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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
September 6,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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U.S. Productivity
Growth Declines An Opportunity for Ben
Bernanke?
Today, the Department of Labor
reported productivity in the nonfarm
private business sector increased at a
1.6 percent annual rate in the second
quarter from the first quarter of 2006.
This was an upward revision from the 1.1
percent preliminary estimate published
August 8.
On a year-over-year basis, second
quarter productivity in the nonfarm
business sector was up 2.5 percent. That
is a solid performance and indicates the
growth potential of the U.S. economy
remains formidable.
The 1.6 percent second quarter
productivity gain was sharply lower than
the 4.3 percent jump scored in the first
quarter; however, the poor second
quarter estimate does not point to a
trend but rather reflects the erratic
nature of quarterly productivity data.
The absence of substantial
inflationary pressures, outside the
volatile energy sector, indicates the
second quarter dip was temporary. Only
strong productivity growth would permit
nonfinancial corporations and
manufacturers to continue posting gains
in profits while paying higher wages and
raw material prices.
Importantly, nonfinancial
corporations posted a 2.2 percent gain
in the second quarter over the first
quarter, and 4.8 percent increase on a
year-over-year basis. Rising interest
rates hurt performance at banks and
other financial companies, and this
pulled down the average for second
quarter productivity growth for the
entire economy.
Outlook for 2007
The superior performance of
nonfinancial corporations indicates
productivity growth is likely to
re-emerge in the third and fourth
quarters.
The productivity performance of U.S.
factories remained particularly
encouraging. Manufacturing productivity
advanced at a 2.6 percent annual rate
over the first quarter, and for durable
goods, productivity grew at a 3.7
percent annual rate. The year-over-year
growth rates for all manufacturers and
durable goods were 3.7 and 6.0 percent,
respectively.
Steady interest rates and moderating
energy prices are setting the stage for
resurgent productivity and GDP growth in
the fourth quarter and first half of
2006.
A stock market rally will provide a
leading indicator of better times ahead.
Sustaining Permanently Strong
Growth
The continued strong performance in
manufacturing goods raises serious
questions about the large trade deficit,
and difficulties U.S. companies
encounter competing with imports and
winning export markets. Superior
productivity performance, especially in
durable goods, indicates U.S.
competitive performance in global
markets is held back by an overvalued
dollar, federal budget deficits,
skyrocketing health care costs,
ineffective U.S. energy policies, and
regulatory burdens imposed by
Washington.
Were the Chinese yuan and other Asian
currencies revalued against the dollar,
the shift in resources toward export and
import-competing industries to reduce
the trade deficit would give
productivity a significant jolt, because
these industries exhibit 50 percent
higher labor productivity growth and
spend much more on R&D than the rest of
the economy. Cutting the trade deficit
in half would boost R&D spending enough
to push sustainable productivity growth
to 3 to 3.5 percent per year, and
potential GDP growth above 4 percent.
Sadly, President Bush's current policy
agenda offers little hope that the
Administration will take significant
steps to remedy these pressing problems.
His proposals are reworks of previous
initiatives and palliatives.
Rising productivity notwithstanding,
outsized federal budget deficits, the
overvalued dollar, uncontrolled health
care costs, and ineffective energy
development policies make the Federal
Reserves responsibility to maintain both
growth and price stability much more
difficult
With inflation moderating in the
months ahead Ben Bernanke has a golden
opportunity to speaking out on these
vital issues.
Strong performance in nonfinancial
sectors indicates the growth potential
of the U.S. economy remains closer to
four percent than the three percent now
expected. We can accomplish that with
the right monetary, fiscal, exchange
rate, energy, and health care policies.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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