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<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><B>-----Original Message-----</B><BR><B>From:
</B>Michael Eisenscher <<A
href="mailto:meisenscher@igc.org">meisenscher@igc.org</A>><BR><B>To: </B><A
href="mailto:Solidarity4Ever@igc.topica.com">Solidarity4Ever@igc.topica.com</A>
<<A
href="mailto:Solidarity4Ever@igc.topica.com">Solidarity4Ever@igc.topica.com</A>>;
<A
href="mailto:LLNews-post-4244@igc.topica.com">LLNews-post-4244@igc.topica.com</A>
<<A
href="mailto:LLNews-post-4244@igc.topica.com">LLNews-post-4244@igc.topica.com</A>><BR><B>Date:
</B>Monday, July 10, 2000 3:03 AM<BR><B>Subject:
</B>PRODUCTIVITY<BR><BR></DIV></FONT>
<DIV>Sunday, July 9, 2000 |</DIV><BR>
<DIV>Just How Productive Are U.S. Workers? </DIV><BR><BR>
<DIV>By DAVID FRIEDMAN</DIV><BR>
<DIV> Behind the Federal Reserve Board's interest-rate
deliberations and </DIV>
<DIV>months of sluggish stock-market performance lies a nagging question: Why
did </DIV>
<DIV>U.S. productivity, the nation's economic output per labor hour, suddenly
</DIV>
<DIV>accelerate in 1995 after decades of stagnation? The answer will determine
</DIV>
<DIV>whether America is truly leading the world into a new, prosperous era, or
</DIV>
<DIV>whether its good times reflect unique circumstances that can, and likely
</DIV>
<DIV>will, change for the worse. </DIV>
<DIV> The benefits of productivity are indisputable.
When more products and </DIV>
<DIV>services can be created from less labor, capital and raw materials, the
</DIV>
<DIV>economy can expand without inflation. Demand and supply roughly balance.
</DIV>
<DIV>Prices stabilize. Unprecedented levels of employment, wealth creation and
</DIV>
<DIV>consumption become jointly sustainable. </DIV>
<DIV> "New economy" enthusiasts claim that
information technologies like the </DIV>
<DIV>Internet and computers explain America's recent productivity spurt. In the
</DIV>
<DIV>early 1990s, these technologies spread throughout the economy. By the
middle </DIV>
<DIV>of the decade, business was wired for success. America's digital rebirth
</DIV>
<DIV>supercharged everything from the nation's stock markets to once-moribund
</DIV>
<DIV>manufacturing sectors. </DIV>
<DIV> This happy story is a staple of the business and
news media. But it's </DIV>
<DIV>supported by surprisingly weak evidence. Some of America's apparent </DIV>
<DIV>productivity gain is attributable to changes, adopted in 1995, in the way
</DIV>
<DIV>government keeps its statistics. In fast-growth periods, moreover, capital
</DIV>
<DIV>investment usually rises faster than work hours. This artificially boosts
</DIV>
<DIV>output relative to labor and overstates real productivity improvements.
</DIV>
<DIV> When adjusted for such factors, the productivity
data present a bigger </DIV>
<DIV>paradox. It turns out that during 1995-99, all America's real productivity
</DIV>
<DIV>gains were achieved by durable manufacturing industries: makers of cars,
</DIV>
<DIV>furniture and computer hardware. According to Northwestern University
</DIV>
<DIV>economist Robert J. Gordon, productivity growth rates actually declined in
</DIV>
<DIV>the nearly 90% of the U.S. economy outside these sectors. But nondurable
</DIV>
<DIV>industries like trade and financial services are by far the most avid
</DIV>
<DIV>consumers of computer and information technology. Why did their
productivity </DIV>
<DIV>fall? </DIV>
<DIV> Skeptics suggest that new-economy sectors merely
repackage, rather than </DIV>
<DIV>create, high-value information; functions like retail sales are displaced,
</DIV>
<DIV>not better ones invented. The Internet is counterproductive if it
encourages </DIV>
<DIV>personal e-mailing or shopping while on the job. Real productivity gains as
a </DIV>
<DIV>result of automating typing or databases were realized years ago when
</DIV>
<DIV>computers were first introduced. Developments since then have added </DIV>
<DIV>increasingly marginal benefits. Even business-to-business Internet links,
</DIV>
<DIV>thought to boost productivity by improving interfirm information flows, may
</DIV>
<DIV>prove disappointing if they duplicate, rather than enhance, fax, telephone
</DIV>
<DIV>and other existing options. </DIV>
<DIV> This may help explain the productivity declines
suffered by most of the </DIV>
<DIV>U.S. economy. But can information technology account for the productivity
</DIV>
<DIV>gains in durable manufacturing? Or do other factors, such as historically
low </DIV>
<DIV>component and raw-material costs and an increasingly servile labor force,
</DIV>
<DIV>better explain what's happening? </DIV>
<DIV> Part of the productivity story in manufacturing is
unquestionably about </DIV>
<DIV>the decline of working-class power amid the pressures of globalization and
</DIV>
<DIV>the rise of nontraditional labor markets. Recent Federal Reserve studies,
for </DIV>
<DIV>example, show that America's true manufacturing work force is twice as
large </DIV>
<DIV>as officially reported because of the skyrocketing use of
"temporary" </DIV>
<DIV>employees. This boosts apparent productivity by severely undercounting
actual </DIV>
<DIV>labor hours in an industry and by reducing benefit and wage burdens. During
</DIV>
<DIV>the 1990s, in fact, real hourly manufacturing wages rose more slowly
relative </DIV>
<DIV>to productivity growth than at any time in the last 40 years. </DIV>
<DIV> The unprecedented price stability of commodities
and raw materials </DIV>
<DIV>during the 1990s also played a big role. After the Gulf War, energy prices
</DIV>
<DIV>annually rose by an average of just 1%, compared with more than 13% a year
in </DIV>
<DIV>the previous two decades. Energy and material costs are deducted from U.S.
</DIV>
<DIV>gross output to calculate productivity. When global or political conditions
</DIV>
<DIV>keep such key prices low, domestic productivity automatically rises. </DIV>
<DIV> Then there's the problem of determining which
countries and what workers </DIV>
<DIV>actually generate the reported improvements in productivity. The way </DIV>
<DIV>productivity is measured in the import-dependent high-tech sectors, which
</DIV>
<DIV>account for the vast majority of U.S. growth, greatly complicates matters.
</DIV>
<DIV> To measure the "true" output of U.S.
computer makers, the government </DIV>
<DIV>uses a novel technique: It adjusts values according to product </DIV>
<DIV>characteristics like processor speeds or hard-drive capacities. For
example, </DIV>
<DIV>if $1,000 buys a 200 MHz machine in 1997 and an otherwise identical 400 MHz
</DIV>
<DIV>computer a year later, manufacturing productivity is said to have doubled
</DIV>
<DIV>even though market prices did not change. </DIV>
<DIV> This technique can grossly overstate the value of
U.S. manufacturing. </DIV>
<DIV>Does doubling processor speeds, for example, really make a computer twice
as </DIV>
<DIV>valuable? Until late last year, moreover, when the data were partly
revised, </DIV>
<DIV>all U.S. productivity growth since 1995 was attributed to computer
production </DIV>
<DIV>alone. </DIV>
<DIV> Computers, like most durable sectors, are heavily
dependent on imports. </DIV>
<DIV>As much as 80% of all computer imports are transfers between foreign </DIV>
<DIV>producers and U.S. companies like Apple or Compaq. Sophisticated components
</DIV>
<DIV>like microprocessors are shipped from country to country for manufacturing
</DIV>
<DIV>purposes before they are assembled into a finished product. </DIV>
<DIV> Suppose that the reason why a U.S. company can
sell a 400 MHz machine </DIV>
<DIV>today for the same price as last year's 200 MHz model is that overseas
</DIV>
<DIV>suppliers were unable to raise prices on the faster processor. The cost to
</DIV>
<DIV>the U.S. company stays the same for a better-performing crucial component.
</DIV>
<DIV>But unless the "true" cost of the imported processor is adjusted
for quality, </DIV>
<DIV>just as the value of the finished product is increased to reflect better
</DIV>
<DIV>performance, reported U.S. productivity will be too high. The actual </DIV>
<DIV>productivity increase would have been achieved almost entirely by the
</DIV>
<DIV>overseas supplier's manufacturing skills or overseas pricing constraints.
</DIV>
<DIV> There is good reason to think that the U.S.
economy may, in large part, </DIV>
<DIV>be benefiting from productivity subsidies of this sort. During the last
</DIV>
<DIV>decade, worldwide overcapacity caused manufacturing and high-tech component
</DIV>
<DIV>prices to plummet. Then the Asian fiscal crisis forced some of the world's
</DIV>
<DIV>most sophisticated high-tech producers to cut prices even more to earn
</DIV>
<DIV>dollars and shore up their countries' weakened currencies. Coupled with
</DIV>
<DIV>virtually limitless low-cost manufacturing opportunities in the Third
World, </DIV>
<DIV>in the 1990s U.S. producers could obtain the most advanced components and
</DIV>
<DIV>technology at unbelievably low cost. </DIV>
<DIV> Statistically, there is no difference between
productivity generated by </DIV>
<DIV>brilliant innovations like the Internet or by squeezing lower prices from
</DIV>
<DIV>labor and suppliers of raw materials and components. Each story implies,
</DIV>
<DIV>however, dramatically different future prospects for the U.S. </DIV>
<DIV> If the happy story is correct--productivity and
technology go hand in </DIV>
<DIV>hand--Americans can expect that current worries about an overheating U.S.
</DIV>
<DIV>economy will be pushed aside by a tidal wave of productivity-led growth.
</DIV>
<DIV>Tight labor markets and soaring trade deficits may cause some short-term
</DIV>
<DIV>difficulties, but the U.S. can literally produce its way out of these and
</DIV>
<DIV>other potential growth bottlenecks. As other nations copy U.S. innovations,
</DIV>
<DIV>moreover, a worldwide productivity boom will ensue. </DIV>
<DIV> Should it turn out that U.S. productivity gains
come more at the expense </DIV>
<DIV>of domestic groups, like the working class, which is disproportionately
</DIV>
<DIV>affected by globalization, or foreign producers suffering from adverse
</DIV>
<DIV>financial conditions, the future is far less rosy. It is true that </DIV>
<DIV>working-class political power is at its lowest point in decades. Also,
</DIV>
<DIV>countries like Japan, China and most of the middle- and lower-income world
</DIV>
<DIV>appear locked in investment and trade patterns that, for the time being,
</DIV>
<DIV>provide the U.S. with both high-quality, low-cost products and the capital
to </DIV>
<DIV>consume them. </DIV>
<DIV> The problem with building wealth from economic
inequity is that, </DIV>
<DIV>eventually, something bad happens. Even now, Asian opinion makers are
</DIV>
<DIV>discussing ways of eliminating their increasingly unattractive dependence
on </DIV>
<DIV>the United States. Blue-collar labor may now be docile, but should the
</DIV>
<DIV>economy slow and the brunt of any hardship fall, as appears likely, on the
</DIV>
<DIV>nation's "temporary" work force, social unrest will follow. Over
time, it's </DIV>
<DIV>difficult to appease the less privileged and avoid conflict while
preserving </DIV>
<DIV>the unbalanced domestic and international relationships that feed upscale
</DIV>
<DIV>U.S. wealth. That's why the markets cheer adverse employment data at home
and </DIV>
<DIV>stable, but unspectacular conditions abroad. </DIV>
<DIV> Uncertainty about the reasons for U.S.
productivity growth thus drives </DIV>
<DIV>marketplace and policy anxiety. It's possible that the data may yet prove a
</DIV>
<DIV>harbinger of a beneficent economic era. Yet, the chance that they chronicle
</DIV>
<DIV>an all-too familiar, potentially explosive social reality cannot be </DIV>
<DIV>discounted. Everything depends on getting the story straight. * </DIV>
<DIV>- - -</DIV><BR>
<DIV>David Friedman, a Contributing Editor to Opinion, Is a Markle Senior Fellow
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