Thursday, December 24, 2020

Productivity decline as a source of cost-push pressure

On or about 13 November I went looking for the quoted search term "cost-push" at some 30 blogs I've been to many times over the years. Made some notes and did nothing with them, just gathered em up.

On or about 20 December I noticed, new from Dietrich Vollrath, When did productivity growth slow down? Vollrath is usually a good read. 

Some questionable stuff in his post, such as 

The received wisdom is that we are living through a period of slow TFP growth, and that this slowdown in TFP growth kicked in around the early 2000s. But I’m not sure that’s the whole story.

Not sure??

And there's some unquestionable stuff in there, like

When you zoom out further you’ll find that if there was a slowdown in productivity growth it started in the late 1960s or early 1970s and has continued through today.

and

If we’re having a discussion about what went “wrong”, then we need to look way earlier than the early 2000s to figure it out.

I always want to look earlier, so definitely yes to that. And I've known since forever that the productivity slowdown started mid-70s but more recently I question that date, and Vollrath's "late 1960s" is the kind of earlier that I like to look at.

//

On or about today, I was looking thru my "cost-push" notes of the 13th and found this excerpt from :

A change occurred in the late 1960s / early 1970s, however, as labor productivity slowed. Under the then-current regime, labor income continued to grow in line with the economy, maintaining its share of total income. Because productivity was no longer rising as much as previously, though, the return on capital consistent with a constant share of total income could not deliver an adequate rate of return – a profit squeeze ensued. This drove firms to increase prices, leading to larger wage demands and cost-push inflation.

from Postings from along the Trail... by hmg, Jr.

In my notes there was only the excerpt, no evaluation. Maybe I gave it a little extra attention today because of the "late 1960s" thing coming on the heels of Vollrath's "late 1960s" thing. Whatever the reason, this hit me hard today:

  • labor productivity slowed
  • labor income continued to grow
  • a profit squeeze ensued
  • and cost-push inflation.

Usually, when you look up cost-push inflation, you find something like

rising costs push up prices.
Usually the rising costs are wages and oil. If you are as unimaginative as I am, and you read article after article after article looking for something more, you get nothing but tired of reading the same story over and over again.

That's why my "financial cost-push" theory strikes me as such a big deal, and why hmg Jr's

productivity decline as the source of cost-push pressure

concept is such a thrilling thought. With cost-push, you only need something to get it started. After that, the solution to the problem of rising costs creates more rising costs, and you've got a spiral. With hmg Jr's explanation and my own, I now have two explanations of how cost-push got started.

//

hmg, Jr puts the start of the productivity slowdown at 1965, right where Allan Meltzer puts the start of the Great Inflation.

//

So we start with high productivity in the post-WWII period, and a rule that says wages should increase with productivity. It's a nice rule because it means we can afford to buy the output we produce. Equilibrium is satisfied, and economists are happy.

But then productivity drops off, and before you know it wages have gone up more than the rule allows. A high wage share means a low profit share, and that is a problem. The problem is solved by suppressing wages and restoring profit share.

Great.

I'm not sure how this all works, with productivity and growth complicating things. Let me imagine an economy where productivity -- output per hour -- grows 3% per year, and everything else is ceteris paribus fixed.

So output grows at 3%, labor gets two-thirds, capital gets one-third, and I don't know why it works but I think that is the story. And everything is fine for a while. And then productivity falls by half.

So now output grows at 1.5%. If labor still gets two-thirds and capital still gets one-third, everybody gets half what they got before. (So I could see right away that cost pressure rises, because everyone wants as big a piece of the pie as they got before. That part I got.)

For some reason it is not okay if capital has to take a cut, but it is okay if labor has to take a cut. I don't know whether the reason is economic or political, but capital still has to get 1%. Before, when they got 1%, there was 2% left over for labor. Now there is only half a percent left over for labor.

And that's pretty much the story hmg, Jr. tells.

//

There are still a lot of loose ends between my ears, but I think I have the general picture. It's just the increase that gets reduced, not the whole amount, assuming I understand the process.

In the time of 3% productivity, if we got 100 last year then this year we get 103%. In the time of 1.5% productivity, if we got 100 last year then this year we get 101.5%. The 100 doesn't go down, just the addition gets smaller. And labor's share of the addition gets smaller.

In the Economic Forecast post, however, hmg, Jr. foresees further decline due to the retirement of the baby boomers and the consequent fall in the size of the labor force:

Whereas from the 1970s until the advent of the baby boom's retirement, reduced productivity growth allowed for either rising real wages and constant real profits (a falling return to investment), or rising real profits (a constant return to investment) and constant real wages, it is unlikely that this will continue. For real profits to continue to increase, delivering a constant return to investment, real wages must now fall. The “game” has changed from one approximated by zero sums, to a closer approximation by negative sums.

If productivity goes below 1%, then for capital to get its 1%, labor has to give up its productivity gain entirely, and more besides. (Except now it's not productivity falling. It's labor force size.)

//

I don't see hmg, Jr. addressing the question of why productivity fell. Maybe I missed it. I've heard it said, though, that productivity fell because baby boomers brought to the labor force their inexperience in quantity sufficient to cause that decline in productivity.

Nice, right? I'm a baby boomer. When I started working, I made productivity fall. And then by retiring, I made things worse again. I just can't win.

// 

Meanwhile, hmg Jr. lays out a clear picture:

Measuring a real standard of living by real output per capita as “Y/N”, labor productivity as “Y/L”, and labor per capita as “L/N” – where “Y” is real aggregate output, “L” is aggregate hours worked, and “N” is the level of population – the following equation relates them: Y/N = Y/L * L/N.

 The equation Y/N = Y/L * L/N is a version of growth accounting. Dan Sichel:

The speed at which the economy can grow over a longer horizon is determined by changes in two main factors: the total amount people are working — which involves both the number of workers in the labor force and the hours they work — and the efficiency with which they produce goods and services.

 Let me repeat what I said the other day:

I have no trouble accepting the idea that an increase in the labor force or an increase in productivity can boost economic output. But I cannot accept the ridiculous notion that nothing else plays a role in boosting output.

I think we have to go back to why productivity fell. I think it has to do with cost.

4 comments:

The Arthurian said...

A week and a half after writing the above, I like hmg Jr's concept as the "push" that could have boosted inflation from the "creeping" level to the problematic level. It is a satisfying explanation but as hmg Jr points out, it occurs around 1965. While it can explain the "great" inflation of 1965 and after, it can explain neither the recurrence nor the rise of inflation in the years before 1965. It cannot explain JFK's "jawboning" for example, and it cannot explain the steel price rises that occurred despite JFK's efforts, nor those under Eisenhower.

The growing cost of finance can and does explain the pre-1965 inflation in terms of an identified cost-push pressure.

In addition, if cost influences productivity, then the rising financial cost pressures of the 1950s and early '60s may explain the productivity slowdown that hmg Jr puts at 1965.

Unfortunately, the phrase "productivity and costs" always seems to refer to labor productivity and labor costs and how they work together to cause or contain inflation. It never seems to refer to how rising or falling cost may lead to decreases or increases in productivity.

So it goes.

The Arthurian said...

In Exploring the Causes of the Great Inflation Kevin J. Lansing writes:

"In work by Orphanides (1999), which is further explored in Lansing (2000), the hypothesis is that Fed policymakers of the 1970s did not know that trend productivity growth, and hence the economy’s sustainable growth rate, slowed dramatically around 1973 for some reason that has yet to be fully understood. One version of the story goes like this: to construct an estimate of the economy’s sustainable growth rate, Fed policymakers fit a trend through the historical data. When incoming data started falling below the fitted trend because of the abrupt productivity slowdown, policymakers interpreted the data as evidence of a severe recession. In an effort to “lean against the wind,” policymakers lowered short-term interest rates. Though well-intentioned, this policy turned out to be overly expansionary because it did not account for the reduction in the economy’s sustainable growth rate. The result was higher inflation. As more data came in over time, policymakers adjusted the fitted trend, improving their estimate of the economy’s sustainable growth rate. However, with interest rates still below previous levels, inflation continued to rise. Eventually, inflation rose to a point where Fed policymakers were motivated to reverse course and start raising interest rates to fight inflation. The momentum in inflation was such that the Fed could not turn things around until the early 1980s."

Okay, so hmg Jr is not the first to link the productivity decline to the Great Inflation.

But then, Lansing's next paragraph begins:

"A problem with this story is the timing of the rise in inflation. The theory ties the rise to the productivity slowdown, but research places the slowdown sometime in the early 1970s, not the mid-1960s, when U.S. inflation actually began to rise..."

Hm.

I wonder what Orphanides says about that, and Lansing (2000).

Orphanides (1999) is given as
Orphanides, Athanasios. 1999. “The Quest for Prosperity without Inflation.” Unpublished manuscript. Federal Reserve Board, Division of Monetary Affairs.

Lansing (2000) is given as
Lansing, Kevin J. 2000. “Learning about a Shift in Trend Output: Implications for Monetary Policy and Inflation.” Unpublished manuscript. FRB San Francisco.

The Arthurian said...

I also find Milton Friedman in Chapter 8 of Money Mischief saying

"Low productivity is another favorite explanation for inflation. Yet consider Brazil. During the 1960s and 1970s it experienced one of the most rapid rates of growth in output in the world, and also one of the highest rates of inflation... But productivity is a bit player in the inflation story; money is at center stage."

Productivity is a favorite explanation. I guess it's common and I just missed it.

The Arthurian said...

Vollrath has a new post: The 1965 shift in growth, January 8, 2021

"This is a follow up to my last post from early December...
I want to revise that earlier post a little to push back the slowdown even further to the mid-1960s...
"