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Outlook 2012: Will the Real Economic Recovery Finally Stand Up? . Mark Partridge October 18, 2011 Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy (Partridge.27@osu.edu) Department of Agricultural, Environmental & Development Economics Ohio State University Extension. Introduction.
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Outlook 2012: Will the Real Economic Recovery Finally Stand Up? Mark Partridge October 18, 2011 Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy (Partridge.27@osu.edu) Department of Agricultural, Environmental & Development Economics Ohio State University Extension
Introduction • The title of my 2009 talk: The Great Crisis: Will Economic Recovery Look More Like the Crisis? • Even though I realized that we were entering recovery, my answer was Yes!, but I never thought Yes!!!!!!!!!! and then some… • So, a good question is when will have recovery and then what are our next challenges/issues. Policy & Oulook Program
Introduction—Continued I will first provide an overview of where we are in the U.S. and Ohio to provide the context of today’s outlook. Then I will discuss forecasts for the U.S. and try to put some context on that for Ohio and perhaps for the 2012 elections. I will then conclude with a little about the economic impacts of Marcellus Shale and then inequality for the US. Policy & Oulook Program
Economic Recovery: Then and Now • From WW II to 1990, recessions tended to be cyclical. • Orders slowed down. • Inventories fell and pent-up-demand took hold. • Factories rehired workers—i.e., most jobs did not disappear. Policy & Oulook Program
Economic Recovery: Then and Now • Since 1990—recessions have become structural as industries/firms downsize and the lost jobs permanently disappear. • “Jobless recoveries” • Bubbles in the 1980s and 1990s took years to work off after recession. • This recovery also looks like the financial crisis recessions pre-Great Depression. Policy & Oulook Program
National Non-farm Employment 60 months after the onset of recession, seasonally adjusted, Month 0 =100
Ohio’s performance in recession and recoveries Ohio usually falls deeper in recession than the nation as a whole. This time we actually fared about average (just a little below average). Ohio recoveries tend to be drawn out. Policy & Oulook Program
Ohio Non-farm Employment 60 months after the onset of recession, seasonally adjusted
Manufacturing and Recession Manufacturing’s share of the economy is falling meaning that it has a smaller impact on growth. This recession is actually slightly better for manufacturing than the 2001 recession and the jobless recovery. Policy & Oulook Program
Growth in the “Three C’s” The Three C’s performance also illustrates that OH will likely recovery differently depending on what part of the state we are talking about. A key reason for the economic differences across the 3 C’s is their relative manufacturing intensity, though each have their own culture. Columbus is lagging the other 2 C’s. Cleveland continues to surprise. Policy & Oulook Program
U.S. Forecast • I use the NABE September Forecast. It reflects the average of 52 economists and does not have an agenda. • http://www.nabe.com/publib/macsum.html • NABE forecasts 1.7% GDP growth in 2011 and 2.3% in 2012 (about 1% lower than their May 2011 forecast.) • A reasonable economic expansion should have > 4% growth for 2 years or so. • IMF’s U.S. forecast is 1.5% and 1.8%. • Also revised down by about 1% since June. Policy & Oulook Program
US Forecast • NABE sees a very weak labor market • Monthly Nonfarm payrolls are expected to rise 124,100 per month in 2011 and 162,100 per month in 2012. • At sustained monthly rate of at least 200,000+ is needed for a few years. • UR rate will still be 8.5% at end of 2012 • US still 1 million jobs below 2000 level. • Most panelists don’t see labor market recovery to pre-recession levels until 2015 and some don’t see it until 2017. Policy & Oulook Program
U.S. Forecast • On the positive side, NABE sees • Expansionary monetary policy (?) • Growth in the rest of the world (?) • Business investment and pent-up consumer demand (?) • On the negative side: • Low consumer and business confidence • Uncertainty about future gov’t policies (?) • I add uncertainty whether ‘Washington’ can do anything of consequence. • Tepid housing market (2013 recovery?) Policy & Oulook Program
U.S. Forecast • Negative Factors continued: • Financial headwinds caused by tight credit conditions and balance sheet restructuring • High federal deficits and the European debt (Greek) crisis weigh on the world economy • In this economic environment, while I do not see a recession, I have a difficult time seeing how a President could be reelected in this climate. • 1968 and 2000 elections are exceptions where economy was not THE issue. Policy & Oulook Program
Ohio Context • Ohio has added 1.6% jobs in the last year • US added 1%. • Ohio Unemployment rate 9.1% in Aug 2011, 9.9% Aug 2010, and 8.6% in May 2011. • Columbus has lost about 0.6% jobs--local performance has been uneven. Policy & Oulook Program
Ohio Context • Ohio’s strengths are • (1) strong leadership direction • I am not saying good or bad direction. • Improved position on state taxes. • (2) State budget is mostly balanced on a structural basis. • State avoided tax increases by pushing them down to local gov’t. • Yet, there is little uncertainty that the state budget is sustainable if we have another recession. Policy & Oulook Program
Ohio Utica (Marcellus) Shale: Game Changer? • Commenting on shale energy development: “This will be the biggest thing in the state of Ohio since the plow…This is truly extraordinary.” Aubrey McClendon CEO of Chesapeake Energy of Oklahoma. • Quoted in the Columbus Dispatch “Realism on Renewable Energy.” September 22, 2011, Pp. B1-B2. Policy & Oulook Program
Utica Shale: Game Changer? • Economists point out that ‘projects’ and policies should be judged on their net benefits and costs, and NOT net job creation. • E.g., CO2 content of coal vs natural gas. • E.g., lower energy costs or energy security. • The best source of an industry’s actual economic impact is NOT the industry itself, studies paid for by the industry, or sympathetic politicians and newspapers. • This is not a surprise . • In serious research, we use peer review to weed out poor studies. We create counterfactuals. Policy & Oulook Program
Utica Shale: Game Changer? • A counterfactual is what would have happened if there was no shale industry. The difference between the number of jobs that did happen and the counterfactual is the actual jobs CREATED. • So-called ‘impact studies’ that estimate direct and indirect effects are over-estimates of new job creation and serious regional economists have not viewed them as anywhere near best practice for decades. NOT COUNTERFACTUALS! • At best, a well done impact study should tell you how many jobs are ‘supported’ by an industry, not how many jobs it ‘created.’ Policy & Oulook Program
Utica Shale: Game Changer? • #3 continued: • The “Penn State Impact Study” funded by the shale industry is a good example. It predicts 111,000 jobs in 2011 and 212,000 in 2020 using the IMPLAN software. • Such studies usually ignore displacement effects and do not compare development’s impact to the counterfactual. Also, it estimated 95% of shale industry purchases are in PA. • (Mexican Restaurant/IA studies/no price effects) • We do a difference in difference assessment of those with heavy mining vs similar counties w/o mining to get a better handle on the actual income and job creation. Policy & Oulook Program
Source: U.S. Dept. of Labor QCEW http://data.bls.gov/pdq/querytool.jsp?survey=en and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CES, Total Nonfarm Employment by state, www.bls.gov. • Note: 21111-Oil and gas extraction 213111 - Drilling Oil and Gas Wells 213112 - Support Activities for Oil and Gas Operations 541360 - Geophysical Surveying and Mapping Services 238912 - Nonresidential Site Preparation Contractors 333132 - Oil and Gas Field Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing 333911 - Pump and Pumping Equipment Manufacturing for natural gas wells 486210 - Pipeline Transportation of Natural Gas 237120 - Oil and Gas Pipeline Construction
Policy & Oulook Program PA Counties considered in our simple difference in difference counterfactual
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.go
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Inequality, taxes and class warfare • Growing inequality is likely to be a major issue in future political discourse—eg Occupy Wall Street. • Greater inequality encourages growth, entrepreneurship, and innovation. Source: Partridge, 1997 AER; 2005 J. of Reg Sci.) • It is also associated with greater job growth and lower unemployment (Pre-2000 Europe vs U.S. comparisons) • Greater inequality comes at the expense of breakdown in social cohesion, lower educational attainment, worse health outcomes, etc. • The pro inequality incentive aspects would clearly breakdown if the benefits are not widely shared. (Welsch, 1999) • Some politicians say the wealthy should pay more taxes. “Buffet Rule” Other changes possible… Policy & Oulook Program
Conclusions The economy continues to sputter. I don’t see ‘normal’ growth until 2013 and full recovery until 2015-16. In other words, 2012 will represent a continuation of the jobs recession. Ohio is on a better budget footing. Utica shale should be evaluated on costs vs. benefits, not on job creation. The spectacle of high inequality is real and could approach a tipping point. Policy & Oulook Program
Thank you Mark Partridge Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy Dept. Agricultural, Environmental & Development Economics The Ohio State University Google “Partridge Swank” and you will get my website (614) 688-4907 (partridge.27@osu.edu) Policy & Oulook Program
Individual County Graphs Follow Policy & Oulook Program
Greene-Perry Matched Employment Pair • Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov.
Fayette-Franklin Matched Employment Pair Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov.
Susquehanna-Carbon Matched Employment Pair Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov.
Tioga-Union Matched Employment Pair Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, REIS Data, Downloaded Oct. 7, 2011. www.bea.gov