Peak Oil will go a long way toward creating incentives for Green investment. The more expensive long-distance shipping becomes, the more frantically corporations will be shortening their supply and distribution chains. When fuel prices go back up and over their 2008 peak, we can expect at least 20% of airline routes and trucks to shut down almost immediately. When fuel hits $12/gallon and truckers start parking their rigs, shoppers tired of near-empty produce sections will be snatching veggies off the tables at farmers’ markets as fast as they appear. And local market gardening is one industry whose supply is extremely elastic.

    We can expect a drastic move toward relocalization in the face of Peak Oil. Warren Johnson described the process thirty years ago as “Muddling Toward Frugality.”

  2. Perhaps, but don’t count on it. Unfortunately, there’s new untapped fields still coming to light, with the prospect of more sources of carbon to take from the ground and pump into the air. I find ‘Peak Oil’ to be a moving goalpost, even though at some point it will truly peak

  3. Craig Collins says:

    Wouldn’t a “Tobin Tax” be one of the best ways to raise the funds Mr. Pollin is looking for while somewhat discouraging future damaging financial speculation bubbles?

    Tobin Taxes are simple sales taxes on currency trades across borders. The original proposal came from James Tobin, Ph.D., a Nobel laureate economist at Yale, but economists have since refined his approach. Tobin Taxes can be enacted domestically by national legislatures, but will require multilateral cooperation to be effectively enforced. Political will for passage is the major obstacle to be overcome, but citizen mobilization could be very effective given the current political & economic climate worldwide.

    The proposal is important because it has the potential to raise enormous sums of money while discouraging future financial crises. The estimated $100 – $300 billion per year it could generate would make it possible to meet urgent global priorities, such as preventing global warming & turning the tide towards a green economy.

    How Tobin-style Taxes would work:

    * Currency speculators trade over $1.8 trillion dollars each day across borders. The market is huge, and volatile.
    * Each trade would be taxed at 0.1 to 0.25 percent of volume (about 10 to 25 cents per hundred dollars)
    * This would discourage short-term currency trades,about 90 percent speculative, but leave long-term productive investments intact.
    * The currency market would thus shrink in volume, helping to restore national economic autonomy. Nations again could intervene effectively to protect their own currency from devaluation and financial crisis.
    * Billions in revenue, estimated at $100 – $300 billion per year, would be generated.
    * Revenue could go into earmarked trust funds to fund urgent international priorities.

    This information and more on Tobin Taxes can be found at:
    http://www.ceedweb.org/iirp/

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  5. I understand that peak oil is true and that we are now past the point of peak oil. I understand many of the current events have to do with this understanding and it won’t be long before the main stream media and population wake up and understand what is going on. For me and my family, we are preparing for the life after the crash.

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