Why talking jobs is better than campaigning on values
In Seattle and nationally, our political discourse is frustrating and circular, wrapping us in irrelevant talking points. How about discussing the ways we make a better future?
For good reason, public frustration with the quality of political discourse in our country is growing. At a time when both parties should be coming up with ideas to seize the economic future for the next generation, we are instead treated to petty bickering and endless discussions about lifestyle choices by free people. Whether or not a woman decides to stay at home with her child does not affect my life and, anyway, it’s none of my business. The fact that we have to spend so much time talking about whether gay people should be able to marry strikes my kids and most of the younger generation as ludicrous.
In Seattle, we are focusing on more on lifestyle issues than economic ones and seem to ignore the good news happening under our noses (more on that later). Our civic discussions focus on things like whether or not to extend closing times for bars, raising and lowering parking rates (for what purpose, it’s not exactly clear). And our latest civic obsession, getting an NBA franchise from Sacramento or some other city getting the screws put to it by NBA Commissioner David Stern to fork over ever more public money.
At the national and local levels, these issues will not affect our economic recovery in any appreciable way. We need both political parties and local, county, state, and federal governments to focus on something that is quite simple: How to recover from 30 years of subsidizing consumption, cutting taxes, and divesting capital from productive uses, like education and transportation?
This is the theme of a recent presentation by Walter Kemmsies, chief economist at Moffat and Nichol. Kemmsies was hosted by the Port of Seattle to discuss short- and long-term economic trends and how our political system is failing to adequately take advantage of our strengths while planning for problems down the road.
While we have gotten ourselves into a bit of a bind, there are some good fundamentals to build on, particularly in the short term, as we continue the long slog out of recession. We should remember that the 2007–2009 gross domestic product (GDP) collapse was the worst since the years 1929–1932. Recovering from this “supply side” recession will take a long time and will require the creation of a new economic structure — one based on focused public and private investments in productive capacity.
First, a few key takeaways from Kemmsies’ presentation:
- Europe is harmless. The obsession with austerity measures is hindering their recovery and creating unnecessary misery. Lesson: let’s not do that here.
- If you want to know where the action is in the future, look to countries with young populations, Mexico, Brazil, India, Russia, China (even though China is aging, the sheer numbers make them huge players).
- American consumers will not lead the global economy beyond the near term recovery, nor will Europe. In the longer term the recovery will be led and sustained by consumers in those countries that are growing. For instance, China buys 23 million cars while the U.S. buys 16 million. It is apparent by the numbers that exports are leading the way. Shipping container volumes increased by 8 percent in 2011. The vast majority of that increase was in exports.
In this situation, we must ride the wave and focus on public and private investments that are productive — that is, they grow our production capacity. This means education and innovation, educating our people to take advantage of the opportunities that will be there for them if they have the right skills. Technical training and having strong community college systems to retrain workers are just as important as our four-year universities.
A big part of the cost of production is in transportation. Investing in existing infrastructure, more efficient management of our roads, and creating opportunities for private capital to flow into these investments can begin to turn the tide from subsidizing consumption to subsidizing production and catch us up.
We can never compete with the developing world on the basis of cheap labor. We can, however, take advantage of relatively cheap capital that is now mostly flowing into natural resource speculation, or worse, sitting on the sidelines. This also means that those exports that are capital intensive, like agricultural products, energy, large capital goods, and technology, give us a competitive advantage over those countries that don’t have ready access to capital.
So what can our political leaders do to take advantage of this obvious opportunity? President Barack Obama wisely focused on exports early on in his administration, recognizing the demographic realities of an aging America (consuming less) and a younger developing world. As noted earlier, exports are leading the way to recovery. But we can do more. In fact, exports accounted for a third of economic growth in the last eight quarters.
The Seattle Times recently reported that “the state's manufacturing sector added 14,600 jobs — most of that growth in the Seattle area — over the 12 months ending in March.” In fact, half of private-sector job growth in March was in manufacturing.
Remember that most of the growth is actually happening in the Seattle area. For those who think our industrial area should be redeveloped or put into consumptive rather than productive use, these numbers cannot be ignored. Chris Hansen, the hedge fund manager trying to bring the NBA back to Seattle recently told The Seattle Times that industrial areas in cities inevitably evolve, eventually being redeveloped into office buildings, hotels and other commercial uses. Hansen told the Times: "To the extent that we're accelerating that process a little bit, hopefully that's a good thing.”
I don’t blame Hansen for this line of reasoning. He’s not alone. But the economic numbers tell a different story and prove how important maritime (the sector where I work) and manufacturing are to Seattle. Even with the recent jobs numbers and the proof that manufacturing and exports are leading the charge to recovery, those sectors still don’t make it into the “highest, best use” calculations of elected leaders and civic boosters.
Anything that imperils the ability of these types of businesses to thrive, whether traffic gridlock, incompatible adjacent uses, or public policies that inhibit growth should be resisted by policy makers. The debate about a new NBA Arena in the SoDo area should be considered in light of these economic realities and cautions.
According to Seattle's Industrial Lands Study in 2007, only 12 percent of city land is zoned for industrial use in 2006. That is down from 14 percent in 1984. But that land is really important if you care about jobs and economic growth. In fact, "In 2006, the industrial sector accounted for $5 billion in taxable sales which translates to 33 percent of the City's retail tax revenue." The report further states that "industrial businesses also generated 32% of the of the City's total B&O tax revenue."
At the federal level, the U.S. Congress should authorize a surface transportation bill that has been languishing due to the inability of the Senate, controlled by Democrats, and the House, controlled by Republicans, to come to agreement. Both legislative bodies have only recently passed separate bills that differ widely. Larry Ehl at Transportation Issues Daily reports that pessimism persists regarding a final deal even as the Federal Highway Trust Fund will go broke in 2013. The federal government can also do more to help states invest in university and K-12 education. The federal and state leaders mainly criticize universities for hiking tuition while they themselves divest public resources from the system. University leaders don’t have many options and we all suffer.
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 8:26 a.m. Inappropriate
Jordan: You nailed it on why Sodo is the wrong location for a new arena.
Washington as we hear often is the most trade-dependent state in the country, and yet the proposed arena would continue to constrict egress and ingress into one of the city and state's most vital economic engines. Unless there is a commitment -- in stone, since last time it was ignored -- to make the transportation investments necessary to relieve the bottlenecks, allow freight to move more efficiently and keep the industrial/manufacturing center of the city viable, the arena, if built, should be located somewhere else.
There are many other arguments against this proposal, but this one is the most compelling. You cannot replace manufacturing/industrial jobs with relatively low-wage service jobs and expect anything but negative economic consequences.
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 10:34 a.m. Inappropriate
The new arena can easily fit into SoDo while all southbound imports and cargo can be unloaded at the port of Tacoma. SoDo deserves all the benefits of basketball, hockey, trade shows, and concerts that cannot be squeezed into the outdated and misplaced Key Arena and I-5 rooftop disaster so-called convention center.
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 10:42 a.m. Inappropriate
Thank you for this cogent article. Unfortunately, since "values" issues are easy to understand and high-pitched, it is easy to get sidetracked by them.
Washington's tax code hinders the economy. I think that the greatest accomplishment possible for the next governor will be to forge the bipartisan coalition necessary to modernize the state's tax system.
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 11:18 a.m. Inappropriate
Some good points in this article but it's riddled with standard mainstream media false equivalence -- "both parties are equally guilty." Read this article and listen to this interview with two veteran congressional analysts who long have been known for their bipartisan centrism. They say media folks need to get some guts and call out the Republicans.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/lets-just-say-it-the-republicans-are-the-problem/2012/04/27/gIQAxCVUlT_story.html
http://www.npr.org/2012/04/30/151522725/even-worse-than-it-looks-extremism-in-congress
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 11:27 a.m. Inappropriate
Continued growth is a Ponzi scheme. We need to think about providing enough for everyone in a sustainable way. One way, already being considered by France and England,is to cut the work week to 3 days. We would make enough for necessities, have fewer luxuries, but get back time, which is really our most precious resource.
Another obvious way to improve the quality of life would be to subsidize people to live near where they work. The same dollars that fuel costly transportation projects and their maintenance could be used to increase the quality of peoples lives. What we would get is more time now wasted in commuting, less spent on fossil fuels, less global warming pollution, getting ourselves less dependent on foreign oil, fewer traffic accidents, and less stress. If we took even 10 percent of the current cars out of the commute, it would end most of our rush hour traffic jams and render our current highways adequate.
Posted Tue, May 1, 7:38 a.m. Inappropriate
Hi Silenus,
Oh how I like your fresh thinking: "Another obvious way to improve the quality of life would be to subsidize people to live near where they work."
Thumbs up!
~ December
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 2:39 p.m. Inappropriate
Our city and our state has a choice here. Do we want to be for job generation or for the eventual destruction of the most important industrial neighborhood in the state?
Hansen hasn't hid the fact that he wants the arena to push Sodo toward gentrification, which means this is an either/or proposition for the state.
Manufacturing is our future, and yet Hansen wants to kill manufacturing as we know it in Seattle.
Some of we basketball fans who don't believe Sodo is the right place for the arena have come together on Twitter and Facebook. Join us:
https://twitter.com/#!/ArenaChoices
https://www.facebook.com/ArenaChoices
If you don't believe Sodo is the right place, be sure to also tell the City Council and County Council very soon. Hansen is trying to ram this deal through without adequate public input.
Posted Mon, Apr 30, 4:58 p.m. Inappropriate
I would be interested in knowing how Mr. Kemmsies explains the fact that that Europe's most austere economic power, Germany, is weathering the economic downturn the best, while Europe's most free-spending nations are the ones feeling the most misery. Profligate deficit spending only works when you can control your currency and wipe out your debts in the following years with inflation caused by printing money. Of course, that degree of inflation punishes savings and investment, and that bring about its own miseries, doesn't it?
Posted Tue, May 1, 9:47 a.m. Inappropriate
dbreneman -- Thanks for the question. Dr. Kemmsies had the following response:
"Germany actually ran a surplus so that it would have funds when a rainy day came. This is what Keynes argued for. He did not suggest that a coutry continuously run a deficit. The US has not run a surplus since 2000. The euro did not completely come undone because it is the Deutschemark in disguise. I belive Germany is tapping into its rainy day fund and increasing taxes in order to bail out Southern Europe. But Germany is not in that great a shape either. Exports to China and to some relatively unstable Middle East countries have been driving its economy. As China's economy cools, so will Germany's."
Posted Tue, May 1, 10:48 a.m. Inappropriate
Many countries, many stories, many opinions. Here's an interesting one from a professor who bills himself as a Democrat, but hardly ever sounds like Harris:
http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2012/05/01/icelands-recovery-lessons/
Posted Tue, May 1, 7:15 p.m. Inappropriate
Thanks for the reply, Jordan. It should be noted that the German taxpayers have little patience for bailing out the profligate southern Europeans after spending two decades bailing out the former East Germany. Many workers in the east, after two generations of brutal dictatorship, had no connection with the work ethic, and so the government was obliged to give many in their 30s and 40s pensions in exchange for their promise to stay out of the workforce. In addition, the fact that vocal critics in the distressed countries of Europe view the actions of their benefactors as the "second German invasion" leaves many Germans wanting to kick the ne'er-do-well cousins off the proverbial living room couch, and good riddance. Germany may yet declare the Euro experiment a failure and go back to the Mark, a prospect that should give the French pause.
Posted Tue, May 1, 12:45 p.m. Inappropriate
Unfortunately we measure ourselves with the blindly-open GDP, which equates arguably non-productive activities of oil-spill clean-up and hockey on par with manufacturing of exports or provision of healthcare. The last decades' fantastical growth of the finance industry as a percent of GDP should have been a clue as to how amiss we were from investing in the production and infrastructure that would secure a stronger present and future. And when the bubble created by the likes of Mr Hansen burst we find ourselves individually and collectively bankrupted or just holding the bag.
But often even our infrastructure investments are not pragmatic. Until we adopt methods such as a triple (or quadruple) bottom line, our emotions and an erroneous scoring system (along with broken politics) will continue to favor stadiums (with their relatively short shelf life and cotton-candy GDP) over education and infrastructure, and will hamper us all the way down.
(1000 chars a challenge, plz fix!)
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