http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/2013/0713friedman.html![]() This article is from the July/August 2013 issue of Dollars & Sense magazine. Subscribe Nowat a 30% discount. Collapsing Investment and the Great RecessionInvestment in real inputs—structures and machinery used to boost future output and productivity—is one of the ways that an economy grows over time. In a capitalist economy, such investments are also crucial for macroeconomic stability and full employment because they provide an “injection” of demand to balance the “leakage” caused by personal and institutional savings. The Great Recession that began in 2007 was marked by a collapse of investment unprecedented since the Great Depression, as well as a dramatic drop in overall production and a sharp jump in unemployment. Since 2009, overall output has been growing again, but we have seen a much slower recovery of investment than after other recessions since 1947. The worst economic crisis since the 1930s, the Great Recession came after a long period of declining investment, and a break in the linkage between corporate profits and new investment. Rising Profits, Falling Investment: The share of national income going to investment (net of depreciation of existing plant and machinery) has been declining since the beginning of the “neoliberal” era, around 1980. Since the start of the Great Recession, net investment as a share of GDP has plummeted to its lowest level since the 1930s. This sharp drop in investment comes despite sharply rising profits. (snip) The Broken Link between Profit and Investment:
In the past, higher corporate profits were associated with higher
rates of investment, as businesses have rushed to take advantage
of profitable opportunities. In the current crisis, however, the
link between profit and investment has been broken and investment
rates have been very low despite high rates of profitability
(especially in 2010 and 2011). Businesses are holding back on
investing, either because they anticipate continued low levels of
demand (perhaps due to high unemployment and low wages) or because
they plan to shift more production outside the United States. (snip) (snip) (snip) We Are Still Far from Recovering: During the current “recovery” (2009-present), the unemployment rate has remained higher and investment as a share of GDP has remained lower than the average not only for past recoveries, but even for past recessions (since 1947). No wonder the current situation seems more like a continuation of the Great Recession than a genuine recovery.
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