Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Job crisis: US is halfway to lost decade. Even with the massive 2008-2009 policy effort that successfully prevented financial collapse and depression, the United States is now halfway to a lost economic decade.


By Lawrence H Summers, Reuters:


Over the last five years, from the first quarter of 2006 to the first quarter of 2011, the US economy’s growth rate averaged less than 1 per cent a year, about like Japan during the period when its bubble burst. At the same time, the fraction of the population working has fallen from 63.1 per cent to 58.4 per cent, reducing the number of those with jobs by more than 10 million. The fraction of the population working remains almost exactly at its recession trough and recent reports suggest that growth is slowing.

Beyond the lack of jobs and incomes, an economy producing below its potential for a prolonged interval sacrifices its future. To an extent that once would have been unimaginable, new college graduates are this month moving back in with their parents because they have no job or means of support. Strapped school districts across the country are cutting out advanced courses in math and science and in some cases only opening school four days a week. And reduced incomes and tax collections at present and in the future are the most important cause of unacceptable budget deficits at present and in the future.


For full article:

(The writer is Charles W Eliot University Professor at Harvard University and a former US Treasury secretary)

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