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Explore the debunking of prevalent myths surrounding America's future economic decline, from debt woes to job quality, based on data and analysis from reputable sources.
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Five Myths About America’s Future Economic Decline Stephen J. Rose, Georgetown Center on Education and the Work Force September, 2012
Past, Present, and Future • We look to the past to predict the future. • Key question: Is the present downturn a cyclical problem, or does it reflect the maturation of structural problems? • Reinhardt and Rogoff find the economic crises set off by financial problem take over 4 years to recover from.
Economics Fundamentally Boils Down to Two Questions • Size of the pie • Technology • Infrastructure--physical, finanical, legal, and cultural • Full utilization of Resources • Distribution of the Pie • Between profits and compensation • Between workers and nonworking elderly and children • Between different types of workers
Pessimism is Attractive • Remember when the Japanese were going to eat our lunch? • Remember the fear of automation in the 1950s and so-called high structural unemployment? • The dismal science of economics has often argued that stagnation was a constant threat.
Data Issues Make It Tough to Get Things Right • World is Complex: hard to develop appropriate metrics and collect necessary information. • Different theoretical perspectives make people highlight certaina data and not others and interpret trends in different ways . • Different statistical measures: absolute, relative, change, change in rate of change; in terms of making comparisons over time—comparative statics versus longitudinal. • Many researchers “cook” their results.
What Some Are Saying • Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Tyagi: “Never before have middle class families worked so hard just to break even.” • Kusnet, Michel, and Teixeira: “With most people, the intensity, the insecurity, and the arduousness of their economic struggles are woven into the fabric of their lives—and are central to their identity.” • Kuttner: “At least two-thirds [of Americans] are economically stressed… [Over the past three decades] all of the [productivity] gains went to top 10 percent (most to the top 1 percent)”
Myth 1:The Inevitability Claim • Like Rome and the United Kingdom before us, dominant powers eventually lose their place as the world leader. • Alternative view is a “convergence club with America being the leader of a group of nations with similar standards of living
Basic Strengths of US Economy • Largest single market • English is the world language and American cultural output is widely available • Strong Financial and Legal Systems • Openness to Change • Best higher education system in world, especially at graduate level
Broad Expansion of Educational Attainment Source: Current Population Surveys and PUMS 60
Myth 2: With the decline in manufacturing, most service jobs are dead-end and low-paying
Service Jobs are mainly in offices, health care, education, and communications.
With rising education, job quality has improved Source: Current Population Surveys and PUMS 60
If All of the Gain From 1979-2007 Had Gone to Richest Decile? • Since GDP per capita is up 63%, this growth would represent 39% of all income. • If the top 10 percent started with 30 percent of all income, then their share with all of the growth going to them would be 60 percent of all income! • The top quintile would have over 75 percent of all income.
Absolute Measure of Well-Being: Confusion about Median Income
Growing Inequality but Significant Growth in Middle Source: CBO
Myth 4: We are Doomed by Debt Remember for every debt holder, there is a corresponding asset from the person doing the lending
Are American Households Drowning in Debt? • According to Survey of Consumer Finances, 2010: • 60% of Households have no credit card debt; median debt of those with debt is $2,600. This share is down; it had been around 54% over the last 18 years. • 25% of Households have no debt of any kind.
Student Debt is Rising • 70% of students don’t pay the sticker price. • High sticker prices allow colleges to provide support to low and middle income students. • 35% percent of BA grads and 83% of their parents have no undergraduate debt. • The median debt of those with debt is 26,000; only 10% have debts over $40,000.
Housing Debt is the Issue • Nearly 80% of household debt is mortgage debt. • The craziness of the housing bubble led many people to buy homes they couldn’t afford and to take home equity loans that led them to be under water today. • This will take time to unwind and there will be lots of pain; but this is not a structural problem.
Public Debt Will Bankrupt the Economy • We need to align wants and revenues. • Supporting elderly non-workers is expensive but doable. • The key issue is setting tax rates at a level that keeps carrying costs manageable. • Currently, even with high debts, low interest rates mean low carrying costs.
Fear that Foreign Imports Undercut Domestic Output • This theory started with the Mercantilists in the 17th century. • When we started running trade deficits in the early 1980s, Ben Friedman predicted an imminent “day of reckoning” and declining GDP. • There is no statistical connection between rising trade deficits and rising unemployment.
China Can Undersell US in Every Commodity Eventually • Balance of Payments must be zero in every year for every country. A country cannot just sell goods. • China keeps its currency low by buying US treasuries. • Although we have net debts of over $3 Trillion, our foreign capital income is greater than our payments to foreigners.
China is a Fast Growing But Faces Many Problems • Its GDP per person is less than 20% of US level. • It has raised 500 million people out of poverty, but another 500 million remain in poverty. • There are tensions over the authoritarian rule of the Communist Party. • Inflation and social unrest loom on the horizon.
Conclusion • The economic crisis has taken a severe toll. • But the toll is probably greater for our European competitors. • China, Japan, and Europe face an explosion of costs to support their elderly. • We have problems (e.g., inequality, poor K-12 system, rising medical costs) but we will remain wealthy and vibrant.