WHAT RECOVERY? THE CASE FOR CONTINUED EXPANSIONARY POLICY AT THE FED

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WHAT RECOVERY? THE CASE FOR CONTINUED EXPANSIONARY POLICY AT THE FED REPORT BY J.W. MASON JULY 25, 2017 The question of whether or not the economy is operating at its full potential is critical for policymakers who might intervene through monetary or fiscal policy if GDP is lagging. The question is similarly important to the workers, investors, and businesses who see their prospects rise and fall with GDP growth. Today s dominant story, told by the Federal Reserve, the media, and many prominent economists, is that the economy has recovered from the recession and is growing about as fast as it can without overheating. This outlook has led the Fed to increase interest rates four times since December 2015, ending the historically low rates it maintained for nearly a decade. As evidence that the economy is at potential i.e. is utilizing all productive labor, capital, and resources many cite the unemployment rate of 4.3 percent. This is the lowest it has been since 2001, and it s expected to continue falling, although inflation remains below the Fed s 2 percent target. However, Roosevelt Fellow J. W. Mason, among others, questions the premise that we have achieved full employment and GDP is currently at potential. In What Recovery? The Case for Continued Expansionary Policy at the Fed, he shows that output in 2016 remains well below pre-recession expectations. Low demand and reduced investment, he argues, have kept labor and capital on the sidelines. To achieve the kind of high pressure economy that promotes investment, raises wages, and increases work force participation, the Fed should pursue much more expansionary policy. Below, we outline Mason s argument that nearly a decade after the financial crisis the economy is still suffering from weak demand. Most importantly, his paper asks policymakers to weigh the risks of error. Continuing expansionary policy if the economy is already at potential will, at worst, lead to inflation rates higher than the targeted 2 percent. But tightening policy while GDP remains below potential could cement current lows in labor force participation and productivity, holding back output for years to come. CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2017 ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG 1

WHAT RECOVERY? GDP HAS NEVER RETURNED TO THE PRE-2007 TREND. U.S. GDP has not recovered from the 2008 financial crisis. Unemployment has returned to the level considered to be full employment, and price inflation is close to if still short of the Fed s 2 percent target, seeming to indicate that the economy is using all productive labor, capital, and resources, or operating at potential. But participation in the labor force has declined and labor productivity (output per worker) has stagnated. The result: Output (or GDP) remains 15 percent below the pre-2007 trend line, a gap that is getting wider, not narrower, over time. There is no historical precedent for the GDP slowdown, nor was it predicted by pre-recession forecasts. In the 60 years since World War II, periods of above-average growth have followed periods of below-average growth, and vice versa. But this is not the story since the Great Recession. The apparent recovery the closing of the gap between potential GDP and actual GDP is due to downward revisions of the estimated potential output. These estimates have been steadily revised downward since 2007, as economic growth has continued to disappoint. And so while the proverbial GDP ball has gotten closer to its goal, that is because the goalposts have been moving backward, not because the ball has been moving forward. ESTIMATES OF POTENTIAL OUTPUT FOR VARIOUS DATES 90 100 110 120 130 Historical 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 CBO estimates/forecasts of potential output for various years. The heavy black line shows the historical path of GDP. The colored lines show historical and forecast estimates of potential output for each year from 2002 through 2016. The bluegreen lines are estimates made before the recession, while the red-purple lines are estimates made after the recession. The 2006 value is set to 100. Source: CBO, author s analysis. CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2017 ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG 2

DISCOUNTING THE DOMINANT NARRATIVE Many economists argue that factors unrelated to the recession namely, an aging population and slowing technological progress account for recent declines in output growth. But these theories are flawed. Such supply-side factors can explain at most half the decline in employment and don t offer a plausible account of the slowdown in productivity growth. Demographic changes do not explain low labor force participation About half of the gap between actual output and the pre-recession output trend is due to reduced labor force participation. Some economists attribute the decline in labor force participation to an aging U.S. population; retirees don t work. However, our analysis shows that changes in the age and gender composition of the U.S. population explain only about 40 percent of the reduction in employment. The majority is due not to an aging population, but to decreased labor force participation rates among working-age Americans. ACTUAL EMPLOYMENT-POPULATION RATIO VS. DEMOGRAPHIC-BASED PREDICTION Employment population ratio Employment population ratio predicted by demographic changes (age and gender) Employment-population ratio 56% 58% 60% 62% 64% 2000 2005 2010 2015 Survey Year Employment-population ratio is the fraction of all civilians aged 15+ who are employed. The demographic prediction shows how the employment-population ratio would have evolved after 2000 if, in each year, the employment rate within each demographic group (e.g. 28 year-old females) had remained constant while the size of these groups changed. Source: CEPR, Current Population Survey, author s analysis. CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2017 ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG 3

Slowing technological progress does not explain low productivity Reduced productivity output per worker accounts for the remaining gap between actual output and its pre-recession trend. Here, some economists point to slowing technological progress in Internet technologies, a major driver of growth in the 1990s and early 2000s. But an emphasis on IT overlooks that productivity slowed across sectors; reduced tech productivity accounts for only about 40 percent of the overall decline. Moreover, a narrow focus on technological growth ignores that technology may be employed more productively under stronger economic conditions. For example, businesses may have invested so little since the recession because existing capital sufficed to satisfy the reduced demand for their products. PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH BY PERIOD IN TWO PERIODS Technology Transport & Utilities 2011 2015 Avg. Prod. Growth -4-2 0 2 4 6 8 Manufacturing Retail & Wholesale Services Extractive FIRE 0 5 10 15 20 25 1999 2007 Avg. Prod. Growth Productivity growth by industry. The horizontal axis shows average annual real productivity growth over 1999-2007, the vertical axis shows average annual real productivity growth over 2011-2015. The size of the circles is proportional to the average employment in the industry over the full period. Source: BEA, author s analysis. At a macro-economic level, even these supply-side stories point to weak demand One cannot explain the state of the economy without a prolonged slump in demand, even if an aging population and slowing technological growth really did decrease the economy s productive potential, and even if these independent shifts happened to coincide with the recession. If the demand for goods had continued to increase while the economy s ability to supply those goods slowed, then we would expect prices to rise, but instead we have observed record lows in inflation despite the Fed s attempts to stimulate the economy. CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2017 ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG 4

THE ECONOMIC REALITY AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT The economy is suffering from the prolonged recession The full range of macroeconomic indicators low inflation, interest rates, and business investment; slow output, employment, and productivity growth; and a declining labor share of income point to an economy plagued by weak demand. Most likely, slack labor markets have caused discouraged workers to leave the labor force, while weak demand for products has discouraged productivity-boosting investment by businesses. In short, we are still suffering from the prolonged effects of the Great Recession. Policymakers should call for increased spending to boost employment and output. Rather than raising interest rates, the Fed should adopt an expansionary stance that stimulates the economy. We have not yet recovered from the recession. High interest rates or austere spending could cause labor force participation and productivity growth to calcify at their current, stunted levels. Contractionary policy also carries a small risk of deflation a danger that current policy tools cannot address. The risks posed by expansionary policy are comparatively remote. Even if the economy were at potential, the worst side effect of a stimulus would be to increase inflation a problem we do not have yet and could easily deal with if it arises. In fact, many economists have suggested that the Fed seek out a higher level of inflation, in order to create more space to lower rates in future recessions. If inflation does occur, prices for scarce resources in particular, labor will rise first. And an increase in the wage share of income would, if anything, be a benefit rather than a cost. View the full report at http://rooseveltinstitute.org/what-recovery. CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2017 ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG 5

ABOUT THE AUTHOR J.W. Mason is a Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, where he works on the Financialization Project, and an assistant professor of economics at John Jay College, CUNY. His current research focuses on the history and political economy of credit, including the evolution of household debt and changing role of financial markets in business investment. He also works on history of economic thought, particularly the development of macroeconomics over the twentieth century. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank Laurence Ball and Jason Furman for their comments and insight. Special thanks for the research assistance from Amanda Page-Hoongrajok and John Sturm. Roosevelt staff Nellie Abernathy, Amy Chen, Mike Konczal, Katy Milani, Marshall Steinbaum and Alex Tucciarone all contributed to the project. This report was made possible with generous support from the Open Philanthropy Project. ABOUT THE ROOSEVELT INSTITUTE Until economic and social rules work for all, they re not working. Inspired by the legacy of Franklin and Eleanor, the Roosevelt Institute reimagines America as it should be: a place where hard work is rewarded, everyone participates, and everyone enjoys a fair share of our collective prosperity. We believe that when the rules work against this vision, it s our responsibility to recreate them. We bring together thousands of thinkers and doers from a new generation of leaders in every state to Nobel laureate economists working to redefine the rules that guide our social and economic realities. We rethink and reshape everything from local policy to federal legislation, orienting toward a new economic and political system: one built by many for the good of all.