The Great Recession is just the beginning

By Matt Miller [the self-described "center" of U.S. public radio's
"Left, Right & Center," which also involves a right-winger (Tony
Blankley of the Moonie Press) and two left-wingers (Arianna
Huffington, who used to be on the right, and Bob Scheer).]

Wednesday, July 21, 2010; [Washington POST]

Here's a cheery midsummer thought. You know those 15 million
unemployed, and that sluggish growth, and the debt hangover and
de-leveraging, and those soaring deficits? Well, these woes aren't our
biggest economic problems.

The real test for the U.S. economy starts once we get past the fallout
from the burst housing and banking bubbles that triggered the Great
Recession. And when it comes to that challenge -- which involves
preserving U.S. living standards in a world of global competition --
we either (1) don't know what to do, or (2) we do know but seem to
have little intention of doing it.

A brief trot through history places this moment in context. After
World War II, when the United States was the only economy left
standing, we began an unprecedented economic run. "You had a 60-year
period where every new industry of huge value-added or breakthrough
innovation or high risk -- whether it was pharma, biotech, software,
personal computing or semiconductors -- were all totally U.S.-based,"
Bill Gates said in 2007.

The shared [??] prosperity this dominance made possible built the
middle class. But the age of U.S. supremacy had to end sometime, and,
starting two decades ago, rising powers such as India and China began
the reforms that would make them genuine competitors.

>From the point of view of humanity, these nations' rise has been
fantastic news. Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted from
poverty, with billions hoping to follow. But for workers in advanced
countries, the wage strains were inevitable, as it became feasible to
locate more work with low-cost (and, increasingly, high-quality) labor
anywhere on the planet.

It was at this point in the saga, when research already showed that up
to 100 million Americans were living in households earning less than
their parents did at a similar age, that -- bam! -- the housing and
financial bubbles burst.

Historians may therefore think of the Great Recession as Decline, Interrupted.

The thing to remember is that these are different kinds of events. The
bursting bubbles, and the associated market panic and credit freeze,
was a heart attack, to which the authorities responded with emergency
measures.

But "the fate of the middle class" in a global era is different. It's
more like cancer -- a slower yet more profound threat, requiring a
fundamental renewal of American competitiveness. And without a
galvanizing "emergency."

Broadly speaking, there are two big things we need to do. The first,
put well (if not in a sexy slogan) by economist Michael Spence in the
Financial Times recently, is "to create capital-intensive jobs that
have labor productivity levels consistent with advanced country
incomes."

The second big thing is to make sure Americans have the skills to
perform these jobs. [and that wages rise with labor productivity, no?]

How are we doing on this agenda? Dismally. For starters, U.S. elites
simply don't think in terms of a national economic strategy of the
kind Spence states so simply. To be sure, the stimulus funded some
energy technologies with real promise -- advanced storage and lighting
technologies, and power conversion devices, for example -- that are
poised to lift productivity in these areas dramatically. Such
productivity gains can make higher wages sustainable. But we're not
yet close to the needed scale of public- and private-sector effort
here.

And, in any event, why will firms that can locate work anywhere
manufacture these breakthroughs in America? As former Intel CEO Andy
Grove argued in Bloomberg Business Week recently, it's not enough to
do the product innovation in the United States; we need to do the
manufacturing, too. That's the only way, Grove says, to gain the
hands-on experience with products that leads to all subsequent
innovations. Surrender the manufacturing and you lose this virtuous
cycle -- a logic that leads Grove to call for protectionist measures
if need be to make sure America keeps this
innovation-to-manufacturing-to-good-jobs link here.

On education, meanwhile, the administration's agenda, though "bold" by
historic standards, isn't nearly ambitious enough. In terms old
SAT-takers can understand, "Race to the Top" is to "needed education
reform" as "little seed" is to "giant oak." At this pace we're looking
at a decades-long fix.

No politician will talk about the prospect of declining living
standards. Business leaders who know what's afoot abroad talk
privately about it all the time. The defining question of our era may
be this: What do we do if incremental change isn't equal to renewing
American competitiveness, but our political system isn't capable of
producing more than incremental change?

What if waiting for our "Sputnik moment" turns out to be a lot like
waiting for Godot?

Matt Miller, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and
co-host of public radio's "Left, Right & Center," writes a weekly
column for The Post. He can be reached at [email protected].
-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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