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<text id=94TT0462>
<title>
Apr. 25, 1994: Recovery For Whom?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE ECONOMY, Page 30
Recovery For Whom?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A split-level surge combines new hiring with heavy layoffs,
and many incomes stagnate too
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Bernard Baumohl/New York, Sophfronia Scott Gregory/Lawrence,
Scott Norvell/Atlanta and Suneel Ratan/Washington, with other
bureaus
</p>
<p> "A rising tide lifts all the boats."
</p>
<p>-- John F. Kennedy, 1963
</p>
<p> "This time it hasn't. The tide of the 1990s is different."
</p>
<p>-- Stephen Roach, economist at the investment firm of Morgan
Stanley, 1994
</p>
<p> Kennedy's belief that a growing economy helps everybody to a
more abundant life has been gospel for three decades. But Roach's
opinion better describes today's reality: the closer one looks
at the three-year-old recovery, the more it appears to be unlike
any in recent memory. It is a split-level surge in which mass
layoffs are continuing side by side with new hiring and heavy
overtime; high-income people are making more money, while many
others are working at worse jobs for lower wages than a few
years ago and still others have seen pay raises, if any, fall
behind even today's slow (2.5%) pace of inflation.
</p>
<p> True, the people still hurting are a minority. A very large
minority, though. Recent national polls show as many as 40%
of those queried can see no sign of a recovery in their own
finances. They think the nation remains in a recession; a few
even say depression.
</p>
<p> It is an opinion not lost on President Clinton, who well remembers
that he was elected in 1992 primarily because he promised to
make life better for the average citizen. Publicly, the President
quotes the belief of some eminent economists "that our economy
in its fundamentals has the best prospects it's had in two to
three decades." But to aides he expressed frustration recently
that "this appears to be a recovery for investors," not for
the man and woman in the street, as a White House official put
it. What to do, though? Clinton's aides disagree even on whether
to express displeasure with the Federal Reserve's widely reported
plan to raise interest rates again in order to head off any
revival of inflation. Some aides even think the recovery could
use a wee bit of slowing; slightly less growth in 1995 might
make for a faster advance in the re-election year of 1996.
</p>
<p> In any case, it is difficult to see much the Administration
could do quickly to overcome the fundamental trends--primarily
the economy's wrenching readjustment to sharper foreign competition--that are making the recovery so lopsided. Some clues to just
how lopsided it is:
</p>
<p> Caterpillar Inc. is one of the big corporate comeback stories:
after slashing its work force from 60,558 in 1988 to 50,749
by the close of 1993, the company has got its costs down and
its productivity up and is doing its first rehiring in five
years. But Sandy Koicuba, 44, does not feel she is making any
comeback--even though she is one of those rehired. In late
1992 she was laid off as a materials specialist at the York,
Pennsylvania, manufacturing plant; she has been recalled to
pack materials in a warehouse across the street. Her wage: $9.10
an hour, vs. $17 an hour in her old job--and she gets only
one fringe benefit, inadequate major medical insurance. "I work
60 hours a week, and I still can't make it," she says. ``I gross
$1,400 a month and take home $1,000--and my mortgage is $600
a month. I've been to every bank and mortgage company to refinance.
I can't do it because I don't have the money coming in. My friends
have taken up a collection to pay my doctor bills. I don't go
shopping for clothes; my jeans have holes in them."
</p>
<p> Atlanta led all major cities in job growth last year. That did
not help Tim Monteith, 37, who was laid off three years ago
when the photo-finishing company he served as a marketing manager
moved to North Carolina. "I read the classifieds and talk to
friends and network," he reports, but he has been able to find
only a string of temporary or part-time jobs. Having exhausted
his savings accounts and a 401(k) pension account from his former
employer, Monteith has been living on credit, and desperate
to do something. So he turned to an old hobby: making costumes.
Now he can be found on Atlanta street corners in outrageous
getups--including one that has Marilyn Monroe doing handstands--to plug the business of such clients as a photo-finishing
lab. That job hardly makes good use of his education: Monteith
has both a bachelor's degree in biochemistry and an M.B.A. from
Memphis State University.
</p>
<p> Cathy Caniglia, 29, just returned to her job selling computer
software in Houston after giving birth to her first child, a
son; her husband Steve has been continuously employed as a stage
technician. But their combined income has failed to keep pace
with living costs. The couple sets aside 10% of Steve's paycheck
in a savings account, but they find themselves dipping into
the account constantly just to cover day-to-day expenses such
as car payments. They must do this at the worst possible time:
a mediocre insurance policy failed to cover $3,500 in bills
for Cathy's hospital stay that the couple will somehow have
to pay out of earnings.
</p>
<p> At the cavernous Costco Warehouse bargain store in Lawrence,
on Long Island in New York, Janet Lee, 52, scowls as her daughter,
a college student, picks up and hopefully eyes a box of barbecued
pork ribs. "Put that back!" Janet orders; she cannot see how
she and her husband James, 58, can afford it. James delivers
heating oil, but his $30,000-a-year salary has not been increased
in two years, and "prices keep going up," says Janet. On top
of that, certificates of deposit she bought initially at an
interest yield of 10% are now paying only 2.5%, and the Lees
may soon have to pay higher fees when they write checks: Chemical
Bank will soon require depositors to maintain minimums of $6,000
in combined accounts or $3,000 in checking accounts alone to
escape monthly and per-check fees. Says Janet: "I don't know
anyone who can do that. Donald and Marla ((Trump)) maybe." Overall,
she says, "I haven't noticed any recovery. Who's getting the
profits? It's the bosses."
</p>
<p> Some bosses, however, are not doing well either. Jeffrey Culver,
a dentist in Berkeley, California, figures he needs "about 20
new patients a month to stay healthy, but I've been in the 15-to-17
range." And older patients keep putting off any expensive dentistry.
Culver has restructured his pension plan, taken less vacation
and frozen the salaries of his six employees. Says he: "I used
to feel the salaries I offered were at the upper level, but
now I can't maintain that. [His employees] are going to have
to be happy at the second tier."
</p>
<p> Such tales, of course, are not the whole story or even most
of it. Every week brings a mixture of good and bad economic
news, and last week was no exception. New claims for unemployment
compensation jumped (bad), and so did business inventories (also
bad). But sales rose even faster (good), and Ford Motor raised
its dividend 12.5%, the first increase since 1989 (especially
good since it indicates that Ford's directors expect the recovery
to keep rolling).
</p>
<p> In general, growth is slowing from the unsustainable 7% annual
rate the economy hit at the end of 1993, but output of goods
and services this year is widely expected to rise at least 3%.
That is considered a sustainable rate that can continue to reduce
unemployment--which has fallen from a peak of 7.7% to 6.5%-without
reigniting inflation. The most important dissent comes from
the Federal Reserve Board, whose governors appear to think the
economy right at the moment is growing a bit too fast. If the
Fed does raise interest rates again soon, it will be to keep
easy credit from fueling an overly rapid advance.
</p>
<p> Yet the overall figures mask a crazy quilt of variations. Geographically,
the picture varies not just by regions but by neighboring states
or even within states. In New England, Massachusetts and New
Hampshire are growing strongly, but Connecticut has been knocked
virtually prostrate by cutbacks in its three main industries:
defense, shipbuilding and insurance. In Texas the Rio Grande
Valley, for decades the poor stepchild of the economy, is flourishing
because of trade with neighboring Mexico. But other parts of
the state are troubled by defense cutbacks. Texas Instruments,
after slashing worldwide employment from 70,000 in 1990 to 59,500
today, is hiring people to fill orders for semiconductors--but simultaneously laying off workers in its defense business.
</p>
<p> In California the agricultural Central Valley is doing fine,
but the Los Angeles area is barely beginning to steady after
a deep slump. In Florida, Bob Dickinson, president of Carnival
Cruise Lines, happily reports that advanced bookings for spring
and summer travel are up 30% from a year ago. But Dick Holmes,
a retired autoworker living in St. Petersburg, and his wife
Glady find their earnings on CDs and savings accounts barely
keeping up with inflation. Says Holmes: "We've kind of fallen
in love with Taco Bell. We go there instead of the Olive Garden
or Steak and Ale, which have all raised their prices."
</p>
<p> The strongest crosscurrents, however, cut across the whole economy.
"Americans have to cope with job change on a scale never before
seen in this country," says Secretary of Labor Robert Reich.
The economy, in fact, has accomplished the weird feat of combining
a fairly brisk pace of job creation with a record rate of layoffs.
Reich notes that job creation for the past six months has averaged
200,000 a month. But the increase over the past three years
is about a third below the pace of earlier recoveries. Much
worse, Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a Chicago-based outplacement
firm, counted 615,000 layoffs announced by corporations in 1993--a monthly rate actually double the figure for 1990, the year
the recent recession began. The count rose further, to 193,000
pink slips, in the first three months of this year, up 13% from
early 1993.
</p>
<p> The layoffs, of course, reflect primarily the downsizing mania
of corporations feeling the lash of foreign competition. Their
drive to cut costs and raise productivity has other discomforting
results too. Companies are raising sales and production largely
by working their remaining employees longer hours or at a faster
pace. Morgan Stanley figures that 55% of the gain in output
during the early stages of past recoveries came from increased
productivity--but for the first three years of this expansion
the number is 90%.
</p>
<p> Another way to cut costs is to replace laid-off permanent workers
with temporary or part-time employees, who usually draw only
wages, not fringe benefits. Some 16% of the 2.2 million jobs
the economy has added in the most recent 12 months have been
for temps. In March, 456,000 people found new jobs, the most
for any month in more than six years--but no fewer than 70%
of them were part-time positions.
</p>
<p> Even many of the new full-time positions have been relatively
low-paid. As a result of all these trends, says Laura D'Andrea
Tyson, chairwoman of Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers,
"average earnings have barely increased in real terms"--that
is, discounted for inflation. In fact, there was no rise whatever
in real average hourly earnings last year.
</p>
<p> The cost cutting has its good side: it has held inflation in
check. U.S. industry's labor costs per unit of output, a major
factor determining the pace of price increases, actually fell
at an annual rate of 3.2% in the last three months of 1993,
causing some economists to scoff at the Federal Reserve's fears
about a revival of inflation. ("What inflation?" Clinton growled
to aides late last week.) meeting.) The Fed is on firmer ground,
however, in its reported belief that too much of the recent
economic growth has been fueled by cheap credit. Unable to stretch
stagnant earnings far enough to buy the things they wanted,
many consumers turned to borrowing or dug into savings. Mark
Zandi of Regional Financial Associates, an economic forecasting
firm, figures credit-card, auto and personal loans outstanding
rose 7% by the end of February over a year earlier, while the
personal-savings rate over the three months ending in February,
averaged a fat, round zero. Consumers caught between slowly
rising incomes and more burdensome debt and fewer savings do
not just feel pinched; they are.
</p>
<p> What can be done? The Administration's emphasis, says Tyson,
is on improving "the quantity and quality of jobs." Clinton,
in a speech last week, mentioned one approach: overhauling the
unemployment-compensation system so that anyone registering
will be offered retraining and placement assistance, not just
money. That is precisely the kind of initiative, however, that
has been starved for funds as the Administration and Congress
struggle to reduce the budget deficit.
</p>
<p> Fundamentally, government and private economists put their hope
in a kind of snowball process. First, the economy develops some
self-generating momentum. There are signs that this is beginning.
As production recovers, people who have held on to well-paying
jobs get over their fear that they too will be laid off and
decide they can now buy that dishwasher or wall-to-wall carpet;
their purchasing pushes the advance further. Then, as sales
rise and companies need more production, firms that have got
their costs down and their profits rising smartly begin at last
to hire more people at better wages.
</p>
<p> Even Roach of Morgan Stanley thinks a "productivity-led recovery"
could bring back the days when a rising tide really did lift
all the boats. But he adds a strong caveat: "My darkest fear
is of macho corporate managers who will slash and burn, and
will not make a true commitment for the longer haul to expand
their market share through judicious rebuilding. Then we will
have hollow industries that will undermine our competitive advantage
over the long haul, and that will be an unmitigated disaster
for growth and jobs." Downsizing was and is a painful necessity,
but bosses need to remember that employees are also customers--and firing your customers, or paying them too little to enable
them to buy the goods they produce, cuts a lot more than costs.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>