Economic Development

Economic Development in the United States

Economic Development in the International Business Landscape

Definition of Economic Development in the context of U.S. international business and public trade policy: The process of material and social betterment resulting from increased economic production and productivity.

Secular Stagnation of the U.S.

The increasingly frequent arguments that the US may be for in a period of secular stagnation – that is, long term slow growth- brings to mind the ex-baseball player Yogi Berra’s (alleged) statement that he was observing “déjà vu all over again”. It is all over again because during the latter part of the Great Depression, and again immediately after Word War II, many economists were warning about the prospects of slow growth unless governments invested at a high rate. I do not believe this is the prospects for the present economy.

The arguments made at that time are eerily similar to those currently made. Alvin Hansen of Harvard University claimed in the latter part of the 1930s that because of presumed modest technological progress and weak private investment, the economy would move forward with little economic progress unless the government provided substantial stimulus. Many economists after the Second World War believed that because of high savings rates, especially among richer persons, savings would be too large compared to private investment to produce full employment without large-scale government investments. Present proponents of the secular stagnation thesis make closely related arguments, even though the economy has greatly changed over the past 70 years.

On the technological front, the claim is that despite the development of computers and the Internet, the prospects for major innovations in the next decade are not bright. I believe these arguments are wrong (see my post, “Will Long-Term Growth Slow down, 10-07-12), although the longer-term future is not knowable with any confidence.

Most of the pessimism about prospects for technological advances does not recognize the latest developments in energy and medical care. Fracking and the extraction of oil and natural gas from shale rock have greatly increased the supply and lowered the price of natural gas, and to a lesser that of oil. Also neglected is the revolution going on in personalized treatments of cancer and other major diseases. That advances in life expectancy and the quality of life are not captured in GDP measures (they could be included without too much effort) should not blind us to their robust advances in recent year that have added immense value to consumer welfare. Personalized medicine, which is about to explode, will raise that value much further.

Perhaps as a result of their presumed limited advances in technology, secular stagnation proponents believe there will be insufficient private and public investment relative to the level of savings, even at nominal interest rates that have been close to zero. They cite the weak investment in the US, and even more so in Europe, during the slow recovery from the depths of the Great Recession. The growth in GDP has also been disappointing compared to the recovery in GDP from other severe recessions, and the decline from peak unemployment has been slow.

However, It would seem strange that the US cannot generate enough investment even though the 1990s was a decade of good overall growth in GDP and rapid growth in employment. The first 7 years of this century also had low unemployment and high investment, although part of this investment was in the housing industry that led to an unsustainable bubble in housing prices. I doubt that the American economy underwent such a large structural change over this relatively short period, especially given the continuing stimulus in world demand from a rapidly growing Chinese economy and that of other developing countries.

I agree with the secular stagnation thesis that the government should increase overall investment in various kinds of infrastructure, including bridges, airports, and road. However, I strongly urge that, whenever feasible, user fees are implemented, including time-of-use fees on roads (see, for example, the case for congestion fees in my “The Solution to Traffic Congestion”, 2-12-06).

The main way governments can help the economy is by reforming tax and regulatory policies. For example, the US has one of the highest corporate income taxes in the developed world at about 35 percent. A reduction in this rate to no more than 30 percent, and preferably to 25 percent, combined with giving firms the right to expense all investments, would be a major stimulant to corporate and other investment.

The growth in regulation in the US has been rapid since the end of the Reagan administration, sufficiently so that America’s world ranking in the degree of regulation has greatly worsened over time. The US standing will get even worse as a result of the convoluted and extensive financial regulations in the Dodd- Frank Act, and the messy and extensive regulations that seem to be developing in the healthcare industry as a result of the Affordable Care Act. One way to simplify and reduce these and other regulations is to increase the role of clear simple rules, such as higher equity requirements for banks, in place of regulator discretion. This would provide investors with clearer and simpler guidelines about what they can and cannot do.

To conclude, I do not believe the American economy will experience secular stagnation over the next decade because technology will continue to advance at a good pace, and there will be no dearth of private investment opportunities. But it would be valuable to cut corporate income taxes and reduce the massive amount of regulation. These changes would stimulate investment and growth in a way that also improves the efficiency of the American economy.

Author: Becker, defunct

Tribal Economic Development and the Constitution

According to the Encyclopedia of the American Constitution, the contact “between non-Indians and Native American tribal nations largely destroyed the traditional economies of tribal nations, which included agriculture, hunting and fishing, and associated trade networks. Fish and game were slaughtered or depleted.”

Economic Development Administration Regulations Database

This is a database related to interests in and transfers of real estate, in the following material: Administrative Materials. A description of this real estate database is provided below:

Sections of title 13, Business Credit and Assistance, of the CFR that relate to the Economic Development Administration within the Department of Commerce, as found in the Housing and Development Reporter Reference Files.

Further information on United States legal research databases, including real property databases, are provided following the former link.

Finding the law: Economic Development in the U.S. Code

A collection of general and permanent laws relating to economic development, passed by the United States Congress, are organized by subject matter arrangements in the United States Code (U.S.C.; this label examines economic development topics), to make them easy to use (usually, organized by legal areas into Titles, Chapters and Sections). The platform provides introductory material to the U.S. Code, and cross references to case law. View the U.S. Code’s table of contents here.

Related Subjects

Related subject matters include:

Tribal Economic Development

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Economics

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

State Economic Development

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Political Economy

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Labor

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Employment Law

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

International Labor Law

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Industrial Safety

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Labor Right

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Labor Policy

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Economic Cooperation and Development

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Social development

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Price Policy

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Price Control

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Pricing Strategy

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Dumping

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Social development

There is related information to this topic in this American legal encyclopedia.

Resources

Further Reading

Comments

10 responses to “Economic Development”

  1. International Avatar
    International

    Jim

    Once quality improvements, like healthy longevity, are monetized, the measure of economic success is not GDP, but GDP per capita.

    I don’t get it, but economists like these two continue to talk about how to raise the GDP, ignoring entirely the denominator of the equation. In other words, economic success could be achieved at low cost by putting a stop to all the breeding.

    If I’m trying to make it though the winter in a snowbound sailing ship together with 10 dogs and 10 cats, all breeding away, it should soon occur to me to: first, stop their breeding; second, start killing them off to lower the competition for food; third, start eating them. Folks like Shackleton have actually done this.

    Now I don’t (yet) recommend killing or eating Amerikan kids, but we sure as hell could put a stop to all the gummint policies that encourage breeding. If we needed workers (sometime in the distant future), we could turn to importing potty-trained workers from nearby countries who are ready and willing to contribute to the GNP without our having had to spend over $10,000 each over 13 years to give them a public mis-education.

    A sure road to economic disaster is to continue to overtax the producers among us in order to support the indigent unemployed that go on breeding away.

  2. International Avatar
    International

    Bruce

    Japan is the poster child and living proof that low interest rates do not guarantee economic growth and prosperity. Years ago before the “Bernanke has all the answers” era, many of us criticized Japan for failing to own its problems. Many people thought Japan should face up to the mess it had created and do the right thing. Broadly accepted was the concept that only by letting its zombie banks and industries fail could Japan clean out the system and move forward.

    While they claim otherwise, in many ways Bernanke and the Fed have put America on a path that mirrors the same unsuccessful path taken by Japan. A path that avoids real reform and bails out the very people that caused many of our problems.

  3. International Avatar
    International

    Bill Goode

    Tax policy and government regulation do impact domestic growth, but the fear of the same also has a beneficial or detrimental effect, as well. The fiscal multiplier produced by government stimulus will change depending on what the stimulus is spent on (maintaining high employment in the public sector vs. improving unemployment in the private sector) as well as, what other uncertainties exist in the minds of the consumer (increasing savings vs. consumption).

    Monitary policy at this zero lower bound level has obvious limitations. Fiscal Policy probably would have a greater impact; however, the type of legislation that private industry infers or fears from the political party in power and how the government spends any stimulus (private or public)is very difficult to put into a mathematical model; thus making the prediction of the benefit of such a fiscal policy less reliable.

  4. International Avatar
    International

    Gertrud Fremling

    It is easy to imagine many types of (now) luxury type services where demand would continue to increase. For instance the whole category of educational/athletic services, such as personal trainer, dance instructor, ski instructor. Similarly, people like to learn to improve many fun skills, such as getting group lessons in cooking, painting, ceramics, wood working, playing a musical instrument. Pets will be pampered more, increasing demand for veterinarians, dog walkers, pet psychologist. And if the cost of travel comes down due to automation, demand for air craft, tour guides et.c. would go up. Protective services, such as security guards and police would increase, too as people spend less on other areas. Just look at what the currently wealthy consume: they do not prefer robots but actual personal service.

  5. International Avatar
    International

    Neil

    Simply because we can do something, doesn’t necessarily mean we should do it. Socio-economic benefits many times outways our ability to do things. QEI was once advised by her Counsel to throw open the Nation to vast imports. Her response, “But then what will our Craftsman and Artisans do”? And so, a Golden age was born. Or, when the Emperor Augustus and cohort Agrippa was approached by their construction Engineers who told him that they had machines that could drastically reduce the amount of Labor and time required to rebuild Rome. Augustus’s response, “That’s not the point” and so another Golden age was born.

  6. International Avatar
    International

    Terry Bennett

    I remember standing on the shore at Messina in 1981 and looking over to mainland Italy, and asking my local contact why there was no bridge. He said the mafia ran the ferry. A few connected ferry operators benefited, and tens of thousands of residents on both sides were burdened, many to the point that they’d avoid the trip whenever possible.

    If the government wants to step in and regulate product quality or features, as they have now done with health insurance, maybe they can beat back the Chinese import machine. Meanwhile, millions of Wal-Mart customers vote every day that Its products are good enough to get the job done. Should 300 million people pay higher prices for clothes so a few thousand textile workers can luxuriate in their less than competitive production level? I’m suspicious.

  7. International Avatar
    International

    Jack

    there being many more technical breakthroughs in computers (and robotics) in the coming decade. But even were the pace of development to slow the more widespread adoption of what we have should produce substantial productivity increases.

    Most of us likely remember almost spending more time and energy than we saved with under-powered computers running the clumsy DOS. Today, ha! despite frustration with “Obamacare” we’re seeing not only a roll out of a system empowering both buyer and seller to “meet” at a competitive market place, but IT systems moving ahead, finally! that should greatly improve productivity of docs, nurses and all, but with more “big data” available and searchable, we should be able to find and adopt the procedures offering the best outcomes or same at less cost.

    Haha! “Trouble is…..” the productivity gains seem to be getting wasted with, from a recent report, employees spending two hours a day at “work” on social media.

    Well! after the positive outlook on increasing productivity in about every endeavor that comes to mind but teaching? and lawyering? what about Neil’s question as to “What will our craftsmen do?”

    One answer and Becker has it right, is to be honest with ourselves and no longer ignore over $2 trillion on LONG delayed maintenance and upgrades of our infrastructure. A simple equation really, pay the hard hit construction sector extended unemployment and eventually welfare and “disability” or put them to productive work fixing our nation up so that when this mess is over well have the playing field for a brighter future.

    Much of the rest of the answer —— lacking an especially insightful queen, is that of resorting to democratic processes that might guide the “invisible hand” to more favorably “develop our nation’s resources for the benefit of THE people” ie NOT one in a hundred.

    “Two hours of social media” ie the new version of squandering the day yakking at the water cooler, gives us one big clue. “Send ’em home early!” Yes! even as our “40 hour week” seems to have all too often become more hours and the expectation of text messages being answered during all waking hours, what we need is a shorter work week and say the number of holidays as France. Spread more of what work there is over more employees.

    Next, is to quit caterwauling about “productive and “jobless leeches”” and pull out ALL the stops to begin the long awaited “trickle down”. Start at the bottom where the costs are very small by SUBSTANTIALLY increasing the min wage. Instead of glorying in the demise of the collective bargaining that built the middle class from THEIR share of the mfg era and instead work to further empower unions like SEIU that are seeking to represent the lowest paid and least powerful working folks.

    As Gertrud hopes there will be Demand for new products and services, but ONLY IF far more of us have the time and discretionary income to take Bush’s advice to “go shopping”. If not we continue to ha! take advantage of IT to buy stuff on Ebay to fix our aging gas hogs and eat our discounted food purchased in bulk at Costco at home, while, one more chuckle, even McD’s tries to figure out how to improve its numbers.

    Stagnant wages —————- stagnant economy.

  8. International Avatar
    International

    Bruce

    Society must find a better way to distribute labor and the rewards of labor. This would give more people a path to finding real and fulfilling work. The cost of inequality is taking a toll on our culture. Robots and new technology have streamlined and increased productivity and at the same time eliminated many jobs. Big business is good for big business but not necessarily for the masses. Consolidation often means a gain in efficiency, but this often comes at the cost of losing diversity and a “robustness” to both society and the economy. The benefits of efficiency sometimes have a huge hidden cost.

    How the fruits of labor are divided is important, this includes not just the wage deserved by a common laborer, but how much CEO’s, those in management, and those that can’t, or choose not to work, receive. While we have become far more efficient in producing goods, all people should in their lifetime contribute to the good of society and the economic pie.

  9. International Avatar
    International

    Terry Bennett

    In a duel of imaginations, is it more imaginative to imagine tasks that can’t be automated, or to imagine even more fantastic machines that can in fact automate those tasks? Gertrud’s posts are usually quite insightful, but the existence of the Wii and Khan academy tend to argue against her position above. As robots get better and outperform humans, consumers will shift in their preference. Maybe it can never be 100%, but Judge Posner’s point is well taken: there are magnitudes of new automation on the near horizon, and large numbers of jobs facing elimination thereby (though at least some offsetting number of other jobs will be created in the process).

    The “rewards of labor”, per the post of B Wilds, are distributed naturally, and I do not see any justification for artificially and systemically interfering with that. Just eyeballing it, I expect the cheapest way to deal with the economic problem is to pay welfare subsidies to those who can’t produce enough to pay for their consumption. As for CEO pay, anybody who wants to see them paid less is free to accomplish that, without resort to government. Simply buy a majority of the stock, outvote all the apparently foolish shareholders who want to pay THEIR executives so much, have the company offer lesser salaries to executives, and reap the extra profit yourself as your $40,000-per-year CEO leads the company to equal success. After all, anybody can manage a large company.

    Our tech landscape and daily life will look significantly different in 25 years, if only because of the continued maturing of the innovations that occurred 25 years ago. Just about anything can be automated to a greater extent than currently, as the building blocks get cheaper and it becomes more cost-effective to do so. I expect we’ll see game-changing advances in medicine, robotics, and plenty of other areas, and even a significant re-on-shoring of manufacturing as Jii Jii mentioned (I saw a 3-D printer in Staples this week for a mere $1,250).

    The employment picture will continue to be bleak for those who choose to remain unskilled, probably even bleaker than at present. Maybe we’ll move toward a 25- or 30-hour work week, to spread less work across more workers. Not so many decades ago, work weeks were much longer, and maybe that trend will continue.

    I expect that the U.S. will still be a land of great, even boundless opportunity for those who respond appropriately to market demands. For those who ignore that message, whether out of mere stupidity or a principled and obstinate insistence that it should be otherwise,…well, don’t worry, I’m sure we’ll still have some kind of welfare in place.

  10. International Avatar
    International

    Terry Bennett

    I think the discussion here is suffering from a disconnect of perspectives, i.e., one person looks at a snapshot of the world 10 years from now and another looks 30 years out, and of course they don’t agree on what they see because they are seeing two different worlds. (E.g., your parents may not want robotic daycare, but your grandchildren, many of whom were moving a mouse before they could talk, are likely to be quite comfortable with it. Also, by the time your grandchildren need it, robots are likely to be pretty good.)

    When COBOL was invented and computers started turning up in the large firms that could afford them back in the late 1950’s, the forecast was that many jobs would be eliminated. It was wrong – at the time. The nature of the work changed promptly, but as bookkeepers were laid off, programmers were hired. It took several decades, but by now the prediction has come true. If we had to do all the work manually today that is done by the horde of ubiquitous machines, including typing every report that is printed out of a PC or viewed on-screen, it would take millions upon millions of extra people. (The truth is, most of it just wouldn’t be cost-effective to produce at all and would not get done.) The norm today is that you still need a person, but that’s person’s PC is a multiplier, enabling the person to get a lot more done.

    Right now it’s not cost-effective to invent and deploy crop-picking robots because a farmer can hire a small army of Mexicans by the bushel, but the day will come. Our aging demographic is already pulling low-skill labor to geriatric services, and that arena is going to see more technology in the near future. Suppose a company owns nursing homes and needs 1 nurse’s aide per 5 residents (on every shift). If they can automate some parts of the work and get down to 1 per 10 or 20 residents, that frees up a lot of money.

    A hundred years ago, a lot of jobs were thoroughly unpleasant and back-breaking. Look at the first car factories compared to today. There is less labor overall, but the more striking trend is that there is less drudgery in the labor that remains. I believe this upward march will continue, and people will find more benign work over time, thanks to machines. Where the employment itself will come in the future is a different question, and I believe we don’t know yet – but I have every confidence that it will come, in ways just as unforeseen by us as our current economy was unforeseen by our forefathers.

    Communism and capitalism both occur in nature, but communism does not scale well. A family is a communist collective. A father works and feeds his wife and children without regard for account. Once you expand out beyond a family, or a clan, or a tribe, to dealings with other humans with whom a love connection is not presumptive, and once you get past clubbing each other over the head and taking each other’s property, capitalism is what arises – trade, and just compensation. Communism falls apart as soon as collective production drops below collective consumption and supply fails (when, as Margaret Thatcher said, you run out of other people’s money). Capitalism persists as long as demand exists. My vision of the future is that people will still want stuff, and they will pay to get it, and there will be competition to supply it cheaply, and there will be too many unskilled people competing which will drive the price of unskilled labor very low, and there will be a class of people who are eclipsed from the economy because they just don’t have the wherewithal to produce as much as they consume, and we’ll need to subsidize them, and we will. (This is also my vision of the present.)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *