The country’s
potential growth rate is barely half what it was two decades ago. Here’s how to
raise it
BACK in the mid-1990s, America’s economic prospects
suddenly brightened. Productivity soared. Immigrants and foreign capital
flocked to take advantage of what was quickly dubbed the “New Economy”. The
jobless rate fell to 4%, yet inflation remained low. All this led economists to
conclude that America’s potential rate of growth—the speed at which the economy
can expand while keeping unemployment steady and inflation stable—had risen
sharply from its decades-long average of 3%, to 3.5% or even higher.
Sadly, the New Economy is no more. The
recovery from the recession of 2008-09 has been the weakest of the post-war
era, and evidence is mounting that America’s potential growth rate has
plummeted. Its two big determinants, the supply of workers and the rise in their
productivity, have both fallen short. Performance in the past year has been
particularly feeble: America’s labour force has not grown at all and output per
hour worked has fallen. The IMF recently cut its estimate of the country’s
potential rate of growth to 2%. Other economists put it as low as 1.75%.
So far, the slide in potential has had little practical
impact. Because the recession was so deep and the recovery so weak, the economy
is still operating below its capacity. But in the long term a halving of the
economic speed limit would have grim consequences. Living standards would rise
more slowly, tax revenues would be lower and the burden of paying today’s debts
heavier.
Solving the
short-term problem means boosting demand, so the Federal Reserve should keep
interest rates low. But to pep up long-term growth, America also needs to
address the supply side. In particular, it needs more workers and faster
increases in productivity.
The not-so-mysterious case of the disappearing worker
The
number of working-age Americans rose by an average of 1.2% a year in the 1990s,
and by a mere 0.4% in 2013. The proportion of them actually in the workforce
has fallen from over 67% to less than 63%. The recession is partly to blame,
because after years of joblessness some people have given up looking for work.
That is one reason why boosting the recovery is important. The ageing of the
baby-boomers is another reason. The number of people in their late 50s (when
participation in the workforce starts to drop) and older is rising fast.
Both
these vulnerabilities are exacerbated by a self-inflicted problem: policies
that depress the supply of workers. Most damaging is America’s broken
immigration system. Getting into the country has become much more difficult.
The number of visas issued today for highly skilled people is a fraction of
what it was in the 1990s, even as the number of unfilled vacancies for skilled
workers soars. Deportations have surged and the southern border has become far
harder to cross.
Obamacare,
though good in other respects, tends to shrink the labour force because it
helps people get health care without working. There is less to be said for the
outdated social safety net, which manages both to be stingy and to discourage
work. America spends a smaller proportion of its GDP than other rich countries
on retraining the jobless and helping them find work. It has not raised the
retirement age and it has allowed its disability-insurance system to become an
ersatz welfare scheme. The number of workers on disability, hardly any of whom
will work again, has doubled since 1997 to 9m. For once, Europe could teach
America some labour-market lessons: thanks to welfare reforms, the proportion
of Europeans in the workforce is now rising.
The mystery of the
slump in productivity
In the
long run, the most powerful way to boost growth is for workers to become more
productive, as they did in the 1990s. But raising productivity is hard, and the
recent slump puzzling. Innovation drives productivity growth, and a dizzying
array of new developments, from “big data” to the “internet of things”,
suggests that innovation is speeding up. Yet the growth in the average worker’s
output per hour was slowing before the 2007 crisis and has fallen further
since.
That
may change, because it takes a while for firms to react to disruptive
technologies. Computers started to spread in the 1980s but their impact did not
show up in the data for more than a decade. The latest surge in innovation will
also take a few years to translate into higher output per hour. The slow
recovery from the recession may have lengthened this delay, by deterring many
firms from investing in information technology. But here, too, politicians have
made matters worse.
There is much America’s government could do
to boost investment. It could, for instance, increase public spending on
infrastructure. It could reduce the sky-high corporate tax rate which
encourages firms—such as AbbVie, which is proposing to shift its base to
Britain by buying Shire (see article)—to move
abroad rather than invest at home. And it could start cutting the endless
sprawl of job-destroying regulations that companies say is a worse problem even
than taxes. It is doing none of these things.
The
impact of a supply-side revolution, with immigration reform, an overhaul of
disability and training schemes, infrastructure investment, deregulation and
corporate-tax reform all high on the agenda would be gradual. But even the prospect
would strengthen the recovery, by encouraging investment and deterring the Fed
from raising interest rates too soon.
Thoughtful
politicians have produced schemes for radical change in almost all of these
areas, but their plans—like so much else—have fallen victim to America’s
polarised politics. The Republicans stand in the way of loosening immigration
rules, while Democrats fear that supply-side reforms are a plot to hurt the
average Joe. Both sides hoover up cash from special interests keen to keep anticompetitive
regulations in place. Barack Obama, the least business-friendly president for
decades, has devoted far too little attention to the problem. So the odds rise
that America’s economy will continue to lumber along at an underwhelming pace,
and Americans will have no one to blame but their leaders.
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