Shutdown, What is it good for? Absolutely Nothing.
It is beyond absurd to have a federal government shutdown and simultaneously guarantee back pay.
Wait, I need to back up here.
It is beyond absurd to have a federal government shutdown in the first place. This doesn’t happen in other developed, first world countries.
Wait, I still need to back up.
For several months now, the ever persistent Andrew Donaldson has been politely encouraging me to start writing. Well, at least something a bit longer than a few quick, witty tweets. So a bit of context on me. I’ve been a federal government economist for the better part of two decades. I’ve been furloughed, been declared essential and worked without pay, and happily today, not furloughed and paid.
I hope I can provide an interesting and thoughtful perspective.
I’d like to talk about the personal and business consequences of government shutdown .
For instance, airports are now closing concourses due to lack of personnel. Closing a concourse means that retail workers at the airport have to be reshuffled. They may potentially lose out on pay, which they will not get back. Private sector contractors who work on federal government contracts likely also will not get any back pay
But business groups with strong lobbyists have influenced the US government to re-open small sections. These actions, though, may be potentially through legally dubious means.
On the personal front, approximately 400,000 federal workers will work without pay, and another 400,000 will be sent home, also without pay. Federal workers aren’t that different from private sectors workers, in that most live with finances that depend on each paycheck. Contrary to Representative Scott Perry’s (R-PA) statement “who’s living that they’re not going to make it to the next paycheck?” Well, depending on the answer, it could be between thirty-three and eighty percent of workers. I suspect the percentage is not that different whether one works in the public or private sector.
In my near two decades on the job, I’ve found that by and large, federal government bureaucrats are just that, bureaucrats, doing the job that Congress and the office of the President has created for them by passing law. Most leave their partisan hats at home. I know of passionate Republicans doing work that one might think a Democrat would love, and vice versa, and both do it well.
I’m worried about the toll of this shutdown on the function of our bureaucracy. According to OPM, retirements are increasing. The folks retiring are the ones who know the ins and outs of their particular task. They know who the proper points of contact are in other agencies. They cannot be replaced easily by hiring a recent college graduate or private sector contractor. Now, retirements should be accelerating even without the current climate as more and more of the federal workforce is retirement eligible. Further, the shutdown makes government employment less attractive to workers. While I prefer a smaller government to what we have today, I also prefer a government that works. We won’t get there if the federal government becomes an unattractive place to work.
Let’s get some value out of our bureaucracy. Send the bureaucrats back to work with pay, so they can continue to plan for the US Census, provide agricultural data to farmers, etc, as all other developed countries do. The squabbles of politicians on a border wall should not affect the producing of critical agricultural reports, the maintenance of our parks, or require business to lobby for favors for government services they consider “essential.”
My state had a 793-day budget impasse a few years ago, so I’m pretty jaded to this kind of stuff. The impasse went on for so long because the courts intervened to require payment of government workers, though for the most part not the vendors, contractors, universities and local governments. What precipitated passage of a budget was a suggestion in a state supreme court decision that the payments were not legal, and the Attorney General began efforts to set aside lower court injunctions. The end will come when the political class senses that they will be blamed for the pain.Report
I agree with everything said here. (and I’m guessing most everyone else does too, to one degree or another, thus the low comment count)Report
I think it was that there was a ton of new #content here yesterday – at least two new posts just on shutdown alone. (That’s what I’m going with to explain my …2 comments.)Report
FTR I am still good with closing the whole thing down and throwing the keys in the ocean.Report
Oh, and this post basically rules you out as being this guy.
(though that would be a heck of a misdirection) 😉Report
Yeah, what Kolohe said. This shutdown is hurting a lot of people, not just the enployees directly involved but the customers of those people as well as folks that normally get a fair amount of business from those folks. Ripples spreading in the pond.
But I gotta say that I haven’t really felt it directly and I think that’s likely true for most folks. But I think that’s going to start changing as time goes on. There are reports of TSA officers calling in sick, not because they’re protesting or anything, but because they simply don’t have the money for gas to get to work. Others are looking for other work. This could cause staffing headaches for some time if it isn’t resolved soon.
The thing is, we can all point to things where we think the government is doing too much or whatever, but that isn’t how this works. You don’t get to pick and choose, it’s not quite random really but sorta.Report
Nothing to argue with here motoconomist, the whole thing seems especially strange to someone used to the Westminster system.
Also, welcome to the site, from one government economist to another.Report
I don’t want to stir up anything here, but is it entirely ethical for a person to be writing an opinion piece as a government employee? Moreover, taking a side on a partisan issue while making reference to the economics of the situation, while identifying himself as a federal economist?Report
Perfectly fine to speak your own opinion on your own. The only issue would be if claiming to speak on behalf of your gov’t role, or using that role to promote the opinion.Report
Yep. Which is one reason why I never identify my agency when I write.
I can’t put up a sign endorsing to vote for so and so in my office, but I can say I worry about the impact of furlough on government workers.Report
Government employees do not forfeit the right to their opinions or to expressing them. Assuming he wrote this on his own time and is not a government official claiming to speak on behalf of his agency, he’s fine.Report
That is legally true. However, as James Hansen will attest, speaking out too often or too vocally will get you in a lot of trouble nonetheless.
Of course I say this as a vocal federal employee.Report
What’s the shutdown been good for? TRAFFIC.
My commute is vastly easier there are so many cars not on the road. If it keeps up, we might be looking at re-evaluation the need for so many of these workers. RIF baby.Report