Don’t Believe What
You Hear About The US Economy
The latest numbers, when put in
context, hardly impress
By Dean Baker
January 13, 2015 "ICH"
- "Al
Jazeera"
- The
end of the year produced a number of
media celebrations for the United
States’ economic comeback. News
stories endlessly touted the 5.0
percent GDP growth figure for the
third quarter, contrasting it with
weak growth in Europe, slowing
growth in China and a recession in
Japan. Reporters also touted the
321,000 jobs gained in November —
the strongest such growth in almost
three years. In addition, the
month’s 0.4 percent rise in the
average hourly wage was taken as
evidence that workers were now
sharing in the benefits of growth.
The economic news was
so positive, in fact, that the
Republicans switched from blaming
Obama for his allegedly job-killing
taxes and regulations to taking
credit for the economy’s
performance. Leading Republican
anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist
credited the budget cuts
demanded by Republicans in 2011 for
the economy’s strength.
As usual, just
about everything we’ve heard about
the economy is wrong. To start, the
5.0 percent growth number must be
understood against a darker
backdrop: The economy actually
shrank at a 2.1 percent annual rate
in the first quarter. If we take the
first three quarters of the year
together, the average growth rate
was a more modest 2.5 percent.
The economy is
very slowly making up
the gap between potential GDP and
actual GDP — that is, the value
of the goods and services the
economy could be producing but isn’t
because of a lack of demand. The
Congressional Budget Office puts the
size of this gap at 3.6 percent of
GDP, which comes to more than $600
billion annually, or more than
$4,000 per household. This is a lot
of money to be throwing in the
garbage every year. At the economy’s
growth rate through the first three
quarters of 2014, we will close this
gap in 12 to 36 years.
Compare the 2014
growth number with those from
recoveries after previous severe
recessions: Growth averaged 5.2
percent from 1976 to 1978, and it
averaged 5.4 percent from 1983 to
1985. That so many people are
celebrating 2.5 percent growth over
three quarters shows a serious
lessening of expectations.
Furthermore, the
third-quarter GDP number was driven
by factors that will almost
certainly be reversed in the fourth
quarter. A big jump in military
spending added 0.7 percentage points
to the quarter’s growth. This will
almost certainly be reversed in the
fourth quarter, which will create a
drag on growth.
Similarly a reported
fall in the trade deficit added 0.8
percentage points to the quarter’s
growth. The trade data for the
fourth quarter thus far indicate
that the deficit will almost
certainly widen, thereby subtracting
from growth. In short, anyone who
expects that we will see more
quarters with 5.0 percent growth is
not paying attention to the data.
Even the comparisons
with other countries are misleading.
While austerity policies have led to
weakness across Europe, countries
such as Germany, Austria and even
France have
better labor market performances
when measured by employment rates.
Japan has made more than twice as
much progress in getting its
population back to work since it
adopted stimulus policies in 2013.
And even with its slowdown, China is
still growing at more than a 7.0
percent annual rate.
Of course, these
statistics don’t matter to ordinary
people as much as the extent to
which they are seeing the benefits
of growth in the form of higher
wages. Here also the reporting has
been badly confused.
The 0.4 percent
growth figure reported for November
was an anomaly. Wages reportedly
grew at just a 0.1 percent annual
rate in October and were flat in
September. The November jump was
making up for the weak growth
reported the prior two months. Wages
grew at a just a 1.8 percent annual
rate over the last three months
compared with the prior three
months. That is slightly slower than
the average over the prior 12
months.
Real, sustained
wage growth requires much more
tightening of the labor market. Even
if the economy sustains a pace of
300,000 new jobs a month (it won’t),
the labor market still will not make
up the ground lost in the recession
by the end of 2015. Most American
workers are still far from feeling
confident that they can ask for a
pay raise or find another job that
would pay them more.
These
circumstances should be front and
center as the Federal Reserve Board
sets economic policy in 2015. There
will be growing pressure on the Fed
to raise interest rates as the
financial industry starts warning
about incipient inflation. Everyone
should realize the purpose of higher
interest rates is to slow the
economy and keep people from getting
jobs. That is not a policy that is
in most people’s interests.