|
Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
|
July 3,
2008
|
|
By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
E-MAIL
WEB SITE
|
 |
Economy Loses 62,000
Jobs in June Crisis Grips the Job Market
Today, the Labor Department reported
the economy lost 62,000 payroll jobs in
June, after losing 62,000 jobs in May.
Economists expected a 50,000 loss in
June.
Governments added 29,000 jobs, and
private sector employment fell 91,000.
Businesses have become too pessimistic
about the outlook for the economy, and
the capacity of the Bush Administration
and Federal Reserve to manage it. While
exports remain strong, domestic demand
remains weak and shows few signs of
recovering.
The Labor Department reported the
unemployment rate steady at 5.5 percent.
However, this statistic was greatly
affected by the number of discouraged
adults who have left the labor force.
Factoring in the decline in the number
of adults participating in the labor
force, the unemployment rate is closer
to 7.2 percent.
Six straight months of job losses are
the strongest evidence yet that the
economy has slipped into a recession of
uncertain depth and duration. The
banking crisis, high oil prices and the
ballooning trade deficit China are
causing employers to relocate to Asia
rather than be caught in the U.S.
Tsunami.
Retail sales and personal consumption
expenditures were stronger in May, as
personal income got a bump from
tax-rebate stimulus checks. But this
one-time jolt did not mask very weak
sales of consumer durables such
appliances and automobiles. Along with
weakness in housing and nonresidential
construction, credit shortages and tepid
automobile sales are causing businesses
to trim investments in new capacity and
hiring plans. The crisis is clearly
worsening.
Exports are lifting sales and
employment in commodities and basic
industrial materials, but overall a
weaker dollar against the euro and other
currencies and the resulting increase in
exports are not enough to save the
economy from recession.
Energy and food price inflation have
not infected other sectors of the
economy. The market-based price index
for personal consumption expenditures,
which is closely watched by Federal
Reserve policymakers, has risen only 0.1
percent each of the last four months,
and has risen only 1.9 percent over the
last 12 months. Movements in long bond
rates do not reflect a pronounced shift
in inflation expectations.
Yet, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke is complaining about rising
inflation expectations and brandishing
higher interest rates to quell inflation
fears. At a time when the data says the
opposite about inflation and many
manufacturers and service providers lack
the pricing power to push forward rising
energy and commodity prices, the Federal
Reserves pronouncements look more like
sorcery than science.
That’s a recipe for a housing market
collapse, stock market rout and job
market disaster.
U.S. Policies Worsening Inflation,
Recession Risks
Tight global markets are pushing up
U.S. food and energy and food prices and
headline inflation, but U.S. energy,
exchange rate and monetary policies are
exacerbating problems and making likely
a protracted period of slow growth.
The ethanol program is pushing up
food prices, and robust growth in China
and elsewhere in Asia are pushing up
energy and raw material prices. The Fed
could only marginally affect those
pressures by constraining U.S. growth
through higher interest rates.
China is controlling domestic prices
for gasoline and other refined products,
subsidizing oil imports with the dollars
it obtains through its purchases of U.S.
dollars to sustain an undervalued yuan,
and increasing demand for oil more
rapidly than it is contracting in the
United States. The combined dynamic of
U.S.-Chinese integration and Chinese
intervention in currency and oil markets
is to drive up exports and growth in
China, drive up gasoline and other
energy prices in the United States, and
slow growth and increase unemployment in
the United States.
Treasury’s inaction regarding China’s
policy of buying dollars for yuan to
sustain an undervalued currency permits
China to continue to subsidize
manufactured exports and oil imports,
and expand its purchases of oil more
rapidly than the United States reduces
imports. This is pushing up the
international price of oil, gasoline and
diesel prices, cushioning the Chinese
economy from the U.S. economic slowdown,
and exacerbating the economic slowdown
in the United States.
The Federal Reserve’s aggressive
interest rates cuts have had a limited
effect on GDP and employment growth, and
the stimulus package is not large enough
to compensate for rising gasoline prices
and the meltdown in the credit and
housing markets.
The stimulus package at $152 billion
is hardly enough to offset higher
gasoline prices, and less than half as
large as the losses taken by the major
New York banks and their customers on
subprime securities. The stimulus
package is lessening the pain imposed by
soaring gas prices and flagging domestic
demand for U.S.-made goods and serves,
but it is insufficient to head off a
recession.
The Federal Reserve is in crisis,
because its mix of policies addresses an
old style recession, one premised on
inadequate demand but solid financial
institutions. The current recession has
its origins in questionable banking
practices and a breakdown of investor
trust in the integrity of Wall Street’s
most venerable banks and investment
houses.
Federal Reserve regulators,
apparently lacking appreciation for the
gravity of these problems, have focused
mostly on urging banks to raise new
capital without effective parallel
efforts to reform bank business models
and practices. Often, new capital has
been provided by sovereign wealth funds
or private equity firms, which lack
sophistication in the intricacies of
commercial and mortgage banking and
demand few changes in bank management
policies.
The result is sophisticated buyers of
fixed income securities, such as
insurance companies and pension funds,
remain unwilling to accept loan-backed
securities from the banks. The market
for mortgage backed securities issued by
commercial banks has evaporated.
For similar reasons banks cannot
raise additional new capital. Investors
that initially came to the rescue of
Citigroup and others have been burned by
falling share prices. Not seeing
meaningful changes in management
personnel and practices at the banks,
investors are not willing to commit
additional new capital to these failing
institutions.
The housing sector has been in a
recession for months, in significant
measure, because the market for
mortgage-backed securities has broken
down. At this time, banks can only write
conforming loans that can be sold to
Fannie Mae or held on their balance
sheets. The bond market will not accept
mortgage-backed securities underwritten
by the major Wall Street banks, and this
significantly curtails the market for
less than prime securities.
The whole chain that creates
financing for mortgages and other
consumer loans has been corrupted from
loan officers to banks that bundle loans
into securities, to bond rating agencies
like Standard and Poor’s who demand
payments from banks instead of charging
investors to evaluate mortgage-backed
securities.
The Federal Reserve and Treasury need
to prod the private banks to reform
lending practices, and to encourage bond
rating agencies to return to investor
financed ratings. Unfortunately, Henry
Paulson and Ben Bernanke have been shy
to do this, and the Democratic
leadership in the Senate and House is
too busy raising campaign money on Wall
Street to prod the Administration to
meaningful action on banking reform.
The economy is sailing through
dangerous, unchartered waters, and Henry
Paulson and Ben Bernanke, the helmsmen,
seem confused and unsteady, adding to
pessimism about the outlook for U.S. GDP
growth and jobs.
The Fed’s inadequate response to the
credit crisis is undermining the
exchange for the dollar against the
euro. Cheap dollars permit Europeans to
bid up the price of oil, further pushing
up U.S. gasoline prices and exacerbating
the U.S. economic slowdown.
The bottom line, Treasury and Federal
Reserve policies toward China and the
banks are manufacturing higher oil
prices, inflation and recession.
It is no surprise the economy is
hemorrhaging jobs.
Weak Wage Growth and Unemployment
Construction, manufacturing, finance,
and retail trade displayed weakness,
reflecting significantly slower GDP
growth.
Wages increased a moderate 0.6 cents
per hour, or 0.3 percent. Moderate wage
and strong labor productivity growth
should help keep core inflation in
check, and this should help abate
Federal Reserve concerns about nonfood
and nonenergy price inflation, so-called
core inflation, as it navigates the
fallout from the subprime crisis. What
problems the Fed faces in the core will
be a pass-through from higher food and
energy prices, not a permanent increase
in inflation expectations.
The unemployment rate was 5.5 percent
in June. However, these numbers belie
more fundamental weakness in the job
market. Discouraged by a sluggish job
market, many more adults are sitting on
the sidelines, neither working nor
looking for work, than when George Bush
took the helm. Factoring in discouraged
workers raises the unemployment rate to
about to 7.2 percent. As the economy
slows further this figure will likely
exceed 8 or even 9 percent.
Overall, the pace of employment
growth indicates the economy is settling
into a troubling malaise. Second quarter
growth in GDP should be close to 1
percent, thanks to a bump from the
stimulus package. However, the recent
surge in retail sales will prove
temporary. Sales of durable goods, like
appliances and lawn mowers, continue to
slump, Ford and GM have announced
further production cutbacks, and
builders have an 11 month supply of
unsold new homes. Auto production and
housing starts should not improve much
until the fourth quarter, at least, and
those conditions will feed into the rest
of the economy. The jobs outlook should
not markedly improve until at least the
fourth quarter..
Manufacturing, Construction and
the Quality of Jobs
Going forward, the economy will add
some jobs for college graduates with
technical specialties in finance, health
care, education, and engineering.
However, for high school graduates
without specialized technical skills or
training and college graduates with only
liberal arts diplomas, jobs offering
good pay and benefits remain tough to
find. For those workers, who compose
about half the working population, the
quality of jobs continues to spiral
downward.
Historically, manufacturing and
construction offered workers with only a
high school education the best pay,
benefits and opportunities for skill
attainment and advancement. Troubles in
these industries push ordinary workers
into retailing, hospitality and other
industries where pay often lags.
Construction employment fell by
43,000 in June. This is a terrible
indicator for future GDP growth.
Retailing shed 7.5 thousand jobs, and
financial services lost 10.1.
Manufacturing has lost 33,000 jobs,
and over the last 97 months
manufacturing has shed more than 3.8
million jobs. Were the trade deficit cut
in half, manufacturing would recoup at
least 2 million of those jobs, U.S.
growth would exceed 3.5 percent a year,
household savings performance would
improve, and borrowing from foreigners
would decline.
The dollar remains too strong against
the Chinese yuan, Japanese yen and other
Asian currencies. The Chinese government
artificially suppresses the value of the
yuan to gain competitive advantage, and
the yuan sets the pattern for other
Asian currencies. These currencies are
critical to reducing the non-oil U.S.
trade deficit, and instigating a
recovery in U.S. employment in
manufacturing and technology-intensive
services that compete in trade.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
Robert H. Smith School of Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
Opinion Articles |