Last week, there was good economic news. Maybe.
The U.S. Census Bureau reported that household income had
risen during 2015 by 5.7 percent. That
was the first increase since 2007, the last year before the Great
Recession. Women employed full-time gained
somewhat more than men. Unemployment was
down and millions more had health insurance.
That’s the good news.
The not-so-good news was that, even with the increase, household income
was still below what it had been in 2007 and even further behind the 1999 level.
Income inequality, the gap between the rich and the poor, stabilized
and did not increase last year, but it was still high and well above what it
had been in the 1990s.
For some doubters about the economic improvement, there
would be no positive news until people who had quit looking for a job and were
no longer counted as unemployed came back into the labor force. For other critics, improvement would depend on
reducing the income gap.
Recovery from the recession has been imperfect partly because
of imperfect government policy. President
Obama managed to push through one stimulus boost, but Congress denied him any
more jump-start spending.
Because of the inability to use fiscal measures – government
spending and tax tools – all anti-recession efforts have been left to monetary
policy run by the Federal Reserve. It drastically
lowered interest rates and added more money to the economy.
At some point, Federal Reserve policy lost strength. It has weakened interest rates as a tool by
keeping them below one percent even as the economy recovered. Small increases will not return normal
interest rates, with their greater flexibility as a tool, for years.
But the problem seems to go well beyond simply recovering to
the 2007 level. Many well-paid,
relatively less skilled jobs have migrated out of the country. Now, lower paid workers elsewhere produce
competitively priced imports. That’s one
cause of complaints about trade policy.
The exported jobs won’t come back home. And technology makes production here possible
with fewer workers. The U.S. needs to
provide better training and retraining, so people can add skills and adjust to more
advanced needs.
Workers must now be paid in line with the value of their labor
to products or services. The way to
create jobs that pay well is to keep the country ahead of others in developing
leading edge products and services. That
requires government help, now lacking.
There’s another reason the good economic news may not feel
so positive. In the U.S., with the third
largest population in the world, people spread across a continent are not
likely to have the same experience as the national average.
The American national economy is composed of many smaller
economies. Broad economic policies, as proposed
by presidential candidates, have uneven effects across the country. That should prompt states to take on bigger
roles in developing economic growth.
Traditionally, that has meant offering tax breaks to
companies willing to locate in a state.
Such policies do not promote national economy growth. They are simply aimed at luring jobs away
from other states.
Tax incentives will not do the job by themselves. They are not targeted and, in light of
interstate competition, they are not likely to be notably better that what’s
available elsewhere. They amount to a passive
economic development effort.
Some states, like California or Texas, have complex
economies virtually the same as that of an independent nation. But many others, including Maine, must
develop and exploit a more limited range of sectors.
With the oldest median age population in the country and as
a popular place for retirement, Maine could create a focus on innovative ways
of providing living space and health care to seniors. State educational institutions could increase
training of health care personnel.
Such targeted development depends on better marketing of
what the state does well. Let retirees
know they are invited and health care professionals know they are needed.
If public funds spent through tax incentives were replaced
by targeted spending on sectors in which Maine can specialize, the results
could produce more and better employment.
In short, active development effort should replace passive and sometimes
questionable tax cuts.
A divided federal government will likely remain unable to
produce a consistent growth policy and possibly much else. Even if Republicans succeed in cutting
regulations or taxes, that won’t necessarily boost the Maine economy or that of
many other states.
The absence of federal action should lead to greater state
action in economic development.
Otherwise, recovery, however good, could pass by some states and
workers.