Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University and NBER CIRET Conference, New York City October 14, 2010 Controversial Issues About the Recession and Recovery.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MACROECONOMICS What is the purpose of macroeconomics? to explain how the economy as a whole works to understand why macro variables behave in the way they.
Advertisements

The Demise of Okuns Law and of Procyclical Fluctuations in Conventional and Unconventional Measures of Productivity Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern, NBER,
Inflation, the NAIRU, Potential Output and Productivity Growth During the Slow Recovery Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern University and NBER NBER Session.
Economic Forces in American History The Great Depression.
National Income and Price
Perspectives on the Current Economic Recession. World Growth is Reviving.
IN THIS CHAPTER, YOU WILL LEARN:
Outline Investment and the Interest Rate
Business Cycle Theory Changes in Business Activity ©2012, TESCCC Economics, Unit: 06 Lesson: 01.
Business Cycle Theory Changes in Business Activity ©2012, TESCCC Economics, Unit: 06 Lesson: 01.
Measuring GDP and Economic Growth Chapter 1 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Macro Free Responses Since 1995 GDP Economic Growth Money and Banking Monetary Policy Fiscal Policy Exchange Rates Inflation Recession Theories.
22 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
MCQ Chapter 9.
U. S. Economic Growth: Looking Far Into the Future Robert J. Gordon Stanley G. Harris Professor in the Social Sciences, Northwestern University, and NBER.
MACROECONOMICS © 2010 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved S E V E N T H E D I T I O N PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw C H A P.
Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University and NBER Sandhouse Gang, Chicago December 9, 2010 Controversial Issues About the Recession and Recovery.
Introduction to Economic Fluctuations
Chapter 14: Stabilization Policy
Slide 0 CHAPTER 9 Introduction to Economic Fluctuations In Chapter 9, you will learn…  facts about the business cycle  how the short run differs from.
Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
Charts Related to Labor Market Developments Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern and NBER CBO Advisers Meeting November 13, 2009.
The Economy and Marketing
Office Hours: Monday 3:00-4:00 – LUMS C85
In this chapter, you will learn:
M ACROECONOMICS C H A P T E R © 2008 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved SIXTH EDITION PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. G REGORY M ANKIW Introduction.
Chapter 8 The Classical Long-Run Model Part 1 CHAPTER 1.
Inflation and Unemployment. Money and Inflation  Rise in money supply does not equal a rise in Real GDP in the long run, since price level rises as well.
Professor Emeritus of Economics February 25, 2015 REMNANTS OF THE GREAT RECESSION.
Aggregate Demand and Supply. Aggregate Demand (AD)
Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Economics THIRD EDITION By John B. Taylor Stanford University.
THE BUSINESS CYCLE.
1 Business Cycles and Unemployment Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing.
After the Recession: How Hot? David Wyss Chief Economist TVB New York September 8, 2004.
Matching History and Theory Keynesian Stimulus 1) Keynesian Stimulus – 1930’s 1)Fine tuning in the 1960’s.
 Circular Flow of Income is a simplified model of the economy that shows the flow of money through the economy.
Spending, Income, and Interest Rates Chapter 3 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University, NBER, and CEPR AEA Panel, Denver January 7, 2011 The Recession and Recovery: Implications for Labor Markets and.
Final Exam Study Guide Final Exam: Wednesday, May 11th 5:30pm-7:30pm DeBartolo Hall Room 356.
Chapter 17: Labor Productivity: Wages, Prices, and Employment
1 Chapter 16 Business Cycles and Unemployment Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western.
MACROECONOMICS © 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
Business Cycles and Unemployment. Business Cycle Alternating periods of economic growth and contraction, which can be measured by changes in real GDP.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western Mods 17-21, 30 Macro Analysis Part I.
Review of U.S. Economy. Review of Macro Concepts Unemployment (Ch. 7) Inflation (Ch. 7) GDP (Ch. 8) Economic growth & determinants (Ch. 9) Money, central.
Economic Growth & Instability
The U.S. Economy, 2007 – Today: Collapse, Stimulus, Austerity, “Recovery” Robert Pollin Department of Economics and Political Economy Research Institute.
124 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand. 125  What is the purpose of the aggregate supply-aggregate demand model?  What determines aggregate supply.
Aim: What is Macroeconomics and AD?. Roots of Macroeconomics The Great Depression Classical economists believed that the economy was self correcting Keynes.
Chapter 13: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Model.
Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain what determines aggregate supply  Explain what determines aggregate demand  Explain.
What Macroeconomics is about Structure and performance of national economies Policies that governments formulate and use to affect economic performance.
AGGREGATE DEMAND, AGGREGATE SUPPLY, AND INFLATION Chapter 25 1.
The Recovery from the Great Recession In this presentation National forecasts are produced by Global Insight, Inc. State and Metropolitan forecasts are.
20 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply. Short-Run Economic Fluctuations Economic activity fluctuates from year to year. In most years production of.
The Interplay Among Inflation, Productivity, and Potential Real GDP Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern University Presented at Seminar, Council of Economic.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Income and Interest Rates: The Keynesian Cross Model and the IS Curve.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 19 What Macroeconomics Is All About.
NEO-KEYNESIANISM Keynesian, Monetarism (Friedman) and Rational Expectations (Sargent)
Output, growth and business cycles Econ 102. GDP Growth Countries:  High savings rate have higher GDP/ cap.  high population growth rates have low GDP/
Fun Facts- The Lion King  Simba means “lion”  Mufasa means “King”  Scar’s original name is Taka which means “trash”- he changed his name after getting.
IS–MP model consists of IS curve (combinations of real interest rate & aggregate output where goods & services market is in equilibrium. Closed econ equilibrium:
1 Chapter 12 Business Cycles and Unemployment Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Sections 1 and 2 Chapter 10, 8 th and 9 th edition Chapter 9, 7 th edition Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
ECONOMIC POLICY What are the problems or goals? What are the Solutions?
Creating a Forecast Charles Steindel January 21, 2010 All views expressed are those of the author only and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve.
Presentation transcript:

Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University and NBER CIRET Conference, New York City October 14, 2010 Controversial Issues About the Recession and Recovery

The Plan: From Long-Run to Short-Run to Policy The reasoning behind my pessimistic long-term US growth forecast, recently summarized in Business Week Graphs on dimensions of the weak labor market. The labor market is in worse condition than the product market. New research on the “Demise of Okun’s Law” and the near-term division of output growth between productivity, hours, and employment growth – –Why is the labor market in such bad shape compared to the product market? The policy debate: what more can monetary and fiscal policy do?

The Pessimistic Long-run Conclusion Comparing forecasts with actual: Output growth will slow from 2.9 to 2.4 Output per capita growth will slow from 1.74 to 1.4 That is the slowest growth of income per capita “since George Washington” Compare to or

Growth in MFP vs. Ypc by Time Interval,

Components of Growth in Y/H, vs

From Y/H to Y/N, the Role of Falling LFPR

Possible Further Room for Pessimism These projections are based on the historical record of growth between years of “normal” utilization (1987, 2007) No allowance here for long-run “tainting” effects of the current abysmal economy – –Loss of skills and human capital – –Years of low investment will increase the age of the capital stock and reduce the growth of both capital quantity and capital quality

Policy Prescriptions for Long-Run Growth Problem Slowdown reflects aging of population and stagnation of educational attainment Solve the first by immigration, particularly of high-skilled people Work on the second by better government- run student loan programs and direct measures to address the rising relative price of college education (“higher education cost disease”) Stimulate demand to avert long-run supply sclerosis

Next We’ll Look at Graphs of Raw Numbers for Current US Labor Market Now We’re Looking at – –Magnitudes: How Severe Is This Episode? – –Timing: Do Labor Market Indicators Change at the Same Time as Output (Real GDP)? – –Which Measures Are the Most Different from ? We Consider as a Single Recession and also as two back-to-back recessions – –(Jan-July 1980 and Jul 81 to Nov 82)

Output Gap vs. Gap in Aggregate Hours of Work

Conclusion to this point Comparing the 9.6 level of U rate now to 10.8 in Nov & Dec 1982 is misleading – –U rate in July 81 or even Jan 80 started higher – –Overall increase in is greater – –Much more incidence this time of long-term unemployment and forced part-time The emergence of long-term unemployment: is the US becoming more like Europe’s two decades ? Stylized fact: If the empl/pop ratio was the same today as in 2000, there would be 14 million more jobs (9 million from lower unemployment rate, 5 million from higher LFPR) “New Normal” for LFPR? For U Rate?

Documenting and Explaining the Change in Cyclical Labor-market Behavior Documenting – –A new approach to disentangling trends and cycles Use of “outside information” from inflation equation to determine the unemployment rate gap – –A new approach to data Total Economy not NFPB Sector Conventional vs. Unconventional Measures – –Initial finding as reported before: hours gap > output gap in , the reverse of

The Output Identity: Simple Version and Conventional Version

Conventional Compared to Unconventional Identity

Kalman Trends, Conv vs. Unconv Output

Aggregate Hours

Total Economy Labor Productivity (Y/H)

Output Gap vs. Gap in Aggregate Hours of Work

Close-up for Period since 1986

Regression Analysis Changes in hours gap regressed on – –Own lags – –Current and lagged changes in output gap – –Error-correction term (lagged level of hours gap) – –“End of expansion” dummy variables (capture overhiring end of expansion, underhiring beginning of recovery) “Early recovery productivity bubble”

Long-run Coefficients: The “Demise of Okun’s Law”

Explanations Offered in My Research The “Disposable Worker” Hypothesis Similar sources as rising US inequality Increased market power of managers and highly paid professionals – –Increased share of executive incomes coming from stock options Reduced market power of workers due to: – –Declining unions, declining real minimum wage, low-skilled immigration, and imports

Implications for the Unemployment Rate Translate forecast growth in hours into the hours gap Regression coefficients imply roughly 60% of an improvement in hours gap flows into employment rate gap Optimistic path, output gap shrinks 0.8 points per year (3.3 vs. 2.5) Pessimistic path, output gap stays where it is forever (2.5 percent growth forever)

Implied Unemployment Paths

Reasons This May Be Too Optimistic Why does pessimistic U Rate decline even though output gap is fixed? – –Error-correction term implies mean reversion both of negative hours gap and positive productivity gap Division of predict real GDP growth between productivity and hours: mean reversion may be delayed – –Much publicized “reluctance to hire” – –Matched with “reluctance to invest” – –Firms are not expecting the 3.3 growth scenario If the 3.3 growth rate actually happened, short-term outcome would be more productivity growth and less hours and employment growth But will that output scenario happen?

Reasons To Be Skeptical of Optimistic Scenario Reinhart-Rogoff. Recoveries after financial crises are slower than after garden-variety recessions Ineffectiveness of monetary policy Political paralysis just as Obama stimulus is about to be withdrawn

The Fed is Out of Ammunition Textbook IS-LM model still taught in intermediate undergrad macro Monetary policy is ineffective if: – –Horizontal LM curve – –Vertical IS curve The Fed now is plagued by both Why should QE2 work since QE1 didn’t?

The Fed Can’t Control the Cost of Business Borrowing

Fundamental Causes of Weak Recovery (Vertical IS) Consumption – –Collapse of Household Net Worth – –Record-high indebtedness Residential Construction – –Foreclosures and Under-water Mortgages – –People walk away from under-water – –Their credit is tainted for years – –Their houses add to supply but not to demand – –My mortgage broker’s story, 3 vs. 80

Consumption Problem: Household Balance Sheet

Housing Starts Used to be a Leading Indicator, but Not Any More

Where is Fiscal Policy? Krugman NYT Monday: it wasn’t tried. Look at government employment excluding census workers The Obama stimulus was too small and too much was wasted on tax cuts and capital-intensive infrastructure spending

What Ended the Great Depression? Chart Extends Quarterly

How Does the Obama Stimulus Measure Up?

The Current Debate, What About Inside vs. Outside Govt Debt? Monetary Policy is parralized but still can support fiscal expansion A fiscal stimulus does not raise outside debt (“held by the public”) if the Fed buys the bonds This is the classic Milton Friedman “heliocopter drop” of money In today’s terminology, QE2 supports a fiscal stimulus But where is the political will?

Conclusions A Real GDP path of 3.3 brings the U rate down to 6 percent by early 2014 Reasons this may be too optimistic Pessimistic path leaves U rate at 8 percent in 2016, Europe déjà vu Model has mean-reversion built in, underhiring in will be reversed, productivity bubble will be reversed. Basic problems: Reinhart-Rogoff, ineffective monetary policy, lack of political will on fiscal policy, about to become much worse after the elections