Evaluating the free market by comparing it to the alternatives (We don't need more regulations, We don't need more price controls, No Socialism in the courtroom, Hey, White House, leave us all alone)
Friday, April 5, 2024
Did Government Red Ink Make the US More Dynamic than Europe?
"I like to entertain seriously views I disagree with, but it’s hard to
describe a new hypothesis on the left about the United States’ economic
dynamism relative to Europe’s as anything other than “cockamamie.” The claim from Rogé Karma in The Atlantic
is that “the US economy is doing spectacularly well,” and the reason
for this performance is that America is “stealing from Europe’s
big-government, welfare-state playbook.” By spending $5 trillion on
pandemic relief, but letting people lose their jobs, so the argument
goes, the US shuffled the labor market and got people into better, more
productive jobs:
This labor-market reshuffling, argues Adam Posen, the president of
the Peterson Institute for International Economics, is the most
plausible explanation for why American workers experienced a sudden spike in productivity
in the second half of 2023 — one that didn’t occur in Europe. ‘The
pandemic response convinced people that government ultimately had their
back,’ Posen told me. ‘And that allowed people to take bigger risks than
normal.’
Let’s look at the evidence. If this theory is right, then
productivity should have spiked just after Americans returned to work.
The figure below plots percent change over the previous year in real
output per hour, from the first quarter of 2019 to the fourth quarter of
2023, alongside the prime-age employment rate. We do indeed see
productivity increasing in the latter half of 2023.
But what’s happening with the employment rate? It has recovered almost all of its pandemic losses by March 2022. Total quits
also peaked in April 2022, implying that the job market reshuffling
started slowing down then. It’s pretty arbitrary to attribute the
productivity growth in 2023 to job reshuffling, when the latter process
was more than 90 percent complete a year and a half before. More likely,
falling inflation is the dominant reason productivity grew in late
2023.
The other piece of evidence that fits poorly with Karma’s claim is
the fact that the US has been more dynamic than Europe for a long time.
The figure below plots real GDP growth (percentage change from a year
ago) for both the US and the Eurozone.
How can anyone look at these numbers and say that pandemic spending
is what caused the US to outpace Europe? From Q4 2017 through Q1 2021 —
14 consecutive quarters — US growth beat the Eurozone’s. Then, from Q2
2021 through Q4 2022, with the sole exception of two quarters, the
Eurozone outpaced the US. Only in the four quarters of 2023 has the US
again taken a lead on the Eurozone. A more natural reading is that the
US generally has higher growth than the Eurozone, but something happened
in 2021 and 2022 to disrupt that usual pattern. One could as easily
make the case that large federal deficits and inflation hurt the US
relative to Europe.
Taking a step back, it’s hard for me to reconcile this new “social
democratic” interpretation of the pandemic with the way that social
democrats have interpreted, well, just about everything else. They want
to say that mass unemployment was good this time because it allowed
people to quickly find new jobs where they were more productive. That
sounds a lot like the “liquidationist” perspective that influenced the Fed in the late 1920s
as it crushed the stock market boom. Do Karma and Posen think that the
Fed should be celebrated for having responded too late to the Great
Recession that hit in 2008? That we should welcome a big financial
crisis now and then? Was the Fed justified in letting the US slip into
depression in the early 1930s?
Now, presumably, they would respond that mass unemployment is only
good if people can get rehired quickly, which wasn’t the case during the
Great Depression, nor the Great Recession. Still, the logic suggests
that the workers would be better off if government periodically
encouraged employers to fire many of their workers to help “reshuffle”
the labor market.
On theoretical grounds, the hypothesis makes little sense either. Do
businesses really keep around workers who are making a lot less than
their marginal product for a long time? Do people really give up on
growing in their career once they have a job?
The new “reshuffling” thesis of American recovery doesn’t make much
sense on the evidence or economic theory. It serves a convenient
political purpose in helping to justify massive federal stimulus that
otherwise looks like a costly waste, ahead of an election, but that’s
about all that can be said for it.
For sources of American economic recovery, let’s look instead at the
belated recovery of macroeconomic stability, which has allowed America’s
natural dynamism to come through."
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