Showing posts with label economic policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economic policy. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 May 2025

Review of Daniel Susskind's Growth: A Reckoning

 An interesting and stimulating book on tradeoffs and moral questions

 




The causes and consequences of economic growth are two of the key topics in economics. The former was a focus of researchers in the twentieth century, while the latter has come into focus in the twenty-first. When growth took off during the industrial revolution, working conditions in the mines and factories were appalling, and it took many decades for them to improve, then many more decades for modern society with its science, health and education systems to develop. Those are the benefits of two centuries of economic growth. Now, however, Daniel Susskind points to the costs of growth, such as ‘widening economic inequalities, the degradation of the natural world, the hollowing out of local communities, the unleashing of technologies that we seem unable to control.’

 

Susskind calls this the ‘tension between the promise and price of growth’, and he warns that ‘for the first time in our history, the costs of growth threaten to overwhelm its gains.’ His book is not a detailed study of challenges of climate change, globalisation, inequality or artificial intelligence. Nor does it offer ‘definitive lists of policy interventions’ tailored to each challenge. Instead the ‘aim is different. To sweep these challenges together and look at them from a new vantage point…to deepen our understanding of the problems we face and why we have failed to tackle them until now.’

 

Susskind starts with three ‘simple but remarkable’ facts. The first is the fact that economic life was stagnant for millennia until the industrial revolution; the second is that growth began only 200 years ago; and the third is how economic growth has been sustained, unlike previous growth spurts that were limited and fizzled out. The first half of his book covers this history of growth, what he calls its ‘mysterious past.’

 

This is a familiar story. Living standards did not change from primitive humans to Neolithic hunter gatherers to medieval farmers, Economic growth was missing in Greek, Roman, Persian and Chinese empires. Historically, there was a Malthusian tradeoff between population growth and food supply, and the imperative was subsistence and survival. Susskind calls this 300,000 year period the great stagnation. 

 

Classical economists like Adam Smith and John Stuart Mill did not write about growth. They were concerned with economic progress, but not economic growth because there was no measurement of economic growth until gross domestic product (GDP) was developed in the 1930s and 1940s as a measure of economic activity. In those days GDP was tangible, about adding up what was being made. Today, services and the intangible economy are important. Simon Kuznets, who was the first to measure GDP, didn’t think defence spending should be included, and what is in and is out of GDP raises interesting and important philosophical questions.

 

How did economic growth get going? The book has a deep analysis of why economic growth lifted sustainably in the industrial revolution rather than some other time in history, and why it occurred in England. Although the causes of the industrial revolution have been much debated between different schools of thought, and ‘economists have struggled to understand the process’, we now know enough understand what happened.

 

Susskind provides a very short history of the important ideas. The 1930s Harrod-Domar model attributed growth to increases in physical capital (plant, equipment, buildings and structures).  The 1950s Solow-Swan model of economic growth identified the role of technological progress and productivity (how efficiently capital and labour are used). Susskind then highlights the work of Paul Romer in the 1980s, who made the role of new ideas fundamental for economic growth, Joel Mokyr on the role of culture in the 1990s, and Daron Acemoglu and the role of institutions in the 2000s. 

 

The conceptual and political role of GDP is given a lengthy treatment. Firstly, because in the twentieth century increasing GDP was strongly correlated with ‘human flourishing’ and measures like mortality, health, education and employment. Second, because both economics and politics became dominated by the need to increase GDP, despite its limitations as an adequate or comprehensive measure of progress. Susskind argues that the post-war pursuit of growth and increasing GDP assumed that success would resolve other problems, avoiding associated moral questions and costs of growth. 

 

The second half of the book is on what he calls the growth dilemma: ‘on the one hand it is associated with many of our greatest triumphs and achievements. But on the other, it is also related to many of the greatest problems we confront today. The promise of growth pulls us …towards pursuing ever more of it. But its price pushes us away with a powerful force.’ Susskind calls this the ‘troubling present’, where people are no longer confident their living standards, and those of their children, will continue to improve. 

 

Technology is not on a pre-determined path. Britain’s role in the Industrial Revolution was also caused in part by the high cost of wages and the availability of cheap coal, known as induced technological change. Susskind emphasises the significance of directed technological change, or how governments can shape the path of technological development through policy choices. For example, the US university system has benefited from public funding for defence and space technologies, and the pandemic effects on technology adoption and behaviour shows how fast we can change. Markets on their own do not provide adequate price signals for the process of idea generation, and he suggests taxes and subsidies, laws and regulations, and social narratives and norms can be used, for example to promote technological progress that is more environmentally friendly and provide incentives for growth that is less reliant on fossil fuels.

 

Susskind believes confronting the growth dilemma is ‘one of the most important tasks that now faces humankind.’ Further, it is an ‘opportunity for moral revitalization, to create a renewed sense of collective purpose in society in pursuit of what really matters - not simply a more prosperous economy but the many other ends that people care about’ such as a fairer society, a healthier planet, good jobs and the quality of our politics. This is the ‘uncertain future’ of growth. 

 

One response is to ‘tinker’ with GDP and make it more representative, favoured by technocrats. This ‘misunderstands the nature of the challenge that we face: it is not a technical problem about mismeasurement but a moral one about what matters.’ He argues that markets will not always provide the right price signals, and will not embody all the things that society actually cares about. In particular, market pricing does not deal with externalities, such as the future impact of climate change.

 

The other response is to give up on growth, and slow down the economy through degrowth. Susskind argues this focuses on the price of growth while neglecting the promise of future benefits, and at a ‘time when growth is slowing around the world, this seems particularly misguided.’ Degrowth is not a solution to the growth dilemma, instead there is infinite potential for ideas. A weak version of degrowth is to accept that growth is only one of the goals society cares about, for example we might introduce a wealth tax even if it reduces economic growth.

 

Looking at what we might do, Susskind is sceptical on the effectiveness of conventional approaches like building more infrastructure, reforming planning and land-use, and more education. The important and most innovative sections of the book are on the solutions Susskind advocates, which are about dealing with the tradeoffs involved, such as between growth and the environment, or growth and inequality. He suggests three approaches: where possible, tradeoffs should be avoided; we should attempt to weaken tradeoffs using the tools of policy, regulation and incentives; and in some case tradeoffs must be accepted, where the choice is between less growth and ‘other important outcomes we care about’, which raises moral questions on what we should care about and how much we should value the future and future people. 

 

Susskind thinks most of these tradeoffs cannot be avoided, therefore we should confront them and the moral issues involved directly. On equity versus efficiency, he argues we are inside the frontier for the optimal point on this trade-off. On growth versus the environment, the decline in the cost of reducing or removing emissions has changed and still is changing the tradeoff. A difficult tradeoff is between globalisation and the damage done to left-behind places, and he argues for ‘dynamic competitive advantage’ where a country does what is best for it at any given time. He says ‘It falls to us to confront the tradeoffs presented by growth’s promise and its price,’ by managing them where possible but, if that is not possible, accepting the need to choose between objectives.

 

His answers to the growth dilemma can be frustratingly imprecise. For example, he says ‘we should care about the future far more’, and ‘we should care about other valuable ends far more.’  Exactly how we do this and what they are is not always clear. On how to pursue growth in the future, he believes the key is the creation and unleashing of ideas, through reform of the patent system, increasing R&D, and faster development of technology. He warns inequality risks losing the idea-generating potential of people without access to education or resources to create and take advantage of their ideas. 

 

Although some people ignore the trade-offs between growth and its costs, denying that they exist, there may be (or possibly will be) a point where policymakers need to accept that meeting climate and other social objectives requires slower growth. When it becomes necessary to choose among objectives, Susskind suggests leaving the choice ‘to the world of politics.’ He proposes more use of collective deliberation such as citizen assemblies (100 or more people) for major policy issues, and ‘mini-publics’ such as citizens juries and citizen panels (30 or more people) for ‘important, but less consequential questions such as the location of a new hospital.’ There are also consensus conferences and citizen dialogues that offer feedback. 

 

Susskind concludes with this shift from our current ‘representative’ democracy to this ‘deliberative’ democracy. ‘The leaders to whom we have delegated the growth dilemma … have failed to confront the tradeoffs that it presents us with. This is why we feel the tension between the promise and price of growth so acutely today.’ He is optimistic that people want to be more useful citizens and, if given the chance to participate, would resolve the tradeoffs the growth dilemma presents us with. 

 

This is a most interesting and stimulating book, particularly the last couple of sections on the tradeoffs and the moral questions. Whether or not one shares Susskind’s optimism about people as citizens and solutions to the growth dilemma, his view that the direction of growth is something we can control is important. His analogy is the difference between a train that runs in one direction on tracks and a sailing boat that can be steered by raising and lowering the sails and can go in any direction on the open sea. That is a message people and policymakers everywhere should heed.

 

 

Daniel Susskind, 2024. Growth: A Reckoning, Penguin Books. 

 

 

Thursday, 1 February 2024

Review of Richard Langlois' The Corporation and the Twentieth Century

 Langlois, R. 2023. The Corporation and the Twentieth Century: The history of American business enterprise, Princeton University Press. 


 

An exhaustive, detailed history of US business that continues Richard Langlois long-running dialogue with Alfred Chandler’s work on managerial capitalism. Ranging across all major C20 industries like railways, automobiles, aircraft, electrical appliances and computers, and loosely organised into periods of a couple of decades covering pre WW1, pre WW2, post WW2, stagflation and the final decades, each chapter looks at the political context, the development of key industries and the relevant technological innovations that drove the process: ‘It has been a central theme of the book that the large integrated corporation in the twentieth century owed its rise to prominence in significant part to the eclipse of the market and the growth of state power during the Depression and the World wars’ (p. 478). In the 1980s the wheel turned, market forces began to reassert themselves, new corporate structures emerged, and the boundaries of the firm shifted again. 

 

A focus of the book is the effects of regulation on industry. The early contest between Populists and Progressives that played out in anti-trust cases and Supreme Court decisions often led to regulations ‘misaligned’ with technology and market opportunity. In many cases consumer interest was secondary, with lower prices seen as evidence of anti-competitive behaviour as ‘American regulatory policy worked to segment markets, generally along lines of supply technology not market demand’ (p. 466). 

 

The institutional origins of regulators in key industries and their role in creating and maintaining cartels or oligopolies contradicts the view that the US favoured large corporations. In fact, the large, vertically integrated firm was an outcome of legal constraints on contracting that were intended to favour small businesses but had the opposite effect. Many regulated firms then underinvested in maintenance and innovation, leading to spectacular collapses like Penn State Railroad, Chrysler Corp and Pan Am, and the demise of other once great corporations like IT&T, RCA, Westinghouse and US Steel.

 

The role of technological opportunity, R&D and innovation is emphasised, battles over patents and standards discussed, and how disruptive tech eventually overcame regulatory barriers in industries like transport (containerisation and air freight), radio (AM and FM) and TV (broadcast networks and cable). Disruption in computing (transistors and integrated circuits), manufacturing (consolidation and lean production) and the near death experiences of IBM, Apple and GE are detailed: ‘The most disruptive new entry has often come not in the form of a small start-up but a large firm in a related area’ (p. 549). 


Intellectual contests of ideas and the increasing use of economics in regulation get short, non-technical explanations. Important business leaders and given credit when due and their failures dissected. For those interested in regulation and the role of government agencies, business history, and the interplay of technology and industry, this is a great read. 






Wednesday, 16 May 2018

A Macro View of Australian Property and Construction 2018

This year I got to do a class on the Commonwealth Government's 2018-19 Budget in the context of the state of play for Australia's construction and property industries. This is a top-down overview, the budget is like an annual scorecard of current economic performance, so all the data is at a national level and follows the budget focus on the ongoing transition from the end of mining boom two in 2012. The lecture looked at the macroeconomic role of increased government spending on infrastructure and the change in roles of residential building and non-residential construction in the business cycle. The slides from the lecture follow, PDF here, the idea is to let the data tell the story. I also do a class that goes through the Budget aggregates in their macroeconomic context, with a bit of history, the PDF of Budget 2018 - A Macro View is here.

























Other relevant posts are:
Construction in the Australian Economy here
The Australian Construction Industry After the Mining Boom here 
Cities and Built Environment Policies here
Construction Productivity here

Monday, 17 July 2017

The Australian Built Environment Sector

The Economic Contribution of the BES



The Australian Bureau of Statistics publication Australian Industry (ABS 8155) uses a wide sample of private sector firms and non-profit organizations to get financial data on balance sheet items. This is the modern approach to national statistics, accessing and organizing data from a range of sources, mostly digital. As explained by the ABS:

This publication presents estimates of the economic and financial performance of Australian industry in 2015-16. The estimates are produced annually using a combination of directly collected data from the annual Economic Activity Survey, conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, and Business Activity Statement data provided by businesses to the Australian Taxation Office.

Australian Industry provides a useful data set to compare industries with, and to compare sectors (called divisions and subdivisions) within industries. The data excludes the public sector but includes non-profits in industries like health and education, which are combined with private sector businesses to get a total for the non-government part of the economy.

Figure 1 shows the Total All Selected Industries and the Construction industry’s share for three of the data series produced: employment; wages and salaries; and industry value added, a measure of output. In 2015-16 Construction employed 1.04 million people, 9.7 per cent of the total, paid 11.3 per cent of total wages and salaries, and contributed 10 8 per cent to the output of the non-government sector.

Figure 1. Construction Share of Industry Output and Employment


The building and construction work done and output statistics capture the on-site activities of contractors and subcontractors. The construction industry, however, has an important role linking suppliers of materials, machinery, products, services and other inputs to the public and private clients on the demand side. These two views have been called broad and narrow, with the narrow industry defined as on-site work and the broad industry as the supply chain of materials, products and assemblies, and professional services. Production of the built environment, how it is created and maintained through project initiation, design, fabrication and construction to operation, repair and maintenance, requires a deep and dense network of firms. With the property and real estate industries on the demand side, these firms make up the built environment sector.

Employment and value added data from Australian Industry 2015-16 is provided at three levels, for industries, divisions and subdivisions. Construction data is at the two digit division level, but data on Manufacturing and Professional and technical services is given at the three digit sub-division level. This allows the contribution to the built environment sector of relevant parts of those industries to be identified. After combining the on-site work done by contractors and sub-contractors with manufacturing, property and real estate services, professional services and quarrying, the built environment sector accounts for 16.4 per cent of total employment and 21 per cent of output, measured as industry value added, of the Australian non-government sector.

The idea that the construction industry, as measured in the national accounts, is only one part of the creation and maintenance of the built environment recognizes the industry’s extensive linkages with other sectors. Through those linkages the impact of construction activities on other parts of the economy is much greater than their direct contribution.

The on-site work done by contractors and subcontractors is only around half the total economic contribution of the built environment sector when downstream suppliers and the property and real estate industries on the demand side are added. 

Table 1. Australian Built Environment Sector
2015-16
Employment
Value Added
Employment
Value Added
Industry
Number
$mn
Number
$mn
30 Building construction
206,000
27,319


31 Heavy and civil engineering construction
121,000
21,156


32 Construction services
713,000
68,222


Total construction
1,040,000
116,697
1,040,000
116,697





6921 Architectural services
40,153
3,942


6922 Surveying and mapping services
15,853
1,872


6923 Engineering design and engineering consulting
132,498
17,889


6924 Other specialised design services
30,479
2,384


Total professional, scientific and technical services
218,983
26,087
218,983
26,087





1331 Textile floor covering manufacturing
1,470
205


1491 Prefabricated wooden building manufacturing
753
77


1492 Wooden structural fittings and components
23,752
2,160


1493 Veneer and plywood manufacturing
825
88


1916 Paint and coatings manufacturing
6,853
1,103


2010 Glass and glass product manufacturing
9,085
1,358


2021 Clay brick manufacturing
1,999
433


2029 Other ceramic product manufacturing
1,944
175


2031 Cement and lime manufacturing
3,229
1,191


2032 Plaster product manufacturing
1,548
290


2033 Ready-mixed concrete manufacturing
8,359
1,311


2034 Concrete product manufacturing
7,388
793


2221 Structural steel fabricating
18,676
1,761


2222 Prefabricated metal building manufacturing
5,384
626


2223 Architectural aluminium product manufacturing
15,938
1,486


2224 Metal roof and guttering manufacturing
3,631
362


2229 Other structural metal product manufacturing
8,580
814


2452 Space heating, cooling and ventilation equipment
5,135
645


2462 Mining and construction machinery manufacturing
8,195
1,008


Total manufacturing
132,744
15,886
132,744
15,886





67 Property operators and real estate services
345,000
66,382
345,000
66,382
09 Non-metallic mineral mining and quarrying
12,000
2,476
12,000
2,476





Total Australian built environment sector


1,748,727
227,528
Per cent of all industries


16.4
21.0
Total all industries


10,678,000
1,083,865
Source: Australian Industry ABS 8155.