Qatar Tribune

Fewer working-age people may slow US economy. Will it lift pay?

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AS America’s job market rebounds this summer and the need for workers intensifie­s, employers won’t likely have a chance to relax anytime soon. Worker shortages will likely persist for years after the fastreopen­ing economy shakes off its growing pains.

Consider that the number of working age people did something last year it had never done in the nation’s history: It shrank.

Estimates from the Census Bureau showed that the U.S. population ages 16 through 64 fell 0.1% in 2020 — a scant drop but the first decline of any kind after decades of steady increases. It reflected a sharp fall in immigratio­n, the retirement­s of the vast baby boom generation and a slowing birth rate. The size of the 16-64 age group was also diminished last year by thousands of deaths from the coronaviru­s.

A year earlier, in 2019, the working age population had essentiall­y plateaued.

It’s not entirely clear how population patterns will unfold once the pandemic fully fades. But even if the working age population resumes growing, it will almost certainly do so at an anemic pace. A continuing drop in that population, or even a tepid increase, would pose a problem for the economy. A healthy economic expansion has always depended on robust population growth to fuel consumer spending, justify business expansion and drive corporate earnings. Without a sizable influx of new workers, growth could stagnate.

Still, some economists foresee a silver lining for individual­s: Fewer people of working age could compel companies to compete harder to hire and retain employees. And that could mean higher pay, better opportunit­ies and other inducement­s to keep and attract workers, a trend already evident in the June jobs report the government released Friday. Average hourly pay rose a hefty 3.6% compared with a year ago, faster than the prepandemi­c pace.

“The workers would be doing better than the economy as a whole,” said Manoj Pradhan, the founder of Talking Heads Marco, an economics research firm, and formerly an economist for Morgan Stanley.

If wages were to rise sharply, it could also help narrow the vast inequality that has increasing­ly divided the most affluent Americans from everyone else and left the lowest-income households struggling to afford rent, food, child care and other essential expenses.

With population growth sluggish, economic expansion would hinge on whether companies could make their

workers more productive. An increase in productivi­ty, often made through investment­s in labor-saving technology, could further raise pay. Living standards would rise even if the economy struggled to grow at what’s normally considered a healthy pace.

Last year, the number of legal and unauthoriz­ed immigrants entering the United States fell for a fourth straight year to below 500,000 — less than half the level in 2016 — according to calculatio­ns by William Frey, a demographe­r at the Brookings Institutio­n. The number of deaths jumped 8%, to above 3 million, reflecting largely the impact of the pandemic.

A fundamenta­l long-term drag on the working-age population is the exit of the enormous baby boom generation from the labor force. The number of people ages 65 and over will likely jump 30% over the next decade, Frey said.

“We’ve never really been in this type of situation before,” he said. “There’s just not enough (young adults) to replace people who are leaving.”

The situation has been exacerbate­d this year by a spate of early retirement­s. Roughly 2.6 million people who were working before the pandemic now say they’re retired and not searching for a job, according to Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Sharp gains in stock prices and home values despite the deep pandemic recession made it easier for many older Americans to leave the workforce early.

One of them is Jeff Ferguson, a physician with Eli Lilly & Co. in Indianapol­is, who retired in April at age 59 after 22 years with the company.

Having worked from home during the pandemic, Ferguson said, made the transition smoother. But he was also encouraged by his solid investment gains and by the strengthen­ing of the local housing market despite economic uncertaint­y.

“I probably retired with a tailwind as opposed to retiring with a headwind,” he said. “If I had perceived a headwind, I might have delayed it.”

The pandemic also lent him a new perspectiv­e on life and retirement. Ferguson plans to travel around the country with his wife, a pediatrici­an, and catch up with relatives.

Gad Levanon, an economist at the Conference Board, said the drop in the working age population will be particular­ly evident among Americans without college degrees. As aging baby boomers retire, they’re being replaced by younger workers who are likelier to be college graduates. Blue-collar workers — anyone without a four-year degree — will become scarcer. That trend will likely create labor shortages in such industries as manufactur­ing, constructi­on, retail and restaurant­s and hotels.

Levanon estimates that the number of college graduates will keep growing about 2% a year, despite the population slowdown, while non-college degree holders will dwindle. This could make it harder for future college grads to find jobs commensura­te with their education levels. Companies may also inflate their job requiremen­ts, perhaps demanding bachelor’s degrees for jobs that didn’t require them before.

 ??  ?? A sign for workers hangs in the window of a shop along Main Street in Deadwood, S.D. The US workingage population shrank last year for the first time on record.
A sign for workers hangs in the window of a shop along Main Street in Deadwood, S.D. The US workingage population shrank last year for the first time on record.

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