Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

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Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit Alan B. Krueger Chairman Council of Economic Advisers April 26, 2012

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Alan B. Kruegar, Chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, spoke on reversing the middle class jobs deficit on April 26, 2012 at Columbia University

Transcript of Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Page 1: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Alan B. KruegerChairman

Council of Economic Advisers

April 26, 2012

Page 2: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 1: The 2000s Saw Far Weaker Job Creation Than Each of the Previous Five Decades

2Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics; CEA calculations.

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1950s+24%

1960s+31%

1970s+27%

1980s+20%

1990s+20%

2000s

Nonfarm Payroll Employment Millions

Jan. 2000-Dec. 2007

+5.7%

Page 3: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 2: Real Earnings for the Median Year-Round Worker Stagnated

3Note: Earnings adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers. Source: CEA calculations based on Current Population Survey March Supplement.

32,000

34,000

36,000

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Real Median Earnings for Full-Time Year Round Workers, 1981-2010

2010 Dollars

2010

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Figure 3: The Share of Workers Earning a Middle-Class Income Has Been in Decline Over the Past Three Decades

4Source: CEA calculations based on Current Population Survey March Supplement.

66.1

64.8

60.259.5

56

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68

1980 1990 2000 2010

Share of Full-Time Year Round Workers With Annual Earnings Within 50 Percent of the Median

Percent

0

Page 5: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 4: Economic Growth Turned Positive in 2009:Q3 and Has Continued for 10 Straight Quarters

5Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Shading denotes NBER recession.

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3.63.0

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Real GDP GrowthAnnualized Quarterly Percent Change

2011:Q4

Page 6: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 5: Jobs Have Been Growing Since February 2010

6Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Shading denotes NBER recession.

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Change in Private Nonfarm PayrollsThousands, Seasonally Adjusted

Feb-10

Page 7: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 6: Job Growth in the Current Recovery is Closely Tracking the Early 1990s Recovery

7Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics; CEA calculations.

96

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-36 -30 -24 -18 -12 -6 Trough 6 12 18 24 30 36

Private Payroll Employment During RecoveriesNBER-Defined Cycle Trough = 100

Current (June 2009

Trough)

Months from Trough

1991

2001

Page 8: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 7: Strong Economic Growth in the 1990s Helped Lift Incomes for All Quintiles

8Source: Census Bureau; CEA calculations.

-0.4% 0.1%0.3%

0.6%

1.2%

Lowest fifth 2nd fifth Mid fifth 4th fifth Top fifth-0.5

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Annual Growth Rate of Real Income Across the Family Income Distribution,1979 to 2010

2.2% 2.1% 2.2% 2.3%

3.2%

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Lowest fifth 2nd fifth Mid fifth 4th fifth Top fifth

Annual Growth Rate of Real Income Across the Family Income Distribution,1995-2000

Percent

Page 9: Reversing the Middle Class Jobs Deficit

Figure 8: The Manufacturing Sector Provides a Path to the Middle Class, Especially for Workers with an Associate’s Degree or Less

9Note: The median annual earnings is based on full-time year-round workers.Source: CEA calculations based on Current Population Survey 2011 Annual Social and Economic Supplement.

Manufacturing 56%

Manufacturing63%

Non-Manufacturing

47%

Non-Manufacturing

49%

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All Workers

Associate's Degree or Less

Percent of Workers With Annual Earnings Within 50 Percent of the Median, 2010

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Figure 9: Manufacturing Employment Fell Beneath Its Normal Bounds Early in the 2000s

10Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, CEA calculations.

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Manufacturing Employment Millions

Dec. 2000-Dec. 2007

-3.4 million

Dec. 2007-Jun. 2009

-2.0 million

Jan. 2010-Mar. 2012+470,000

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Figure 10: Domestic U.S. Manufacturers Are Increasingly Competitive

11Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, International Labor Comparisons; CEA Calculations.

-23.0 -10.8 2.1 2.9

14.1 17.120.8

40.8 44.1

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Singapore Japan U.K. Korea SwedenGermany France Canada Italy

Change in Manufacturing Unit Labor Costs, 2002-2010Percent

Taiwan

UnitedStates

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Figure 11: Share of Population with a Post-Secondary Degree in 2009 by Birth Cohort

12Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Education at a Glance 2011.

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Share of 55-64 Year Olds With a Post-Secondary DegreePercent

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Share of 25-34 Year Olds With a Post-Secondary DegreePercent

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Figure 12: College Completion Rate by Income Quartile

13Source: Bailey and Dynarski (2011) based on National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1979 and 1997. College completion is measured by age 25.

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0.21

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Lowest Quartile 2nd Quartile 3rd Quartile Top Quartile

1979 to 1982 birth cohorts

1961 to 1964 birth cohorts

Fraction of Students Completing a Bachelor's Degree, by Income Quartile and Birth Year