Sectoral Imbalances and Long Run Crises - Joseph E. Stiglitz
Basically, according to Stiglitz the productivity in manufacturing turns out to be a curse that killed the manufacturing employment and as a consequence the global demand.
I'd like to have your insight about this. Does this makes any sense for you ?
The problem is that numeric/software is killing everything. Services as well ...
For instance, I rather have a good online video course from the best teacher on the subject than a bad presentation from an average local teacher...
Today the challenge is to shift workers out of manufacturing into services. This will have to be done globally. But globalization has made the global economy especially sensitive to shifting comparative advantages. In the shift from agriculture to manufacturing, the US continued to be a strong producer of agricultural goods, even as employment diminished, simply because there was an abundance of one of the critical factors, productive land. That may happen in some manufacturing sectors, where US production continues apace, but with a fraction of the employment. But the dislocations may be larger, since in some sectors, there may be little reason that production should continue at all inside the US. Employment will then decrease both because of the increase in productivity and because of the loss of comparative advantage. Some countries may attempt to invest, to restore their dynamic comparative advantage; but from a global perspective, this cannot be a “solution” to the problem of declining global manufacturing employment. Indeed, to some extent, it will exacerbate the problems, because the struggle to achieve dynamic comparative advantage will normally be through further increases in productivity—meaning even less manufacturing employment.
I'd like to have your insight about this. Does this makes any sense for you ?
The problem is that numeric/software is killing everything. Services as well ...
For instance, I rather have a good online video course from the best teacher on the subject than a bad presentation from an average local teacher...
If global growth continues to remain as robust as it has been at its peak, at some 4% , global growth in the demand for manufactured goods may fall only slightly short of the amazing growth in manufacturing productivity (or may even slightly exceed it). In that case, the fight will be over where the relatively fixed set of manufacturing jobs are located. For the world as a whole, the share of employment in manufacturing will almost surely decline significantly, and in the longer run, almost surely, productivity growth will outpace demand growth. Thus, in the long run, the countries that will face the most serious adjustment problems are those that, in the short run, remain committed to strong manufacturing sectors supported by exports and ultimately low exchange rates. For most countries, continuing commitments to jobs in manufacturing (just as many countries remained committed to agricultural employment throughout the 1930s) in the face of adverse productivity and demand conditions is a recipe for problems, if not now, later .
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