WASHINGTON (By
Michael Mandel, BusinessWeek) June 8,
2007 —
Whenever critics of
globalization complain about the loss of American jobs to low-cost
countries such as China and India, supporters point to the powerful
performance of the U.S. economy. And with good reason. Despite the
latest slow quarter, official statistics show that America's economic
output has grown at a solid 3.3% annual rate since 2003, a period when
imports from low-cost countries have soared. Similarly, domestic
manufacturing output has expanded at a decent pace. On the face of it,
off shoring doesn't seem to be having much of an effect at all.
But new evidence suggests that shifting production overseas has
inflicted worse damage on the U.S. economy than the numbers show.
BusinessWeek has learned of a gaping flaw in the way statistics
treat off shoring, with serious economic and political implications. Top
government statisticians now acknowledge that the problem exists, and
say it could prove to be significant.
The short explanation is that the growth of domestic manufacturing has
been substantially overstated in recent years. That means productivity
gains and overall economic growth have been overstated as well. And that
raises questions about U.S. competitiveness and "helps explain why wage
growth for most American workers has been weak," says Susan N. Houseman,
an economist at the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research who
identifies the distorting effects of off shoring in a
soon-to-be-published paper.
Fly in the Ointment
The underlying problem is
located in an obscure statistic: the import price data published monthly
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Because of it, many of the cost
cuts and product innovations being made overseas by global companies and
foreign suppliers aren't being counted properly. And that spells trouble
because, surprisingly, the government uses the erroneous import price
data directly and indirectly as part of its calculation for many other
major economic statistics, including productivity, the output of the
manufacturing sector, and real gross domestic product (GDP), which is
supposed to be the inflation-adjusted value of all the goods and
services produced inside the U.S.
The result? BusinessWeek's analysis of the import price data
reveals off shoring to low-cost countries is in fact creating "phantom
GDP"--reported gains in GDP that don't correspond to any actual domestic
production. The only question is the magnitude of the disconnect.
"There's something real here, but we don't know how much," says J.
Steven Landefeld, director of the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA),
which puts together the GDP figures. Adds Matthew J. Slaughter, an
economist at the Amos Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College who
until last February was on President George W. Bush's Council of
Economic Advisers: "There are potentially big implications. I worry
about how pervasive this is."
By BusinessWeek's admittedly rough estimate, off shoring may
have created about $66 billion in phantom GDP gains since 2003 (page
31). That would lower real GDP today by about half of 1%, which is
substantial but not huge. But put another way, $66 billion would wipe
out as much as 40% of the gains in manufacturing output over the same
period.
It's important to emphasize the tenuousness of this calculation. In
particular, it required BusinessWeek to make assumptions about
the size of the cost savings from off shoring, information the
government doesn't even collect.
Getting Worse
As a result, the actual
size of phantom GDP could be a lot larger, or perhaps smaller. This
estimate mainly focuses on the shift of manufacturing overseas. But
phantom GDP can be created by the introduction of innovative new
imported products or by the off shoring of research and development,
design, and services as well--and there aren't enough data in those
areas to take a stab at a calculation. "As these [low-cost] countries
move up the value chain, the problem becomes worse and worse," says
Jerry A. Hausman, a top economist at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. "You've put your finger on a real problem."
Alternatively, as Landefeld notes, the size of the overstatement could
be smaller. One possible offset: Machinery and high-tech equipment
shipped directly to businesses from foreign suppliers may generate less
phantom GDP, just because of the way the numbers are constructed.
Depending on your attitude toward off shoring, the existence of phantom
GDP is either testimony to the power of globalization or confirmation of
long-held fears. The U.S. economy no longer stops at the water's edge.
Global corporations often provide their foreign suppliers and overseas
subsidiaries with business knowledge, management practices, training,
and all sorts of other intangible exports not picked up in the
government data. In return, they get back cheap products.
But the new numbers also require a reassessment of productivity and
wages that could add fire to the national debate over the true
performance of the economy in President Bush's second term. The official
statistics show that productivity, or output per hour, grew at a 1.8%
rate over the past three years. But taking the phantom GDP effect into
account, the actual rate of productivity growth might be closer to
1.6%--about what it was in the 1980s.
More broadly, it becomes clear that "gains from trade are being measured
instead of productivity," according to Robert C. Feenstra, an economist
at the University of California at Davis and the director of the
international trade and investment program at the National Bureau of
Economic Research. "This has been missed."
Pat Byrne, the global managing partner of Accenture Ltd.'s supply-chain
management practice, goes even further, suggesting that "at least half
of U.S. productivity [growth] has been because of globalization." But
quantifying this is tough, he notes, because most companies don't look
at how much of their productivity growth is onshore and how much is
offshore. "I don't know of any companies or industries that have tried
to measure this. Maybe they don't even want to know."
Phantom GDP helps explain why U.S. workers aren't benefiting more as
their companies grow ever more efficient. The cost savings that
companies are reaping "don't represent increased productivity of
American workers producing goods and services in the U.S.," says
Houseman. In contrast, compensation of senior executives is typically
tied to profits, which have soared alongside off shoring.
Importing Earnings
But where are those
vigorous corporate profits coming from? The strong earnings growth of
U.S.-based corporations is still real, but it may be that fewer of the
gains are coming from improvements in domestic productivity. In fact,
holding down costs by moving key tasks overseas could be having a
greater impact on corporate earnings than anyone guessed--or measured.
There are investing implications, too, although those are harder to
quantify. Companies with their primary focus in the U.S. might suddenly
seem less attractive, since underlying economic growth is slower here
than the numbers show. But if the statistical systems of other developed
countries suffer from the same problem--and they might--then growth in
Europe and Japan might be overstated, too.
When Houseman first uncovered the problem with the numbers that is
created by off shoring, she was primarily focused on manufacturing
productivity, where the official stats show a 32% increase since 2000.
But while some of the gains may be real, they also include unlikely
productivity jumps in heavily outsourced industries such as furniture
and audio and video equipment such as televisions. "In some sectors,
productivity growth may be an indicator not of how competitive American
workers are in international markets," says Houseman, "but rather of how
cost-uncompetitive they are." For example, furniture manufacturing has
been transformed by off shoring in recent years. Imports have surged
from $17.2 billion in 2000 to $30.3 billion in 2006, with virtually all
of that increase coming from low-cost China. And the industry has lost
21% of its jobs during the same period.
Yet Washington's official statistics show that productivity per hour in
the furniture industry went up by 23% and output by 3% between 2000 and
2005. Those numbers baffle longtime industry consultant Arthur Raymond
of Raleigh, N.C., who has watched factory after factory close. "And we
haven't pumped any money into the remaining plants," says Raymond. "How
anybody can say that domestic production has stayed level is beyond me."
Wrenching Process
Paul B. Toms Jr., CEO of
publicly traded Hooker Furniture Corp., recently closed his company's
last remaining domestic wood-furniture manufacturing plant, in
Martinsville, Va. It was the culmination of a wrenching process that
started in 2000, when Hooker still made the vast majority of its
products in the U.S. Toms didn't want to go overseas, he says, but he
couldn't pass up the 20% to 25% savings to be gleaned from manufacturing
there.
The lure off shoring works the same way for large companies. Byrne of
Accenture is working with a "major transportation equipment company"
that's planning to offshore more than half of its parts procurement over
the next few years. Most of it will go to China. "We're talking about
30% to 40% cost reductions," says Byrne.
Yet no matter how hard you look, you can't find any trace of the cost
savings from off shoring in the import price statistics. The furniture
industry's experience is particularly telling. Despite the surge of
low-priced chairs, tables, and similar products from China, the BLS is
reporting that the import price of furniture has actually risen 6.7%
since 2003.
The numbers for Chinese imports as a whole are equally out of step with
reality. Over the past three years, total imports have climbed by 89%,
as U.S.-based companies have rushed to take advantage of the enormous
cost advantages. Yet over the same period, the import price index for
goods coming out of China has declined a mere 2.3%.
Facade of Growth
The import price index also
misses the cost cut when production of an item, such as blue jeans, is
switched from a country such as Mexico to a cheaper country like China.
That's especially likely to happen if the item goes through a different
importer when it comes from a new country, because government
statisticians have no way of linking the blue jeans made in China with
the same pair that had been made in Mexico.
Phantom GDP can also be created in import-dependent industries with fast
product cycles, because the import price statistics can't keep up with
the rapid pace of change. And it can happen when foreign suppliers take
on tasks such as product design without raising the price. That's an
effective cost cut for the American purchaser, but the folks at the BLS
have no way of picking it up.
The effects of phantom GDP seem to be mostly concentrated in the past
three years, when off shoring has accelerated. Indeed, the first time
the term appeared in BusinessWeek was in 2003. Before then,
China and India in particular were much smaller exporters to the U.S.
The one area where phantom GDP may have made an earlier appearance is
information technology. Outsourcing of production to Asia really took
hold in the late 1990s, after the Information Technology Agreement of
1997 sharply cut the duties on IT equipment. "At least a portion of the
productivity improvement in the late 1990s ought to be attributed to
falling import prices," says Feenstra of UC Davis, who along with
Slaughter and two other co-authors has been examining this question.
What does phantom GDP mean for policymakers? For one thing, it calls
into question the economic statistics that the Federal Reserve uses to
guide monetary policy. If domestic productivity growth has been
overstated for the past few years, that suggests the nation's long-term
sustainable growth rate may be lower than thought, and the Fed may have
less leeway to cut rates.
In terms of trade policy, the new perspective suggests the U.S. may have
a worse competitiveness problem than most people realized. It was easy
to downplay the huge trade deficit as long as it seemed as though
domestic growth was strong. But if the import boom is actually creating
only a facade of growth, that's a different story. This lends more
credence to corporate leaders such as CEO John Chambers of Cisco Systems
Inc. who have publicly worried about U.S. competitiveness--and who
perhaps coincidentally have been the ones leading the charge offshore.
In a broader sense, though, the problem with the statistics reveals that
the conventional nation-centric view of the U.S. economy is completely
obsolete. Nowadays we live in a world where tightly integrated supply
chains are a reality.
For that reason, Landefeld of the BEA suggests perhaps part of the cost
cuts from off shoring are being appropriately picked up in GDP. In some
cases, intangible activities such as R&D and design of a new product or
service take place in the U.S. even though the production work is done
overseas. Then it may make sense for the gains in productivity in the
supply chain to be booked to this country. Says Landefeld: "The
companies do own those profits." Still, counters Houseman, "it doesn't
represent a more efficient production of things made in this country."
What Landefeld and Houseman can agree on is that the rush of
globalization has brought about a fundamental change in the U.S.
economy. This is why the methods for measuring the economy need to
change, too.