October 1998, Vol. 121, No. 10
Précis
Waiting for
the paradigm
America's
changing well-being
Why cities are
important
For example, Margaret K. Burke and Michael A. Kouparitsas conclude in the October Chicago Fed Letter that "the robust performance of the U.S. economy has been due to temporary factors that have permanently raised the level of U.S. production, but have not changed the long-run growth rate of the economy." Indeed, both an analysis using trend decomposition by unobserved components and another using spectral techniques suggest to the authors that underlying trend growth rates have increased only very slowly in the 1990s and are not any higher than they were in the 1980s.
Although she approaches the issue from a very different perspective, Susan C. Lakatos presented similar conclusions to a recent meeting of the National Association for Business Economics. Her presentation, "S&P Earnings, Corporate Profits, and Productivity," reconciled the recent above-average price-to-earnings ratio of the Standard & Poors 500 by adjusting their reported earnings to more economically meaningful profit estimates. After that reconciliation, corporate earnings were well within their historical relationship with the profit figures in the national income and product accounts and would imply that price ratios are much more in line with historical averages. Similarly, by an analysis of the relationship of the deviation of cur-rent quarter output growth from its five-term moving average and the growth rate of domestic nonfinancial corporate productivity, Lakatos concludes that not only is the economy not outperforming history in terms of productivity growth, but may even be slightly underperforming.
The last measure is important not only for what it says about current activities, but for what it indicates for the development of future earnings power as well. While the percentage of young men who are neither enrolled in school nor employed has not changed much for any of the race and ethnic groups, the percentage of young women has fallen substantially. The most substantial declines have occurred among young black women starting in 1991 and among young Latinas since 1995. For both black and Hispanic women, much of the decrease can be accounted for by increases in school enrollment.
On the theoretical side, there is the notion that the productivity of a worker with a given amount of human capital or productive skill depends in significant ways on the level of human capital present in the workers that he or she interacts with. Thus, moving a worker from a low-capital group to a high-capital group may raise the workers productivity through the mechanism of interaction. Opportunities for interaction are not uniformly distributed in space and are much more common at the nodes we call "cities."
Empirically, researchers have found evidence that doubling a citys size or density is associated with an increase of roughly 6 percent in labor productivity. The study based on urban density in fact found that gains due to employment density can explain more than half of the labor productivity variation among States. This study, report Ragan and Bharat, also goes to great length to avoid its results being negated by reverse causality or weakened by the impact of potential intervening variables such as education and public capital, and show that the results do not reflect the influence of market size (a potential alternative hypothesis).
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