Like all good parrots, the talking heads in the North American media can be counted upon to regurgitate buzzwords over and over again – even when they don't have the faintest idea what those words mean. The latest example of mindless droning from these pseudo-reporters is that the U.S. economy is headed for a “jobless recovery”.
As with all oxymorons, no intelligent person would/should be foolish enough to add these buzz-words to his/her lexicon. By definition, an “economic recovery” means a net increase in economic activity, which also dictates positive wealth generation. When an economy is producing wealth, this must also result in job-creation.
We can invent scenarios where such job creation is delayed. For example, an economy with a large, but mostly automated manufacturing sector could see a surge in demand (and production) as economic conditions improve. Over the short term, it is certainly possible that such an economy could sell most of its production abroad. Thus, an economy generating a significant increase in net wealth could temporarily produce little new employment in the domestic economy.
However, this must only be a temporary situation. Though the “trickle down” theory of right-wing capitalists has been thoroughly discredited as a model for economic growth, there is a kernel of truth buried within this propaganda. When an economy produces significant amounts of wealth, even if that wealth creation is focused primarily in the hands of the wealthiest members of society, these people spend some of that money – creating wealth and employment opportunities for the “little people” further down the economic ladder.
The “trickle down” theory fails as an economic model for the same reason the phrase “jobless recovery” fails the test of rationality. When only the wealthiest people in a society have disposable income (people with enough wealth that they don't need employment income to keep spending), it is mathematically impossible to have a robust economy.
The reason for this revolves around an economic concept known as the “marginal propensity to consume”. While this sounds complicated, like most jargon, it is actually quite a simple and obvious notion when explained in ordinary English. Basically, the lower a person's level of wealth/income the more they spend out of each new dollar they receive.
Thus poor people have a marginal propensity to consume of “1” (or 100%), because due to their minimal wealth, they are forced to spend their money as fast as they receive it – just to survive. Conversely, at most, a billionaire might have a marginal propensity to consume of 0.1 (or 10%) - and likely far less – since these people have so much wealth (and consumer goods) already, that there is little need or motivation to spend any more each time their wealth increases by another dollar.
Plutarch, the Greek philosopher, uttered this famous quotation over 2,000 years ago: “An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of all Republics”. The reason this is true is based upon our marginal propensities to consume. When wealth is evenly dispersed in a society, this means that a high percentage of that wealth is in the hands of people with a high marginal propensity to consume.
These people spend a high percentage of each dollar they take in. And then the person receiving that dollar spends a high percentage of that dollar, and so on and so on...
Conversely, in a society where wealth is highly concentrated in a tiny percentage of the population (like the United States, today), only a small fraction of each new dollar of wealth that is produced gets spent. This small “multiplier effect” dictates weak economic activity – since instead of being spent and re-spent, money collects in large pools of “idle wealth”, which produces no economic benefit for a society.
Nowhere are these economic principles truer than in a consumer economy like the United States. With the exodus of manufacturing, the U.S. economy now produces little wealth. Therefore, for well over a decade this economy has become totally dependent on ultra-high levels of consumption to sustain the economy. In fact, for over two years, the U.S. as a whole had a negative savings rate – meaning a marginal propensity to consume of greater than 100%.
As we have seen (and as any child could predict), this was totally unsustainable. However, what makes this brief period of insanity truly frightening is that with an extremely heavy concentration of wealth, during the time when the economy had a negative savings-rate, the wealthy were still socking-away billions of dollars per year – meaning those at the bottom were spending much more than 100% of their incomes.
This brings us back (finally) to the mythical “jobless recovery”. Apart from the phony “economic growth” of the U.S. tech-bubble, followed by the even more-fraudulent housing bubble (where illusory “wealth” produced temporary jobs), all that Americans have experienced for roughly twenty years are “jobless recoveries”.
However, as I have illustrated with fundamental principles of economics (which are based upon both mathematical and logical certainty), you cannot have a healthy economy (i.e. a real “recovery”) without the masses having significant spending power – since at no time in human history has the spending of the wealthy been enough to produce a healthy economy (this was old news 2,000 years ago).
Therefore, if the masses don't have jobs, then the only way they can spend money is to borrow money. Here, at last, we expose the truth of the “jobless recovery”: in previous years, Americans were able to create the (temporary) illusion of economic health through excessive borrowing – and then spending those borrowed dollars virtually as fast as they borrowed.
Essentially, saying “jobless recovery” became a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy, where like Pavlov's Dogs, Americans would automatically begin spending again (with borrowed dollars) as soon as they were told the economy had recovered.
There have been no “jobless recoveries” in the past – not in the United States, or anywhere else in the world. All that happened in previous “jobless recoveries” is that Americans mortgaged their futures (and the futures of their children) through dramatically increasing their debt levels, and then recklessly spending those borrowed dollars on mostly pointless consumption.
As stated before, this is completely unsustainable – and now, today, that binge is over. Americans have maxed-out their credit. The days of borrowing-and-spending are over. As a result, the only thing which can pull the U.S. economy out of what appears to be a terminal, downward spiral is real economic growth – and the jobs which always accompany such growth.
When the talking heads (and the propagandists who put those words in their mouths) say the words “jobless recovery”, what they are really saying is “no recovery at all”. While in past years, the magic of credit cards could conceal that false propaganda, that magic is a thing of the past.
Today, the absurdity of the “jobless recovery” is about to be exposed in the U.S. once and for all – with sufficient clarity that even the mindless, media talking-heads will be able to see the inherent falsehood in this myth.
Read more Stockhouse articles by Jeff Neilson