Tuesday, November 15, 2011

United Talent Agency leases former Hilton Hotels headquarters

Hilton HQUnited Talent Agency has agreed to move its headquarters into the former Hilton Hotels headquarters near Beverly Hills City Hall in one of the region’s biggest office leases this year.

The talent agency, one of the world’s largest, signed a long-term agreement to rent 120,000 square feet. New York developer and landlord Tishman Speyer acquired the former Hilton buildings at 9336 and 9346 Civic Center Drive in January and launched a $30-million makeover of the complex built in the 1980s to make it appeal to prosperous tenants.

United Talent will begin its own multimillion-dollar improvements to its space early next year and move 350 employees there by late 2012, the agency said.  Plans by architectural and design firm Rottet Studio include a 150-seat screening room and other amenities.

The complex will be renamed UTA Plaza.

Magazine publisher Playboy Enterprises Inc. announced last week that it will also move into 45,000 square feet in the former Hilton headquarters, which is now nearly fully leased, Tishman Speyer said. Terms of the leases were not disclosed, but the landlord is asking for about $4 per square foot per month for space in the complex, according to real estate data provider CoStar Group.

The talent agency now occupies 80,000 square feet in Wilshire Rodeo Plaza at 9560 Wilshire Blvd., the former headquarters of investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert.

“After 20 great years on Wilshire we are excited to have a new campus that will allow for our continued growth and provide an enhanced environment for our colleagues and clients,” the agency’s board of directors said in a joint statement.

The agency also has an office in New York.

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-- Roger Vincent 

Image: Rendering of UTA Plaza after a planned makeover. Credit: Tishman Speyer

 

American Migration Reaches Record Low

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

The share of Americans who move their homes in a year has reached a record low, the Census Bureau reported today.

Dollars to doughnuts.

From spring 2010 to spring 2011, just 11.6 percent of the people moved residences, the lowest rate since the government began keeping track of migration in 1948. The difference between that rate and the 2009 rate of 12.5 percent was not statistically significant, but it was a far cry from its heights in the mid-20th century. From 1951-52, for example, 20.3 percent of Americans moved.

The record low moving rate was primarily driven by a drop in the share of people moving from one home to another within the same county.

Many economists are much more concerned, however, by the low share of Americans who are moving between counties and between states. Declines in this type of migration have been partly blamed for continued high levels of unemployment: stuck in underwater homes they cannot sell, many unemployed workers are unable to move to areas where there are more job opportunities.

Among the people who moved within the same county, 18.6 percent did so for job-related reasons; among those who moved between counties, 35.8 percent followed job opportunities.

Of the 6.7 million people who moved between states, the most common migrations were:

Many Americans have stayed put for their whole lives, regardless of economic ups and downs. As of 2010, 59 percent of Americans lived in the state where they were born. The state with the highest percentage of residents who were born there is Louisiana, at 78.8 percent, followed by Michigan (76.6 percent), Ohio (75.1 percent) and Pennsylvania (74 percent).

Nevada, by contrast, had the most outsiders, with less than a quarter (24.3 percent) of its residents born in the Silver State.

Here’s a map, provided by the Census Bureau, showing states by their share of native-born residents:

Prosecutions for Bank Fraud Fall Sharply

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

Federal prosecutions for financial institution fraud have tumbled over the last decade, despite the recent troubles in the banking sector, according to a new analysis of Justice Department data by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University.

Dollars to doughnuts.

This category can refer to crimes committed both within and against banks. Defendants include bank executives who mislead regulators, mortgage brokers who falsify loan documents, and consumers who write bad checks. (Here are some recent cases of bank fraud prosecutions.)

During the first 11 months of the 2011 fiscal year, the federal government filed 1,251 new prosecutions for financial institution fraud. If that pace continues, TRAC projects a total of 1,365 prosecutions for the fiscal year. That’s less than half the total a decade ago.

The decline in these new cases stands in contrast to the government’s broader approach to federal criminal prosecutions. Federal prosecutions for other crimes have grown tremendously, with the number of total new prosecutions filed for all federal crimes nearly doubling over the last decade:

Millionaires group to lobby for higher taxes -- on themselves

Supercom
As the deadline nears for the congressional “super committee” to come up with a deficit-slashing plan, a group of people who have made $1 million a year or more is trying to pressure lawmakers to raise tax rates on the nation’s highest income earners.

Patriotic Millionaires for Fiscal Strength, an organization formed in 2010, said it’s sending a delegation of 21 members to Washington on Wednesday to seek meetings with super committee senators and representatives.

The group’s message: “Any super committee deal that does not include higher taxes for millionaires should be killed.”

Among those in the group heading to Washington for the lobbying effort: Leo Hindery Jr., former chief executive of AT&T Broadband; Frank Jernigan, a former senior software engineer for Google Inc.; and Garrett Gruener, founder of Ask.com.

Republicans and Democrats have been far apart on the issue of boosting tax revenue as part of any deal to pare the deficit. The super committee faces a Nov. 23 deadline to reach agreement on how to cut $1.5 trillion from deficits over the next decade.

Patriotic Millionaires was formed a year ago as Congress debated whether to extend the personal income tax cuts that took effect during President George W. Bush’s first term. Ultimately, Congress and President Obama agreed on a two-year extension of the cuts.

But Obama in September called for a new tax on millionaires as a way to raise revenue.

At a minimum, the millionaires group wants the top tax rate for the highest earners to return to 39.6%, from the current 35%, according to Erica Payne, a spokeswoman for the organization.

“Many would like the tax rate to be higher” than 39.6%, she said. The higher rate should apply to anyone grossing more than $1 million in income, she said. IRS data show that 235,000 households reported adjusted gross income of at least $1 million in 2009.

The group says it has about 200 members in all, including more than a dozen current and former Google employees, actress Edie Falco and economist Nouriel Roubini.

The delegation heading to Washington also will meet with anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, the father of the “no tax increases” pledge that most Republicans in Congress have signed.

"They asked to meet. I said, ‘sure,’” Norquist told the Associated Press. “I suppose somebody told them the only thing standing in the way of their wonderful act of charity is me.”

Norquist has an alternative revenue-raising plan: He says those making $1 million a year or more who want to pay higher taxes are free to make direct contributions to the U.S. Treasury, over and above whatever taxes they owe.

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-- Tom Petruno

Photo: The congressional "super committee" for budget cuts, seated in the front row, meets in Washington last month. Credit: Mark Wilson / Getty Images

 

Spirit Airlines boosts fee for booking domestic flights online

Spiritreuters

Florida-based Spirit Airlines, the only airline in the nation to charge passengers for carry-on luggage, now charges nearly $34 to book a round-trip flight online.

Spirit has long promoted itself as the ultra low-budget airline that offers fares as low as $9 each way. But the airline also boasts one of the most extensive lists of extra fees in the industry.

Earlier this month, Spirit raised the "passenger usage fee" from $8.99 for one-way domestic flights to $16.99. The fee for international flights dropped from $18.99 to $16.99.

The only way to avoid the fee is to buy a ticket at an airport counter. But as of Jan. 24, 2012, the airline will charge passengers $5 to print out a ticket at the airport counter.

The airline announced in August 2010 new fees to stow a bag in the on-board overhead compartment, in addition to charges to check luggage in the cargo area.

The carry-on fees range from $20 to $40, depending on whether passengers pay online or at the airport counter. The lowest luggage fee is charged to members of the airline's $9 fare club. But it costs about $60 a year to join.

A few months after announcing the carry-on fees, Spirit said it planned to install "pre-reclined" seats that do not adjust.

The airline says the new slim leather seats are 30% lighter, cutting down on fuel costs and offering 20% more space under the seat. By eliminating a steeper recline, the airline can also fit more seats into the plane.

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Photo: Passengers speak with a Spirit Airlines worker at Detroit International Airport. Credit: Reuters

Consumer Confidential: Retail sales, reliable cars, Whole Foods

Retail sales rose in October.

Here's your takin'-it-to-the-streets Tuesday roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

--We're shopping, and that's good for the economy, but we're in danger of living beyond our means. Retail sales rose in October, suggesting the economy started the fourth quarter with some zip to its stride. Another report showed wholesale prices fell during October as gas prices dropped, signaling a cooling of fuel-driven inflation pressures that have hit consumers' pocketbooks. But analysts say Europe's debt crisis could push the United States back into recession early next year. Moreover, consumer spending is rising faster than incomes, which can't be sustained. What do we need? Jobs. Lot of them. (Reuters)

--Getting a great deal on a set of wheels is one thing. Keeping those wheels running is another. So which cars are cheapest to maintain? Toyota gets the top spot for reliability, followed by Hyundai. The rankings were compiled by auto diagnostic and repair website CarMD, which collects repair data from its network of 3,000 U.S. mechanics. Rounding out the top 5 were Honda, Ford and General Motors, followed by Mitsubishi, Nissan, Kia, Volkswagen and Chrysler. Now you know. (MoneyWatch)

--Whole Foods wants to protect your little fingers while also doing some good for people abroad. The company's new initiative with Comfort the Children and Allegro Coffee allows shoppers to make a direct, positive influence on Kenyan women and special needs children through products called LIFE Jackets. LIFE (Livelihood, Investment, Financials and Empowerment) Jackets are reusable canvas cup sleeves that protect the environment as well as your hands from hot beverages. The total 99-cent cost of each cup sleeve goes straight to Comfort the Children, a nonprofit that helps poor Kenyan mothers with special needs children. Nice. (DailyFinance)

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Shoppers are coming out in force as the holidays approach. Credit: Gary Friedman/Los Angeles Times

 

Ask Laz: Giving back a bonus [Video]

If your employer erroneously pays you some bonus money before you quit, are you required to give it back? L.A. Times consumer columnist David Lazarus offers his advice.

 

Wal-Mart reports disappointing third-quarter results

Getprev
Despite a bump in sales, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. reported third-quarter profits that fell below Wall Street expectations, reflecting continued financial worries among its core low-income shoppers.

For the three months ended Oct. 31, the nation's largest retailer reported a profit of $3.3 billion, or 96 cents a share, down 2.9% from $3.4 billion, or 95 cents, a year earlier. The results were 2 cents below analysts' expectations.

Wal-Mart executives said Tuesday that the retailer was focusing on keeping prices low to attract customers who remain thrifty and pessimistic about the U.S. economy.

Our shoppers "want to save money. They're juggling credit cards, using coupons and skipping restaurants and vacations," said Wal-Mart Chief Executive Michael Duke in a conference call. "There is a real sense that that the economic strain is taking its toll."

The company's low-price strategy did boost sales by 1.3% at U.S. Wal-Mart stores open at least a year, breaking a nine-quarter streak of sales declines for the chain's American stores. Same-store sales are an important measure of a retailer's health because they exclude the effect of store openings and closings.

The Bentonville, Ark., company stumbled in the last few years by removing thousands of products from its shelves in an attempt to de-clutter its stores. In April, the retailer reversed its decision and announced plans to expand its offerings by 8,500 items, or 11%, for an average store.

Looking forward to the holiday, Duke said the company would continue to emphasize competitive prices with a price match guarantee, a layaway program and free online shipping options.

Wal-Mart forecast that fourth-quarter earnings would range from $1.42 to $1.48 a share, while its guidance for the full year would be between $4.45 to $4.51 a share.

Wal-Mart shares had dipped more than 2% in trading Tuesday.

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Photo: A Wal-Mart store in Los Angeles. Credit: Robyn Beck / AFP/Getty Images

LivingSocial launches online restaurant ordering, delivery service

Takeout
Daily deals website LivingSocial is starting to offer online restaurant ordering and delivery options, venturing into territory dominated by businesses such as GrubHub and Snapfinger.

The service is rolling out initially as a test in LivingSocial’s Washington, D.C., hometown. Users there will be able to order food from their computer or smartphone and either have it delivered or waiting for pickup at the restaurant without the hassle of a long line.

Users will at first have access to more than 70 restaurants, some of which also offer discounts through LivingSocial.

Mobile food ordering is picking up in the restaurant industry.

New San Francisco Bay Area grilled cheese start-up the Melt, launched by Flip Video founder Jonathan Kaplan, allows customers to order online and then collect their food by scanning a QR code at the counter.

The GrubHub website, founded in 2004, features menus from partner restaurants. Customers can click to order remotely, with prompts for side dishes and topping options.

Snapfinger, also founded in 2004, has a similar format. Real-time menus from chains such as Boston Market and California Pizza Kitchen omit items that the restaurants have run out of; Snapfinger also informs diners of order backlogs and pickup times.

LivingSocial is also offering a new feature called Room Service, which the company says will involve limited “white glove” delivery from higher-end eateries.

Available for now only in downtown D.C. on Thursday and Friday nights, the service will feature a prix fixe menu from one new restaurant each week. LivingSocial staff will handle the deliveries, which includes “high-quality tableware, dining accessories, top-shelf presentation of food and a special after-dinner treat,” the company said.

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Photo credit: Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times

Menus feature 7% more pork dishes amid sausage craze, cheap prices

PORK

Restaurants are pigging out, increasingly offering pork on their menus, according to new research.

Dishes that have gone whole (or part) hog are up 7% over the year, according to the research group Technomic. The meat, which has resisted food price increases better than beef and even chicken, is showing up in appetizers, side dishes and entrees.

Chipotle restaurants use naturally raised pork in their carnitas and Applebee’s now serves red beans and rice with andouille sausage. McDonald’s also brought back its cult-favorite McRib sandwich this fall.

Menus laden with sausage and hot dog items are also spreading across the Southland, spurred on by the growing number of beer gardens and wiener restaurants.

But pork isn’t always the main attraction. Eateries are pairing it with other meats and even shellfish.

And diners aren’t only seeing chunks of ham. Bacon, whose menu appearances have risen 7% annually for the past few years, is also a main driver of pork’s recent popularity.

Perhaps this calls for more restaurants to prepare turbaconducken -- chicken stuffed in duck stuffed in a turkey wrapped in bacon. Or not.

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Photo: John MacDougall / AFP/Getty Images

Bond yields jump in France, Belgium, Austria as crisis spreads

Brussels
More dominos may be about to fall in Europe.

A new selling wave swamped government bond markets on the continent Tuesday, driving yields sharply higher in France, Belgium, Austria and Spain, among others.

Despite its AAA-credit rating, France’s 10-year bond yield soared to 3.68%, up from 3.42% on Monday and the highest since April. The yield has surged from 2.50% in early September.

Belgian 10-year bond yields rose to 4.91% from 4.59% on Monday.

The jump in interest rates signals a further spreading of the debt-crisis contagion from Italy to other countries, as investors grow increasingly fearful about governments’ abilities to pay their debts.

“The respite from Eurozone issues was ephemeral at best as changes in leadership in Italy and Greece [last week] were not enough to convince markets that the debt issues were any closer to resolution,” George Goncalves, interest rate strategist at Nomura Securities, wrote in a note to clients.

Making matters worse: A new European recession seems increasingly likely, which will only make it more difficult for governments to dig out of their debt holes.

Rocketing yields on Italian bonds over the last two months opened a new and more dangerous chapter in the debt crisis. Italy’s woes led to the departure of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi over the weekend.

On Monday Italy paid a yield of 6.29% to issue $4 billion in new five-year bonds. The rate was the highest in 14 years. By contrast, the U.S. Treasury pays just 0.90% on five-year debt.

Financial markets have been looking to the European Central Bank to halt the contagion. In theory, the ECB could commit to buying unlimited quantities of bonds to try to hold rates down. But the ECB has seemed reluctant to act aggressively.

“In the prophetic words of Sting, the market is sending out an SOS to ECB policymakers,” Goncalves said. “However, a good response from the ECB does not seem forthcoming.”

European stock markets ended mostly lower for a second straight session. The Italian market fell 1.1%. French shares slid 1.9%. But stocks remain above their September lows.

The euro currency slipped 0.6% to a one-week low of $1.355.

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Photo: A six-meter-high depiction of Belgian cartoon hero Tintin and his dog Snowy is seen atop the Lombard Building, backdropped by the Brussels' skyline. Credit: Geert Vanden Wijngaert / Associated Press

Home prices fall in October as mortgage changes take hold

Reduced.Price

Uncle Sam’s steps to exit the mortgage market took a toll on Southern California’s housing market in October as fewer higher-cost homes sold.

The median price, the point at which half the properties sold for more and half for less, dropped because sales of more expensive homes took a dive with government-backed financing for those homes scaling back last month.

The region’s median sale price was $270,000 in October, according to real estate market tracker DataQuick. That was the lowest since January, a 3.6% decline from September and a 4.6% drop from October 2010.

“For a few months now, lower prices and amazingly low mortgage rates have kept resale activity slightly ahead of last year,” John Walsh, DataQuick president, said in a statement. “Of course, that’s not saying a lot when you consider sales were 25% to 30% below average.”

With 16,829 new and previously owned homes sold, October’s sales pace was 29.3% below the average for that month going back to 1988, when DataQuick records start. Sales were down 7.3% from September and up 0.5% from October 2010.

One big change to the market last month was the federal government's first step to reduce its role in the mortgage business by lowering the size of home loans it will guarantee.

The government currently supports about 90% of new mortgages — essentially propping up the home loan market after credit dried up and home sales plunged in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis. The loan limit determines the maximum size of a mortgage that the Federal Housing Administration, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can buy or guarantee.

So-called nonconforming jumbo loans that are offered on the private mortgage market typically require bigger down payments and carry a higher interest rate, resulting in higher monthly payments for borrowers. In Los Angeles and Orange counties, the limit for FHA, Fannie and Freddie loans dropped from $729,750 to $625,500.

According to DataQuick, sales of properties in those two counties with loans between those limits fell 71% from the month before and 71.5% from a year earlier.

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Photo: A home for sale in Altadena. Credit: Associated Press

The surprising history of Italy and sovereign default


Italy doesn't do sovereign default (Photo: Getty)


There is a great deal of wild talk in financial markets about how Italy is "bankrupt", about how default there is "inevitable", and how it would be an Italian default that brought down the euro (rather than Italian default, or depreciation in its currency relative to the German currency, being a risk in the event that the euro collapses - my own view). During the past couple of years we have become used to stories of how common sovereign default has been for Greece, over the past 170 years. But how many people are aware of how often Italy has defaulted, historically?


Well, readers may remember – if they ever read my blogs, at least – that Italy faced a similar debt to GDP ratio to today in the 1990s, without defaulting or inflating or growing fast, and did so at higher interest rates than it is being charged even at current elevated levels. But do they remember when it last did default?


It being the 2010s, presumably readers will rush off now to check out the Wikipedia entry on sovereign defaults. You will find no entry for Italy there. That list is incomplete in a number of regards – for example, it does not include the defaults of France and Britain on their First World War debts to the US in the early 1930s. France began defaulting in 1932. Britain began defaulting in 1933. Italy – which of course was one of the allies of France and Britain in the First World War – was the last World War I ally to default. The only Italian default I can identify, historically, was that from 1940, when it suspended payments to its then World War II enemies.


Sovereign default is almost always a choice – a matter of appetite to pay, rather than ability. Britain and France were not out of assets in the 1930s, any more than Greece is out of assets now. Because it is a matter of choice, it is a reflection, as much as anything, of culture and history. Italy simply has no history of peacetime sovereign default. It doesn't do it. Instead, it has a history of having borne very large government debt to GDP ratios and paid. That is one key reason it has found it possible to build up such a high debt to GDP ratio.


This doesn't in itself prove that the Italians will not default this time. But it is one very important way in which Italy is totally unlike Greece.



Wholesale prices for gas, cars down in October

The producer price index was down 0.3% after rising 0.8% in September
Buying that new pickup truck and then filling it with gas cost less in October as wholesale prices slipped for the first time since June.

The producer price index was down 0.3% after rising 0.8% in September, according to the Labor Department.

Wholesale gas prices slid 2.4%, while the cost of cars dipped 0.8% and the price of pickup trucks dropped 1.6%.

Food prices were on the upswing for the fifth consecutive month, increasing 0.1%. The cost of chicken jumped 4.8%; eggs were also pricier.

Overall, however, inflationary pressures may be leveling off, giving consumers a bit more room to spend during the upcoming holiday season.

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Photo credit: Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Federal Housing Administration could require bailout, audit finds

A new report said there is close to a 50% chance the Federal Housing Administration could need a bailout
There is a nearly 50% chance that the Federal Housing Administration will require a taxpayer bailout as the struggling housing market continues to eat away at the cash reserves of the agency, which insured about one in seven residential mortgages issued this year, according to a government audit released Tuesday.

The reserves, which are not supposed to be below 2% of projected losses, continued to fall this year, dropping to 0.24% from the already seriously low level of 0.5% last year, the report said. The drop was caused by the FHA's cash reserves falling by $2.1 billion, to just $2.6 billion.

But under the report's baseline projection for housing prices, which assumes they will drop 5.6% in 2011 before rebounding next year to 1.3% growth, the FHA would not need a bailout, the report said. In fact, the reserve fund would return to its mandated 2% level by 2014, slightly earlier than projected last year.

"It would take very significant declines in home prices in 2012 to create a situation in which the current portfolio would require any kind of additional support," said acting FHA Commissioner Carol Galante. She said the agency's reserve fund continues to be "actuarially sound."

But the report by an independent actuary found that if home prices continue to decline next year, the FHA probably would need a bailout. The size of the bailout would depend on how much housing prices drop.

If the FHA needs taxpayer money to keep it afloat, it does not have to seek approval from Congress or the White House. The agency has existing authority to tap the U.S. Treasury for funds.

The FHA, which was created during the Great Depression to help revive a devastated housing market, has never required taxpayer assistance. It has been playing a major role in the housing market since the subprime housing bubble burst, and most of the losses come from loans it guaranteed that were made before early 2009.

With its reserves dwindling because of losses on insurance for those loans, the FHA took steps in late 2009 to improve its finances. Those steps included requiring higher premiums and better credit scores from borrowers. Those moves have helped buffer the agency against the continued slide in housing prices, and the high average credit score of 700 for borrowers whose loans were insured last year set a record for the FHA, Galante said.

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-- Jim Puzzanghera in Washington

Photo: A house for sale in Glendale in September. Credit: Getty Images

Robinson Helicopter hits milestone, makes 10,000th chopper

Krobinson_makes_champange_toast

Robinson Helicopter Co., the nation's leading maker of commercial helicopters, hit a major milestone when its 10,000th chopper came off the production line.

To mark the occasion, the company held a celebration at its factory, which now hugs almost half a mile of runway at the east end of Torrance Municipal Airport. The event took place last week with employees, city officials and representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Also in attendance was Frank Robinson, the company’s 81-year-old founder, who spoke briefly about starting the company in 1973. He retired in August 2010 and turned over the chief executive role to his son, Kurt.

Kurt Robinson predicts the company’s total aircraft production for 2011 will more than double last year’s production of 162 choppers.

At Robinson Helicopter's complex in Torrance, hundreds of workers churn out 10 helicopters a week -- from start to finish. The company manufactures more civilian helicopters than any other helicopter manufacturer in the world, making the two-seat R-22, four-seat R-44, and the new five-seat R-66.

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Photo: Kurt Robinson, Robinson Helicopter Co.'s chief executive, makes a toast at the firm's Torrance complex. Credit: Robinson Helicopter

The Balanced Budget Amendment Delusion

Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack Kemp and Ron Paul. He is the author of the coming book “The Benefit and the Burden.”

This week the House of Representatives will take up a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution. An idea that has been kicking around for ages, it has never overcome the hurdle of needing a two-thirds approval vote in both houses of Congress. (After which it would not require the president’s signature but would need to be ratified by three-quarters of the states to take effect.)

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

The concept of balancing the budget annually is a bad idea but not an unreasonable one. However, the idea of mandating a balanced budget through the Constitution is dreadful. And the proposal that Republican leaders plan to bring up is, frankly, nuts.

Perspectives from expert contributors.

The Founding Fathers took the necessity of balancing the federal budget to be self-evident – with no need to mandate it because economic circumstances severely constrained the government’s ability to spend more than taxes covered.

The memory of the hyperinflation of the War of Independence was fresh, and people were rightly concerned that deficits would lead to the printing of money to cover budgetary shortfalls, restarting inflation. Moreover, the domestic capital market was virtually nonexistent during the early years of the republic, and all Americans were wary of borrowing from abroad unless absolutely necessary.

Consequently, the budget was usually balanced for the nation’s first 150 years, except during wartime, and strenuous efforts were made to pay down the debt as soon as hostilities ended. This budgetary norm didn’t change until the 1930s, when economic stagnation and widespread deprivation made balancing the budget impossible. Also, the economic theories of John Maynard Keynes became popular and argued that large deficits would be necessary to restore growth.

Conservatives view the adoption of Keynesian economics as original sin, opening the door to a vast expansion of government. Instead of being paid for with politically unpopular tax increases or spending cuts, new spending programs were to a large extent financed with seemingly costless deficits. The economist James Buchanan called this “fiscal illusion.”

He had a point. We would have less spending if its tax cost was fully apparent. If people knew their taxes would go up or they would lose government benefits whenever spending increased, we would have a lot less spending.

Unfortunately, conservatives intentionally destroyed the remnants of the implicit balanced budget constraint in the 1970s so they could cut taxes without having to cut spending at the same time. Finding enough spending cuts to pay for big tax cuts would have doomed their efforts, so they concocted a theory, “starve the beast,” to maintain a fig leaf of fiscal responsibility.

Under this theory, deficits are intentionally created by tax cuts, which puts political pressure on Congress to cut spending. Thus, cutting taxes without cutting spending became the epitome of conservative fiscal policy. Unfortunately, it didn’t work.

We gave starve-the-beast theory a test during the Reagan administration, but as I have shown previously, when push came to shove, Reagan was always willing to raise taxes rather than allow deficits to get out of control.

We gave starve-the-beast theory another test during the George H.W. Bush and Clinton administrations. They both raised taxes and, according to the theory, this should have caused spending to rise, because tax increases feed the beast. But they didn’t. Spending as a share of the gross domestic product fell to 18.2 percent in 2000 from 22.3 percent in 1991, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

We gave starve-the-beast theory another test during the George W. Bush administration. Taxes were slashed, but spending rose – again, the exact opposite of what the theory said should have happened. The economist Bill Niskanen asserted that the result was not surprising because the Republican position on taxes effectively reduced the tax cost of spending.

Nevertheless, conservatives like Grover Norquist insist that starve-the-beast theory works, which is why they relentlessly push for still more tax cuts despite the obvious failure of previous tax cuts either to stimulate economic growth or restrain spending, and oppose even the most trivial tax increases no matter how big the deficit.

Historically, one problem conservatives had with a straightforward balanced budget requirement was a concern that it might lead to tax increases. It would also make further tax cuts more difficult to achieve.

Today, most conservatives support a constitutional requirement that will only restrain spending but make tax increases effectively impossible, while continuing to permit tax cuts regardless of the deficit. This is the essence of the “balanced budget” amendment that Republicans plan to vote on.

The amendment reported by the House Judiciary Committee in June would limit federal spending to 18 percent of “economic output” (whatever that is) without a three-fifths vote in both the House and Senate and would require a two-thirds vote to raise taxes. The latter requirement is even more stringent than it appears because it applies to the full membership of both houses, not just the percentage of those present and voting. Taxes, on the other hand, can be cut with a simple majority vote.

Space prohibits a full discussion of all the technical problems with this poorly drafted amendment. A July 8 report from the Congressional Research Service does a good job of going through some of them.

These include the fact that gross domestic product is nowhere defined in law, nor could it be because it is a continually evolving concept; 18 percent of G.D.P. is a totally arbitrary figure that couldn’t be achieved this year even with the abolition of every federal program other than Social Security, Medicare, national defense and interest on the debt, because the deficit is twice as large as total nondefense discretionary spending.

Outlays would actually have to be well below 18 percent of G.D.P. in practice because future spending is held to 18 percent of the previous fiscal year’s G.D.P., and there is no practical way of enforcing the amendment through the federal courts. For more details, see my July 11 article in Tax Notes magazine.

The truth is that Republicans don’t care one whit about actually balancing the budget. If they did, they would want to return to the policies that gave us balanced budgets in the late 1990s.

The crucial one was higher taxes, which virtually all Republicans opposed in 1990 and 1993, and budget controls that prevented tax cuts unless offset dollar-for-dollar with cuts in entitlement programs, which Republicans abandoned in 2002 so they could cut taxes without constraint.

Of course, no Republican favors such policies today. They prefer to delude voters with pie-in-the-sky promises that amending the Constitution will painlessly solve all our budget problems.

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