The
problems in Japan started when an “asset price bubble” burst. This resulted in the Japanese economy
basically stalling out (with weak or negative growth) for around 10 years. The problems here started when the housing
market bubble burst, leading to severe damage to our financial system (Japan’s
financial system was similarly damaged back then). Additional damage occurred because the
housing bubble also diverted capital to that should have been invested in other
developing industries rather than housing.
When the bubble burst, these industries were behind the foreign
competition and were not providing the jobs they could have.
If
we say the economic problems started in January 2008, we are over five years
into an economic malaise and we don’t really know when a strong recovery will
begin. The stock market is smoking, but
it just recently exceeded its previous peak.
Any shock or cyclical correction would put us behind again.
The
part of the economy where we are really losing is the job market. We frequently talk about unemployment
numbers. But numbers do not get unemployed, people do. And the people losing the most in this mess
are those who lost jobs since 2008. Once you lose your job in this economy, you
can stagger around in the “employment wilderness” for years. Not being employed
productively in your field of expertise causes you to lose income, professional
value and personal fulfillment. Here are some examples from my personal network
(names changed):
This economy can make you feel like a "castaway" |
-
Rich
is a marketing executive who was let go in 2007. Under normal circumstances he would have
found another position in his industry in 2008.
However due the recession, he bounced around several jobs outside of his
industry before finding something that fully utilized his experience in
2012. Rich lost five years of productive
work.
-
Bill
is a 53 year-old industrial engineer. He has been unemployed for two years
because his skills are most valuable when companies are expanding. Companies
are not expanding in this uncertain environment. Bill’s loss is two years and counting.
-
Cindy
is a 50-year old marketing communications professional who was laid off from a
large company in 2010. She found a new
job within a year with a small Internet-based communications firm. However, she did not fit in with the culture
of the new company and lasted less than two years. She is back looking for work
the second time in three years. Even though the job situation has improved
since 2010, there are still four unemployed people for every job opening and
competition for good jobs is fierce. She
is on her way to losing two years.
-
Joe,
a web-based marketing guy, was downsized from his company and it took him 15
months to find a new position. But after two years, his company was sold and he
is on the market again. He will also lose
two years.
-
Craig
is a 54 year-old marketing communications professional and has been looking for
work for three years. Becky, a product manager,
has worked one year out of the last four.
-
Many
college graduates have not found jobs in their field. Some are still looking three years after
graduation while working part-time. They
just lost the first three years of their careers and it will take them three
years longer (or more) to pay off sizable college loans.
All these people have valuable skills that they could be
using to grow the economy, but they can’t because companies are not expanding,
jobs are not being created and the economy is plodding along. This is a huge waste of human capital. The economy suffers and the people suffer.
And the suffering has consequences. Largely due to the
Great Recession, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports
that the suicide rate for men in their 50’s has increased over 50%. Rates for other demographic groups are up
also.
If we have already “lost” five years, when will this end?
The Wall Street
Journal reports that at the current rate of job growth
(adjusted for population growth) it will take nine more years for employment to
return to pre-recession levels. Of
course the rate of job growth is expected to increase soon. However if it takes
even five more years (instead of nine), then five plus five I believe equals a
decade. We haven’t lost the decade yet,
but we are well on our way.
Is this guy running our economy? |
Some people may argue that the situation is not that dire
and that displaced middle-aged workers will just have to work into their 70’s
to make up the difference.
But just because people are living longer in general does
not mean people are healthy enough or able to work this long. If you have to
work that long, there is no guarantee that you will even have a retirement.
For example, my friend Jerry, age 64, planned to finish
his long, successful, career this fall and begin enjoying a great, extended,
retirement. They buried him last week.
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