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Issue 1, January/February 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The Unsinkable
Texas Economy
The 1990s will go down in history as
the decade of buoyant economic growth in Texas. 1999 was no
exception. After a slow start due to the lingering effects
of the Asian crisis, the Texas economy bounced back in the
second half and finished the year only moderately weaker than
in 1998. As shown in Chart 1, job growth was positive and
exceeded the national average in each year of the decade.
During 2000, Texas exports, particularly
of technology-related products, should accelerate. Although
oil and gas prices are hard to predict, the unexpectedly high
prices since March 1999 should pump up the budgets of Texas
drilling companies, which have only recently begun to add
jobs. And, after several strong years, construction activity
has begun to slow. An election year always poses a challenge
for Mexico, but current indicators suggest that the country
will maintain its current economic expansion into 2000 and,
thus, will continue to stimulate Texas exports and the border
economy. Although tight labor markets will likely restrain
Texas job growth, overall these factors suggest that growth
in 2000 will be stable to slightly higher than in 1999.
High Oil Prices Providing a Boost
In Texas, we "dance with the
one that brung us," and the energy industry has been
our partner for a long time. While oil and gas production
in Texas has declined steadily since the early 1970s and technology-related
industries are a growing share of the state's economy, big
swings in oil prices can still have a significant economic
impact. As shown in Chart 2, broad deviations in Texas employment
growth from its trend have correlated highly with oil price
movements.
Dallas Fed economists Stephen Brown
and Mine Yücel estimate that the state is 75 percent
less sensitive to oil price fluctuations today than it was
in 1982.[1] Even with the reduction, however, the economists
estimate that a 10 percent decline in oil prices that is perceived
to be long-lasting would decrease total Texas employment by
0.36 percent. The price of West Texas Intermediate crude averaged
$14.39 per barrel in 1998—a 31.2 percent decline from
1997 after adjusting for inflation. At the end of 1998, most
forecasters believed oil prices would remain below $14 per
barrel throughout most of 1999. As shown in Chart 3, both
the rig count and oil and gas extraction employment dropped
sharply from early 1998 through early 1999.
Production cutbacks by OPEC countries
and a pickup in world demand for oil caused prices to jump
beginning in March 1999, and by year-end the futures market
was suggesting oil would average about $23 per barrel in 2000.
Although the rig count has bounced back, oil and gas extraction
employment is just beginning to recover. Based on the Brown/Yücel
model, oil price swings were likely responsible for a significant
portion of the overall slowdown in first quarter 1999, and
if price expectations hold up, the energy sector will be an
important source of growth in 2000.
Technology-Related Industries Growing
Strongly
As shown in Chart 4, technology-related
industries have been an important source of strength for the
Texas economy in the 1990s. These industries grew at an average
annual rate of 5.6 percent from 1990 to 1998, almost twice
the rate of total nonfarm job growth, which averaged 3 percent.
The strongest sector was computer-related services, which
increased at an annual rate of 10.1 percent. The weakest sector
was electronic components including semiconductors, which
increased at an annual rate of 1.4 percent. The semiconductor
industry has achieved very high productivity growth rates;
thus, output in this industry has risen at a much faster pace
than employment.
While data from the narrowly defined
industries shown in Chart 4 are not available on a timely
basis, the more broadly defined categories shown in Chart
5 suggest that the high-tech industries slowed in the first
quarter but have since shifted into high gear. According to
most market experts, the outlook for semiconductor sales is
strong. Industry contacts say that strengthening world demand
and the introduction of new products, particularly in communications,
will likely stimulate demand across a wide range of electronic
products in 2000.
Exports Continuing Recovery
A main factor driving the slowdown
and recovery of the high-tech sector in 1998 and 1999 has
been fluctuations in exports due to changing international
conditions. As shown in Chart 6, between the fourth quarter
of 1997 and the first quarter of 1999 growth in exports to
Mexico slowed and exports to other Latin American countries,
Asia and Europe declined. The weakening and rebound have been
particularly acute in chemicals and high-tech products such
as electronic equipment and nonelectrical machinery.
Demand from Mexico is likely to continue
even as that country goes into an election year. Weak oil
prices and the Russian financial crisis stalled Mexico's real
output in fourth quarter 1998 and first quarter 1999. With
a greater sense of calm in the international markets and strongly
rising oil prices, Mexico bounced back in the second and third
quarters of 1999 (Chart 7 ). As David Gould highlights in
the November/ December 1999 issue of Southwest Economy,
Mexico looks much less vulnerable to recession than in the
years before previous elections.[2] Subdued levels of domestic
credit, government spending and the current account deficit
all bode well for the Mexican economy going into 2000. The
adoption of a flexible exchange rate has also reduced the
chance of a currency devaluation and economic crisis. As shown
in Chart 8, the real value of the peso in November 1999 was
low relative to the average levels prior to past election
year devaluations.
Construction Activity Slowing
Although mortgage rates have eased
slightly, the overall rise in rates since the end of 1998
has led to a slowing in single-family housing permits (Chart
9). Continued strength in nonbuilding activity (Chart 10 ),
however, has kept overall contract values from slipping significantly.
In 1998, Congress adopted a slightly different version of
the transportation reauthorization legislation, providing
a minimum estimated increase in federal funding of $700 million
per year for six years for Texas roadways and bridges. School
construction has also been strong.
Manufacturing, typically interest rate-sensitive,
has been dominated in recent years by international demand
and energy markets. Despite higher overall interest rates,
manufacturing activity has improved since the second quarter
of 1999, even in some of the more interest-sensitive sectors
such as transportation equipment and the construction-related
industries—stone, clay and glass, fabricated metal products,
and lumber and wood products (Chart 11). The construction-related
industries will likely weaken in the near future if construction
activity continues to soften.
Expansion Likely to Continue in 2000
While strengthening international
demand and current high energy prices should result in increased
opportunities for Texas businesses in 2000, labor market tightness
should dampen overall job growth. As Dallas Fed economist
Lori Taylor discusses in the September/ October 1999 issue
of Southwest Economy, many of the large metropolitan areas
of the state have very low unemployment rates and very high
rates of labor force participation.[3] Thus, getting employment
growth in excess of the working-age population growth (about
2.2 percent for Texas in 1998) will require gains in net in-migration.
This may be difficult in an environment where almost all regions
of the nation are expanding strongly.
Recent movements in leading indicators
of the Texas economy confirm a positive outlook for 2000 (Chart
12 ). The Texas Leading Index increased from July to October
1999, with five of the eight components showing gains. A slight
decline in the Texas inflation-adjusted export-weighted value
of the dollar (inverted in the index) indicates a generally
lower international price for products produced in Texas.
A lower price should help the state's international competitiveness.
A rise in the U.S. leading index signaled
continued strength in the U.S. economy. Gains in permits to
drill oil and gas wells and in the oil price reflect improvements
in the energy industry. New unemployment claims declined,
suggesting that fewer individuals are expecting to be unemployed
for an extended period. A stock price index based on companies
with significant employment in the state declined, but it
will likely show a pickup in the last two months of the year.
Help-wanted advertising and average weekly hours worked signaled
some weakness.
A forecasting model based on the movements
in the index suggests that job growth should slow only slightly
in 2000 from the pace set in the second half of 1999 (Chart
13). Because of the weakness in the first quarter of 1999,
however, the model predicts that annual employment growth
will increase slightly from 2.2 percent in 1999 to 2.5 percent
in 2000. Based on the model's past forecasting accuracy, there
is only about a 2 percent chance that employment will be lower
in either April 2000 or October 2000 than it was in October
1999. Thus, the probability is very high that the Texas economy
will remain unsinkable for at least another year.
—Keith Phillips
| About the Author
Phillips is senior economist
at the San Antonio Branch of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- For a more complete description of the detrended
employment series and the relationship between
oil prices and the Texas economy, see "The
New Texas Economy," Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Southwest Economy, Issue
1, January/February 1999, p. 5.
- David Gould, "Can Mexico Weather Its
Next Election Cycle?" Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Southwest Economy, Issue
6, November/ December 1999, pp. 10–14.
- Lori Taylor, "The Economics of Prosperity:
A Texas Tale," Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas Southwest Economy, Issue 5,
September/ October 1999, pp. 1–4.
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Productivity,
the Stock Market and Monetary Policy in the New Economy
One of the new economy's defining features
is faster productivity growth. The new economy's most prominent
(and, to many, most worrisome) feature is a booming stock
market. Of the new economy's implications, those for monetary
policy are among the most controversial.
In this article I discuss productivity
growth—what it is, why it's important and evidence that
it has recently been increasing. I also touch on the stock
market and what it's saying about expectations for future
growth in productivity. However, the bulk of the article is
devoted to an analysis of the connection between productivity
growth and monetary policy.
The main conclusion is that, for policymakers,
whether productivity growth is high or low is less important
than whether productivity growth is rising or falling. Rising
productivity growth means good times for central bankers.
It means the Federal Reserve can realistically hope to deliver
low unemployment, rising wages and more rapid output growth,
all without any acceleration in consumer prices. Once productivity
growth stabilizes—even at a high level—policy
choices become more difficult.
The good news is we're experiencing
faster productivity growth and have reason to believe this
faster growth will continue. Over time, even a small increase
in productivity growth can lead to a huge improvement in living
standards for Americans. Unfortunately, although productivity
can keep rising forever, productivity growth cannot. Hence,
we must be prepared for a shift to a less favorable policy
environment. Looking ahead, the days of low unemployment without
inflation are probably numbered, even if the days of rapid
output growth and high stock prices are not. The big challenge
will be recognizing the shift in the policy environment when
it occurs.
Productivity Growth
What It Is. When
people talk about productivity, what they usually have in
mind is labor productivity—output per hour or output
per worker. Government statisticians distinguish among three
underlying sources of labor productivity growth.
The first is increases in the amount
of plant and equipment per worker. For example, I recently
had an ink-jet printer installed in my office. It saves me
from having to walk down the hall when I print something from
my computer. It saves others on the floor from having to wait
for my documents to print. So both my productivity and that
of my colleagues have increased.
The second source of productivity growth
is improvements in the quality of the workforce. One would
expect a workforce with more schooling and more job experience
to be more productive, on average.
The final source of productivity growth
is improvements in technology and in the organization of the
production process—in other words, better equipment
and better management. The label economists apply to productivity
gains from this third source is "multifactor productivity
growth."
Why We Care. Productivity
growth is important because it is the main determinant of
changes in our standard of living. Chart 1 shows the growth
rate of GDP per capita along with the growth rate of labor
productivity. Note how growth in GDP per capita tends to rise
and fall in conjunction with growth in labor productivity.
The most striking feature of the chart
is the big slowdown in both productivity and per capita GDP
growth during the 1970s. Average annual per capita GDP growth
fell from 2.5 percent in the 1950s and 1960s to 1.1 percent
in the late 1970s as productivity growth slowed from 2.4 percent
to 0.5 percent per year. We don't yet have a good understanding
of what caused this deterioration.
Although we saw a partial reversal
in the 1980s and early 1990s, it's only been since 1995 that
labor productivity and per capita GDP growth have fully recovered.
Driven by rapid productivity increases in the high-tech industries,
overall productivity growth is back to where it was during
its post–World War II golden age.
The timing of the increase in productivity
growth is noteworthy. Ordinarily, productivity growth surges
as we emerge from a recession, only to taper off as the economic
expansion matures. In contrast, the recent increase began
after the economy had been growing for nearly five years.
So, there's reason to believe the increase is not just a flash
in the pan.
Irrationally Exuberant?
Productivity and the Stock Market.
The period of rising productivity
growth since 1995 has been marked by sharp increases in price/earnings
and price/dividend ratios, suggesting a connection between
productivity growth and the stock market. A connection certainly
has intuitive appeal. For a given rate of labor force growth,
the more rapid productivity growth is, the greater the potential
growth rates of output, earnings and dividends. With faster
expected growth in earnings and dividends, people are willing
to pay more for a stock at any given level of current
earnings or current dividends.[1] That's why an Amazon.com
can have a market capitalization some 14 times that of Barnes
& Noble, despite never having earned a profit.[2]
Of course, interest rates, inflation
and investors' risk perceptions also affect stock valuations.
However, if all these other factors are held constant, high
stock market valuations ought to signal that investors expect
rapid productivity growth.
Chart 2 shows what happens when price/earnings
and price/dividend ratios are used to predict productivity
growth in the nonfarm business sector, after controlling for
interest rates, inflation expectations and employment trends.[3]
The chart illustrates that although investors have been overly
optimistic or overly pessimistic at times, in general they
have done a good job of anticipating productivity swings.
In particular, recent high and rising stock market valuations
have been justified, so far, by high and rising productivity
growth.
As of third quarter 1999, investors
were anticipating an additional 60-basis-point rise in productivity
growth—to 3.5 percent—during the coming year.
Hence, current market valuations assume not just that productivity
growth will remain rapid but that it will continue to increase
in the year ahead.
Productivity Growth and Monetary
Policy
That productivity growth is high
and may well remain so is extraordinarily good news; it's
the story that belongs on the front page with the banner headline.
But for monetary policymakers, some more obscure details of
the story are important too.
Is Inflation Dead? Since
fourth quarter 1995, inflation has remained contained even
as output has accelerated and unemployment has fallen to a
30-year low. This performance has led some commentators to
proclaim that inflation is dead. Is it true that in the new
economy, with faster productivity growth, the Fed need no
longer worry about inflation? The answer lies in the linkages
between wages, prices, productivity and unemployment.
Chart 3 traces the relationship between
changes in wage growth and the level of unemployment over
the 35 years from 1961 through 1995. Note that wage growth
tends to rise over time when the unemployment rate is low
and to fall over time when the unemployment rate is high.
The critical unemployment rate is just under 6 percent. Recent
experience has been generally consistent with this historical
relationship. (See the points marked with triangles.) As Alan
Greenspan has noted, at low unemployment rates, "upward
pressures on wage costs are inevitable, short of a repeal
of the law of supply and demand."[4]
We've just seen that money wage growth
rises or falls depending on the amount of slack in the labor
market. Chart 4 shows that real, or inflation-adjusted, wage
growth tracks growth in labor productivity. Faster productivity
growth means faster real wage growth. In particular, the higher
rates of productivity growth since 1995 have been accompanied
by a marked acceleration of real wages. The linkage isn't
perfect, but it's quite good. The linkage also makes sense:
firms ought to be willing to pay workers more, in real terms,
the more productive they are.
Why has inflation not increased despite
tight labor markets? The key to the mystery is rising productivity
growth. As shown in Chart 4, real wage growth— the difference
between money wage growth and inflation—is closely tied
to growth in labor productivity:
Wage Growth –
Price Growth = Productivity Growth
Turning this relationship around, price
growth is linked to growth in unit labor costs—the difference
between wage growth and productivity growth:
Price Growth = Wage Growth
– Productivity Growth
(inflation) = (growth in unit labor costs)
Hence, if productivity growth is rising
quickly enough, inflation can remain steady or decline even
if tight labor markets are driving wage growth higher. In
other words, rising productivity growth can offset, or more
than offset, the inflationary effects of tight labor markets.
That's exactly what has happened over the past four years.
Faster growth in output and wages, a falling unemployment
rate and low inflation have spelled good times for Joe Six-pack
and good times for central bankers—all courtesy of the
high-tech productivity revolution.
However, if it is rising productivity
growth that has kept tight labor markets from putting upward
pressure on inflation, policymakers have reason to be wary.
Productivity growth, even if it remains high forever, cannot
keep rising forever. Once productivity growth stabilizes,
the buffer between tight labor markets and inflation will
disappear. Inflation isn't dead, merely sleeping—awaiting
the day when productivity growth begins to level off.
Tough Policy Choices Ahead.
It is useful to run through some
examples that illustrate how the policy environment will change
when productivity growth stops rising. In each case, I assume
the economy enjoys a five-year period during which productivity
growth rises from 1.2 percent per year to 3.5 percent per
year. This path mimics the actual behavior of productivity
growth in the United States since 1995. Thus, the 1.2 percent
figure matches the rate of nonfarm productivity growth in
the U.S. economy in 1995 (and the trend rate of the early
1990s), while the 3.5 percent figure matches the rate stock
market investors expect during 2000.[5]
Of course, real-world productivity
growth may rise above 3.5 percent. But it can't keep rising
forever, and my illustrations all assume that 3.5 percent
is the limit. In each year from 2000 on, the average worker
produces and earns 3.5 percent more than the previous year—up
from a 1.2 percent annual increase in 1995. There's no question
that society in general is much better off because of this
transition to a higher rate of productivity growth. People
feel wealthier than they did before—and justifiably
so.
While productivity growth is rising,
life is rosy for Fed policymakers as well. They can simultaneously
deliver low unemployment and steady inflation, as illustrated
in Chart 5. The unemployment path plotted in the chart reproduces
the actual path seen in the United States since 1995. Given
assumed changes in unemployment and productivity, predicted
paths for output growth, wage growth and inflation are generated
using the historical relationships displayed in Charts 3 and
4. [6] Note that wage growth is predicted to more than double
over five years. Inflation remains low. Output growth rises
from 2.7 percent in 1995 to 5 percent in 1999. On the whole,
the predicted patterns of output growth, wage growth and inflation
pretty well approximate what we've observed in the U.S. economy
over this period.
The exercise shown in Chart 5 makes
the Fed's job look a lot simpler than it was. Productivity-growth
and inflation trends don't become obvious until well after
the fact. As a result, many economists, fearing that falling
unemployment and rapid output growth would lead to higher
inflation, wanted a tighter monetary policy during the late
1990s. At the other extreme were analysts concerned that,
without a looser policy, we might actually see runaway deflation.
Fortunately, those in the middle—"new-paradigm
optimists"—won the day.
Policymaking in the years ahead—as
productivity growth stabilizes—is going to be even more
difficult. I look at two extreme policy choices. The first
assumes the Fed tries to hold the unemployment rate at its
current level (4.1 percent). Results, shown in Chart 6, are
as follows. First, because the unemployment rate remains low,
labor markets stay tight and wage inflation rises indefinitely.
Second, because rising productivity growth no longer acts
as a buffer between wages and prices, price inflation changes
direction and begins to follow wage inflation upward. Finally,
because the unemployment rate is no longer falling, output
growth slows a little.
A policy that implies ever-increasing
inflation is ultimately unsustainable, so holding the unemployment
rate down permanently is not really an option. The point of
Chart 6 is that the longer you try to keep the unemployment
rate down, once productivity growth has leveled off, the higher
the inflation rate you're ultimately going to be saddled with.
At the opposite extreme from a policy
that tries to hold down the unemployment rate is a policy
that holds down the inflation rate. Chart 7 shows the consequences
that pursuing a hardline anti-inflation stance would have
for the labor market and output growth. Because prices respond
with a lag to changes in productivity growth, holding inflation
down does not require that the unemployment rate return immediately
to its long-run average level. Nevertheless, the increase
is fairly rapid. Rising unemployment and steady productivity
growth are sufficient to halt the acceleration of money wages,
but rising unemployment also means a period of sluggish output
growth—a "growth recession."[7]
In summary, the days of low unemployment
accompanied by low inflation will be over once productivity
growth begins to level off. If we try to hold the unemployment
rate at an artificially low level after this date, we can
expect wage pressures to begin spilling over to prices. If
we try to hold inflation down, we can expect to experience
a period of slow output growth and rising unemployment.
Know When to Hold Them, Know When
to Fold Them. How will policymakers
know when it's time to shift gears? The conventional wisdom
is that low unemployment, rising wage growth, rapid output
growth and high stock valuations are all symptoms of an overheated
economy. When we see several of these symptoms at once—as
we do today—it's a clear signal that we need tighter
monetary policy.
The conventional wisdom is at best
a half-truth. The fact is, low unemployment and accelerating
wages are perfectly consistent with a steady or even declining
inflation rate if productivity growth is rising. Similarly,
unusually rapid output growth and historically high stock
market valuations may simply signal that trend productivity
growth is higher now than in the past. If low unemployment,
rapid wage and output growth, and high stock valuations are
accompanied by high and rising productivity growth, they are
to be celebrated, not feared.
The implication is that the conventional
inflation indicators are of little use unless you know what's
happening to productivity growth. Unfortunately, available
measures of productivity growth bounce around a lot from quarter
to quarter and are subject to major revisions. So, timely
recognition of productivity trends is difficult. It follows
that the best place to look for emerging inflation pressures
is probably in the inflation statistics themselves. That doesn't
necessarily mean waiting for consumer price inflation to start
rising. Changes in commodity prices may give advance warning
that retail price increases are in the pipeline.
Conclusions
The good news is that productivity
growth has sped up, implying more rapid gains in living standards
for the average American and higher real wages for workers.
Investors are counting on continued
solid growth in productivity. Indeed, they are betting that
productivity growth will increase further in the year ahead.
In the past, investors have done fairly well at anticipating
fluctuations in productivity growth.
The bad news, from the perspective
of the Federal Reserve, is that even if productivity growth
remains rapid, policymaking is likely to become more difficult.
The tension between our desire for low unemployment and our
desire to maintain low inflation will increase in the years
ahead.
—Evan F. Koenig
 |
| About the Author
Koenig is vice president
and senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas.
Notes
Ricardo Llaudes provided
research assistance for this article.
- For a brief, informal discussion of this point,
see Paul Krugman, "Dow 36,000: A Self-Defeating
Prophecy," Fortune, December 6,
1999, pp. 70–71. For an in-depth analysis,
see Richard W. Kopcke, "Are Stocks Overvalued?"
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston New England
Economic Review, September/October 1997,
pp. 21–40.
- As of January 14, 2000, Amazon.com's market
capitalization was $21.9 billion, as compared
with $1.52 billion for Barnes & Noble. (Source:
http://finance.yahoo.com
[off-site])
- The estimated forecasting equation is (view
the PDF for this equation).
- Humphrey–Hawkins testimony before the
House Committee on Banking and Financial Services,
July 22, 1999.
- More generally, the productivity growth rates
I use in my examples equal the actual rates
recorded in the nonfarm business sector for
1995–98. I assume 3.3 percent productivity
growth in 1999 and 3.5 percent productivity
growth every year thereafter.
- To generate the wage and price paths displayed
in Chart 5, the historical relationships shown
in Charts 3 and 4 are generalized to allow
for more sophisticated dynamic interactions.
(See
the box entitled "The
Dynamics of Wage and Price Adjustment" in the PDF. )
The output growth path is derived from the
assumed
paths
of productivity
and unemployment using Okun's Law. See Arthur
M. Okun, "Potential GNP: Its Measurement
and Significance," in The Political
Economy of Prosperity, 1970 (Washington,
D.C.: Brookings Institution), pp. 132–45.
- Chart 7 should be treated with caution. It
predicts fairly sharp swings in output growth
but takes the path of productivity growth as
given. In reality, swings in output growth typically
induce endogenous swings in productivity growth
in the same direction.
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Beyond
the Border
Trade, WTO and the Environment
Participants in last month's World Trade
Organization meetings in Seattle faced large and intense demonstrations
critical of what many demonstrators saw as the organization's
indifference to environmental issues.
Environmentalists have long been concerned
over what they see as the links between trade liberalization
and environmental danger. Some groups argue that polluters
that would never be permitted to operate in developed countries
take their operations to more compliant developing countries—just
as soon as developed countries drop their trade barriers by
enough to make exporting back to these countries profitable.
According to this view, some developing countries are happy
to get the jobs and will tolerate the pollution. Environmentalists
sometimes refer to such relocations and exporting as "environmental
dumping."
This explanation is troubling, and
whether it is widespread enough to be problematic or not,
evidence suggests that poor countries sometimes pollute more
as they grow. If this is how economic development works when
trade liberalization takes place, it is easy to see why so
many demonstrators turned out in the streets of Seattle.
The question is, Is this really how
economic growth, trade liberalization and pollution interact?
Research by Princeton University professors Gene Grossman
and Alan Krueger offers a perspective that is subtler and
more complicated and that raises questions about the virtues
of discouraging or placing conditions on trade liberalization.
As a background, it is useful to recall
that trade and trade liberalization spur countries' growth.[1]
What complicates the story is the relation between growth
and pollution. Grossman and Krueger's detailed picture of
the connection between income per capita and air pollution
in 42 countries and between income per capita and water pollution
in 58 countries suggests a complicated relationship between
growth in income per capita and pollution.[2]
The authors investigate whether pollution
typically increases with income per capita, whether it sometimes
increases and sometimes declines, or whether it always declines.
Behind this examination is the question of whether or not,
above a certain income per capita, countries begin to treat
clean air and clean water like anything else they want more
of—that as countries grow richer they will pay for laws
and law enforcement that will clean up their environment.
The other question is, of course, At what levels of income
per capita will countries start their cleanups?
Grossman and Krueger perform econometric
analyses on the connections between a nation's income per
capita (among other variables) and the incidence of sulfur
dioxide and smoke in the air and of lead, arsenic, nitrates,
fecal coliform bacteria and a host of other contaminants in
the water.
The results are rather different from
what might make some demonstrators hit the streets. The authors
find not only that pollution does not invariably increase
with income per capita but that there is typically a humpbacked
relation. That is, pollution increases up to a point and then
falls as countries with incomes above that point take steps
to reduce a particular contaminant.
In the cases of sulfur dioxide and
smoke, for example, once a country's income reaches levels
comparable with Mexico's and Malaysia's, respectively, the
quantities of those contaminants begin to fall. Other contaminants
typically reach their peaks at lower incomes per capita. Countries
start doing something about lead in the water when they reach
an income per capita comparable with Peru's. Countries start
to improve the oxygen levels in water at about the income
per capita of Botswana. With some contaminants, such as cadmium
and nitrates, income per capita levels are relatively high
before a country does much. But in all cases, countries begin
pushing down pollution when their incomes per capita grow
to levels well below that of the United States.
If free trade means growth, maybe free
trade is what environmentalists really want.
—William C. Gruben
| About the Author
Gruben is vice president
and the director of the Center for Latin American
Economics at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- An excellent source of information is offered
by Jeffrey Frankel and David Romer in "Does
Trade Cause Growth?" American Economic
Review 89, June 1999, pp. 379–99.
- Gene Grossman and Alan Krueger, "Economic
Growth and the Environment," Quarterly
Journal of Economics 110, May 1995, pp.
353–77.
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Regional
Update
As described in this issue's cover story,
the Texas economy continued its long expansion in 1999, and
job growth is projected to increase slightly this year to
2.5 percent from 2.2 percent in 1999. Because employment is
the best of our timely measures of the state's economic performance,
we put much effort into getting the best estimate possible.
As described by Berger and Phillips in the July/August 1993
issue of Southwest Economy, we developed a unique seasonal
adjustment procedure that incorporates early job estimates
that the Bureau of Labor Statistics later incorporates into
its annual revision.
As shown in the table, over the past
four years, revisions to our adjusted employment series have
averaged only about 0.5 percent. On average, the forecasted
growth rates have been off by slightly less than 1 percentage
point, and, excluding 1997, the average absolute error is
only about 0.5 percent.
Overall, this analysis shows that over
the past four years our forecasts of Texas job growth have
been pretty accurate. However, 1997's stronger-than-expected
national economy and higher energy prices were an example
of how quickly conditions—and forecasts—can change.
—Keith Phillips and Frank Berger
| About Southwest
Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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