Business Standard

Need work? Maybe that's a job for government

A job guarantee wouldn’t have to start out as an iron-clad deal

- NOAH SMITH © 2018 Bloomberg

The other day, New Jersey US Senator Cory Booker proposed a federal program guaranteei­ng a job for anyone who wants one. It’s an idea that sounds a lot more radical than it is. If properly implemente­d, a job guarantee could be a good way of both fighting recessions and getting more Americans into the workforce in the long term.

Economist Adam Ozimek, writing in Forbes, wasn’t a fan of Booker’s plan, calling it “absurd” and “insane”:

Corey (sic) Booker’s proposal is clear that [ government-provided jobs] should pay $15 an hour with benefits. Another recent proposal suggests [a yearly salary of] $24,600…According to the Census, there are currently 50 million wage and salary workers with annual earnings below $25,000…Is this a joke? The idea here is to nationalis­e what a quarter of the US labour market and therefore economy? Half of it?

Ozimek’s reaction may prove to be a common one. If so, that’s unfortunat­e. For several reasons, the idea is far less absurd than he believes.

Booker’s numbers are anything but radical — assuming a 40-hour workweek for 50 weeks a year, $24,600 a year is equivalent to a wage of $12.30 an hour, which, although considerab­ly higher than the current federal minimum wage of $7.25, is less than the $15 that the senator supports. As a general rule, guaranteed government jobs should always pay minimum wage —for them to pay more is, effectivel­y, a minimum wage hike, since any workers earning less in the private sector could switch to the government version. As for benefits, McDonald’s offers them, as does WalMart, so it makes sense that government jobs would too.

But Booker’s proposal is merely a start. Employers in rural Kansas simply can’t afford to pay as much as those in downtown Boston, and workers need less to live because rent and other living costs are lower. Thus, it makes sense that government jobs would pay different wages in different places.

It’s also worth noting that even if government-provided jobs did pay slightly more than private-sector jobs in some regions, it wouldn’t represent nationalis­ation of a quarter of the country’s labour market, because those companies would almost certainly raise their wages to compete. There’s a limit to how much companies could raise wages, of course — but since companies like Wal-Mart and McDonald’s are not currently operating close to a zero profit margin, they have a bit of room.

Finally, a job guarantee wouldn’t have to start out as an iron-clad deal — it could just begin as a government work program. It’s not such a radical idea . The idea, which is similar to programmes implemente­d under President Franklin Roosevelt during the Great Depression, is attractive for a number of reasons.

First, unlike many welfare programs, a job guarantee actually produces real useful goods and services. Due to government inefficien­cy, the things created by government jobs might not be worth quite as much as the money that gets spent on their creation, but they would be worth more than zero.

Second, jobs provide a kind of dignity that traditiona­l welfare programs, or even innovative new ones like universal basic income, probably don't. Third, a government jobs program, would be a very effective tool for fighting the unemployme­nt created by recessions and much cheaper, per job created, than a traditiona­l Keynesian stimulus.

Finally, a government job program could help bring more Americans into the labor force long-term. That might help stanch or even reverse the decline in the US labour force participat­ion rate:

Holding a job — any kind of job — improves people’s work ethic, by getting them used to daily labor. It helps teach basic skills of the workplace — how to show up on time, get along with co-workers and follow directions. And it’s a valuable addition to their resume, if and when they decide to look for a higher-paying job.

But it’s important to note that this final benefit is hypothetic­al. Studies of public-sector jobs programs show that these efforts haven’t been very successful at promoting increased employment in the past — programmes such as job training and subsidies for private-sector employment have been much more successful.

That empirical finding should give advocates of the job-guarantee idea pause. It’s possible that government will offer jobs but that very few people will take them. That would certainly limit the programme’s cost, but also make it pretty ineffectiv­e as a tool for reducing poverty. It’s also possible that those who do take government jobs will stay there forever instead of moving up the job ladder — not the worst possible outcome, but not great either.

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