Posted on 10/21/2006 6:54:23 PM PDT by WarrenC
The U.S. economy remains in better shape than bearish partisans contend. Broad economic indicators like real GDP, payroll employment, and industrial production are expanding, while the U.S. economy itself is nearing its sixth year of expansion. Yet the same bullish claim cannot be made about Michigan, which continues to lose jobs.
Its rare for a state with an economy as large as Michigans to record job losses in the midst of a national expansion. A lot of ink is spilled in Detroit each month reporting short-term job losses. But some key long-term trends have been overlooked.
How bad is Michigans labor market? Michigan is the only state to record a contraction in nonfarm payroll employment for five consecutive years. The states labor market is headed for its sixth straight annual decline in 2006. This unprecedented contraction is centered in the private manufacturing sector, which peaked in July 1999. Total Michigan nonfarm employment peaked in June 2000. Employment in some of Michigans metropolitan statistical areas peaked earlier including Flint, which peaked in 1997.
Say again? You mean Michigans job losses didnt start under President Bush?
Trained economists are debating the various factors that have contributed to Michigans single-state recession. These include fiscal, regulatory, trade, and monetary policy. By contrast, too many Michigan politicians have resorted to the logical fallacy of poisoning the well in an election year.
Fortunately, a few officials are focusing on sound economics. Thanks to the efforts of Oakland County executive L. Brooks Patterson and state Rep. Leon Drolet (R), and despite Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholms opposition, Michigans anti-competitive single-business tax has been repealed. Thats good news since employment isnt the only troubling economic indicator in Michigan. Income growth also has been weak when compared to historical norms.
The BEAs per capita income series dates to 1929. Between 1929 and 1980, Michigan PCPI was 100 percent or more of the U.S. total for all but two years (1932, 1933). It peaked at 122 percent of the U.S. total during WWII. Since 1980, Michigan PCPI has been several percentage points above or below the U.S. rate until 2005, when it fell to 94.8 percent of the U.S. total. The only time Michigan recorded a weaker number was in 1933, when income was 93 percent of the U.S. total.
Michigans rank in the national income sweepstakes also has fallen. From a peak of eighth in the U.S. in 1944, Michigan has dropped to twenty-fourth in the nation as of 2005, its second-worst performance. (In 1982, a recession year, Michigan was twenty-fifth in PCPI.)
Before his untimely passing in August, Stephen Dresch advanced a neo-Hayekian critique of the Michigan governments many failed attempts to pick economic winners with tax dollars. According to Dawson Bell of the Detroit Free Press, Dresch helped set in motion investigations of university economic-development activity which led to public outcry, criminal convictions and the departure of high-level officials at Michigan Technological University. Dresch was later elected to the state legislature as a Republican in a heavily-Democratic Upper Peninsula district.
It was Hayek who argued that governments lack the knowledge to successfully engage in central planning. And Dresch, a Yale Ph.D, was treated in a boorish manner in Lansing for defending this moral high ground. But there is cause for longer-term optimism. Dreschs critics lost this years policy battle over the single-business tax, while more positive change seems inevitable in the wake of Michigans severe employment and income declines.
Those serious about solving Michigans economic problems should reflect on Dreschs critiques and let private venture capitalists and entrepreneurs, not politically connected funds and authorities, allocate capital.
One lesson to be learned from Michigans single-state recession is that economics trumps politics. Another is that markets dont wait for politicians.
Greg Kaza is executive director of the Arkansas Policy Foundation, an economic research group founded in 1995 in Little Rock.
OH! It's all of Bush's fault, Do-Nothing-Debbie and Grandstand Granholm tell us so!
I remember when the Dems told us that we should amend our Constitution to allow Granholm to run for President because she was such a good governor.
But then they also said that Gray Davis would make a good President.
Just for starters, I simply cannot imagine voting for anyone who calls herself Senator Debbie. This nickname stuff has gone too far. Deborah, yes; Debbie, no.
Not that Granholm is any better.
Not a single mention of the factors I see living here in Michigan:
1. The auto industry, while not the force that it was in 1978, is still the source of many many jobs. The remaining jobs were thought to be safe 10 years ago, but now we see massive layoffs, the bankruptcy of Delphi, and the movement offshore of manufacturing.
2. Health care is expensive here. The health insurance scene is dominated by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, which has to be the worst-run organization on the face of the earth. I know of no employer who is happy w/ BCBS, but there are precious few alternatives. The State of Michigan has Medicare and Medicaid thru BCBS, as well as the health insurance of virtually every public employee in the State.
3. Why do we have a full-time paid legislature? Does this make us significantly better-run than neighboring Indiana, which has a part-time legislature?
4. We have term limits here that are too short. The effect is that every politician is busy job-hopping, something like a big Musical Chairs contest. Worse yet, the House never gets leadership organized. I'd propose 12-year limits for both houses.
They have a plan though. Here in Missouri, they run daily radio ads asking us to move our businesses there.
The liberalism and corporate welfare states that are killing Michigan started A VERY LONG TIME AGO --- thanks to big smoke-stack industry pandering to unions. Now they are paying the price --- Rush even noted that MoTown was the "first welfare state in America to collapse" --- and that is exactly it.
Does not take any 20-year MBA to figure out what happened. Pretty simple.
In Monroe county we have supposedly unreadable, nonunderstandable absentee ballots. Wonder how we were the ONLY county that was printed "wrong?" I think the dems are worried that our county is going Republican and are trying to stop the slide.
Somebody should check how things are going in Maine before they call it a one-state Michigan recession. Them politicians over there couldn't find their arss with both hands.
Good luck to you. We need more young college conservatives. And we seem to be getting them.
Clear as a bell to me... and if Hillary is elected so will go the whole country...
Michigan has one of the largest and most active College Republican chapters.
Plus we harbor 2 very conservative colleges. Hillsdale and Northwood University.
Midland doesn't give me much of a challenge and its very strongly Republican but some of the other areas are very democrat and just crazy.
Get some of those Dearborn muzlims to run for office. That'll fix everything.
"Michigan has one of the largest and most active College Republican chapters" - I assume you are referring to UMich.
Maybe they can explain the course at Michigan entitled "How to be gay". That's a good one.
Wasn't that the day after she was elected?
BCBS may not be the only reason. If my memory is correct MI has one of the unhealthy populations of any state, i.e. overweight etc.
I heard at breakfast today of another housing development of McMansions in SE MI that are all foreclosed, and the hits just keep on coming.....
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