U.S. Economy
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The United States enjoyed a special advantage in the availability of
factories, machinery, and other capital goods after World War II ended in
1945. During the following decade or two, many of the other industrial
nations were recovering from the devastation of the war. But that
situation has largely disappeared, and the quality of the U.S. labor
force and the level of technological innovation in U.S. industry have
become more important in determining trade patterns and other
characteristics of the U.S. economy. A skilled labor force and the
ability of businesses to develop or adapt new technologies are the key to
high standards of living in modern global economies, particularly in
highly industrialized nations. Workers with low levels of education and
training will find it increasingly difficult to earn high wages and
salaries in any part of the world, including the United States.
B Barriers to Trade Despite the mutual advantages of global trade, governments often adopt policies that reduce or eliminate international trade in some markets. Historically, the most important trade barriers have been tariffs (taxes on imports) and quotas (limits on the number of products that can be imported into a country). In recent decades, however, many countries have used product safety standards or legal standards controlling the production or distribution of goods and services to make it difficult for foreign businesses to sell in their markets. For example, Russia recently used health standards to limit imports of frozen chicken from the United States, and the United States has frequently charged Japan with using legal restrictions and allowing exclusive trade agreements among Japanese companies. These exclusive agreements make it very difficult for U.S. banks and other firms to operate or sell products in Japan.
While there are special reasons for limiting imports or exports of
certain kinds of products—such as products that are vital to a nation’s
national defense—economists generally view trade barriers as hurting both
importing and exporting nations. Although the trade barriers protect
workers and firms in industries competing with foreign firms, the costs
of this protection to consumers and other businesses are typically much
higher than the benefits to the protected workers and firms. And in the
long run it usually becomes prohibitively expensive to continue this kind
of protection. Instead it often makes more sense to end the trade barrier
and help workers in industries that are hurt by the increased imports to
relocate or retrain for jobs with firms that are competitive. In the
United States, trade adjustment assistance payments were provided to
steelworkers and autoworkers in the late 1970s, instead of imposing trade
barriers on imported cars. Since then, these direct cash payments have
been largely phased out in favor of retraining programs.
During recessions, when national unemployment rates are high or rising, workers and firms facing competition from foreign companies usually want
the government to adopt trade barriers to protect their industries. But
again, historical experience with such policies shows that they do not
work. Perhaps the most famous example of these policies occurred during
the Great Depression of the 1930s. The United States raised its tariffs
and other trade barriers in legislation such as the Smoot-Hawley Act of
1930. Other nations imposed similar kinds of trade barriers, and the
overall result was to make the Great Depression even worse by reducing
world trade.
C World Trade Organization (WTO) and Its Predecessors
As World War II drew to a close, leaders in the United States and other
Western nations began working to promote freer trade for the post-war
world. They set up the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 1944 to
stabilize exchange rates across member nations. The Marshall Plan, developed by U.S. general and economist George Marshall, promoted free
trade. It gave U.S. aid to European nations rebuilding after the war, provided those nations reduced tariffs and other trade barriers.
In 1947 the United States and many of its allies signed the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which was especially successful in
reducing tariffs over the next five decades. In 1995 the member nations
of the GATT founded the World Trade Organization (WTO), which set even
greater obligations on member countries to follow the rules established
under GATT. It also established procedures and organizations to deal with
disputes among member nations about the trading policies adopted by
individual nations.
In 1992 the United States also signed the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) with its closest neighbors and major trading partners,
Canada and Mexico. The provisions of this agreement took effect in 1994.
Since then, studies by economists have found that NAFTA has benefited all
three nations, although greater competition has resulted in some
factories closing. As a percentage of national income, the benefits from
NAFTA have been greater in Canada and Mexico than in the United States, because international trade represents a larger part of those economies.
While the United States is the largest trading nation in the world, it
has a very large and prosperous domestic economy; therefore international
trade is a much smaller percentage of the U.S. economy than it is in many
countries with much smaller domestic economies.
D Exchange Rates and the Balance of Payments
Currencies from different nations are traded in the foreign exchange
market, where the price of the U.S. dollar, for instance, rises and falls
against other currencies with changes in supply and demand. When firms in
the United States want to buy goods and services made in France, or when
U.S. tourists visit France, they have to trade dollars for French francs.
That creates a demand for French francs and a supply of dollars in the
foreign exchange market. When people or firms in France want to buy goods
and services made in the United States they supply French francs to the
foreign exchange market and create a demand for U.S. dollars.
Changes in people’s preferences for goods and services from other countries result in changes in the supply and demand for different national currencies. Other factors also affect the supply and demand for a national currency. These include the prices of goods and services in a country, the country’s national inflation rate, its interest rates, and its investment opportunities. If people in other countries want to make investments in the United States, they will demand more dollars. When the demand for dollars increases faster than the supply of dollars on the exchange markets, the price of the dollar will rise against other national currencies. The dollar will fall, or depreciate, against other currencies when the supply of dollars on the exchange market increases faster than the demand.
All international transactions made by U.S. citizens, firms, and the
government are recorded in the U.S. annual balance of payments account.
This account has two basic sections. The first is the current account, which records transactions involving the purchase (imports) and sale
(exports) of goods and services, interest payments paid to and received
from people and firms in other nations, and net transfers (gifts and aid)
paid to other nations. The second section is the capital account, which
records investments in the United States made by people and firms from
other countries, and investments that U.S. citizens and firms make in
other nations.
These two accounts must balance. When the United States runs a deficit on
its current account, often because it imports more that it exports, that
deficit must be offset by a surplus on its capital account. If foreign
investments in the United States do not create a large enough surplus to
cover the deficit on the current account, the U.S. government must
transfer currency and other financial reserves to the governments of the
countries that have the current account surplus. In recent decades, the
United States has usually had annual deficits in its current account, with most of that deficit offset by a surplus of foreign investments in
the U.S. economy.
Economists offer divergent views on the persistent surpluses in the U.S.
capital account. Some analysts view these surpluses as evidence that the
United States must borrow from foreigners to pay for importing more than
it exports. Other analysts attribute the surpluses to a strong desire by
foreigners to invest their funds in the U.S. economy. Both
interpretations have some validity. But either way, it is clear that
foreign investors have a claim on future production and income generated
in the U.S. economy. Whether that situation is good or bad depends how
the foreign funds are used. If they are used mainly to finance current
consumption, they will prove detrimental to the long-term health of the
U.S. economy. On the other hand, their effect will be positive if they
are used primarily to fund investments that increase future levels of
U.S. output and income.
X CURRENT TRENDS AND ISSUES
In the early decades of the 21st century, many different social, economic
and technological changes in the United States and around the world will
affect the U.S. economy. The population of the United States will become
older and more racially and ethnically diverse. The world population is
expected to continue to grow at a rapid rate, while the U.S. population
will likely grow much more slowly. World trade will almost certainly
continue to expand rapidly if current trade policies and rates of
economic growth are maintained, which in turn will make competition in
the production of many goods and services increasingly global in scope.
Technological progress is likely to continue at least at current rates, and perhaps faster. How will all of this affect U.S. consumers, businesses, and government?
Over the next century, average standards of living in the United States will almost certainly rise, so that on average, people living at the end of the century are likely to be better off in material terms than people are today. During the past century, the primary reasons for the increase in living standards in the United States were technological progress, business investments in capital goods, and people’s investments in greater education and training (which were often subsidized by government programs). There is no evident reason why these same factors will not continue to be the most important reasons underlying changes in the standard of living in the United States and other industrialized economies. A comparatively small number of economists and scientists from other fields argue that limited supplies of energy or of other natural resources will eventually slow or stop economic growth. Most, however, expect those limits to be offset by discoveries of new deposits or new types of resources, by other technological breakthroughs, and by greater substitution of other products for the increasingly scarce resources.
Although the U.S. economy will likely remain the world’s largest national economy for many decades, it is far less certain that U.S. households will continue to enjoy the highest average standard of living among industrialized nations. A number of other nations have rapidly caught up to U.S. levels of income and per capita output over the last five decades of the 20th century. They did this partly by adopting technologies and business practices that were first developed in the United States, or by developing their own technological and managerial innovations. But in large part, these nations have caught up with the United States because of their higher rates of savings and investment, and in some cases, because of their stronger systems for elementary and secondary education and for training of workers.
Most U.S. workers and families will still be better off as the U.S.
economy grows, even if some other economies are growing faster and
becoming somewhat more prosperous, as measured per capita. Certainly
families in Britain today are far better off materially than they were
150 to 200 years ago, when Britain was the largest and wealthiest economy
in the world, despite the fact that many other nations have since
surpassed the British economy in size and affluence.
A more important problem for the U.S. economy in the next few decades is
the unequal distribution of gains from growth in the economy. In recent
decades, the wealth created by economic growth has not been as evenly
distributed as was the wealth created in earlier periods. Incomes for
highly educated and trained workers have risen faster than average, while
incomes for workers with low levels of education and training have not
increased and have even fallen for some groups of workers, after
adjusting for inflation. Other industrialized market economies have also
experienced rising disparity between high-income and low-income families, but wages of low-income workers have not actually fallen in real terms in
those countries as they have in the United States.
In most industrialized nations, the demand for highly educated and trained workers has risen sharply in recent decades. That happened in part because many kinds of jobs now require higher skill levels, but other factors were also important. New production methods require workers to frequently and rapidly change what they do on the job. They also increase the need for quality products and customer service and the ability of employees to work in teams. Increased levels of competition, including competition from foreign producers, have put a higher premium on producing high quality products.
Several other factors help explain why the relative position of low-
income workers has fallen more in the United States than in other
industrialized Western nations. The growth of college graduates has
slowed in the United States but not in other nations. United States
immigration policies have not been as closely tied to job-market
requirements as immigration policies in many other nations have been.
Also, government assistance programs for low-income families are usually
not as generous in the United States as they are in other industrialized
nations.
Changes in the make-up of the U.S. population are likely to cause income
disparity to grow, at least through the first half of the 21st century.
The U.S. population is growing most rapidly among the groups that are
most likely to have low incomes and experience some form of
discrimination. Children in these groups are less likely to attend
college or to receive other educational opportunities that might help
them acquire higher-paying jobs.
The U.S. population will also be aging during this period. As people born
during the baby boom of 1946 to 1964 reach retirement age, the percentage
of the population that is retired will increase sharply, while the
percentage that is working will fall. The demand for medical care and
long-term care facilities will increase, and the number of people drawing
Social Security benefits will rise sharply. That will increase pressure
on government budgets. Eventually, taxes to pay for these services will
have to be increased, or the level of these services provided by the
government will have to be cut back. Neither of those approaches will be
politically popular.
A few economists have called for radical changes in the Social Security
system to deal with these problems. One suggestion has been to allow
workers to save and invest in private retirement accounts rather than pay
into Social Security. Thus far, those approaches have not been considered
politically feasible or equitable. Current retirees strongly oppose
changing the system, as do people who fear that they will lose future
benefits from a program they have paid taxes to support all their working
lives. Others worry that private accounts will not provide adequate
retirement income for low-income workers, or that the government will
still be called on to support those who make bad investment choices in
their private retirement accounts.
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