November 15, 2024

Economic View: Five Positive Economic Signs Are on the Horizon

The case for optimism is hardly open-and-shut. The economy’s problems include high unemployment, mediocre productivity gains and stagnant or slow-growing earnings for most income classes. Still, let’s consider five indicators that the future is starting to brighten:

MORE DIPLOMAS The nation’s high school graduation rate has risen — to 78 percent in 2010, the Education Department says in its most recent estimate. That’s obviously still not where it should be, but it’s the highest figure since 1974. (For a long time, the rate was under 70 percent. After decades of stagnation, the graduation rate started to turn up in 2000, and the growth has been robust for more than a decade.)

On average, these additional high school graduates — not to mention college degree recipients — will find better jobs and enjoy better health, long-lasting benefits that will be reaped for many decades.

NEW KNOWLEDGE, LESS COST When it comes to education, an even greater productivity gain may be on the way. This month, for instance, the Georgia Institute of Technology announced a new online master’s degree in computer science, for a price of no more than $7,000.

It’s part of a trend toward less expensive education and certification. The examples are numerous: the Khan Academy offers free online instruction in mathematics and other topics, and Coursera and other companies have popularized online courses for millions of users.

How far these trends can be pushed is unclear, but it can no longer be argued that the basic technologies of education haven’t changed in decades or even centuries.

LOWER HEALTH CARE INFLATION The growth rate in health care costs has been slowing for the last four years. In some years, in fact, it’s been no higher than the growth rate of the economy as a whole. And much of the change appears driven by efficiencies, rather than by the recent recession. This is documented in a paper by David M. Cutler, an economics professor at Harvard, and Nikhil R. Sahni, a fellow at Harvard Business School; it appeared in the May 2013 issue of Health Affairs.

This cost deceleration isn’t guaranteed to stick, but the danger that sharply rising health care costs, compounding over time, will crash the entire economy is now somewhat reduced.

POWERING AMERICA FOR LESS We appear to be at the start of a new era of cheap energy. Through advances in both oil and natural gas production, the United States is again becoming a leading exporter of fossil fuels.

Many of the nation’s economic troubles, like slow productivity and  income growth, began about the same time that America’s first age of cheap energy came to a sudden end, in the early 1970s. The effect of today’s energy boom on broader productivity remains to be seen, but it could prove a source of further gains. Unfortunately, cheap natural gas isn’t the path toward sustainable green energy, although it is cleaner than coal and has helped the nation make some progress in reducing emissions.

MOBILIZING THE CREATIVE This final development, concerning the fate of talent in lesser-developed nations, is perhaps the most fundamental. If you were born a genius in Shanghai in 1960, for example, your chances of making much contribution to the larger world were small, because China was largely isolated back then — and extremely unfree economically. It now does a much better job of mobilizing its considerable natural talent.

While the populations of countries like the United States are aging, the number of innovative young people worldwide has never been higher. Countries like China, India, Brazil and Russia, despite recent slowdowns in growth, still are making progress in improving their educational systems and scientific networks. That increases their ability to supply technological innovations — or scientists and entrepreneurs — to the United States. These gains can be reaped in coming decades.

Note, too, that none of these trends can be reduced to breathless or utopian claims about the future of information technology, even though each is intertwined with tech progress in subtle ways. Further breakthroughs in technology, perhaps in the field of quantum computing, could add substantially to these positive trends.

The first decade of this century was largely a lost one, economically speaking, for the average American household. And in the beginning of this decade, median household income has actually dropped, during a time of ostensible economic recovery. Yet the longer-run picture, finally, can be given a partly optimistic gloss. These trends may not ultimately be the dominant ones, but if we’re looking for a positive narrative about the American economic future, some important pieces are starting to fall into place.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/26/business/five-positive-economic-signs-are-on-the-horizon.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix Blog: Jobs: Good Headline, Better Details

The job market seems to be getting better, and it is doing so in surprising areas. Jobs seem to be going to people with less education, and the number of long-term unemployed is coming down.

FLOYD NORRIS

FLOYD NORRIS

Notions on high and low finance.

Over all, the unemployment rate fell to 8.6 percent in November from 9 percent a month earlier.

That rate comes from a survey of households, which is subject to sampling error. During the summer, when jobs data looked poor and talk of a new recession grew, it was much weaker than the other survey, of employers. But this fall it has been much stronger. Over long periods, those reports tend to come together, so perhaps the household numbers will not look as good as they do now.

Or maybe it will simply turn out that the jobs report — which is based on a survey of employers — has been too pessimistic.

Over the last three months, the job survey has averaged gains of 143,000 per month, while the household survey has gained 318,000 per month. Moreover, the job survey has been regularly revised upward. August went from zero — a number that seemed terrifying at the time — to a decent 104,000. The September gain was 103,000 when it was first reported; now the figure is 210,000. October was 80,000 when first reported; now it is 100,000 with one more revision to come.

These are signs of a generally strengthening labor market.

Within the household survey, there are some very encouraging things:

The unemployment rate is falling among workers with less education. The rate for high school dropouts is now 13.2 percent, down from 15 percent a few months ago. The rate for high school graduates is 8.8 percent, down from a recent high of 10 percent. The rate for those with some college, but not a bachelor’s degree, is now 7.6 percent, down from 8.4 percent a couple of months ago.

But the rate for college grads is holding steady at 4.4 percent. It was a little lower earlier this year.

The number of long-term unemployed workers is starting to fall, while the proportion of the unemployed who quit their last job — rather than losing it — seems to be rising. There are now 5.7 million people who say they have been out of work for more than six months, a million fewer that at the peak in early 2010. The number of unemployed workers who say they lost their last job is 7.5 million, the lowest number in nearly three years and down 2.5 million from the peak.

This is not to say those figures are good. The peak level of long-term unemployment had never been as high as three million before the last recession began. The unemployment rate for high school dropouts is double what it was in the summer of 2007. But at least the figures are getting better.

An economy where more jobs are going to those with lesser education who have been out of work for a long time would be a wonderful thing. There is no guarantee that the trends will continue, or that some of the improvement does not come from sampling error. But the new jobs report jibes with the Conference Board consumer confidence report for November, which showed that the people it surveyed were less negative than they had been, both about the current jobs market and about the prospects for improvement.

If recent American economic data was all the information we had, people would be much more optimistic. As it is, there are many who reacted to the job numbers as Micheal Darda of MKM Partners did this morning:

While the economic data have been better of late, we remain concerned that we are seeing a bounce back from a series of supply shocks earlier in the year that may not be sustained against the foliage of tighter financial conditions, a deep recession in Europe and a sharp slowdown in China and emerging-market countries.

The world may indeed fall apart. But for now at least, this one part of it seems to be getting better.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=cb7274ae48702c74d4e3ea9d144b866c