The Lost Generation
This is the most frightening economic chart I have seen in the last decade.
Net private investment, which includes spending on everything from machine tools to new houses, minus depreciation, fell to 0.1% of gross domestic product in the second quarter of 2009, according to the latest government data. That's the lowest level since at least 1947.
Capitalism's most vulnerable point is the death spiral of overcapacity. In the easy credit boom times we built too many malls, too many car factories, too may fast food joints, too many houses. Now the only way for businesses and consumers to survive is too cut back drastically.
That creates a chicken-and-egg problem at a time when the unemployment rate is already nearly 10%: Without more jobs, U.S. consumers will have a hard time increasing their spending; but without that spending, businesses might see little reason to start hiringThis hits the hardest in the young and Business Week raised the possibility that we are creating a "Lost Generation" of young people without the prospects of decent employment. Look at this chart of youth unemployment.
We can talk all we want about building a better future full of "Green Jobs", but on the current trajectory, that future will arrive in China long before it reaches our shores. The "chicken and egg" problem described by the Wall Street Journal won't be solved until the government starts aggressively seeding the Green Tech Business, because alternative energy is the only place where we have undercapacity. And this can be a "bottoms-up" strategy simply by requiring every utility company to buy excess solar and wind capacity from consumers at some sort of fixed rate. Consumers in California could easily afford to shift to solar if they knew they could make a profit from their excess capacity. The second thing the government could do would be to designate certain less scenic parts of the millions of acres of government land as open for solar and wind development in a public private partnership.
The Great Depression required the WPA to act as the investor in public infrastructure to get us out of the death spiral of Zero private investment. We are back at that place (0.1% of GDP). WE need a Green WPA now.




















I don't know specifically about solar, but in my field of robotics, our country is losing out in some areas to Japan and South Korea because of their sophisticated national plans to encourage industry in this area. In contrast, our main source of public R&D is the military.
The recent WTEC study concluded:
October 13, 2009 12:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
That graph of domestic spending goes all the way to zero!
Robots, solar power, green jobs, windmills...
Whatever!
The graph of domestic spending goes all the way to zero!
October 14, 2009 7:40 AM | Reply | Permalink
Moving from low cost power from coal to very high cost power via wind or solar is not the path to prosperity. However, it does have the advantage of making those green job job holders very dependant on government.
October 13, 2009 12:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Well, what is the path to prosperity, oh witty critic?
October 13, 2009 1:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
Your comparison of cost is off. Advances in wind and solar have dropped the cost quite a lot over the years and the science underpinning these technologies is advancing by leaps and bounds. Using the 'very high' comparative term is flat wrong.
Subsidies across the entire energy sector make it a tricky proposition to evaluate but the reality is the costs of green technologies have been dropping like a rock as industry ramps up production. Right now the single biggest prohibitive factor is the economic collapse having dried up investment capital. That has stymied growth at a time when we can ill afford it. Even then, the number of major solar and wind projects under construction and in development and that are receiving funding is still growing. That would not be occurring were the comparative of 'very high' the case.
October 13, 2009 1:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually, the costs of doing nothing about climate change are enormous, both monetarily, as well as lives lost, security collapses, failed states, mass migration, etc. You're assuming that something is free (a clean atmosphere), when it is most assuredly not.
So...you're completely wrong.
October 14, 2009 3:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
I wonder about whether we can even afford to bail ourselves out. We can always print more money to fund a new "New Deal", but at a certain point its a closed system. When you print more money every dollar is worth that much less. To make matters worse, everyone is ditching dollars, for good reason. That will absolutely kill us.
And the really, really scary thing is, no one really cares. There is no big mandate for any fiscal policy change, or any change in direction. Its seems more like we want the bubble to reinflate, so we can feel like we have recovered whether its a pipe dream or not. I think everyone would be ecstatic if a new bubble formed-- Obama and his domestic policy team included.
What we need to do--what we are coming inexorably to either way-- is defund the miltary. Bring our soldiers home, mission accomplished or not, and put them to work building roads and doing government funded civilian research. Park the ships and tanks and satellites. Then we have enough money to run the country and pull off a WPA. If we dont infuse ourselves with a new direction and a boatload of cash to get it done, we will be done for. In 10 more years we will have rotted from within, just like the Soviets. And the last vestige of our power will be our military, which is a really bad idea.
October 13, 2009 1:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
Many societies reach a point where militarization and the financial commitments that go along with it becomes counter-productive to the point of jeopardizing national security. My imperfect memory of world history is that the greatest human empires the planet has ever known succumbed to economic waste at least as often as to military conquest.
October 14, 2009 4:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Its a closed system if the money you're spending goes to things that can't create wealth. An example of this kind of spending is a weapons system. Spending on solar electricy generation creates wealth, either in the form of capital equipment, useful knowledge or available electricity. That wealth can be used again.
Big difference economically.
October 17, 2009 12:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Excellent, scary post, but it's unlikely all those new jobs in China will be "green" - whatever that will mean at the time. The workers' paradise has little time for refinements like environmental awareness, which originate in the corrupt West. The government decides, it acts, and no dissent is allowed. Hot, dirty and crowded, indeed.
October 13, 2009 1:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
When the green economy creates new jobs, the likelihood is that they will be created in China. That's where capital goes when it wants to put people to work.
The Chinese government encourages the creation of new jobs in China. So does the U.S government.
October 13, 2009 2:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
China funds a massive nationalized energy subsidy. This represents a huge advantage for Chinese manufacturers. It is a major factor why so much global manufacturing has moved to China. Western style economic units don't have any flexibility when it comes to nationalizing such things as energy costs. We operate on a comparatively deficient scheme where the argument for manufacturing here can't be made.
Right now it makes no difference though. China is hurting because the global marketplace for their manufactured goods has collapsed.
October 13, 2009 4:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
If I were an American investor I would be investing in the developing world. Not at home. Do any of your charts break down investment in this way?
There's room for a Green WPA in retrofitting buildings for greater thermal efficiency, and probably in conservation in general.
Its hard to see how solar or wind energies can be used for high energy engines. Also how any revolutionary advances would benefit American workers. The advances would be in research labs, jobs not open to the average person. Any manufacturing would likely be done abroad with cheap labor.
Cutting the military is a favorite of the Left but stupid. The military is perhaps the only avenue of advancement for the unskilled and uneducated, especially those from rural areas. And the world is still a dangerous place.
October 13, 2009 3:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Capital is global, labor is local.
Capital has no loyalty to place or people. Labor is all about place, and people.
What generates the highest rate of return for capital can be inimical to local interests. What is raises the living standards of working people can be a drag on the accumulation of capital.
If you were a member of the investment class you might well be motivated to invest in developing economies. But that wouldn't make you an American investor. Just an investor, following the logic of his pocketbook wherever it leads.
Our long love affair with de-regulation and global trade has created an environment in which wealthy individuals must chose between doing what is best for their financial statements and doing what is best for the country. As we have seen, the choice is a no-brainer.
October 13, 2009 5:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
Global trade and technological advance always were unstoppable. We might have been able to better guide them to our advantage with legal restrictions but that's water under the bridge. The question is what do we do now.
October 14, 2009 5:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
We might have been able to better guide them to our advantage with legal restrictions but that's water under the bridge.
So build a dam. Why such a defeatist?
October 14, 2009 6:56 AM | Reply | Permalink
Are you always such an idiot? Among this group of posters I'm hardly the defeatist.
October 14, 2009 7:52 AM | Reply | Permalink
Dams would mean raising tariffs to offset the labor advantage. It would also provide more money from overseas to pay down the deficit rather then getting that money from taxes on citizens.
October 14, 2009 11:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
Your arguments make no sense. But even if they did you fail to notice this isn't the '30s. We've got too many dams and they're highly destructive to the environment.
October 14, 2009 12:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Sorry for being obtsue. A dam is a metaphor for a tariff that could hold back foreign goods from entering the country without a stiff tax that would make the cost of the product commensurate with the domestic product.
PS: I'm no fan of the real dams either, but they served a purpose. We can now move away from them.
October 14, 2009 2:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Retaliatory tariffs were tried in the '30s. The results were disasterous. But, somehow, Germany and France seem to have avoided our downward spiral...so perhaps my first sentence is too much of a generalization, not sensitive to the subtleties. Maybe some other poster can elaborate.
October 14, 2009 8:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think you're right, spider, that global trade and technological advance "were always unstoppable."
But our leading economists, politicians and capitalists have made a religion of them. We've cheered as our good jobs were shipped overseas, and partied when the DOW flirted with 15,000, as though the value of stocks reflected the health of the economy. We've sent our investment capital overseas by the shipload and hocked our homes to buy cheap goods manufactured in foreign sweat shops.
Many of the leading lights of this system preach the loudest about patriotism, when it's time to make war. But they do not know what economic patriotism is.
What now? Now the hard work of learning how to create jobs, here in America, in this new world order we've so enthusiastically built. Those jobs will require very large capital investments here at home and a deep rethinking of what global trade means, and should mean. It will require learning, or maybe inventing, how a capitalistic system works when it truly does believe in economic patriotism.
October 14, 2009 5:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
Agreed.
October 14, 2009 8:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
The jobs associated with wind power and solar would not be those to make solar cell arrays or the wind generators themselves. These are likely to be made in China or in highly automated plants.
The jobs are associated with marketing and sales, site planning, permitting, environmental studies, financing, transportation, warehousing, distribution, construction of foundations and structures, installation of components on-site, wiringing, testing, commissioning, accounts receivable and billing collections, etc. They are also likely to be high maintenance installations that require a lot of ongoing maintenance and modifications. There is also the ongoing metering, billing and payments work if power is sold to the electrical utilities by the homeowners.
I'd estimate that more than 75% of the labor content is in work other than what went into the solar or wind energy equipment leaving the factory FOB.
October 13, 2009 4:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
The rotors / blades for wind turbines are made right here in this country. The manufacture of them is actually very bleeding edge. The generators are a bit more generic.
Solar is different again. A lot of that is done here as well. That has mostly to do with a lot of the solar technology being developed here and spun off from tech development in our universities as U.S. companies. Solar will remain technology centric for a good while. It wasn't long ago that 12% coversion was the norm. That is moving into an 18% range for the conversion of solar energy to electricity with the manufacturing of that class of photovoltaic device just starting to enter manufacturing on a large scale. Bleeding edge research is just starting to figure out how to get that conversion factor up to the 25% range. Large scale manufacturing for that class of device is a couple years down the road. The big push right now is to figure out how to make lower yield devices less costly to produce to drive down the cost of manufacture. I read an article a few days ago where one of the big players has a product that is in essence a shingle that is installed like any other shingle but is a solar implemetation. Not a week goes by without some company or research institution publishing some sort of breakthrough on this stuff.
October 13, 2009 5:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's only a matter of time before renewable becomes affordable. But if no one has any money, where do we sell them? We need other jobs. One venue we should explore is to revisit farming. Agribusiness has this hold on food production and supermarkets have a hold on delivery, but there are so many organizations that are too big to fail in this arena. We also need to stop thinking everything has to be big. It is better to have many smaller ones then the few giants that require a market. What if the consumer is the market and we can eliminate power companies for domestic needs? How crazy is that?!?
October 14, 2009 11:54 AM | Reply | Permalink
Gregor, you speak of something that from the first signs of spring until the snow falls is one of my favoite things. I go to the farmers market in my area most weekends and just love all the fresh produce. Our farmers market is open year round but when stuff is in season is the best. I'm going apple picking in a few days. I happen to think local farms and the affordable quality they provide is a fantastic bargain. The only downside is everyone doesn't have such things available. Those who do should definitely take advantage. Hard to beat.
I'm all for cutting out the middleman. In some cases a middleman actually provides a useful service. We need to be able to differentiate those from the ones who add a layer of cost and nothing else. Specialization has made our lives more complex than might be necessary. I think we need to examine that part of the puzzle.
October 14, 2009 2:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
People do not realize what real food tastes like anymore. I was amazed when I bought a cucumber at a farmer's market and it lasted more then 3 days in my refrigerator. The supermarket stuff goes to mush in 3 days. While it may be more economical to ghave produce coming from South America then grown here, the produce may look the same, but it's really terrible.
October 14, 2009 2:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
In wind power, countries such as Denmark and Spain seem to be leaders, and companies such as Siemens provide generators, gear boxes and other components. A couple of years ago, there was significant import traffic in wind components through the port of Duluth, MN. While there are more plants opening in the US, and there is some export of blades and tower sections, I don't think that the US leads in the high-teck parts of wind power.
The efficiency of solar cells has been researched for many years, since they are critical components in satellites. The materials systems have been pretty well researched, and the trick will be to keep or raise marginally the efficiency, while reducing the manufacturing costs significantly. So design for manufacturability and design of the manufacturing processes is key. But even companies that do their R&D in the US are putting their production facilities in the Far East. There is an impending global glut in solar panel production, especially if Germany reduces its subsidies for solar and dries up some of their artificially elevated demand.
October 14, 2009 2:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks for posting this, Jon Taplin. It's very bleak news indeed.
October 14, 2009 12:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
Jon Taplin,
What an interesting post. Keep it up.
October 14, 2009 10:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
We have massive undercapacity in healthcare, too.
Sure, too many specialist docs, but other than that we have massive shortages of all kinds of health workers, from nurses to pharmacists to techs to nurse assistants.
Not to mention, the health IT industry barely exists. Sure, we've got a lot of IT people, but there's not too many computer programmers, system designers, system implementers who actually understand a healthcare setting.
Finally, there's all kinds of jobs that should exist but don't--people whose job it is to analyze quality data for continuous improvement, people whose job it is to coordinate care to make sure sick people get the right follow-up, etc.
Oh, and freaking gym teachers. We have a shortage of those. In the middle of a freaking childhood obesity epidemic and we're cutting gym. Talk about penny wise and pound foolish.
October 14, 2009 6:03 PM | Reply | Permalink
I wish there were a way to recommend individual posts. If there were, I'd recommend this one twice!
October 14, 2009 9:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
Second that. Excellent post.
Atlantic monthly ran a wonderful article on health care reform. The author basically recommended abolition of private insurance companies but did NOT wish to substitute a single payer system. I wonder if you've seen it and, if so, what you think.
October 14, 2009 9:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
I have been discussing this for about two decades now. Literally - it's a fight to the death between Wall Street and the United States.
Go here to graphs, which includes one very similar to one that scares Taplin.
Debunking the Myth of the Financial Markets
http://www.economicpopulist.org/node/1916/edit
Suggestions to solve the financial crises by basically shutting down most of Wall Street are always shouted down by howls of “How are companies going to raise money?” or “How are people going to invest in companies?”
Well, take a good, long look at this graph, which shows the percentage of capital expenditures by U.S. non-financial companies that was raised in U.S. financial markets from 1952 to 2006.
Wall Street simply is not doing what most people think it’s doing. Nor what most people think it should be doing. Wall Street is not even doing what it says it is doing. Wall Street is pushing a big myth that its services are essential to the functioning of the rest of the economy. But the truth is, as this graph shows, Wall Street does not -- and has not for a very long time -- serve the function of allocating credit in the economy.
This graph is from page 85 of a book by Roosevelt University economics professor Ozgur Orhangazi, entitled Financialization and the US Economy, published in May 2008.
As Orhangazi notes, “The largest and most important use of funds by the NFCs is the expenditures made to acquire capital goods for productive purposes.” (I disagree; the most important, but certainly not the largest, is spending on research and development. Capital expenditures is the second most important use of funds by NFCs.) Wikipedia has a useful definition of capital goods:
Also interesting is the graph on the next page of Orhangazi’s book, which shows that since 1984, new equity issues have been less than capital expenditures by U.S. non-financial companies, except for the three years of 1991 to 1993. In other words, non-financial companies do NOT use the stock market to raise funds for capital improvement programs.
In fact, Orhangazi notes,
What about the bond market? According to Orhangazi, from 1952 to 1980, NFCs obtained eight to 25 percent of their capital expenditures from the bond market. After 1980, when the “Reagan Revolution” allowed Wall Street to regain the control over the rest of the economy it had lost in the New Deal, NFCs usually obtained around a quarter to a third of their capital expenditures from the bond market, with the high reached in 2001 of 45 percent. But the largest source of funding for NFC capital expenditures had been far and away internal funds.
But isn’t it a good thing that non-financial companies mostly use their own funds for capital expenditures? First of all, remember that what we’re trying to do here is debunk the myth perpetrated by Wall Street that the financial markets are of crucial importance to the rest of the economy.
Second, the fact that the financial markets contribute so little to the most crucial operations of non-financial companies is just the beginning of the story. The financialization of the economy has had severe effects on the goals and objectives of NFCs, not just their operations and capital expenditures. What has really happened is that while the size of financial markets and types of financial instruments and transactions have increased, non-financial companies have been forced to abandon the long-term planning and goals of industrial capitalism, and instead adopt the short-term perspective and “quick buck” goals of the financial markets. This short paper by Orhangazi, Financialization and Capital Accumulation in the Non-Financial Corporate Sector: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation of the U.S. Economy: 1973-2003 an October 2007 Workingpaper of the Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, contains many of the main points of the book. Beginning on page 6, Orhangazi explains how and why real investment, such as capital goods expenditures, have suffered in the “financialization era” from Reagan until today.
A second channel through which financialization could undermine real investment is by means of pressure on NFCs to increase payments to financial markets in the form of dividends and stock buybacks by the firm.8 Of course, if the evolution of financial markets and practices in the era of financialization leads to greater debt burdens on NFCs, interest payments will rise as well. The increase in the percent of managerial compensation based on stock options has increased NFC managers’ incentive to keep stock prices high in the short-run by paying high dividends and undertaking large stock buybacks. Simultaneously, the rise of institutional investors, who demand constantly rising stock prices, as well as the aftermath of the hostile takeover movement have pressured NFC managers to raise the payout ratio. NFC managers are thus motivated by both personal interest and financial market pressure to meet stockholders’ expectations of higher payouts via dividends and stock buybacks (a shift in incentives) in the short-run. Both the NFC objective function and its constraint set have changed. As a result, the percent of internal funds paid to financial markets each year has risen dramatically. This creates three distinct restraints on real investment. First, if internal funds are cheaper or safer than external financing, rising financial payments would decrease the funds available to finance real investment by reducing internal funds. Second, the time-horizon of NFC management has dramatically shortened, hampering the funding of long-run investment projects, including research and development. Third, since the firm management does not know how much it will cost to re-acquire the financial capital it pays back to financial markets each year (i.e. it has no idea what the cost of financing for ongoing long-term projects will be next year), uncertainty rises, making some projects with attractive expected gross long-term returns too risky to undertake.
And there is no mistaking what the results have been.
The fundamental problem is the big players on Wall Street have misused the credit mechanism of the economy for their own private gains through the bloating of debt and speculation, at the expense of actually allocating and supplying capital to the real economy. The dollar volume of financial trading has increased nearly forty-fold since the 1960s, but almost none of that trading is of any use to the real economy. Even now, after the collapse of September 2008, big Wall Street firms like are still making most of their money by trading for their own account. Last month, Time.com reported that Goldman Sachs
Anyone who believes that saving the financial system is the way to save the economy, just does not know what the financial system is really all about.
But what about those people who want to save the financial system, because they do know what the financial system is really all about? They’re the ones winning the political fight, so far.
- finis -
And, on Naked Capitalism today: “Does Banking Contribute to the Good of Society?” http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/10/does-banking-contribute-to-the-good-of-society.html
October 14, 2009 8:43 PM | Reply | Permalink
Unfortunately, the current administration has chosen to continue the 'Trickle Down' economic policies that created the problem to begin with (bail out the banks that caused the crash but leave the people to founder, bail out industries that moved manufacturing overseas but only delay the people going under by extending unemployment, ETC).
October 15, 2009 6:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
In 2003 there was 20 sq ft of retail space per capita in the US and I'm sure most of it is mortgaged.
Think of this as part of the national debt of every individual in the county as we as consumers must pay this debt back through shopping.
Think of the opportunity loss of the capital investments that has been lost for long term productive investments that actually would have enhanced our futures.
October 15, 2009 10:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
Sorry I came to this party late but forget massive wind and solar without a new energy grid. That, at a minimum, is a trillion dollar investment in infrastructure and can't be built overnight. That means you can expand that trillion by a factor of 2 or 3 to completion. The power companies have no incentive to upgrade the grid.
So we are stuck as there is no way a new trillion dollar program can be pulled off with a single year deficit of 1.4 trillion.
If unemployment rises to 15% nationally (25% to 30% in real numbers) then you can expect to see a push for a WPA style program for energy grid upgrades.
A new REA style program for high speed internet would also put people back to work.
The cost of all of this is public money of which we have none. Chicken/egg once again.
The guarantee of profit to consumers on solar or wind (officially called feed-in-tariffs) requires public money to subsidize the power company program (along with the smart grid). Where does that money come from?
It appears to me that every program on the table requires government money for funding. With our current budget priorities and too-big-to-fail investments we are heading for a much deeper crash. The 10K mark on the DOW was nothing but an over exuberent Wall Street expecting another bubble to save the economy within 12 to 18 months. Once again, they have screwed it up as the old dynamics no longer work in this new economy (or lack thereof).
The 2 to 4 trillion poured into Wall Street could have funded much of a new economy but instead the wealthy class forced the government's hand to rebuild the old economy (and financial hierarchy).
So we teeter on the edge of the abyss; good economic ideas but no government stimulus money left to kickstart, Wall Street making no large capital investments in this country.
Eisenhower sold the interstate highway system by making it a military priority for rapid equipment and troop moves. Redefining our centralized power grid as susceptable to terrorist attack could mean the freeing up of military budget funds to build the smart grid (distributed power feeds). REA style internet access could be sold the same way.
Just cut a supercarrier and you have a smart grid; cut out our troops in Europe and Korea and you have the internet REA.
Europe is preserving their economies by allowing the US to fund global military policing; the same is true for Korea and Japan. We have neglected Central and South America (and Mexico) which are near collapse.
It is time to re-order the military balance of spending and rethink our position of global military dominance to the detriment of our society. The high cost of an overextended military ruling force is what ruined every culture or Empire in history. (I will be glad to argue that against any traditional history major in the room).
October 17, 2009 7:25 AM | Reply | Permalink