Hmmm, not exactly consistent manufacturing productivity, even before the (recent) recession. Indeed, I might suspect that Texas since around early 2006 has been dependent on moving Services jobs there, not growth in the local economy. But I'm not a Fed Governor:
Now, let’s look at job creation in Texas since June 2009, the date that the National Bureau of Economic Research (or NBER, the body that "officially" dates when a recession starts and ends) declared the recent economic recession to have ended....[I]t is reasonable to assume Texas has accounted for a significant amount of the nation’s employment growth both over the past 20 years and since the recession officially ended.
Let us give him credit for admitting that the 49.9% number is major b*llsh*t. And half-credit for admitting that, if you drop the states that are still heavily negative, the number is below 30%. So things must be looking up in Texas, right?
Hmmm, a nice recovery—rather similar to the 1991-1992 gain—followed by some drop-off, water-treading, and another peak early this year that suggests seasonality, even though the data is Seasonally Adjusted.**** Difficult to argue an upward trend (see most recent footnote), but maybe stable.
Then again, I'm still not a Fed Governor. But let's give him some credit for admitting this self-inconsistent point: The most jobs have been created in the educational and health services sector, which accounts for 13.5 percent of Texas’ employment.
The education sector? Really? Can you say "
stimulus monies"?
People in Dallas sure can. Who is "just spending taxpayer money" now?
And credit Fisher for being fair enough to note the elephant in the Texas room:
I should point out that in 2010, 9.5 percent of hourly workers in Texas earned at or below the federal minimum wage, a share that exceeds the national average of 6 percent. California’s share was 2 percent and New York’s was 6.5 percent.
And for not thinking that the Fed's dual mandate needs to prioritize nonexistent "inflation threats."
It might be noted by the press here today that although I am constantly preoccupied with price stability―in the aviary of central bankers, I am known as a “hawk” on inflation―I did not voice concern for the prospect of inflationary pressures in the foreseeable future....My concern is not with immediate inflationary pressures.
Well, that's good. And since the other half of the dual mandate is full employment, you'll be expecting something positive from businesses, then, eh?
Importantly, from a business operator’s perspective, nothing was clarified, except that there will be undefined change in taxes, spending and subsidies and other fiscal incentives or disincentives. The message was simply that some combination of revenue enhancement and spending growth cutbacks will take place. The particulars are left to one’s imagination and the outcome of deliberations among 12 members of the Legislature.
Ma nishta ha-laili ha-zeh? But Fisher digs deeper:
On the revenue side, you have yet to see a robust recovery in demand; growing your top-line revenue is vexing. You have been driving profits or just maintaining your margins through cost reduction and achieving maximum operating efficiency. You have money in your pocket or a banker increasingly willing to give you credit if and when you decide to expand. But you have no idea where the government will be cutting back on spending, what measures will be taken on the taxation front and how all this will affect your cost structure or customer base.
Huh? I thought government was mean and evil and just spends taxpayer money. Shows what I know; I listened to a Fed Governor, one who tells me that businesses "have been driving profits or just maintaining your margins through cost reduction and achieving maximum operating efficiency." Really should see some nice Production numbers in the past six months, then, no?
No. So when Richard Fisher later says:
[The business owner] might now say to yourself, "I understand from the Federal Reserve that I don’t have to worry about the cost of borrowing for another two years. Given that I don’t know how I am going to be hit by whatever new initiatives the Congress will come up with, but I do know that credit will remain cheap through the next election, what incentive do I have to invest and expand now? Why shouldn’t I wait until the sky is clear?"
There are two answers. The first is the obvious: the Fed only controls short-term rates for risk-free investment. They don't control lending rates, and they don't control long-term rates, which are what I'm interested in if I'm "going to hire new workers or build a new plant." Now, QE2 made it marginally easier for me to borrow in the long-term, but that's gone now. So unless I'm stupid enough to pretend I'm a bank—if I borrow short-term and create long-term liabilities, I better be damned sure someone will refinance me until the project is finished—the Fed guaranteeing that the short-term Government borrowing rate is going to stay low for a while doesn't mean much to me.
The second is more interesting: if I believe in competitive advantage, I want my new products on the shelf before my competitor has hers there. I cannot sell what you cannot see. So I want my plant started now—while I can still get the best available workers before my competitor does, while I can still pick a prime location (less of an issue in a Vast Wasteland, but not insignificant if you're Dallas- or Houston-area), and while I can negotiate a deal with someone who needs me in their space more than I need to be there.
But that is only true if Richard Fisher has been telling the truth about how well I'm running my Texas-based business. And that, not to put too fine a point on it, appears to be—to coin a Texas phrase—bullshit.
I know the reality of Rick Pery: it's a hermetic, incurious one in which women are property, you read what they tell you, and you get to take credit for a win, even if it's your handlers doing all the work, including telling you what to do later. It's not a world of which I approve, but my lack of approval doesn't mean I believe it doesn't exist.
I don't know what reality Richard Fisher inhabits; it is certainly
not one in which there is "a heavy focus on the data." At least not data that is related to the Fed's dual mandate, or how nonfinancial businesses make long-term decisions, or how to attain a competitive advantage.
Rick Perry speaks to his true believers. Richard Fisher expects you to believe him. Currently, only one of them is trying to do national harm to the economy, and it's not the (soon-to-be) 45th President of the United States.
*And the rest of the United States when Bachmann-Perry Overdrive starts on 20 January 2013, but that's tangential.
**Fairness requires me to note that much of the state of California is a desert, though not so bad a one as most of West Texas. Accordingly, growth in those areas would,
pari passu be similar to that of Texas, save that there is no oil in Central California. But never let it be said that we would expect an FRB official to understand geography.
***And let us always remember that Lubbock gave us
the greatest white rock musician of all time.
****Good thing I left out the pre-2006 data, so we don't have to note that the peaks post-Great Recession are close to the ca. 2006
troughs.
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