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Day 5 • The US Economy – Today and Near-Term Future • U.S. remains largest economy (about 22% of world GDP) – China is certainly rising Positives • Growth, although slow in the U.S. has outpaced growth in Europe and Japan • Other than some small banking-based economies (& Norway), U.S. standard of living remains higher than that of other industrialized countries It’s Not all Bad News! Growth Rates Year/”Country” U.S. Euro Area Japan China 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2.7 1.8 -0.3 -2.8 2.5 1.8 2.8 1.9 3.2 3.0 0.4 -4.4 2.0 1.5 -0.7 -0.4 1.7 2.2 -1.0 -5.5 4.7 -0.6 1.4 1.7 Source: Council of Economic Advisors, Economic Report of the President 12.7 14.2 9.6 9.2 10.4 9.3 7.7 7.7 GDP Per Capita – PPP Basis Liechtenstein 141,100 2008 Qatar 104,300 2011 Luxembourg 81,100 2011 Monaco 63,400 2009 Singapore 60,500 2011 Falkland Islands 55,400 2002 Norway 54,200 2011 Brunei 50,000 2011 Hong Kong 49,800 2011 United States 49,000 2011 United Arab Emirates 48,800 2011 Switzerland 43,900 2011 Cayman Islands 43,800 2004 Netherlands 42,700 2011 What Economic Problems must we deal with if the U.S. is to return to long-term growth The Math is Scary • U.S. Debt = $18 Trillion – @ 2% interest = $360 billion of goods and services foregone – @ 4% interest = $720 billion in goods and services forfeited – Without reform, Federal Government will be able to do little except pay Medicare and other social program obligations and fund (to some degree) defense. • Some indications that there will be discussion on fixing the structural deficits, but no action yet • Note that this concern should straddle the political spectrum – Conservatives want lower debt – Liberals/Progressives want expanded social programs – will not happen if debt not brought under control Health Care Industry • Current ACA is not going to solve problem – Will leave 31 million uninsured after full implementation (CBO) • Conjecture is that already delayed employer mandate may be deleted from ACA – funding becomes problematic – U.S. healthcare still too expensive • Tort Reform might be a good first step – Remove tie between employment and health insurance, which is becoming untenable, and embed deduction in the tax code. Other Possible Reforms include: • Single-Payer (as in Canada) – Americans unlikely to tolerate wait times Canadians are now turning to private alternatives, however Transparency through Tactics such as HSAs • Most patients have little idea what healthcare costs – After “cost-saving” measures at Fairfield, I no longer know what is being billed – I have not incentive to seek less expensive care – HSAs could provide an incentive mechanism, at least for routine and routine sick care Or, Catastrophic Health Insurance • Consumer liable for $X/year, Insurance (public or private) kicks in after that – No one is ever permanently economically ruined by an illness – Insurance of this kind can be written very cheaply, as the insurer avoids the costly nickel and dime expenses normally associated with coverage • Low probability of actually using the insurance! – For reference, see LeClair, Bentivenga (1999), Connecticut Medicine The U.S. Trade Deficit Best Cure is a Good Recession(see data) • A % of every dollar (17% in the U.S.) is spent on imports – If we grow faster than our trading partners, the deficit will worsen again. – Growth in Europe is NOT picking up….If growth returns to the U.S., problem will worsen • U.S. still has a lot of work to do in its relationships with its trading partners – Particularly China (a WTO issue) Other Factors • Self-sufficiency in energy would be a major accomplishment • Devaluation of dollar probably destabilizing – History of “strong $ policy” – Can, however, work to force the Chinese currency to more closely follow the market • Protection of intellectual property also key, as was noted in last week’s presentation Solving the weakness in the labor market • Need to accept that this is a multi-faceted problem: – Regional (unemployment in North Dakota is technically zero) – Specific to certain parts of the labor market (younger, inexperienced workers, both collegeeducated and not --- and older workers (50+)) – Much of unemployment is “structural” (usual government policies to solve problem will not work) • Recognize that the life-time employment with a single firm is gone – Labor mobility much higher – by firm, by region and by occupation – Policies that increase the fluidity of the market are probably the best bet. Other problems in search co solutions • The $1 trillion of student loans outstanding Most Solutions Politically infeasible • Complete forgiveness • Allowing students to declare bankruptcy (?) • Income-Based Repayment already in use – Student loans become a lifetime commitment • Allow students to “work off” debt in public service jobs – Teaching in inner-city – Makes some sense – no means to pay for it Mandatory Education on Loan Repayment Realities • Few 18-year olds understand burden of loans – Few consider realities of repayment when choosing a major – Could be regarded as a substitute for the collateral that would traditionally be required for loans of this size – Could, of course, substantially alter the make up of degrees offered by colleges and universities And What about Home Ownership? • A means by which to incentivize home ownership that does not return us to a housing bubble and a repeat of 2008 – Or a recognition that home ownership in a more mobile society makes less sense, and maybe this should not be a national goal. – Germans function with a homeownership rate that is measurably lower (53.3%) – downside is that wealth accumulation is deeply hampered. Thank You!