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Globalization, International Trade, and Outsourcing: Understanding Economic Growth and Polarization in America 25th Anniversary Montana Arbitration and Labor Relations Conference. Barry Bluestone Northeastern University Bozeman, MT September 23, 2004. Glory Days.
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Globalization, International Trade, and Outsourcing: Understanding Economic Growth and Polarization in America25th Anniversary Montana Arbitration and Labor Relations Conference Barry Bluestone Northeastern University Bozeman, MT September 23, 2004
The Post-War Glory Days1947-1973 • Rapid GDP Growth in the U.S.: • 1950s: 3.9% • 1960s: 4.4% • 1970s: 3.2% • Real Family Income doubles (+104%) • Declining Unemployment • Unemployment Rate declines to 3.8% -- 1966-1969 • Rising Incomes for Most Families
Y= C+I+G+X-M • Consumer Boom • Pent up Savings & Pent up Demand • Union collective bargaining gains • Investment Boom • Conversion to Civilian Production • Government Spending Boom • State & Local Spending on Urban Renewal, New Suburbs, New Regions • Cold War • Export Boom - Marshall Plan • Import Implosion - Legacy of WWII
Wage & Security-Led Growth • Rise of Collective Bargaining • 36% of American Workforce Unionized • Another 1/3 or so benefit from “sympathetic” pressure • Traditional Workplace Contract • AIF/COLA Wage Formula • “Fringe” Benefits • Seniority System • Grievance System • Work Rules/Job Classifications • Union Security Clause • Management Rights Clause
The End of Affluence ….. An Age of Diminished Expectations
So Why Did the U.S. Growth Engine Sputter in the 1970s? • Oil Crisis in the 1970s • Business forced to focus on energy efficiency, not new products or new technologies • Corporate Myopia and Arrogance in face of new competition • Little emphasis on productivity, quality, and innovation • Global Competitors stepped in • Imports clobbered the economy
So Why Did Inequality Explode? • Skilled-Biased Technological Change • Rise of Service-based Economy • Industry Deregulation • Declining Unionization • Lean Production & Destruction of Job Ladders • “Winner-Take-All” Labor Markets • Growing International Trade • Outsourcing & Capital Mobility • Immigration • Trade Deficits
So Why did the U.S. Grow Again? The New Conventional Wisdom: The Wall Street Model
Wall Street Model • Weak Trade Unions kept wages and prices down • Welfare Reform increased labor supply, keeping wages and prices low • Tight monetary policy kept inflation under control and interest rates low • Deficit Reduction/Surplus Generation raised aggregate savings rate, lowering interest rates • Free Trade depressed wages, forced prices down, and kept inflation under control • >>>>>> All leading to a stock market boom and new investment
So Who’s responsible for the new economic boom? • Was it BillClinton … who got the deficit under control? • Was it Alan Greenspan… who got inflation under control? • Was it Ronald Reagan … who got government under control? Answer: None of the above .... Despite all the ballyhoo, the Wall Street Model does NOT explain the U.S. boom in the late 1990s
It takes a little bit of history to understand America’s new prosperity... Long Lags in Technology/Productivity Cycle
New Technologies that spurred Economic Growth • Steam Engine …. 19th C. • Electrification …. Early 20th C. • Integrated Circuit …. Late 20th C. • Computer Hardware • Computer Software • Internet • e-commerce • But each takes decades to impact productivity and growth
Where did the new technology come from for the 1990s Boom? • The Missile Race following Sputnik (‘50s/’60s) • The Space Race with Russia (‘60s/’70s) • From Government Spending onDefense to the Private Sector in a Quarter Century • It was hideously expensive, terribly wasteful, but in a peculiar way it paid off decades later So who’s most responsible for U.S. Economic Boom? Nikita Khrushchev
Public Sector + Private SectorWorking Together • Federal Government provided Basic Research funds • Local, State, and Federal Government educated and trained a labor force to effectively use the new technology • Private sector converted basic research to applied development .... and productivity soared
Public Investment in the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s ... • Basic Research • Education (after Sputnik) • Public Infrastructure (Interstate highways, airports, internet) ......PAID OFF IN THE LATE 1990s
2.7% 1.75%
2% 1%
1% 0.4%
.75% .10%
Energy Crisis .12% .015%
.04% .02%
.05% .02%
.25% .10%