Since September 2007 when the Federal Reserve
responded to the economic crisis facing the United States by dropping the
federal funds rate from 5.25 percent to between 0 and 0.25 percent, the Fed has
done its very best to keep the economy running on all cylinders, unfortunately,
even with its massive monetary experiment and its bloated balance sheet, there
is one aspect of the economy that has not responded as it normally would. This key aspect of the economy is critical to government budgetary planning, particularly given that the Trump Administration's plans call for a 3 percent economic growth rate.
Let's
open with the Bureau of Labor Statistics definition for output per hour. According
to the BLS, labor productivity or real output per hour is calculated
by dividing an index of real output by an index of hours worked of all persons
including employees, proprietors and unpaid family workers. Here is a graph from FRED showing the real
output per hour of all persons in the nonfarm business sector (i.e.
productivity):
As
you can see, it appears as though the curve is flattening after the Great
Recession, suggesting that productivity growth has declined in comparison to
other economic expansions. This graph showing the year-over-year
percentage change in real output shows just how dramatic the slowing in real
output has been since the first quarter of 2011:
Other
than the short period between the first quarter of 2009 and the first quarter
of 2011, productivity growth has been anaemic, particularly when we compare productivity
growth levels in the latest period of economic expansion to that of previous
expansions. To that end, here is a bar graph showing the average rate of
productivity growth for all periods of economic expansion since 1970:
Even
when we include the burst of productivity growth between early 2009 and 2011,
productivity growth in the latest expansion shows the lowest average growth rate going back
nearly five decades. If we look at the growth rate of productivity since
early 2011, year-over-year growth drops to an extremely low level of 0.54 percent, the slowest
productivity growth rate in the past fifty years and only slightly higher than
the period between early 1979 and late 1982 when the U.S. economy experienced
two short-lived recessions and a 19 percent Federal Funds Rate.
Why
has the growth rate of productivity dropped so significantly since the Great
Recession? This can be attributed to several factors:
1.)
a lack of business capital investment in new technology.
2.)
a drop in the productivity payoff from digital technology.
3.) a lack of training in new skills for workers.
4.)
weak demand.
Here is what Stanley Fisher, Vice Chairman
of the Federal Reserve had to say about the weakness of productivity growth in late 2016:
"Understanding the recent weakness of
productivity growth is central to addressing the longer-run challenges
confronting the economy. Productivity growth over the past decade has been
lackluster by post-World War II standards. Output per hour increased only 1-1/4
percent per year, on average, from 2006 to 2015, compared with its long-run
average of 2-1/2 percent from 1949 to 2005. This halving of productivity
growth, if it were to persist, would have wide-ranging consequences for living
standards, wage growth, and economic policy more broadly. A number of
explanations have been offered for the decline in productivity growth,
including mismeasurement in the official statistics, depressed capital
investment, and a falloff in business dynamism, with reality likely reflecting
some combination of all of these factors and more.
We should also consider the possibility that weak
demand has played a role in holding back productivity growth, although standard
economic textbooks generally trace a path from productivity growth to demand
rather than vice versa. Chair Yellen recently spoke on the influence of demand
on aggregate supply.3 In her speech, she reviewed a body of
literature that suggests that demand conditions can have persistent effects on
supply. In most of the literature, these effects
are thought to occur through hysteresis in labor markets. But there are likely
also some channels through which low aggregate demand could affect
productivity, perhaps by lowering research-and-development spending or
decreasing the pace of firm formation and innovation. I believe that the
relationship between productivity growth and the strength of aggregate demand
is an area where further research is required.
I will conclude by reiterating one aspect of the low
interest rate and low productivity growth problems that I have mentioned
previously--the fact that, for several years, the Fed has been close to being
"the only game in town," as Mohamed El-Erian described it in his
recent book.5 But macroeconomic policy does not have
to be confined to monetary policy. Certain fiscal policies,
particularly those that increase productivity, can increase the potential of
the economy and help confront some of our longer-term economic challenges.
While there is disagreement about what the most effective policies would be,
some combination of improved public infrastructure, better education, more
encouragement for private investment, and more effective regulation all likely
have a role to play in promoting faster growth of productivity and living
standards. By raising equilibrium interest rates, such policies may also reduce
the probability that the economy, and the Federal Reserve, will have to contend
more than is necessary with the effective lower bound on interest rates." (my
bold)
Basically,
the Federal Reserve has no real idea on how to improve productivity growth
levels. One thing that they do seem to acknowledge is that slowing productivity will
have a long-term impact on profit growth, living standards, wage growth and
future economic policies. This will obviously pose long-term challenges
for the American economy, particularly during the recovery period after the
next economic contraction. If we think that the economy has not grown at levels seen in past recessions since the Great Recession, dropping productivity growth levels will make the next recovery look like it is barely a recovery at all, a reality that will significantly impact Washington's fiscal planning.
There is a fact which should be understood clearly.
ReplyDeleteNamely, a free market price of anything optimizes the use of the resource in question.
Interest rates should optimize the use of credit.
When interest rates are not high enough, credit gets put to sub-optimal uses.
Having huge amounts of cedit performing sub-optimally must be a significant part of the slow growth in productivity described herein.
Now this may be true but it does not help to solve the problem.
To find the solution to the problem readers must learn about the Ingram School of Economics which not only explains how to solve this problem but also solves many other problems.
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