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American Economy News & Updates


Highlights for those who don't want to watch:
-Labor market recovering, interest rates look to rise mid-2015
-Housing continues to look tepid
-Business investment continues steady growth
-Fed may be forced to raise interest rates earlier than expected, since the market doesn't appear to be pricing cost of capital correctly
-Global risk appetite has been puzzling (both risky assets and long-duration debt have been moving up)
-Geopolitical shocks don't appear to be significant risk at this time
 
U.S. auto industry posts strong sales in August


U.S. automakers could not be more pleased with the close on Sunday of what is expected be the best month so far this year for sales and which seems to portend that 2014 will be one of the best years in recent memory.

New auto sales in the United States in August totaled 1.5 million vehicles, more than during the same month last year, analysts said.

Sales attained that level thanks to higher demand among individual buyers, who took home 1.3 million new vehicles during the month, J.D. Power said.

The 200,000 remaining units were bought by companies for their vehicle fleets, the market research firm said.

Edmunds.com, meanwhile, estimated the number of sales in August at 1.51 million.

If the current sales rate is maintained for the entire year, a total of 17 million units will be sold in the United States, the largest number since 2001.

August sales will come in 5.5 percent greater than in July and the highest in that month since 2003, Edmunds.com said.

LMC Automotive is forecasting that at year-end sales will total 16.3 million vehicles, 5 percent more than in 2013 and a figure that has not been attained since 2006, before the 2008-2009 crisis in the sector.

J.D. Power estimated that U.S. production in July totaled 1.2 million vehicles, 17 percent more than in the previous July.

Between January and July 2014, U.S. manufacturing plants have produced 9.7 million vehicles, about 5 percent more than during the same period in 2013.

LMC Automotive calculated that 2014 will finish with U.S. production of 16.8 million units. EFE



U.S. auto industry posts strong sales in August | Fox News Latino
 
This is but one of the many structural issues standing in the way of a return to growth for the United States.

 
Don’t Blame Shrinking Work Force Participation on Great Recession: Fed Board Paper - Real Time Economics - WSJ

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  • September 4, 2014, 4:04 PM ET
Don’t Blame Shrinking Work Force Participation on Great Recession: Fed Board Paper
ByPedro Nicolaci da Costa
A decline in the share of Americans holding or seeking jobs is largely the product of longer-term factors such as a rising number of retirees rather than the aftermath of a particularly awful recession, economists at the Federal Reserve board say in a new paper.

The U.S. labor force participation rate was 62.9% in July, down from 66% in December 2007 when the recession began and a peak above 67% in 1999.

Fed officials have long debated how much of the recent decline in labor force participation is “structural,” and therefore more intractable, or “cyclical,” the result of an unusually weak economic recovery.

The difference matters for the central bank because the latter type is more likely to be reversed by Fed policies aimed at boosting economic demand, such as holding interest rates very low. The hope has been that if the economy strengthens, some people who have stopped looking for work—and therefore aren’t counted as part of the labor force—would return to the job market. But if the drop is mostly structural, then very low interest rates aren’t likely to make much difference.

The new research comes down squarely on the structural side of the argument.

“Much of the steep decline in the labor force participation rate since 2007 owes to ongoing structural influences that are pushing down the participation rate rather than a pronounced cyclical weakness related to potential jobseekers’ discouragement about the weak state of the labor market,” several top central bank staffers write in a paper set to be presented at a Brookings Institution conference next week.

The findings are part of an ongoing evolution in thinking for a central bank that until recently gave much credence to the notion that weak demand was the primary factor holding down job market participation. In a speech last month, Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen appeared to subtly shift her message, arguing that “along with cyclical influences, significant structural factors have affected the labor market.”

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That was different from her first public remarks as Fed chairwoman in March. “A lack of jobs is the heart of the problem when unemployment is caused by slack, which we also call ‘cyclical unemployment,’” she said then. “I believe there is still considerable slack in the labor market.”

When Ms. Yellen spoke in March, the nation’s jobless rate was 6.7%. It has since fallen to 6.2% in July. She has said recently that if improvement in the labor market continues to be more rapid than Fed officials forecast, they could raise interest rates sooner than widely expected. Many investors are expecting the first rate hike in the summer of 2015.

However, following some costly head-fakes in recent years, officials want to make very sure economic growth and job creation are sustainable before taking their foot off the gas—particularly with inflation still comfortably below the central bank’s target.
 
Once again, the private sector finds ways to solve its own problems, and the public sector utterly fails and asks for yet more money. Time to completely privatize the school system.

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S&P Report Dives into Skills Gap to Find Ways Bridge It - Real Time Economics - WSJ

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  • September 4, 2014, 2:15 PM ET
S&P Report Dives into Skills Gap to Find Ways Bridge It
ByKathleen Madigan
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Businesses finally are hiring at a monthly pace above 200,000 jobs–a trend that is expected to be extended when the government reports on August payrolls on Friday. Along with more job openings, however, has come complaints about the difficulty of finding workers who possess the talents and experience needed.

Wednesday’s Beige Book from the Federal Reserve noted contacts in all 12 districts mentioned a shortage of skilled workers. The National Federation of Independent Business reports a rising share of small business owners say they cannot find qualified workers.

Economists at Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services examined the skills-gap dilemma and what can be done about it. What they found was that the gap can be divided into two different skills sets: basic math and language skills that should be acquired in school, and specialized knowledge attached to specific jobs and experience.

While specialized skills are–almost by definition–higher up on the learning curve, S&P projects this is where the skills gap will be narrowed faster in the short run. That’s because companies have a financial incentive to provide the training needed to run their machinery, follow company-specific processes and program company computers.

According to the report, existing economic research suggest part of the skills gap can be explained by the unwillingness among companies to train their employees and the desire to hire people with the right skills at low wages.

But those attitudes will have to change, said Beth Ann Bovino, U.S. chief economist at S&P and author of the report.

“Businesses picked up hiring nicely this year and wages have started to climb higher,” she said. “If this continues, they may not only hire more workers but train them as well.”

Already, she said, “you see signs private employers are taking small steps to initiate training programs.”

The gap concerning math, reading and writing skills may be harder to bridge, Bovino warned.

The U.S. lags behind other industrialized nations in preschool programs where students begin to learn math and language skills. Moreover, the report said, the difference in access to quality education between affluent and poor children is contributing to the basic skills shortfall.

The challenge is money. Changing U.S. schools will take political commitment and taxpayer willingness.

“Changing the educational system is not a short-term fix,” Bovino said.

Failing to change, however, will hobble the longer-run economic outlook. As the report argues, “although the U.S. economy might still grow even without enough trained workers, it won’t thrive under such conditions.”
 
Fed’s Fisher Says Recent Data Suggest U.S. Recovery Is Strengthening - Real Time Economics - WSJ

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  • September 4, 2014, 8:15 PM ET
Fed’s Fisher Says Recent Data Suggest U.S. Recovery Is Strengthening
ByRob Curran
Recent economic data suggest the recovery is strengthening and the U.S. inflation rate may be running closer to the Federal Reserve‘s targets than is immediately obvious, said Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher.

While acknowledging that recent consumer-inflation data were softer than in prior months, Mr. Fisher said underlying trends remained inflationary, according to a prepared text of comments scheduled to be delivered to the U.S.-India Chamber of Commerce and S. Jaishankar, the Indian ambassador to the U.S. in Dallas.

“In the July statistics, we saw some of the fastest rates of increases in a while for the largest, least-volatile components of core services, such as rent and purchased meals,” Mr. Fisher said. “So the jury is out as to whether we have seen a reversal in the recent upward ascent of prices toward our 2 percent target. ”

Mr. Fisher pointed to the recent August manufacturing and services surveys from the Institute for Supply Management as evidence of strength in the economy.

“These reports echo a string of others—including the Beige Book survey of regional economic conditions released yesterday by the Federal Reserve—that underscore the healing that is taking place in the U.S. economy despite our having what is, in truth, a dysfunctional and counterproductive fiscal and regulatory environment,” said Mr. Fisher, according to the notes.

Mr. Fisher also noted improvement in labor-market conditions, which some economists and Fed members have viewed as mixed.

“Unemployment has declined to 6.2%, and the dynamics of the labor market are improving,” said Mr. Fisher. “At the Federal Open Market Committee…we have been working to better understand these employment dynamics.

Mr. Fisher, who opposed the latest round of quantitative easing from the outset, again warned about unintended consequences of the Fed’s five years of monetary easing.

Speaking about the Fed’s mandate to preserve “moderate interest rates,” Mr. Fisher said “we have overshot the mark.”

“Interest rates on the lowest-quality credits—on ‘junk’—are historically low, as are the spreads they are priced at above the current historically low nominal rates for investment-grade credits,” said Mr. Fisher, who has pointed to junk-bond prices as evidence of speculative froth in markets in the past.

Addressing the Indian ambassador in a section of the text titled “Time to Enhance the U.S.-India Working Relationship,” Mr. Fisher said: “The logic of an enhanced strategic relationship between my country and yours is crystal clear, beginning with a harsh geopolitical reality: You live in a tough neighborhood and need us; we, in turn, need all the friends we can muster in your geographic sphere.”
 
Interesting tidbit from Bespoke Investment Group for followers of the US stock market (one of the best leading indicators for the economy):

With the S&P 500 hitting yet another new all-time high today, the current bull market that began on March 9th, 2009 has crossed the 2,000 calendar day mark. For reference, a bull market is a rally (closing basis) of at least 20% that was preceded by a drop of at least 20%. A bear market is a decline of at least 20% that was preceded by a rally of at least 20%.

Below is a table of the historical bull markets that the S&P 500 has experienced going back to 1928. As shown, the current bull market now ranks 4th in terms of length. It needs to last another 244 days to pass the third longest bull market that ran from 10/3/1974 to 11/28/1980.

The average bull market for the S&P 500 lasts 933 days and sees a rally of 105.3%. At 2,005 days with a gain of 196.4%, the current bull market is just about double the average both in terms of gains and length.

 
Hiring slows as U.S. adds 142,000 jobs - MarketWatch

Hiring slows as U.S. adds 142,000 jobs
By Jeffry Bartash
Published: Sept 5, 2014 11:13 a.m. ET

Unemployment drops to 6.1% to match a six-year low

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Fast food workers demonstrate outside McDonald's in Chicago,. Companies are hiring in almost every industry, but they aren’t offering much better pay.

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The pace of hiring in the U.S. downshifted in August to the slowest rate of the year, but the disappointing employment report did little to stunt a sense among most investors and economists that it’s a temporary blight unlikely to tarnish the nation’s improved growth outlook.

The U.S. created just 142,000 jobs last month to mark the smallest gain since December, preliminary government data on Friday showed. That fell well short of the 228,000 gain forecast by a MarketWatch poll.

Employment gains for July and June were lowered by a combined 28,000, the Labor Department said.

The unemployment rate, meanwhile, fell a tick to 6.1% to match a six-year low, as more people stopped looking for work. The labor-force participation rate dipped to 62.8% from 62.9% to tie a 36-year low.

The deceleration in hiring ended a six-month streak in which the U.S. added at least 200,000 jobs, the best streak of job creation since 2006.

The report drove down yields of the 10-year Treasury 10_YEAR, -0.73% The Federal Reserve is less likely to accelerate its timetable to raise interest rates after the letdown, analysts say. U.S. stocks SPX, +0.37% rose slightly in recent action.

Still, many on Wall Street brushed off the subdued employment report as outlier that’s contradicted by a flurry of other data showing the economy speeding up. Read: why poor jobs report a fluke.

“I don’t think it indicates much of anything,” said Kate Warne, investment strategist at the brokerage Edward Jones. “Everything else suggests we saw better job growth in August.”

The dropoff stemmed in part from fewer jobs in the retail and auto sectors, both of which were influenced by short-term events.

Thousands of employees at a supermarket chain in New England called Market Basket had their hours cut or they walked off the job to protest the firing of a well-liked chief executive. Auto makers laid off fewer workers in July, so they recalled fewer employees than usual in August.

August is also prone to sharp revisions that make the initial job figures suspect. The difference between the first and third estimates of employment growth have averaged more than 70,000 a month in the past five years.

The employment report was not all negative. Most industries continued to add workers,. Employment rose in the professional ranks, health care, construction and the restaurant business.

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The steady rise in hiring reduced a broader measure of unemployment to 12%from 12.2%. The so-called U6 rate includes people who can only find part-time jobs as well as those who’ve recently given up looking.

Also a good sign was an increase in hourly wages after no change in July. Wages rose 0.2% to $24.53.

Even with that gain, the increase in wages over the past 12 months is a mediocre 2.1%. The U.S. can’t grow much growth unless wages rise substantially, analysts say.

So far in 2014 the economy has gained an average of 215,000 jobs a month — the fastest pace of hiring since 1999. The U.S. is on track to add 2.6 million jobs this year.
 
Attempts to foster more trade and investment between Midwestern states and Japan took the spotlight Monday at the 46th annual Midwest U.S.-Japan Conference in Des Moines.

The gathering brings together business leaders from Japan and the Midwest, the governors of six states and a delegation of Japanese officials.

“We find it important enough to be here because this relationship is so important to our individual states and the people who are employed by a number of Japanese companies,” Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad said.

He was joined by the governors of Nebraska, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan and Missouri.

Each governor touted his state’s connection to Japan and used the conference to promote his state’s advantages to Japanese business officials.

“We believe trade and investment should be a mutually beneficial relationship, and we want you to know that Nebraska is open for business,” Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman said.

Members of the Japanese delegation also spoke about trying to promote trade and business partnerships.

“Japanese companies are eager to do even more business, beginning right here and right now. ... Together, let’s discover even more business opportunities in this field of dreams,” said Masaharu Yoshida, the consulate general of Japan at Chicago.

Multiple speakers mentioned the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an agreement under negotiation that would create wide-scale free trade among the U.S., Japan and 10 other countries.

“The TPP is critical to further improve the United States’ position as a strong production base and export base for manufacturing and agriculture,” said Michael Beeman, the acting assistant U.S. trade representative for Japan, Korea and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Affairs.

This year’s conference was the first to be hosted by Iowa since 1995.

Monday’s session began with the signing of two agreements, one by Des Moines Area Community College and the other by the Greater Des Moines Partnership.

DMACC President Rob Denson signed a memorandum of understanding with Yamanashi Prefecture University. The two colleges agreed to expand their student exchange programs.

Denson said Monday that DMACC’s relationship with Yamanashi Prefecture University goes back about 28 years.

Yamanashi Prefecture is Iowa’s oldest sister state.

The Greater Des Moines Partnership signed a memorandum with the Junior Chamber International Kofu.

Kofu is one of Des Moines’ sister cities. The agreement is intended to connect young professionals in both cities.

The conference kicked off Sunday with an opening reception at the World Food Prize Hall of Laureates. It concludes today.

Midwest-Japan trade takes center stage at D.M. conference
 
U.S. budget deficit narrows in August - MarketWatch

U.S. budget deficit narrows in August
By Robert Schroeder
Published: Sept 11, 2014 2:19 p.m. ET

Year-to-date deficit lowest since 2008

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Tax receipts from individuals and corporations are driving the budget deficit lower this year.

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The federal government’s budget gap narrowed in August, the Treasury Department reported Thursday, shrinking 13% from the same month a year ago as receipts rose and spending fell.

The government’s shortfall was $129 billion in August, compared to the $148 billion deficit posted in August of last year. The deficit narrowed due to higher receipts of both individual and corporate taxes, as well as lower spending on budget items including defense and transportation.

Total receipts increased 5% over their August 2013 level, to $194 billion. Spending fell 3%, to $323 billion.

The latest monthly figure is helping to power a big decline in the deficit for the fiscal year to date. Including the August shortfall, the deficit for the first 11 months of fiscal 2014 is $589 billion, which is 22% lower than the year-ago period. The year-to-date figure is the lowest since the same period in 2008.

The government’s budget year runs from October to September. August is typically a deficit month since there are no major tax due dates.

Adjusting for the timing of some payments in August of this year and last year, the monthly budget gap would have been $109 billion, a Treasury official said.

For the full fiscal year, both the Obama administration and the Congressional Budget Office are predicting the lowest shortfall since 2008, when the deficit was $458 billion. Last year, the deficit was $680 billion, the first shortfall below $1 trillion of Barack Obama’s presidency. The deficit hit a record $1.4 trillion in 2009, but has been narrowing as the economy improves.

Much of the year-to-date improvement comes from receipts: Total receipts are up 8% through the end of August, to $2.7 trillion. Spending, meanwhile, has risen just 1% this fiscal year, to $3.2 trillion.

Receipts are higher for the year to date in most budget categories, including individuals’ withheld and payroll taxes, corporate taxes and Federal Reserve earnings. Spending is up slightly overall for the year, but some areas including defense and agriculture have fallen. Defense spending has dropped 5% so far this fiscal year.

The latest budget figures arrive as lawmakers are considering a bill to keep the government open past Sept. 30, and prepare for the midterm elections in November. Without an agreement to fund the government, there would be another partial shutdown like the one that lasted for more than two weeks last fall.

The House of Representatives was due to vote Thursday on a measure to fund the government, but action was postponed until next week to allow members time to consider a White House request to assist Syrian rebels. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced the delay Thursday afternoon.

Falling deficits have taken big fiscal deals off the front burner as a political issue. But the CBO has warned that shortfalls will begin to rise again after 2015, and approach $1 trillion within 10 years if current laws aren’t changed.
 
Fed economists: America’s missing workers are not coming back - The Washington Post

Fed economists: America’s missing workers are not coming back

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By Max Ehrenfreund September 12 at 9:53 AM


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That does not look pleasant. (Courtesy of the Brookings Institution)
A paper by Federal Reserve staff that will be discussed at the Brookings Institution on Friday hints at the central bank's thinking on interest rates and employment in advance of a consequential Fed meeting next week. The findings support hawks on the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee, who feel that the Fed needs to prepare to raise rates sooner than expected.

The paper discusses the number of people who consider themselves part of the workforce -- including both people who have a job and those who are looking for work. It is a measure of the total manpower available in the U.S. economy. This number, the labor force participation rate, has been decreasing steadily since 2000. Americans who can't find work have been leaving the workforce, as have more and more retirees as the population ages.

The question now is whether there is anything that the Fed can do to slow the decline. In theory, interest rates near zero, as they have been since the financial crisis, should lead to rising prices and wages and more openings. In turn, people who are thinking of retiring might continue working, while others who retired early or just gave up on working might be coaxed back into the rat race.

That might not work, suggest the authors of the paper, who include William Wascher, a senior member of the bank's economic staff. They argue that the number of people who aren't working but would be if economic conditions were better is relatively small. In other words, America's missing workers aren't coming back. America's labor force has shrunk, the researchers find, largely because of an aging workforce and other, larger trends, not just because of a bad job market.

The authors warn policymakers that "they should not expect the participation rate to show a substantial increase from current levels as labor market conditions continue to improve."

Yet deciphering the fluctuations in the labor force participation rate is a task fraught with uncertainty. Economists are looking closely at this figure mainly because the financial crisis was so severe that Yellen and others worry it scrambled the unemployment rate, the central bank's traditional measure of the strength of the labor market. While the unemployment rate of 6.1 percent is now approaching normal levels, that figure only includes people who are actively looking for work, and the number of people who are working part time is still very high.

Most economists agree that an aging population accounts for about half of the decline in labor force participation since the crisis. The rest is a mystery. Even before the recession and among people in their working years, between the ages of 25 and 54, fewer men were employed and the number of working women had plateaued. One possible explanation the authors consider in the paper is an increasingly automated, global economy with fewer and fewer jobs in the middle of the income distribution. An education has become necessary for a job that pays well, and competition for jobs that require little skill has become so intense that real wages are falling. Perhaps the economy just no longer has work for some people.

Hard evidence for this hypothesis is hard to come by, however.

Then there is the group who is the main concern of the Fed right now: those who might be willing to go back to work. Their numbers are still being debated. In a note to investors, David Mericle and Sven Jari Stehn of Goldman Sachs took a look at the staff's paper and argued that the authors had been too pessimistic in their reading of the data.

It's also worth noting that even if maintaining interest rates near zero doesn't bring more workers into the economy, there are still reasons why it might be a good idea. Rising wages and prices would allow the Fed to raise interest rates to a higher level before the next recession, which would give the central bank more flexibility to react. Other recent research suggests that wages could rise while prices remained low, which would be a good deal for the working class.

That said, Yellen and her colleagues at the Fed have indicated that they have little interest in these theories, which means that they are likely to pay careful attention to what their staff has to say about participation in the labor force.

At their meeting next week, members of the open market committee will take another look at language in its most recent statement suggesting that an increase in rates is still a "considerable time" off, or that there are a "significant" number of people who would rejoin the workforce or work more hours if conditions improve.

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(AP/Susan Walsh)
Some members, including James Bullard, the president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve, indicated discomfort with this vague language. They feel that the central bank needs to give market participants plenty of warning before raising rates and thus tightening credit throughout the economy. If the members of the committee can't resolve their differences, a change in the wording might have to wait.

Market participants will also be listening closely to Yellen's press conference following the meeting to see if she answers any of the questions about the labor market she posed in her speech at the annual central banking conference in Jackson Hole, Wyo. last month.
 

A conversation between two leftists (Laura Tyson and Eric Schmidt), so no surprises. The conversation about "inclusive growth" (starting around 9:40) is especially dismaying, because taking the great risks that produce world-changing technology can only be incentivized by the great rewards they bring to the risk-takers. At least they acknowledge that from a practical sense, "inclusive growth" means leveling the playing field in terms of education, not in terms of outcome--a conclusion with which I largely agree.

Leftists and fans of authoritarianism (but I repeat myself) will enjoy the discussion starting around 14:00 about how centralization of power will lead to better educational and social outcomes. I especially enjoy the predictable and gratuitous invective about how going after government workers equates to a war on women (teachers).

That said, credit to them for practical conclusions (except for number 5). Their policy recommendations for improving US economic performance are:
1) Improve STEM education
2) Immigration reform
3) Implement the TTIP and TPP trade agreements
4) Corporate tax reform (perhaps moving to VAT)
5) More wealth transfer

As an aside, here is the Wired article to which they refer in the talk about the dystopian future that technology may produce:

Wired 8.04: Why the future doesn't need us.
 
The Biggest Economic—and Political—Puzzle: Persistently Flat Wages - Real Time Economics - WSJ

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  • September 18, 2014, 6:46 AM ET
The Biggest Economic—and Political—Puzzle: Persistently Flat Wages
ByNeil King Jr.
It is in many ways both the ultimate economic puzzle and the great political challenge: Why have American incomes remained so flat, for so long, and what can be done to change that?

The latest batch of data, released Tuesday by the Census Bureau, cast a harsh light on the problem. Yes, median incomes ticked up in 2013, ever so slightly, for the first time since the recession (by all of $3.46 a week, to be exact.) And the poverty rate inched down.

But in today’s dollars, an American household smack in the middle of the earnings scale is taking in now almost exactly what it did in 2000, and barely more than what it did a generation before that.

The deeper trends are more striking. Incomes tended to rise after recession-driven downdrafts in the 1980s and 1990s. But something has shifted since 2000, so that recoveries from the past two recessions have left median incomes worse off.

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Not only have the job gains been meeker coming out of the past two downturns, but income gains have been nonexistent for most Americans.

The White House tried to pluck the most upbeat news from the annual Census release by highlighting a sharp drop in poverty rates among those under 18, an increase in the number of those with health insurance, and a slight narrowing of the wage gap between men and women. But the president’s economic advisers acknowledged the obvious: The data offered “a clear illustration” of the battering the middle class has taken from the recession.

This isn’t just a matter of trauma among lower-skilled or lower-wage workers. Anemic wage growth has plagued virtually all professions for well over a decade. A crunching of data last year found average pay for managers and professionals had nudged up just 2.2% between 2001 and 2012, while it had gone up 2.4% for office administrators and down 1.2% for workers across the rest of the service sector.

Why is this happening? Bookshelves groan under the multiple explanations. Wage pressures due to globalization. The decline in manufacturing and unionization. A minimum wage that hasn’t kept pace with inflation. The spread of automation. The aging of the work force. Rising federal debt and the burden of entitlement spending.

Less abundant are clear ways to reverse the trend.

The White House argues that more public works spending, a higher federal minimum wage and stronger rules on equal pay will help bolster income growth.

Conservatives like Rep. Paul Ryan propose steps like tying government aid to work plans for the poor and expanding the earned-income tax credit by taking money from other welfare programs.

The debate will likely find its loudest and broadest stage in the 2016 presidential campaign. Hillary Clinton has begun to offer small peeks at her thinking, returning to Iowa last weekend to talk of the need for “shared prosperity,” a phrase that hearkens back to her 2008 platform of cheaper health care and more government investment in jobs and education.

But as the years since have shown, neither a Democrat in the White House nor Republicans in Congress have so far found a plausible cure.
 

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