Archive for the ‘Wages, Income & Prosperity’ Category

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sat Mar 28th 2009 at 10:14am UTC

America’s Financial Oligarchs

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

The ever-growing financial bailouts have produced a growing sense of outrage in America. Simon Johnson, professor of economics at MIT and former chief economist at MIT, writes in The Atlantic that America’s financial elite are putting their won interests ahead of their country and essentially looting it to enrich themselves and enhance their power.

Johnson compares America’s new financial oligarchs to their Russian counterparts, and says that their considerable political clout amounts to a “silent coup” which paralyzes the country from undertaking much needed sweeping reform of its banks and financial institutions.

The solution is obvious to anyone who has been part of the IMF or understands the financial crises that have affected other countries. Johnson writes, nationalize the banks and limit the power of the financial elite. But he fears this cannot happen because of their unvarnished power.

Johnson seems convinced that if the financial roots of the the current crisis are not dealt with it will end up worse then the Great Depression.

Sobering stuff. Read it closely.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Mar 25th 2009 at 8:47am UTC

Crisis Geography

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Andrew Sullivan points to Ed Glaeser’s Economix  post on the geography of unemployment and finds a common thread: “Edward Glaeser compares city to city unemployment numbers and affirms Richard Florida’s thesis.” Glaeser writes:

While the disparity in unemployment rates is enormous, it isn’t random. Some areas aren’t just miraculously better able to handle the downturn. Long-standing features of the urban landscape can explain the bulk of the variation in today’s unemployment rates.

Given the enormous gap in unemployment between skilled and unskilled workers, it isn’t surprising that skills best explain today’s metropolitan unemployment rates. The share of adults with college degrees in 2000 can, on its own, explain about one-half of the variation in the unemployment rate.Somewhat remarkably, the educational level of the metropolitan area before World War II can do almost as well.

Here’s his scatter-plot.

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Glaeser also finds that regional unemployment is “strongly linked to manufacturing.” Here’s his plot of the correlation between current unemployment and manufacturing’s share of the labor force in manufacturing in 1970.

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Regional unemployment is also related to density, finding that “unemployment is lowest in those areas that are most centralized.” Sprawling places appear less resilient economically.

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His conclusions: invest in skills and human capital; “beware industrial policies aimed at keeping America tied to heavy industry;” stop trying to breathe life back into declining regions; and encourage mobility.

While the regional diversity within the United States might prompt politicians to pursue policies that target aid to distressed regions, that seems likely to be counterproductive. America has always dealt with regional economic disparities through migration. … Today’s recession will also prompt mobility, probably toward more skilled, more centralized cities with less historical commitment to manufacturing.”

I could not agree more. Our urban policy, such that it is, is decidedly backward looking. It’s high time urban policy focus on leveraging the three key things – mobility, density, and human capital accumulation – that are real engines of prosperity.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Mar 18th 2009 at 3:46pm UTC

The Creative Economy, Bailouts, and Good Jobs

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009
Matt Yglesias has a nuanced and reasoned response to my earlier post.

I think we need to distinguish between the bailouts and the stimulus here. And then within bailouts, we need to distinguish between the auto bailout and the financial sector bailouts.  So, starting with bailouts. The problem comparing the two bailouts is that social justice considerations and economic considerations point in different directions here …

On stimulus, I think that how well this turns out will ultimately hinge to some extent on the success of the programs. In principle, the stimulus spending—which largely goes to infrastructure, to education, and to health care—ought to greatly facilitate economic transition to the kind of “creative” economy Florida’s envisioning. To the extent that that money winds up wasted on programs that are ineffective we will have bought short-term demand at the price of stalling on long-term adjustments. I’d still say that’s a price worth paying, all things considered, but obviously it’s a good deal worse than a scenario in which these investments turn out to pay off in the long-run in the form of a healthier, better educated population able to move on better transportation and take advantage of faster broadband.

Little to take issue with here. His commenters raise the larger and critically important question of how to fill the gap in high-paying, stable, high-quality jobs for folks without, say, college degrees or who are not members of the creative class.

Max writes:

People like Florida have been arguing for trashing the industrial base so long, they don’t seem to notice that, absent finance, we got nothin’… and certainly no employment for the Richard Florida’s of the world.

First things first: I’m not now nor have I ever been anti-manufacturing, anti-industrial base, or anti-working class. My first book with Martin Kenney was entitled The Breakthrough Illusion: Corporate America’s Failure to Move from Innovation to Mass Production (Basic Books, 1990); my second also with Kenney, Beyond Mass Production (Oxford, 1993) summarized the findings from our large-scale study of leading-edge Japanese manufacturing techniques and how Japanese transplants factories like those of Toyota, Honda, and their suppliers were able to successfully build cars in America with American workers. John Krafcik’s study of the GM-Toyota joint venture, NUMMI, showed how GM’s hubris prevented it from learning much about Toyota’s revolutionary production system. Toyota took great advantage – NUMMI became a “laboratory” for how it could produce cars in the States using unionized UAW workers. Then there’s the story of the fit Lee Iacocca threw after recieving a commissoned study of the Japanese transplants – flinging the document against the wall, stomping his feet, and screaming more or less: “They want us to give up our private lunch room and eat with the workers and our own parking spots, the hell with that.” Nuff said.

I have long said that the inspiration for my theory of the creative economy isn’t hip cities, or gay neighborhoods, or even Apple or Google. It comes from my early, ground-level studies of Toyota where top management essentially told me more than 25 years ago: “We will win and the Big Three will lose. The problem is in your heads and the way you manage. You think the key to success is having a big-shot CEO,  lots of engineers, and scads of high-priced MBAs. We know better. The key to our success lies in mobilizing the collective knowledge, intelligence, and creativity of our factory workers.” Time sure seems to have proved them out. And as I have recounted many times, these are more or less the same words my own father – a factory worker of more than 50 years - told me about the plant he worked in.

Josh G. gets to the nub of the matter:

The problem with a “creative economy” is that it doesn’t have any answer about what to do with the large segment of the population that are non-college graduates. Only about 25% of the adult working population has a Bachelor’s degree or higher. Let’s say that we could double that without watering down standards if we put a lot more money and effort into elementary education, reducing child poverty, cheaper college, removing all the lead paint from the slums, and so forth. Great. That still leaves half the population without a degree. What do they do in the “knowledge economy”? The unspoken answer is that they become low-paid servants. In the long run, I don’t see this as being sustainable.

Some people, for various reasons, are simply not intellectually and/or temperamentally suited to a college education. We as a society need to provide these individuals with employment opportunities that allow them to live in dignity and raise families. The old manufacturing economy did this very well. The new “knowledge economy” – not so much.

Two things here. First, the creative class is a broader category than college-educated people. The creative class accounts for 40 million jobs, roughly a third of our workforce – that’s in-and-of-itself bigger than the share of college-educated people in the adult population. And, as my colleague Charlotta Mellander has found (albeit for Sweden), while nine in 10 people with college degrees work in creative class jobs, half the jobs in the creative class are done by workers without such degrees. In fact, it’s why I came up with the concept of  creative class in the first place – I wanted to examine economic growth not just by looking at education level or “what people learn,” but by zeroing in on the actual jobs they do.

Second, the creative economy is made up of three great classes – not two. In addition to the creative class (roughly a third of the workforce and half of all earnings) and the working class (between a fifth and a quarter of the workforce) is the biggest class of all – the service class, with more than 40 percent of all jobs. These are jobs in food prep, retail trade, and the like. They are mainly low-skill and low paying – the lowest paying of all. Creative class workers make twice what working class people make, but three times what members of the service class make. While working class work is relatively stable, and is made up of a lot of  family-supporting “men’s work,” much of the service class work is unstable and concentrated among less-advantaged groups, women, and single-headed households.

So, we can keep wishing and hoping for manufacturing and working class jobs to come back – and trying to breathe life back into them or protect them. Or we can try another route.

We can work to make service jobs better, more stable, more innovative, and higher-paying jobs. Roger Martin and I outline such a strategy in our recent report to the McGuinty government, Ontario in the Creative Age.

It’s doable, actually. We did it once before – by turning a huge number of manufacturing jobs from ”bad” jobs (the kind Marx liked to impugn capitalism for, or what William Blake dubbed “satanic mills”) into the “good jobs” we bemoan losing. This was a big part of the New Deal – the Wagner Act specifically - which made it easier for workers to form and join unions and to bargain collectively. This ultimately helped to accelerate the transformation of factory jobs from low-paying, unstable, subsistence-level work into much higher-paying, stable, family-supporting work. As scholars of post-war “fordism” have shown, it was this mass increase in working class wages which was a key structural force behind mass prosperity.

My factory-worker father told me as much as a young boy: When he started working in the factory at 13 years of age, it took all nine members of his immediate family - my grandfather, my grandmother who worked in a Newark bakery, my dad, and his six brothers and sisters to make a single living wage. But upon returning from infantry service in World War II, all that had changed. Somehow, as if by magic, his bad job had turned into a good one – complete with high wages, good benefits, and stability. It paid enough so my mother could quit her job, they could buy a house, put us through Catholic school, and ultimately through college.

Manufacturing jobs are not pre-ordained as good jobs. We made them good jobs – through worker struggle, public policy change, and massive institutional innovation.

The same kind of thing can – and must – be done with today’s largest class of service jobs. These are the low-skill, port-of-entry analog to the factory jobs of the past. Service jobs come with an added bonus. Many of them are strongly rooted in place and virtually impervious to off-shoring. Whether it’s preparing food, waitering, or cutting hair a huge number of service jobs must be done in-person. That’s why they call them “personal services.”

We can use the same basic principles of the best manufacturing work distilled from quality manufacturing and the Toyota Production system - work teams, worker engagement and involvement, and continuous improvement - to upgrade service work, make it more innovative and productive, and ultimately higher-paying, more stable, and better. Heck, given the massive and geographically uneven hit to manufacturing employment, men are losing their jobs at a much faster pace than women, and many women in service and care-giving occupations have become their family’s main bread-winners.

So Josh G. is right to a point: Left to its own devices without policy change and institutional innovation, our economy will become more and more divided between a creative class elite and “low-paid servants.” But that’s not our only choice. We have a huge opportunity to transform the growing mass of service jobs  into better, more innnovative, more engaged, more dignified, and higher paying forms of work. We did it 70 years ago for manufacturing work. We can surely do it again.

For the life of me, I cannot understand how and why, across the entire the entire United States, there is near-complete silence on the need to upgrade service work. Tomorrow, President Obama should call for a national summit on improving service work bringing together leading companies in the U.S. and across the world from Whole Foods to Starbucks and Ikea who are already doing this. The opportunity, as my mother was wont to say, is “as clear as the nose on your face.”

I’ll have much more to say on how in the future, but for now I’d love to hear what you think.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Mar 18th 2009 at 10:50am UTC

Are Bailouts Saving the U.S. from a New Great Depression?

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

In a word - no.

Citing Justin Fox’s terrific chart of unemployment then and Kevin Drum’s comments, the always-insightful Matt Yglesias writes:

Populists on the left and opportunists on the right have taken to condemning the series of “bailouts” the government has undertaken since the fall of Lehman Brothers. And certainly I think these situations have been mishandled in a number of respects. And beyond that, I think these situations are inherently problematic in a variety of ways. But there’s a strong case to be made that the policy response to the recession has made things better than they might otherwise have been. When I say something like that, people tend to pester me in response for specifics: What, exactly, would have happened if we’d just let AIG and Citi and Bank of America and others collapse? The problem is that it’s impossible to say, in detail, what would have happened.

Yglesias is right: It’s hard to say exactly what might have happened without the bailouts and stimulus.

But something much bigger is at work today then in the 1930s. It’s the structure of our economy that’s the key – and that dwarfs the effects of government bailouts, stimulus, and related policy.

Our economic class composition and occupational structure have changed dramatically over the past several decades. In the 1930s, the majority of Americans worked in manufacturing and related industries. We had an enormous working class. These industries and jobs are very vulnerable to recessions and business cycle shifts with tremendous ups and downs. Recessions – never mind bigger events like the current crisis – devastate manufacturing and working class jobs -  as Michael Mandel, Ryan Avent (which Yglesias more recently cited), and our own research at the Prosperity Institute has detailed. The creative class, which now accounts for some 40 million workers and about a third of the workforce is much more flexible and resilient. It is this changed economic class and occupational structure which are keeping us from Depression-level unemployment rates.

The bailouts and stimulus, while they may help at the margins, also pose an enormous opportunity costs.  On the one hand, they impede necessary and long-deferred economic adjustments. The auto and auto-related industries suffer from massive over-capacity and must shrink. The housing bubble not only helped spur the financial crisis, it also produced an enormous mis-allocation of resources. Housing prices must come a lot further down before we can reset the economy – and consumer demand – for a new round of growth. The financial and banking sector grew massively bloated – in terms of employment, share of GDP and wages, as the detailed research of NYU’s Thomas Phillipon has shown – and likewise have to come back to earth.

On the other hand, there is the classic question: What better and more effective things might have been done with these trillions? That’s for historians to ponder and decide. But the combination of the massively misallocated resources produced by the bubble (plus the costs of military adventures) combined with humongous bailout spending puts the U.S. behind the economic eight-ball in a way it has not been in more than a century. Having hold on the reserve currency helps, but it cannot absolve all these compounded sins.  Sooner or later the money will run out; bills will come due.

That creates a wide open structural opportunity to accelerate what Fareed Zakaria has dubbed the “rise of the rest” to accelerate. Crises are periods where the relative position of nations and regions can and do change dramatically. (Do I think the U.S. will lose its hegemonic position: Of course not. My hunch is that the U.S. is in the same position structurally as England at the onset of the Long Depression of 1873. It was not until the next major crisis – the Great Depression of 1929 and the onset of WWII that it lost its position to the United States. So worst case: The U.S. has one more long-cycle at the top of the heap). But, just think of all the ways the trillions of bailout money could be used to build the economy of the future. And while you’re doing that imagine that some other places outside the United States that have been patiently building and conserving their resources may start to figure out how to do just that.

The clock of history ticks on. Over time, it tends to leave behind those places who get stuck, get trapped, or try too hard to breathe life back into the old order, neglecting the new one that is emerging. And that’s what really worries me.

Michael Wells
by Michael Wells
Mon Mar 16th 2009 at 7:08pm UTC

Nonprofit Blues

Monday, March 16th, 2009

One so far relatively undiscussed aspect of the downturn is the effect on America’s nonprofits, sometimes called the third sector. I spent this weekend with a friend who’s a retired corporate CEO, has a personal foundation that supports local and international projects, and is very savvy in business, finance, and nonprofits. He said he’s heard that as many as half of U.S. nonprofits (charities) will go out of business during the current downturn, which he expects to last a couple of years.

Here are a few observations I can make from what’s happening in Oregon, and in the grants world.

  • Many foundations, having seen their endowments dive with the stock market, are cutting back on large grants. In addition, they’re moving from longer-range capacity-building grants to meeting people’s immediate needs (as one foundation director put it, from philanthropy to charity).
  • Arts organizations are seeing their donations and audiences shrinking. Seasons are being cut back, shows canceled. Some of the weaker players are seeking mergers or takeovers by larger organizations.
  • Safety net organizations like free clinics and food banks are flooded with not only the poor but the formerly middle class.
  • Capital building campaigns are dead in the water.

Nobody knows yet whether or how the stimulus money will affect nonprofits. If the federal government decides to fund projects through grants it may save or even enlarge some nonprofits. To the extent money flows through the states or direct federal spending it will probably have little effect.

A story in today’s New York Times says nonprofits are being flooded with high-level formerly employed volunteers. As anyone who’s worked in nonprofits can tell you, this can be more of a headache than a blessing.

There have been numerous stories in Oregon about how various nonprofits are faring. What are others finding in your communities?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Mar 11th 2009 at 4:47pm UTC

The View from Canada

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

I take this as a very good sign:

The global economic crisis is an opportunity for Canada to cash in when the eventual recovery arrives, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Tuesday in his first major speech on the current recession. Ottawa will ensure the country comes out of the recession faster than other nations and stronger than ever, Harper said, adding Canada entered the global recession in a position of strength compared to other countries. “For Canada, this crisis does offer opportunity,” Harper said in a speech to the Brampton Board of Trade.  Ultimately, it is an opportunity to position ourselves so that when the recovery comes, we’re among the first to catch the wave.”  Canada was the last “advanced country” to fall into recession, he said.

“If there ever was a time to put away that legendary Canadian modesty, it is now,” Harper said.  “Notwithstanding all the troubles around us, Canada has real advantages, real assets, and we should not hesitate to remind investors, partners and leaders around the world of the comparative strengths of our country.”

A colleague who was at the speech reports: He pulled stats from the Fareed Z (Newsweek) piece and was very bullish on Canadian banks, financial systems and, as he said: “Canada will be able to take advantage of this economic crisis.”

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Mar 5th 2009 at 10:52am UTC

Reset or Revolution

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

A BC reader comments on my Globe column:

I don’t think we’re in a recession so much as we’re in a revolution – and it seems closely linked to age and generation lines.

Anyone born after 1996, has experienced resistence settling into a career, paying off student debt, financing a house, a car, etc. The idea of working for one company during one’s working life is far fetched.

Having been denied the single family homes in the suburbs and it’s trappings, alternative values and lifestyles have emerged. There’s no loyalty to automakers, phone companies, or TV networks.

The new generation and economy has forced individuals to adapt to cheaper technologies, means of mobility, communication and a global marketplace. Raising families has been put on hold if not abandoned altogether. Even nationhood has become obsolete.

It’s a brave new world, but corporate boards and political parties have yet to figure it out – or are in a blissful state of denial.

As the new generation abandons traditional middle class mores and lifestyles, who will pay the taxes on increasing medicare costs? Who will purchase the homes built during this last boom and the baby boom generation? Who wants to finance a vehicle in which gas, insurance, maintenance costs continue to rise?

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Mar 4th 2009 at 9:46am UTC

State of Denial

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

BazzFazz sums it up:

Americans are still in a fair amount of denial about how bad things are going to get. In the leafy bucolic Boston suburb where I still have a house and the offspring continue to bring me delightful grandchildren, there are still lots of houses on the market for what are clearly delusional valuations … And it’s bad in so many places, and it’s going to get so much worse, that you have to wonder what, if anything, will help. Sadly, until the great asset write-down runs its course, not much will. And this process will take several years – which is why I think the U.S. will not be the first out of the current recession – it will probably be the last. Because the U.S. over the past two decades has tied up so much wealth creation – which has fed through the entire global financial system, mind you – in real estate in bad places. And the amount of denial here remains painfully high.

Yep.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sat Feb 28th 2009 at 10:20am UTC

The Worst Is Yet to Come

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Like many people, I was uplifted by President Obama’s speech Tuesday night. But, today it’s back to the real world. I find myself in total agreement with this assessment from Seeking Alpha.

You have undoubtedly heard of the Case-Shiller Index. It is a commonly cited index for tracking housing prices. The December read is now out showing a YoY drop of 18.5%, worse than predicted. That is not what is scaring me … He has an index of American home prices going back to 1890. According to this index, the housing bubble we just experienced was by orders of magnitude worse than any other we have ever seen in this country. Moreover (you better be sitting) housing prices have a lot further to drop … He believes we are only halfway back to fair value and usually during a correction we overshoot fair value. You add into this equation the effects of a global downturn, job losses, reduced wages and the like and one can easily imagine us overshooting the trend line significantly.

I firmly believe we will not find a bottom on the economy until we find a bottom on housing. From this data, that bottom is still a long way off, as in 3-5+ years off, and it is a lot lower than most have predicted. That is far worse than this doom-and-gloomer was thinking.

So that puts recovery out to say 2012 or 2014. From where I sit, that may even be too optimistic. Both the Long Depression and the Great Depression lasted some two decades before real recovery came about. I could be in my 70s before this thing turns around. And unless he has four terms or so, Obama will not preside over recovery. My heart may feel differently, but my head tells me there is a long, long road ahead of us.

David Miller
by David Miller
Thu Feb 26th 2009 at 10:55am UTC

Positive Economic Signs? In Miami?

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

I did not have to search high and low for these, but here are four good economic signs and one direct observation. You are welcome to use this list to step away from the edge or as a simple reminder that it is people and firms taking action that will turn the economy around, not the government. There is growth to be had and people and firms are making it happen without the government.

5) Oil is so cheap (around $40 a barrel) that it feels free. Don’t believe me? Demand is rising again and inventory is not. We can and are driving and flying again with impunity (see more below).

4) Twitter raised $35 million in venture financing. Txt updates? Micro-blogging? During “depression-like” conditions?

3) Oracle has acquired more than 10 companies in the last 12 months and Cisco raised $4 billion in debt to make acquisitions. Yes, there are firms (and people) that aren’t levered up and are taking advantage of this recession to purchase rivals and innovators and undervalued assets. They are in fact growing their payrolls. They are efficiently deploying capital.

2) Nancy Pelosi’s husband and some of his buddies just put $30 million into a startup, minor-league American Football league. The United Football League (or UFL) is launching this summer and will play its championship game in Las Vegas over Thanksgiving weekend. That is a low-tech, purely domestic entertainment investment. What do they know?

1) I had to wait in line everywhere in Miami Beach last weekend. From our plane’s arrival (which was delayed because they did not have enough runways) to our attempt to snare a cab to our departure flight, where a line of black limos was waiting for beautiful people to head home and blocking taxi access. Yes, prices were down and RE there is getting crushed, but it was crowded and housekeeping, cabana attendants, beach combers, lifeguards, wait staff, and others were working. Which means managers, accountants, lawyers, web programmers, IT staff, and others were also working.

These are just a few small reminders that the world is not yet over. That perhaps we do not need to “rebuild” everything in America, and that people, acting as individuals and in concert as firms, will do the lion’s share of the work if the global economy is to find its way back to a growth trajectory.