There has been a lot of hand wringing about the apparent productivity
gap between the USA and Canada. My question today is about how real
this gap actually is. For the past twenty years of free trade,
Canada has been competing head to head with the USA on what is
generally a level playing field. Thus this gap should be observed
easily on the ground and it is not.
This generally means it is time to question the damn statistics. A
philosophy of promoting productivity numbers in the USA against a
natural inclination to conservatism in Canada can easily supply a lot
of gap without even knowing it.
The other big potential issue that may not be getting a proper
accounting is that of counting the labor force itself. It is the one
area that can be diddled. Do not count 15,000,000 illegal unreported
immigrants and your productivity leaps. I do not know that this has
happened but it would make up most of the Canada USA gap by itself.
Canada does not have anything but the slightest underground economy
and can not use this diddle.
Other aspects of the Canadian economy are simply far better managed
and visibly so and these may be uncounted in terms of a productivity
calculation.
It is likely time we had a lively debate over the production of the
productivity calculation for both countries. These are all formulas
put together decades ago and they have all been subjected to
political bias since. My favorite diddle is the consumer price index
which gets cuter and cuter in terms of designing a standard basket of
goods. The numbers produced bear little relation to the facts on the
ground that has seen real necessities climb in cost steadily for
years.
Canada's
productivity gap is worse than ever
By Ian Martin,
Financial PostMay 29, 2012
In the long run, our
well-being is dependent on productivity growth,” says Eric
Lascelles, chief economist at RBC Global Asset Management.
It’s not often
economists will admit to bafflement, especially on a matter of utmost
importance to national economic health.
As the predominant
measure of standard of living, productivity of labour in Canada, has
fallen notoriously short of standards set by the U.S. Economy.
For years, economists
prescribed the typical remedies: reduced tax and regulatory burdens,
free trade, low and stable inflation, interest rates and government
debt.
Canadian governments
mostly listened, adopting a national policy agenda deemed conducive
to improving productivity and competitiveness.
On the output side,
the results have been “pathetic,” economist Don Drummond said in
a recent journal article in which he condemned “everything I have
ever done on productivity.”
He estimated that
policymakers in Canada had implemented about 70% of the measures
typically advocated by analysts.
The World Economic
Forum has ranked Canada in the 92nd percentile among the economic and
policy environments required for a highly competitive economy.
Yet output per hour
worked in the business sector averaged just 0.7% annual growth over
the past 10 years, opening up a competitive shortfall of 30% against
the United States.
Even during the last
recession, which typically affords plenty of incentive for the
business sector to operate leaner, Canada’s labour productivity
slipped for the first time in eight recessions spanning the past 30
years, according to Statistics Canada.
“It’s
frustrating,” said Eric Lascelles, chief economist at RBC Global
Asset Management. “Canada should be massively more productive than
it was before and yet we still seem to be falling behind.”
While the economy has
performed relatively well in spite of this competitive disadvantage,
the economic implications of the productivity gap for Canadians are
profound. They may also be unavoidable.
“In the long term,
productivity is one of the most important factors in determining
standard of living, interest rates, inflation, and a lot of other
things,” said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World
Markets.
Mathematically, GDP
growth is the product of two forces — the application of more
labour and/or productivity enhancements.
In the process of
recovering from the financial crisis and ensuing recession, Canada
returned to output growth through the expansion of its labour force.
The U.S. predicated
its growth on improving productivity.
In 2011, Canada’s
labour productivity improved by 1.4%, which isn’t exactly horrible,
until set aside U.S. gains, which measured 3.8%.
“It’s impossible
to meet that benchmark,” Mr. Tal said, arguing that comparing
Canadian productivity to that of the U.S. is unfair. “They’re
able to squeeze so much out of the existing labour force.”
There are merits to
the Canadian approach of building economic strength through numbers.
The jobs lost to the recession were recovered relatively quickly, an
accomplishment that still eludes the U.S. Economy.
But demographic
pressures strain Canadian labour forecasts more so than in the U.S.
An aging population
translates to fewer workers as a share of the total population, which
will constrain fiscal flexibility and the capacity to grow.
“It’s right at our
doorstep and it’s hard to see how, other than through high
productivity, we’re going to deal with that,” said Philip Cross,
a senior fellow at the C.D. Howe Institute and former chief economic
analyst at Statistics Canada.
Mr. Drummond estimates
the Canadian labour force will be growing at about 0.3% per year by
the end of this decade.
If the pace of
Canadian productivity growth remains as it is, the economy will
experience about 1% real growth. Factor in inflation and nominal
growth would sit at about 3%, Mr. Drummond said. “That will not
permit much increase in wages or corporate income.”
Canada’s stubborn
lack of competitiveness resonates through the entire economy,
impairing growth forecasts and limiting wages, meaning less
disposable income, less consumer spending, fewer tax receipts, less
government spending and higher deficits.
As a proportion of the
national economy, the productivity gap in the business sector against
the Americans means Canadians forfeit about $300-billion in lost
output each year.
Had Canada matched the
productivity record of the United States over the past 25 years,
personal disposable incomes would be $7,500 higher, a recent
Conference Board study found. Corporate profits and government
revenue would have been 40% and 31% higher, respectively.
“In the long run,
our well-being is dependent on productivity growth,” Mr. Lascelles
said.
For many years,
mitigating forces have served to mask Canada’s productivity
shortcomings.
The low value of the
Canadian dollar did so throughout the 1990s, keeping Canadian
manufacturing artificially competitive through the advantage of
relatively low prices.
High commodity prices
in the following decade supported Canadian growth in spite of
competitive disadvantages.
“We’ve been able
to get away with it because the world has been throwing money at us
for our goods, in particular our resources,” Mr. Cross said.
“That’s helped mask some the discomfort we would have been
feeling from some of this.”
When the dollar
appreciated, it provided the incentive to enhance productivity and
narrow the gap against the U.S. An inflated dollar makes imports
cheaper, allowing for an increase in machinery and equipment imports
and productivity-enhancing capital investments.
The current account
deficit in machinery and equipment shows Canadian businesses taking
advantage of the currency shift, having quadrupled over the past 10
years.
That, too, has failed
to reduce the productivity gap.
Economists are no
nearer a consensus on the cause of the problem. Theories abound.
There is probably a
cyclical element to Canadian productivity shortfall resulting from
close trade links to a weak U.S. Economy.
“A lot of our
productivity-enhancing measures are designed to tailor to the U.S.
market, and the U.S. market is not asking for anything,” Mr. Tal
said.
Factor out some of the
more transient factors and Canadian labour underperformance may not
be as pronounced as it seems.
“It’s possible
that we are seeing an increase in structural productivity, but the
cyclical element is masking it,” Mr. Tal said. “It’s possible
we are improving without knowing it.”
The spike in commodity
prices may also play a role.
“You look at the
energy sector and its productivity is just falling apart,” Mr.
Cross said. “The oil sands is a tough way to extract oil. But that
just goes hand in hand with the increase in prices. We have found all
the easy-to-find cheap oil and the oil you’re going to exploit now
is the more expensive stuff.”
That tradeoff may
simply be inherent in an economy with strength in resources. High
commodity prices, which have pushed up the value of the Canadian
dollar, may also provoke a deterioration in competitiveness, Mr.
Lascelles said.
Part of the
explanation may be that resource industries tend to engage in less
productive activities when commodity prices are high.
Other resource-based
economies have certainly experienced the same phenomenon, he said.
Should global
commodity markets weaken significantly, the Canadian dollar would
probably fall, thereby improving the competitiveness of Canadian
manufacturing.
“Canada should
actually be celebrating this remarkable balancing act,” Mr.
Lascelles said. “As much as we all would love the Canadian
manufacturing and resource sectors to be firing on all cylinders at
the same time, the reality is, it’s usually one or the other.”
Either way, prices
have helped to ensure Canadian economic health.
But given demographic
trends, Canada can’t just rely on shifting fortunes to level out
growth prospects, Mr. Cross argued.
“We’ve gotten away
for 20 years in this country with not-great productivity because
we’ve had offsetting developments in the price mechanism. Can you
count on that forever? Probably not,” he said. “It’s hard to
imagine how you’re going to get another break in the price
mechanism that will help you offset the aging of the population.”
No comments:
Post a Comment