The
Future of Work
by Charles Hugh Smith
Previously
by Charles Hugh Smith: What
Are the Alternatives to $100K in Student Debt?
A growing number
of workers are becoming increasingly concerned about the future
viability of their jobs (if they have them) and, in many cases,
that of their professions. Looking at a future increasingly defined
by slower economic growth and higher energy costs, many are asking,
What is
the future of work?
Given the "recovery’s"
stagnant job market and the economy’s slide into renewed contraction,
it’s a timely question. To answer it, we must first ask, What
is the future of the U.S. economy?
In broad brush,
the Powers That Be have gone "all in" on a bet that this recession
is no different than past post-war recessions. All we need to do
to get through this “rough patch” is borrow and spend money at the
Federal level, and the household and business sectors will soon
recover their desire and ability to borrow more and spend it all
on one thing or another. We don’t really care what or how, because
all spending adds up into gross domestic product (GDP).
In other words,
we're going to “grow our way” out of stagnation and over-indebtedness,
just as we’ve done for the past fifty years.
Unfortunately,
this diagnosis is flat-out wrong. This is not just another post-war
recession, and so the treatment lowering interest rates to
zero and flooding the economy with borrowed money and liquidity
isn’t working. In fact, it’s making the patient sicker
by the day.
The best way
to eliminate the signal noise of official propaganda (“The stock
market is rising, so everything’s great for everyone!” etc.) and
the high keening wails of Keynesian cargo cultists is to construct
a model of the underlying fundamental forces that will shape the
future.
The best way
to do that is to glance at a few key charts.
Let’s start
with debt. Clearly, the “growth” of the U.S. economy since
1980 is debt-based. Debt has exceeded growth by 136%. If debt had
risen in tandem with GDP, then total debt would be a mere $22 trillion
instead of $52 trillion.

The next chart
reflects how every incremental increase in debt has had a diminishing
effect on growth. Where $1 of debt once added 70 cents to GDP,
now it adds basically nothing, or even reduces GDP.

We hear a lot
of euphoric babble about households "deleveraging;" that is, paying
down debt and thus setting the stage for the next ramp-up of household
debt. But the reality is not quite so euphoric. Compared to the
explosion in household debt since 1980, which we might term the
debt elephant, the recent “deleveraging” reduction in debt is more
like a mosquito.

Next, let’s
look at jobs and employment. To make sure we’re getting the full
picture, let’s look at several measures of employment as a reflection
of the underlying economy.
This first
chart looks like a steady onward-and-upward trend of job growth.
The “jobless recovery” appears to be a modest bump in the road of
ever-rising employment.

By other measures,
however, employment hasn’t hit a bump in the road; it’s off the
road and sinking into a bottomless bog. Here is the civilian participation
rate, which measures how many folks in the civilian population are
participating in the labor market in one way or another.

By this measure,
the labor market has retraced to the level of the 1981-82 recession
thirty years ago.
Next, let’s
look at another, perhaps even more telling metric: private payrolls
per capita, which is basically a measure of how many jobs there
are per capita in the economy.

What this means
is that beneath the glitter of a “rising GDP” and “rising stock
market,” the economy is producing far fewer jobs per capita.
If we look
at the total number of civilians and the total number of jobs, the
chart looks even uglier. We are back to the levels of 1970s stagflation,
just as women began entering the workforce en masse to compensate
for declining household purchasing power.

This next chart
is civilian employment per capita, which is similar to the previous
chart of private payrolls per capita, but includes all jobs, including
public-sector/government employment. Once again it shows that the
economy is back to the levels of the mid-1980s, even including the
rapid expansion of local and state government payrolls.

Another way
to measure the real performance of an economy is capacity utilization
-- how much of the potential capacity of the economy is being used. In
good times, capacity is added because the existing capacity is running
full-tilt. In recessions, there is not enough demand to use
the economy’s full capacity, and therefore no reason to add to capacity
with business investment.
I’ve drawn
some lines to clarify what happened during each primary phase of
the post-war era. During the stagflationary 1970s, capacity utilization
see-sawed between growth and recession, tracing out a series of
lower lows and lower highs. This downtrend reflected the reality
that the economy wasn’t growing; it was stagnating, hitting new
lows with every downturn, and never reaching its previous high-point
during recovery.
After finally
hitting bottom in the 1981-92 recession when Federal Reserve Chairman
Paul Volcker vanquished inflation by jacking up interest rates to
18%, the economy entered a 30-year cycle of financialization (deregulation
of the banking sector and the rise of debt as the engine of growth),
globalization, and technological innovation that fueled a multi-decade
trend of rising productivity.
The wheels
fell off the financialization and dot-com boom in 2000, and the
Federal Reserve and federal government created an even more extreme
version of financialization that inflated a gigantic debt/real estate
bubble. Like all financial bubbles, this one burst, and once again
the Fed and federal government scrambled to inflate another debt
bubble.
Since the household
sector was tapped out and its primary asset, the family home, had
lost a third of its bubble value, the Federal government borrowed
$6 trillion to bail out the banking sector and spread trillions
of dollars around as stimulus and giveaways like "Cash for Clunkers."

Unsurprisingly,
this injection of trillions of dollars did boost capacity utilization.
Roughly 11% of the entire GDP is borrowed and spent every year now
by the federal government. But just as in the stagflationary
1970s, the decline reached a new low and the subsequent rise never
got close to the previous bubble high of 2006.
Now that the
economy is rolling over again, capacity utilization is also declining.
None of this
reflects a healthy economy. What it does reflect is an economy that
has depended on ever-greater amounts of debt to power a diminishing
trend of growth, and an economy which creates fewer and fewer jobs
with ever-greater mountains of debt.
This is not
a bump in the road; it is the exhaustion of the entire model of
growth that we have depended on for the past 30 years. Once
the debt saturation point has been reached, adding more debt subtracts
from the economy rather than adds to it. This is reflected
in the decline of employment by every metric: total number of jobs,
civilian participation, payrolls per capita, and employment as a
percentage of the total population.
We are past
the point of debt saturation, and so we need a new model of employment,
and indeed of “growth” itself. Sadly, as discussed in a
recent report, the Status Quo financial witch-doctors have only
prescribed more debt and more unproductive friction.
Unfortunately,
as the above charts abundantly illustrate, the patient (the U.S.
economy) hasn’t been cured; rather, its condition has gotten worse. The
stock market is like a sort of makeup that has been slathered on
by the Fed to give the appearance of health, but the internal measures
of jobs and income (both declining) show that both the “health”
and the “recovery” are illusory.
So, the key
question to ask ourselves is, Where will the demand for work
be in a post-debt, post-"cheap oil" economy"?
In Part
II: The Future of Work, we tackle this critical question and
provide a framework for potential job seekers/switchers to use in
positioning themselves for meaningful and dependable employment
in this coming era.
Click
here to read Part II of this report (free executive
summary; paid enrollment required to access).
Reprinted
with permission from ChrisMartenson.com.
November
25, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Chris
Martenson
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