Jobs Versus Net Jobs
by Thomas Sowell
Recently
by Thomas Sowell: Obama's
Rhetoric
One of the
reasons for the popularity of political rhetoric is that everybody
can be right, in terms of their own rhetoric, no matter how much
the rhetoric of one side contradicts the rhetoric of the other side.
President Obama
constantly repeats how many millions of jobs have been created during
his administration, while his critics constantly repeat how many
millions of jobs have been lost during his administration. How can
both of them be right – or, at least, how can they both get away
with what they are saying?
There are jobs
and there are net jobs. This is true not only today but has been
true in years past.
Back during
the 1980s, when there were huge losses of jobs in the steel industry,
the government restricted the importation of foreign steel. It has
been estimated that this saved 5,000 jobs in the American steel
industry.
But of course
restriction of competition from lower-priced imported steel made
steel more expensive to American producers of products containing
steel. Therefore the price of these products rose, making them less
in demand at these higher prices, causing losses of sales at home
and in the world market.
The bottom
line is that, while 5,000 jobs were saved in the American steel
industry, 26,000 jobs were lost in American industries that produced
products made of steel. On net balance, the country lost jobs by
restricting the importation of steel.
None of this
was peculiar to the steel industry. Restrictions on the importation
of sugar are estimated to have cost three times as many jobs in
the confection industry as they saved in the sugar industry. The
artificially high price of sugar in the United States led some American
producers of confections to relocate to Mexico and Canada, where
the price of sugar is lower.
There is no
free lunch in the job market, any more than there is anywhere else.
The government can always create particular jobs or save particular
jobs, but that does not mean that it is a net creation of jobs or
a net saving of jobs.
The government
can create a million jobs tomorrow, just by hiring that many people.
But where does the government get the money to pay those people?
From the private economy – which loses the money that the government
gains.
With less money
in the private sector, the loss of jobs there can easily exceed
the million jobs created in the government or in industries subsidized
by the government. The Obama administration's creation of "green
jobs" has turned out to cost far more money per job than the cost
of creating a job in the private sector.
In addition
to reducing jobs in the private sector by taking money out of the
private sector to pay for government-subsidized jobs, the Obama
administration has made businesses reluctant to hire because of
the huge uncertainties it has created for businesses as regards
the cost of adding employees. With thousands of regulations still
being written to implement ObamaCare, no one knows how much this
will add to the cost of hiring new employees.
In the face
of this economic uncertainty, even businesses that have an increased
demand for their products can meet that demand by working their
existing employees overtime, instead of adding new employees. Many
employers hire temporary workers, who are not legally entitled to
benefits such as health insurance, and who will therefore not be
affected by the cost of ObamaCare.
When
President Obama boasts of the number of jobs created during his
administration, the numbers he cites may be correct, but he doesn't
count the other jobs that were lost during his administration. His
critics cite the latter. Both can claim to be right because they
are talking about different things.
What has been
the net effect? During this administration, the proportion of the
working age population that has a job has fallen to the lowest level
in decades. The official unemployment rate does not count the millions
of people who have simply given up looking for a job.
If everybody
gave up looking for a job, the official unemployment rate would
fall to zero. But that would hardly mean that the problem was solved
or that the "stimulus" worked. Creating particular jobs does not
mean a net increase in jobs.
July
23, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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