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Is manufacturing really signalling good news for the US economy?

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Published : October 19th, 2009
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Category : Editorials

 

 

 

 

It is economic theory that informs statistics and not the reverse. In other words, statistics should be interpreted according to theory. Unfortunately the failure of a large number of economists to grasp this fact, including some of the very smart ones, has had the most adverse consequences, consequences that are still with us. The now discredited Phillips curve immediately springs to mind. This little statistical study purported to show an inverse relationship between unemployment and the rate of inflation, despite historical evidence to the contrary and basic economic theory.

 

It was therefore concluded that all that was needed to prevent unemployment from rising was a little more inflation. Members of the Austrian school warned that the statistics had been misinterpreted and that the recommended monetary policy would eventually result in more inflation and more unemployment. Events proved them correct.

 

This brings us to the current state of US manufacturing. It is being reported with glee by the media that US industrial production expanded for the third consecutive month and that industrial capacity inched up from 69.9 per cent in August to 70.5 per cent in September. (Marginal movements like this under a Republican administration are always met with derision from America's corrupt media). The ISM Performance Manufacturing Index has been above 50 since August, lending support to the view that recovery is underway. Many economic commentators have now assumed that this expansion must increase the demand for labour and that the only reason this has not happened so far is that unemployment is a lagging indicator.

 

As I have pointed out before, though a reduction in idle capacity increases GDP it is in no way a measure of economic growth which is properly defined as capital accumulation. The 1930s are a good example of what I mean. From 1933 onwards there was a significant increase in GDP accompanied by a fall in idle capacity. Nevertheless this period was still one of capital consumption as evidenced by the fact that the amount of metal working machinery more than 10 years old rose from 48 per cent in 1930 to 70 per cent in 1940, a 45.8 per cent increase. Then there was the tragic level of unemployment that was maintained by the Roosevelt administration's insistence on keeping wage rates above their market clearing levels. (These facts do not deter leftists from praising this period as a roaring success for big government).

 

Rather than look at an increase in capacity — which is still about 15 per cent below its average as from 1967, a figure that Obama's media cheerleaders managed to overlook — we ought to be examining the composition of the real unemployment figures. At the moment the official jobless rate stands at 9.8 per cent, a figure that no one takes seriously. The actual rate if short time workers and those forced to work part time are included is about 16 per cent.

 

What we have here are millions of underemployed workers. We can therefore expect any downward trend in idle capacity to be accompanied by increased working hours rather than a reduction in the official unemployment rate. This fact has not escaped most economic commentators, many of whom now believe that America is going to be stuck with a massive and permanent pool of unemployment.

 

Once again, one must apply a little economic thinking to the problem. They note that increased earnings are coming from cost cutting which has meant rising unemployment. From this they conclude that the consequent fall in incomes will aggravate the recession by reducing consumer demand. These people do not realise that they are assuming a simple two-stage economy: a production stage and a consumption stage when in fact we live in incredibly complex multi-stage economies with the result that

 

There are many stages of payments which go to make up the gross income but which are not involved in the computation of net income. The larger number of payments is not from consumers to producers, but is made between producers and producers, and tends to cancel out in any computation of net income or of net product value. "In fact, income produced or net product is roughly only about one-third of gross income." (C. A. Phillips, T. F. McManus and R. W. Nelson, Banking and the Business Cycle, Macmillan and Company, 1937, p. 71).

 

As I have stressed a great many times before, the end of a boom always begins in manufacturing*. And this recession is no different. If the underconsumptionists were right every recession would start with consumer industries laying off workers followed by industries at the higher stages of production. However, we find that the reverse is always true, a fact that was well known to economists before the old wisdom was swept away by Keynesian fallacies. In 1934 it was estimated

 

that of a total of almost 14 million persons without jobs at the peak of unemployment in March, 1933, 6½ million were from the durable goods industries, nearly 6 million were from the "service" industries, and only 1½ million were from the consumption goods industries. (Ibid. p. 235).

 

The classical economists were spot on. What matters is production without which there can be no consumption. They also understood the role of capital in raising real wage rates. It is important to recognise this fact if a proper understanding of wage rate movements is to be acquired. What matters is not an increase in wages but an increase in wage rates — meaning the gross wage which includes payroll taxes, health insurance, etc. — within a full-employment context, i.e., one in which there is work for all those able and willing to labour.

 

In this situation wage rates can only continue to increase so long as the process of capital accumulation continues. In other words, it is the accumulation of capital that raises the "intensity of demand" (real wage rates) for labour. (Mountifort Longfield, Lectures on Political Economy, Richard Milliken and Son, 1834, p.195, and Nassau W. Senior, An Outline of the Science of Political Economy, Augustus M. Kelley, 1965, pp. 69-72, 170-730).

 

What this means is that America need not have to endure a large pool of able unemployed so long as wage rates are allowed to adjust to market conditions and that the unemployed are willing to work. Therefore the idea that GDP has to grow at a certain amount to reduce unemployment by a given per centage is erroneous. But it is possible that the boom has wasted so much capital that full unemployment can only be restored by lowering real wage rates for a considerable proportion of the labour force.

 

Moreover, the situation would be greatly aggravated by a large pool of illegal immigrants, something that doesn't seem to bother Congressional Democrats or leftwing union leaders like the SEIU's Andrew Stern. Therefore those who think a simple restoration of industrial production to its average level will be sufficient to raise real wage rates and promote economic growth are making an unwarranted assumption, particularly in the light of Obama's anti-growth program, which is what his policies really amount to.

 

While one can only speculate about whether there is now sufficient capital to maintain real wages rates at previous levels (unfortunately one cannot measure the quantity of capital) there is absolutely no doubt that Obama's energy policies will literally make it impossible for America to maintain its capital structure — let alone extend it. This means the vast majority of Americans will suffer a massive drop in their living standards if these insane energy proposals are implemented.

 

Even if his energy policies were sound his tax, borrow and spend policies are thoroughly destructive of economic growth. For example, reasonably informed commentators recognise that his massive borrowing and huge deficits must eventually drive up interest rates. What most of them don't get is that this will kill off time-consuming projects, the sort that are instrumental in raising living standards. In short, the rise in interest rates could be sufficient to kill economic growth. This is because they would be reflecting the amount of savings that the government was consuming at the expense of capital accumulation.

 

Americans have yet to grasp just what the Obama White House has in store for them.

 

*I am referring to the classic boom-bust-cycle

 

Gerard Jackson

Brookesnews.com

 

Also by Gerard Jackson

 

 

Gerard Jackson is Brookesnews Economics Editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Gerard Jackson is the founder and economics editor of The New Australian (now Brookesnews.com), and offers offers timely articles focused on "events of the day" from a free-market perspective.
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