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DIRECT JOB CREATION POLICIES IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT RECESSION David Neumark.

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Presentation on theme: "DIRECT JOB CREATION POLICIES IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT RECESSION David Neumark."— Presentation transcript:

1 DIRECT JOB CREATION POLICIES IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT RECESSION David Neumark

2 Great Recession slowed job growth… 2

3 … and led to dramatic increase in unemployment rate 3

4 Hiring credits and worker subsidies as tools of job creation 4  Two types of policies with the simplest and most direct impact on the number of workers employed in the state  Subsidies to employers to hire workers (“hiring credits”) Intended to increase demand for labor, by lowering cost of workers  Subsidies to individuals to enter the labor market (“worker subsidies”) Intended to increase supply of labor, by increasing return to work

5 Other policies proposed—less direct, uncertain, and likely more expensive effects 5  Federal ARRA  State level tax reductions/exemptions, regulatory and tort reform, High Speed Rail, other infrastructure investment  “Indirect,” change economic incentives, but don’t directly target increases in employment  E.g., subsidizing other business costs, such as capital investment, may increase employment, but lowering prices of other inputs could lead firms to substitute away from labor  Policies that favor businesses generally should help them grow, but don’t necessarily reduce cost of labor, so cost/job created may be very high  Consistent with job creation costs of ARRA discussed later  Policies favoring particular industries subject may reflect political power more than job creation potential

6 Most hiring credits target specific workers 6  Federal programs have tended to target the disadvantaged  Recent HIRE Act an exception—targets unemployed  States programs vary widely  Many focus on recently unemployed  Fewer focus on disadvantaged  California’s current program: New Jobs Credit  Enacted 2009  Targets small businesses generally  Enterprise zones a little different—geographically targeted

7 Hiring credits 7 Wage (w) Employment (E(w)) D(w) S(w) D’(w(1−c)) Hiring credit = c, simplified Credit reduces wage paid by firms, so they demand more labor at any market wage

8 Theory is simple, but reality is more complex 8  Stigma effects  Eligibility for credit sends negative signals to employers  Large administrative costs  Employer windfalls  Pay for hiring that would have occurred anyway  Need to create incentives for new hiring  Always a problem with hiring credits  Evidence suggests that for credits targeting the disadvantaged, these problems are serious, and generally make hiring credits ineffective

9 Additional problems arise for enterprise zone hiring credits 9  Much effort devoted to activities other than direct job creation  Retroactive claiming (in California) for hires up to four years ago  Cross-vouchering (eliminated in 2006)  Evidence points to no effects on employment in California Similar evidence for other areas—but not all—concurs

10 Credits targeting the unemployed may work better 10  Mid-1970s program a model (New Jobs Tax Credit)  General, did not target disadvantaged workers (but created greater incentives to hire low-skill workers)  Incentivized net job creation (firms had to grow by 2% or more)  Temporary  Evidence indicates NJTC may have created more than 500,000 jobs  Evidence from national policy is less decisive  30+ years ago, so risky to extrapolate

11 EITC is primary example of worker subsidy 11  Federal EITC provides incentives to enter the workforce  Offers wage supplements based on family size  Phases out as earnings increase  Many states have own EITC as add-on to federal program  California has proposed but never enacted its own EITC

12 Worker subsidies 12 Worker subsidy = e, simplified Wage (w) Employment (E(w)) D(w) S(w) S’’(w(1+e)) Subsidy increases wage earned by workers, so they supply more labor at any market wage

13 EITC increases employment 13  EITC boosts employment among single mothers  18-23% increase for low-skill single mothers after federal expansion  State programs also show strong gains  But work disincentives created by phase-out of EITC  Small reduction in hours worked among other groups  Overall employment increases strongly offset any hours reductions  Effective at targeting low-income families

14 Usual conclusion: worker subsidies (EITC) more effective 14  Avoids stigma effects  Low administrative costs  Better targets poor and low-income families  Evidence on positive employment effects is more compelling

15 But key short-run policy recommendation is to use hiring credits targeting the unemployed 15  Evidence of ineffectiveness comes mainly from hiring credits for the disadvantaged  In current context we would focus more on the unemployed generally, more like NJTC  Focus on the unemployed would reduce stigma effects, and current threat of windfalls is low, so eligibility could be simple and administrative burden low  Assuming that Great Recession is demand driven, increasing labor supply unlikely to increase employment, hiring credits maximally effective  Usual distributional arguments weaker in present context

16 Recession Hit Men Harder 16

17 How to increasing short-run impact of hiring credits 17  Target broadly, to avoid substitution away from other workers (and stigma)  Keep burden low by using simple rule—like rising employment— that we can live with in current context  Make credits short-term and temporary, to counter business cycle  No reason to focus on small firms (like California’s NJC)  Avoid retroactive credits, to induce new hiring  Create incentives for growth in employment not hours (more important, and margin on which supply is more responsive)  Don’t expand eligibility, letting credit become general tax relief

18 Hard to estimate costs of job creation via hiring credits, but much cheaper than ARRA 18  Windfall rate high, likely over 90%  Benefits are both direct (lower UI) and indirect (higher earnings through increased skills)  Estimates of cost/job from hiring credits fairly high, $9,100-$75,000  At midpoint of range, about 1/7 th of cost/job created via ARRA (CBO: 1.4-3.6 million jobs at $570 billion through Sept. 2010)  $290,000 at midpoint, vs. $42,000 for hiring credits

19 Limited scope of hiring credits at state level, but keep focus on job creation 19  “Feasible” state spending would have modest impact  E.g., suppose California spend $1 billion  Implication is about 24,000 more jobs (using cost midpoint), or unemployment lower by about.15 percentage point  Even low estimate of cost/job ($9,100) would imply only 110,000 jobs, unemployment rate lower by 0.6 percentage point  Federal government has far greater resources, and can borrow huge amounts  ARRA, distributed by population, would represent $68 billion of spending in California  Still, state hiring credits likely more effective than menu of proposals put forth by legislators

20 Basis for federal stimulus II? 20  Focusing new federal stimulus on hiring credits only could give similar impact for much smaller price tag  $50 billion would create 1.2 million jobs, vs. 1.4-3.6 million estimate of job creation by ARRA (CBO)  Might think policy could get bipartisan support, given focus on helping economy recover by reducing costs to businesses

21 Different sized ideas 21  Emphasize hiring credits for short-term response to Great Recession  Target unemployed broadly, keep it simple, and focus on job growth  Prepare better for future recessions  Establish new federal hiring credit that kicks in when economy slows, fade out when economy recovers  Avoids entanglement with politics, and budgetary difficulties that accompany recessions  Acts as “automatic stabilizer”


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