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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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April 3,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Labor Department Releases Key March Jobs Data Friday
The Labor Department will report
employment data for March on Friday.
This is a key indicator of the depth and
duration of the recession, which began
in December. If the payroll jobs decline
for a third straight month, it will be
hard to deny that the economy has
entered a recession of unknown depth and
duration.
Unlike past post-World War II
recessions, the current meltdown is
caused by a crisis of confidence among
fixed income investors, such as
insurance companies and pension funds,
in the integrity and solvency of the
major Wall Street banks. The rapid
decline in the market value of
mortgage-back bonds issued by these
banks, and erosion in the balance sheets
of the major banks caused by the
declining value of unsold bonds on the
books of these banks, represents a
modern day run on the banks, which has
required the Fed to loan the banks sums
totaling about 4 percent of GDP.
Further job losses will indicate
problems in the financial sector are
damaging the real economy in lasting
ways that will take many months, even
years, to repair. The Administration,
predictably, counsels calm, but apathy
toward prompt movement to repair damage
caused by the shut down in bank access
to the fixed income market to raise
funds has caused credit to contract for
sound businesses. Even as the Fed cuts
interest rates and pumps up the balance
sheets of banks, business loans contract
and layoffs escalate throughout the
economy.
Further, structural problems, like
the growing trade deficit with China and
runaway price of oil, are further
hampering prospects for employment
growth. Unfortunately, the
Administration’s responses to these
problems have been tepid and encourage
pessimism among business in the economic
outlook. Predictably these businesses
cut hiring and layoff workers adding to
the prospects of an employment death
spiral.
In Friday’s jobs report the key
variables to watch are:
Jobs Creation. March 7, the
Labor Department reported the economy
lost 63,000 payroll jobs in February,
after losing 22,000 jobs in January.
In addition, retail sales and industrial
production have been falling, indicating
the housing and credit crisis are
causing a general contraction of
economic activity. First quarter GDP
growth will likely be negative.
If payroll jobs fell again in March
that would be the strongest indicator
yet that the economy has entered a long
recession—one of unpredictable length
and depth. The consensus forecast is
that the economy lost 50,000 jobs in
March. My published forecast is for a
35,000 decline.
Unemployment. In February,
unemployment fell to 4.8 percent, as
statistically estimated by the Labor
Department, even as the number of people
holding jobs fell, because of revisions
in measures of the adult populations,
and labor force participation among
adults.
Since President Bush took office,
adult participation in the labor force
has been declining owing to worsening
labor market conditions. If labor force
participation today were at the same
level as when President Bush took the
helm, the unemployment rate would now
exceed 6.5 percent. The
difference is discouraged workers that
have quit looking for work that the
Labor Department does not count.
Private Sector Payrolls. In
February, government employment expanded
by 38,000 even as overall payroll jobs
contracted 63,000. This indicates the
private business economy shed 101,000
jobs. It is difficult for the public
sector to continuing expanding if the
tax base—the private sector economy—is
contracting. Further contraction in
private sector employment in March
indicates that job losses for the entire
economy will accelerate as we move
through 2008, and the economy may be
headed for a death spiral.
Construction. Historically,
manufacturing and construction offer
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. These
phenomenon at are the heart of middle
class and blue collar discontent that
color the economic debate in the
presidential primaries.
Manufacturing Employment. In
February, manufacturing lost 52,000
jobs, and over the last 91 months
manufacturing has shed more than 3.6
million jobs.
The growing trade deficit with China
and other Asian exporters is a key
factor. 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
and the federal budget deficit 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.
To affect this policy, China
intervenes in currency markets, selling
yuan for dollars and other western
currencies at a discount from a market
determined price. In 2007, this
intervention reached $461 billion or 44
percent of China’s exports. Ben Bernanke
has correctly characterized these as an
effective subsidy on exports.
Sadly, Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson, in a recent speech to the
Economics Club of Chicago, expressed the
view that the employment situation in
manufacturing is healthy and
characterized as protectionist
substantive efforts to redress exchange
rate problems with China, proposed by
Administration critics in Congress. With
such apathy from the Administration and
contempt expressed by Paulson for those
who differ with him on appropriate
tactics, it is small wonder that blue
collar workers and their unions question
the efficacy of U.S. trade policy.
A crisis of confidence has emerged
regarding the conduct of U.S. trade
policy, and the Republican
Administration and Democratic majority
in Congress ignore it at peril of the
nation.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
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