San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Texas could have economic edge

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“At a time where the rest of the country is challenged by aging population­s, slowing workforce growth and a loss of working-age population, with this population growth, Texas is bucking a lot of those trends,” Kaplan said. “Texas is extremely well positioned.”

The U.S. economy is strong, at or near full employment nine years after the Great Recession officially ended in

2009. The unemployme­nt rate is 3.9 percent, the lowest in nearly two decades while the economy this year is expected to grow at a pace near 3 percent. But the national economy faces several challenges that federal, state and local policy makers will need to address to maintain healthy economic growth in coming years, Kaplan said.

The biggest of those challenges is demographi­c. The nation’s population is aging and leaving the workforce, creating potential shortages that will slow the production of goods and services. The labor participat­ion rate — the proportion of people age 16 to 64 working or looking for work — has fallen down from 66 percent in 2007 to 62.8 percent today. The Dallas Fed projects that figure could slip below 61 percent over the next several years.

Immigratio­n skills

In an effort to bolster the nation’s workforce, Dallas Fed researcher­s have said the United States would be well served to develop a skills- and employer-based immigratio­n system, in which government agencies figure out the kind of jobs that are open and adapt immigratio­n policies to fit the needs of the job market.

“If you think you’re going to cut immigratio­n growth by half, you have to recognize that’s inconsiste­nt with a growing GDP,” Kaplan said. “That may be a trade-off decision policymake­rs want to make. But that’s going to make it harder because you have to grow the workforce to grow GDP.”

Texas is flush with newcomers, but it faces its own workforce challenges. As technology plays a larger role in the economy, skills will play an ever more important role and workers will need to adjust to changing industries and jobs. State policymake­rs, he said, should take steps to improve early childhood literacy, secondary education and college readiness — more than half of the state’s college students don’t finish with degrees within six years.

In addition, Kaplan said, the state should dramatical­ly beef up training in high schools and junior colleges for skilled middle-class job openings that don’t require four-year college degrees.

The Dallas Fed projects Texas employment will grow between 3 percent and 3.5 percent in 2018, and the state’s economy could grow by at least 4 percent, well above the 2.5 percent to 2.7 percent in economic growth projected for the United States this year. The state unemployme­nt rate was 4.1 percent in April.

Rising oil prices — U.S. crude was trading above $70 per barrel most of the week, almost three times higher than it was two years ago in the worst of the oil bust, though it fell below $68 Friday on news of possible production increases from Russia and Saudi Arabia — are also providing a tailwind for The Texas economy, Kaplan said.

The need for shale

Global oil consumptio­n is increasing at a healthy pace of 1.5 million barrels a day. Since major oil companies haven’t invested in long-term projects in recent years, the world will become far more reliant on

U.S. shale drillers to meet the growing demand, Kaplan said.

Kaplan said he expects the U.S. economic growth to slip below 2 percent by 2020 as the aging population slows workforce and productivi­ty growth, and stimulus effects of the recent federal tax cuts and spending increases fade.

He said that’s why he favors the Fed raising interest rates gradually to avoid adding more drag on economic growth.

He said he favors boosting the Fed’s key short-term in- terest rate twice more this year, which would bring the benchmark to just over 2 percent.

Government debt

“The reason I’m on the gradual side is I’m worried about these structural headwinds — aging, sluggish productivi­ty, and high to unsustaina­ble levels of government debt,” Kaplan said.

The debt has reached such high levels — above $20 trillion — that government is unlikely to take the traditiona­l steps of increasing federal spending to help lift the economy when the next recession hits, said Kaplan. And as the Fed raises interest rates to keep the economy from overheatin­g, the nation’s debt burden will only grow as the federal government pays more to borrow, Kaplan added.

The path of debt growth could likely not be sustainabl­e,” he said. “And the reason we don’t notice it as much is because interest rates are historical­ly low.”

 ?? Photos by William Luther / San Antonio Express-News ?? Downtown San Antonio can be seen from this shot of the Bandera Road flyover ramp from Loop 410 near Leon Valley. Population is one of two key drivers of economic growth, not only providing workers needed by businesses, but also customers who buy...
Photos by William Luther / San Antonio Express-News Downtown San Antonio can be seen from this shot of the Bandera Road flyover ramp from Loop 410 near Leon Valley. Population is one of two key drivers of economic growth, not only providing workers needed by businesses, but also customers who buy...
 ??  ?? The still-under -constructi­on Frost Tower rises to the right of the original Frost Tower.
The still-under -constructi­on Frost Tower rises to the right of the original Frost Tower.

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