The Rebuilding of
America
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Fareed Zakaria) August 18, 2011 — Every week brings fresh evidence that
America’s unemployment crisis is much deeper and more systemic than predicted —
yet Washington seems unwilling or unable to do anything about it.
Fears of the budget deficit and a dysfunctional
political climate have paralyzed people on both sides of the political aisle.
The result is America is “sleepwalking” through its biggest crisis, writes
Mohamed El-Erian, the low-key co-CEO of PIMCO.
Around 24 million Americans
are unemployed or underemployed (the latter in part-time
jobs that average $19,000, half the median wage). If
these people don’t find jobs soon, they will lose skills
and work habits and become permanently unemployable,
with grim consequences for their families, communities
and the country.
And if employment growth
does not pick up significantly, tax revenue will stay
depressed, unemployment costs will rise and the deficit
will balloon well beyond current projections.
We still seem to be hoping
somehow this problem will resolve itself, but it won’t.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke explained this
week the economy has gone through the worst financial
crisis and the deepest housing collapse since the Great
Depression.
In fact, the problem is even
worse.
Employment growth has been
stalled since 2000. If not for the housing and credit
bubble, this jobs crisis would have revealed itself much
earlier.
We’re in a new world for the
American worker. Technological change and globalization
allow companies to get more output with fewer workers.
Emerging markets provide millions of skilled workers who
can produce the same products at a fraction of the price
that Americans can.
The Bureau of Labor
Statistics notes from 1947 till 2000, productivity
growth was correlated with employment growth. Since
2000, they have diverged. Productivity has risen while
employment has fallen. The Nobel Prize-winning economist
Michael Spence has concluded in America, growth and
employment will diverge in the future.
Does this mean we are stuck
in a low-growth, low-employment future? No, but the
crisis is structural, and we have to recognize its scope
and urgency. “Shutting off the alarm and pulling the
blanket over one’s head is not a solution,” says El-Erian.
Republican concerns about
government spending over the long term are
understandable, but cutting spending in the short run
will result in more unemployment and slower growth.
President Obama talks about
jobs but seems too paralyzed to do something ambitious
to help create them. Even Bernanke said this week there
isn’t much he could do about the slow-growth,
high-unemployment trajectory we are on. Have we all
become fatalists?
In fact, we could enact some
measures that would spur job creation, many with a
limited effect on the deficit. Most immediately,
Washington needs to find ways to employ the millions of
workers whose jobs disappeared with the housing bust.
The simplest way to help
them, and the country, would be to create a national
infrastructure bank to repair and rebuild America’s
infrastructure — which is in a shambles and ranks 23rd
globally, according to the World Economic Forum — down
from sixth only a decade ago.
House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor has played down this proposal as just more
stimulus, but if Republicans set aside ideology they
would see it is actually an opportunity to push for two
of their favorite ideas: privatization and the
elimination of earmarks.
The United States builds
infrastructure in a remarkably socialist manner; the
government funds, builds and operates almost all
American infrastructure.
In many countries in Europe
and Asia, the private sector plays a large role in
financing and operation of roads, highways, railroads
and airports, as well as other public resources.
An infrastructure bank would
create a mechanism by which such private-sector
participation would become possible here as well. Yes,
some public money would be involved, mostly through
issuing bonds, but with interest rates at historic lows,
this is the time to rebuild. Such projects, with huge
long-term payoffs, could genuinely be called
investments, not expenditures.
A national infrastructure
bank would also address a legitimate complaint of the
Tea Party — earmarks. One of the reasons federal
spending has been inefficient is Congress wants to
spread money around in ways that make political sense
but are economically inefficient.
An infrastructure bank would
make these decisions using cost-benefit analysis, in a
meritocratic system, rather than basing decisions on
patronage and whimsy.
The country needs much more:
a revival of manufacturing, emphasizing technical
training and apprenticeship programs; aggressive
measures to promote those industries that are booming,
such as entertainment and tourism; an expansion of
retraining; streamlining the patent process; more visas
for skilled immigrants to stay and create companies and
jobs in America.
These should be part of a
national plan for jobs President Obama must lay out
soon.
But start with something
that would have an immediate impact and put people back
to work — the rebuilding of America.