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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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August 8,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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U.S. Productivity Advances 2.2 Percent
Good News for Inflation, Interest Rates and Economy
Today, the Department of Labor
reported productivity in the nonfarm
private business sector increased at a
2.2 percent annual rate in the second
quarter of 2008. This was a very good
showing the middle of an economic
slowdown, and in line with the 2.6
percent increase recorded in the first
quarter of 2008.
Productivity did fall 1.4 percent in
the manufacturing sector. Those losses
were mostly concentrated in the durable
goods sector. The downsizing of the
automobile sector and slowing growth of
capital goods exports the first half of
this year may have resulted in a
temporary downshift. Productivity growth
has been very strong in recent quarters
in manufacturing, especially for durable
goods, and one or two quarters of
adjustments may be expected as the auto
sector, in particular, reorganizes.
Continued strong productivity growth
helps limit inflation in check in the
face of rising oil and commodity prices,
and accommodates moderate wage growth.
The Federal Reserve can focus on the
subprime crisis and stabilizing credit
markets, without fear of creating
inflationary pressures beyond those
imposed by international oil and
commodity markets. Those pressures are
little affected by Federal Reserve
actions.
The Federal Reserve expects
inflationary pressures to abate by the
end of 2008. The veracity of that
forecast will hinge on global
developments in oil and commodity
markets and not be much affected by
Federal Reserve actions. Oil prices have
been receding in recent weeks, and
demand pressures on available supplies
of other commodities should ease as
growth slows in the U.S. and globally
over the balance of 2008 and 2009.
Credit markets are stuck. The major
New York banks and primary securities
dealers can no longer bundle mortgages
and business loans into bonds, because
insurance companies, pension funds and
other fixed income investors no longer
trust Wall Street financial houses.
Consequently, regional banks, who rely
on New York financial houses to resell
their loans, have limited ability to
extend credit to qualified home buyers
and worthy businesses. To correct this
situation, the Federal Reserve needs to
take bolder steps than those so far
talked about by the Federal Reserve,
Treasury and foreign central banks.
Robust productivity growth give the
Federal Reserve needed room to act much
more decisively.
Labor Costs, Inflation and the
Stock Market
Hourly compensation increased at a
3.6 percent annual rate in the third
quarter, and unit labor costs, which
factor together higher wages and
productivity, increased 1.3 percent.
Strong productivity growth permitted
moderate wage increases, and these pose
no significant threat to accelerate
inflation. Thanks to rising
productivity, wage pressures should not
constrain Federal Reserve interest rate
setting policy.
Prospects for inflation remain mostly
determined by foreign oil and commodity
prices, and cost pressures in China’s
manufacturing, which supplies a
significant share of U.S. consumer
goods. A significant revaluation of the
yuan against the dollar would reduce
pressures both on global oil supplies
and wages in Chinese manufacturing, and
do much to constrain global inflation.
At its September policy setting
meeting, the Federal Reserve will weigh
the impact of the subprime crisis on the
housing market and broader economy.
Observers expect the Fed to keep the
target federal funds rate at 2.0 percent
until after the November election. This
new productivity data, along with
subdued wage increases, indicate the Fed
may keep interest rates steady for the
balance of 2008 and early 2009.
Productivity growth fuels corporate
profits by permitting U.S. businesses to
maintain or widen margins on domestic
operations. Also, U.S. businesses are
taking their innovations abroad, and
foreign operations account for
significant shares of U.S. corporate
sales and profits.
Overall, falling interest rates,
productivity gains and new products, and
profits from overseas operations should
help support stock prices. The stock
market will remain volatile but should
trend upward through the balance of
2008.
Better Productivity Growth Ahead?
Productivity should continue to
advance, and looking beyond the
adjustments associated with the subprime
crisis, the growth potential for the
U.S. economy remains formidable.
Factoring in a one percent annual
increase in the labor force, the economy
could grow 4 to 4.5 percent a year with
appropriate Federal Reserve and Treasury
policies to reform Wall Street Banks and
securities dealers, and the right mix of
fiscal, monetary and exchange rate
policies.
The overvalued dollar against the
Chinese yuan, Japanese yen and other
Asian currencies limits productivity
gains, because the resulting trade
deficit shifts labor and capital from
export and import-competing industries
into other non-trade-competing
activities. Trade-competing industries
exhibit 50 percent higher labor
productivity and spend much more on R&D
than do the rest of the economy.
Also, the trade deficit shifts the
production of new and innovative
products offshore, reducing high-value
employment immediately and increasing
the likelihood that next generation
products will be developed, as well as
made, abroad.
Cutting the trade deficit in half
would boost R&D spending enough to push
sustainable productivity growth to about
3 to 3.5 percent per year, and raise
potential GDP growth to about 4 to 4.5
percent.
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
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