speeches · June 25, 2014
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Investing in People as an Economic Growth Strategy
June 26, 2014
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Lynchburg College, School of Economics and Business
Lynchburg, Va.
Good morning. It’s a pleasure to be here in Lynchburg and to learn about your many technology
and education initiatives. It’s especially rewarding to visit a community that places such value on
early childhood education and recognizes how those early years help lay the foundation for a
skilled workforce in the future. The importance of early intervention and its connection to
workforce development has been a major focus of study for us at the Richmond Fed, and it will
be the subject of my talk this morning. Before I begin, I must note that my opinions are my own
and may not be shared by my colleagues in the Federal Reserve System. 1
Now, it might not be obvious why the president of a Federal Reserve Bank would be interested
in workforce development — what does it have to do with interest rates and inflation? But
workforce development is intimately related to the second part of the Fed’s legislative mandate,
which is promoting maximum employment. That has proven to be a difficult task in the wake of
2007-09 recession, as I’m sure you are all too aware. The unemployment rate persisted around 9
percent for more than two years after the end of the recession, although it has declined
significantly over the past few years. According to the most recent data, the unemployment rate
has fallen to 5.6 percent here in Lynchburg, compared to 5.1 percent for the Commonwealth of
Virginia. Although both are well below the national average of 6.3 percent, they are above rates
that were typical before the last recession.
There are some indicators that would seem to suggest that the labor market has recovered less
than the decline in the national unemployment rate would indicate: The long-term unemployment
rate remains at a historic high, and the labor force participation rate is at its lowest rate in
decades. So in addition to the large number of unemployed, there are also many people who have
dropped out of the labor force altogether. That has led me and other policymakers to ponder a
difficult question: Given the limitations of monetary policy, what can be done to improve labor
market outcomes in the long run?
At the Richmond Fed, our research suggests that much of what we’re currently seeing in the
labor market reflects structural trends rather than a primarily cyclical change in labor market
behavior. That has prompted us to think about long-term strategies to prepare workers for the
labor market. We’ve been thinking about workforce development at the level of the individual:
What can be done to improve people’s skills and adaptability, what economists call “human”
capital? This approach suggests that we may realize high returns from workforce development
efforts, particularly those that encourage individual investments in skills starting at a young age.
Workforce development should be thought of as more than just a short-term treatment ― it also
1
can work as a long-term vaccine that makes workers more resilient to changing labor market
conditions.
Trend versus Cycle
When unemployment is high and inflation is low, the traditional argument is that a central bank
should employ expansionary monetary policy to try to lower the unemployment rate. But
unemployment is complicated: People become unemployed at different times for different
reasons, and those reasons influence the likely effectiveness of monetary policy. The term
“cyclical unemployment” is often used to refer to unemployment associated with a temporary
downturn in the economy and is thought to respond to monetary stimulus. The term “structural
unemployment” is used to refer to unemployment caused by long-term changes in the economy,
such as the decline of certain industries or changing technology, and is thought to be less likely
to be affected by monetary policy. 2 Unfortunately for policymakers, the distinction between
cyclical and structural unemployment is not always clear — and sometimes, a cyclical downturn
can be caused by structural shifts. For example, the decline in manufacturing employment was an
important factor in the economic downturn in 2001. While the labor market eventually
recovered, there was a long period of adjustment as new jobs were created in nonmanufacturing
sectors — a process that reflected more than just a shortfall in demand.
At least some portion of the high unemployment following the Great Recession appears to have
been caused by structural factors. For example, we heard from a number of employers
throughout the Fifth District that they were unable to find workers with the necessary skills,
despite the large pool of unemployed workers. And recent research by a Richmond Fed
economist on the unusually large rise in long-term unemployment suggests that it was caused by
an increase in the number of unemployed workers who were inherently less likely to exit
unemployment, perhaps because they lost a job in a declining industry and their skills were not
easily transferable. 3
The labor market seems to have improved recently; over the past two years, the unemployment
rate has declined 2 full percentage points. Underlying this decline, however, is an unusual trend:
a large drop in the labor force. The labor force participation rate is defined as the portion of the
working-age population that is either employed or unemployed and looking for work. Workers
are only counted as unemployed if they are actively seeking a job, so the unemployment rate can
decline not only if people find jobs, but also if a large number of people decide to quit looking
and thus exit the labor force. An alternative measure of unemployment includes “marginally
attached” workers — those who say they want a job but who have not looked for work during the
past four weeks. This measure is more than a full percentage point higher than the standard
unemployment rate, which suggests that the standard rate might be understating the actual
amount of “slack” in the labor market and overstating the recovery.
As with the unemployment rate, however, it’s important to try to untangle the influence of
cyclical factors, such as discouragement over job prospects, versus structural factors, such as the
retirement of many baby boomers or the increased number of young people attending college
rather than entering the labor market. 4 In fact, the labor force participation rate has been
2
declining for more than a decade, and economists at the Richmond Fed have concluded that the
current low rate is consistent with this long-run trend. 5
Taking a broader view of the labor market, our economists also have constructed an alternative
measure of labor market slack, which they call the “non-employment index.” This measure
considers all of the working-age population that is currently not working as potentially
employable, not just those counted as unemployed under the official definition. But it also
recognizes that they are not all equally likely to find a job, so it weights different groups by their
likelihood of finding a job. The changes in this alternative rate parallel those of the standard
unemployment rate, and both are about halfway back to their pre-2007 troughs. This suggests
that the standard unemployment rate actually is a reasonably accurate reflection of the current
amount of slack in the labor market. 6 In other words, there is more slack than indicated by the
standard unemployment rate, but there always is, and there seems to be no more additional slack
now than is typically associated with the current level of the unemployment rate.
So my reading of the evidence is that much of what we have observed over the past five years
reflects structural changes in the economy that would have been difficult for monetary policy to
offset. This is a good reason to think about what strategies we can employ to ensure that future
generations of workers are prepared to respond to such changes.
Human Capital Theory and Workforce Development
To think about those strategies, it’s helpful to begin in the early 1960s, when economists began
seriously studying the forces and decisions that lead people to differ in their capabilities. They
proposed thinking about knowledge and skills as simply another form of capital that makes
workers productive, just like physical capital such as machines or computers. Workers acquire
this “human” capital by making investments, such as by attending school, getting on-the-job
training or even receiving medical care. 7
More recently, a consensus has developed that human capital is more than just the number of
years spent in school or on the job. Research suggests that noncognitive skills — such as
following instructions, patience and work ethic — lay the foundation for mastering more
complex cognitive skills and may be just as important a determinant of future labor market
success. 8 These basic emotional and social skills are learned very early in life, and it can be
difficult for children who fall behind to catch up: Gaps in skills that are important for adult
outcomes are observable by age 5 and tend to persist into adulthood.9
What does the economics of human capital imply for workforce development programs? Several
insights are especially relevant. First, it makes economic sense to concentrate intensive human
capital investment in the form of formal schooling on the young: The earlier workers invest, the
longer they have to profit from their investments. In addition, because earnings typically increase
with age, young people attending school tend to sacrifice less by way of forgone earnings than
older workers. Another key takeaway is that investments in early childhood can affect later
decisions about formal schooling. If the foundations for learning are laid very early, then even
mild delays in acquiring noncognitive skills might make skill acquisition more challenging later
3
in life; after all, why try as hard to get good grades, stay in high school or enroll in college when
those efforts might not pay off?
Human capital economics also implies that higher education should lead to higher future wages,
both because education is costly to acquire and because it can elevate a person’s productivity.
Indeed, the data confirm that the payoff to education is quite high, a point to which I will return
in a moment. 10
Just as this view of workforce development points toward investment early in life, it also points
toward the challenges confronting later interventions. Asking adults to reinvent themselves in the
face of a relatively short remaining working horizon, when early retirement and exiting the labor
force become viable options, is asking a lot of both the workers and the workforce development
professionals who train them. And indeed, research suggests that workforce development efforts
that focus solely on training or retraining adult workers might have only modest effects on
employment and job retention. 11
Of course, this does not mean that adults cannot or should not learn new skills; I am deeply
sympathetic to the plight of workers who have been laid off from jobs they performed admirably
for decades, and I commend those who wish to complete or further their education. But we may
need to be cautious about treating older workers’ difficulties as remediable through training,
when the appropriate course of action may actually involve greater use of the social safety net.
We may be able to help a large number of future workers, however, by expanding our focus and
thinking about workforce development not as a cure for the short-term shocks that individuals
may experience, but rather as a long-term vaccine that will protect them against future shocks.
More specifically, interventions well before adulthood, even as early as preschool, can
reasonably be considered as part of a long-term workforce development program. For example,
we hear from both employers and workforce development professionals in our District that a lack
of soft skills is a major obstacle for many job applicants. An early focus on critical noncognitive
skills thus may help improve labor market outcomes later in life.
The Role of Information in Human Capital Investment
When we look at the data, we find support for the view that labor market outcomes vary
significantly with human capital investments made early in life, most notably formal education.
Following the 2007-09 recession, the unemployment rate for workers with only a high school
diploma peaked at 11 percent, compared to just 5 percent for workers with a college degree.
Even now, the unemployment rate for high school-educated workers is about twice the rate for
college educated workers, 6.5 percent versus 3.2 percent.
Education also has a significant effect on earnings. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
the median weekly wage for a worker with a bachelor’s degree or higher in 2013 was $1,194,
compared with $651 for a worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, the median
worker with a bachelor’s degree can expect to earn $2.3 million, based on 2009 earnings data,
compared with just $1.3 million earned by the median worker with a high school diploma. 12
4
These facts make it tempting to recommend college as the primary path for workforce
development. But let me note an important caveat: Higher wages and lower unemployment rates
are benefits that appear to accrue only to students who actually graduate from college; there is
relatively little benefit to attending college for only a few semesters without earning a degree.
For example, workers who have attended some college but have not graduated are unemployed
at roughly the same rate as workers with only a high school degree. And while they do earn
about 15 percent more than high school-educated workers, workers with at least a bachelor’s
degree earn 83 percent more. Despite the high return to college completion, however, the college
dropout rate is around 40 percent, and the high school dropout rate is also relatively high. 13 More
than 20 percent of high school students fail to graduate within four years; the rate is as high as 40
percent in some large urban school districts. About 7 percent of 16-24 year olds have not earned
a high school diploma or a certificate of high school equivalency. These students earn
significantly lower wages and face much higher unemployment rates than workers with more
education.
What do these statistics tell us? Students who plan to attend college could benefit from more
information about what is required to succeed. We’ve spoken with representatives from fouryear colleges and community colleges in the Hampton Roads area who have noted that many
students are surprised to discover they lack the basic math skills necessary for college-level
work. If students do not have an accurate assessment of their own readiness for college, they may
be more likely to drop out after they get there. That’s a costly lesson to learn; the average debt
burden among college dropouts who took out loans is more than $14,000. 14 These students could
benefit from learning about options other than enrolling directly in four-year colleges.
Community colleges, for example, are a venue where students can learn more about their
interests and aptitudes and hone the skills that are required for success at four-year schools.
There may also be large gains from sharing information with high school students about different
career and postsecondary education options and about the level of preparedness necessary for
success. For example, one factor in the high school dropout rate may be the increasing focus of
most high schools on college preparation, to the exclusion of other options. But some students
may not wish to attend college or may perceive large barriers to doing so. If these students
believe that the only reason to complete high school is to attend college, they might not see much
value in graduating. But learning about alternative career and educational opportunities that also
require a high school degree could increase the perceived value of high school completion. 15 For
example, a growing number of vocational or apprenticeship programs offer specialized training
in areas that are in high demand, such as health care and advanced manufacturing.
Research suggests that many students are also unaware of the fact that there is a difference
between the average return to college and the return that is likely to accrue to any individual
student. 16 Not all college majors are created equal: The median salary for workers who majored
in engineering is $75,000, compared with $42,000 for workers who majored in psychology or
social work. And students may vary in other ways that affect their labor market chances
irrespective of major. Workforce development thus could include providing students with better
information to help them weigh their relative risks and rewards of college attendance.
5
We must also try to ensure that well-prepared students don’t forgo college because of perceived
obstacles such as cost or lack of knowledge about the payoff. Many students, particularly lowincome students, overestimate the costs of college and underestimate their opportunities for
financial aid. Students also might face social norms that cause them to underestimate their
potential benefits or their likelihoods of success. Researchers have found that providing these
students with targeted information and assistance can increase their matriculation rates, and it
can play an important role in changing the beliefs of students who erroneously think they’re not
college material. 17
The takeaway from this discussion is that examining workforce development through the lens of
human capital economics suggests that workers will realize higher returns on their investments in
human capital when those investments are made early in life. That could mean expanding the
scope of workforce development strategies to include early childhood education and providing
young people with information about the risks and returns of multiple career and educational
options.
Conclusion
To sum up, it is difficult for monetary policymakers to distinguish between cyclical and
structural shifts in the labor market. But the distinction is critical, because monetary stimulus is
unlikely to have much effect on unemployment that results from the latter. My own view is that
much of what we have experienced since the Great Recession is the result of structural shocks
and longer-term changes in the economy, which has led me and my colleagues at the Richmond
Fed to think about how we can best prepare workers to respond to future changes. One answer
seems to be thinking about workforce development as a long-term investment, not a short-term
fix.
Workforce development is an issue of vital importance for individual workers, for employers and
for communities. It’s also critical for our country as a whole. The tremendous gains in living
standards achieved over the past three centuries depended crucially on investments in physical
capital. But human capital was critical as well: The accumulation of knowledge over time is
essential to the process of uncovering and deploying technological innovations that fuel
economic growth. And when we look at disparities in economic outcomes across our society, it
is clear that differences in human capital accumulation play a large role. Doing our utmost to
help the next generation of workers make the best use of their talents and opportunities will lay
the groundwork for both them and their children to achieve their full potential and for the United
States to achieve a more inclusive prosperity.
1
I am grateful to Jessie Romero, Kartik Athreya, Urvi Neelakantan, and John Weinberg for assistance in preparing
these remarks.
2
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, “Labor Market Conditions and Policy,” Our Perspective essay, updated June
9, 2014.
3
Andreas Hornstein, "Accounting for Unemployment: The Long and Short of It," Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond Working Paper 12-07, November 2012.
4
Jessie Romero, "Where Have All the Workers Gone?" Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Econ Focus,
Second/Third Quarter 2012, pp. 12-16.
6
5
Marianna Kudlyak, "A Cohort Model of Labor Force Participation," Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic
Quarterly, First Quarter 2013, vol. 99, no. 1, pp. 25-43.
6 Andreas Hornstein, Marianna Kudlyak, Fabian Lange, and Tim Sablik. “Does the Unemployment Rate Really
Overstate Labor Market Recovery?” Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Brief no. 14-06, June 2014.
7
For foundational papers, see the Journal of Political Economy, October 1962, vol. 70, no. 5, Part 2: Investment in
Human Beings.
8
For example, the general educational development (GED) credential is supposed to be equivalent to a high school
diploma, but people who have earned a GED tend to have much worse labor market outcomes than people who have
graduated from high school. This may be because the same non-cognitive skills that are necessary to complete high
school also determine labor market success. See James J. Heckman, John Eric Humphries, and Nicholas S. Mader,
“The GED,” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper no. 16064, June 2010.
9
See Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis, and Melissa Osborne Groves, “Intergenerational Inequality Matters,” in
Unequal Chances, edited by Bowles, Gintis, and Groves. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2008, pp. 122; Also see James J. Heckman, “Schools, Skills, and Synapses,” Economic Inquiry, July 2008, vol. 46, no. 3, pp.
289-324.
10
See Kartik Athreya, Urvi Neelakantan, and Jessie Romero, “Expanding the Scope of Workforce Development,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Brief no. 14-05, May 2014; and Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond,
“Workforce Development,” Our Perspective essay, updated June 25, 2014.
11
See Fredrik Andersson et al., “Does Federally Funded Job Training Work? Nonexperimental Estimate of WIA
Training Impacts Using Longitudinal Data on Workers and Firms,” National Bureau of Economic Research
Working Paper no. 19446, September 2013; Pierre Cahuc and André Zylberberg, “Labor Market Policies,” in Labor
Economics, Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004; and United States Government
Accountability Office, “Multiple Employment and Training Programs,” Report to Congressional Requesters,
January 2011.
12
See Anthony P. Carnevale, , Stephen J. Rose, and Ban Cheah, “The College Payoff: Education, Occupations,
Lifetime Earnings,” Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, August 5, 2011.
13
The National Center for Education Statistics defines college completion as earning a bachelor’s degree within six
years of matriculating. Graduation rates are calculated according to where students started as full-time, first-time
students. Transfer students and students who return to college after an absence are not included.
14
See Christopher Avery and Sarah Turner, “Student Loans: Do College Students Borrow Too Much—Or Not
Enough?” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2012, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 165-192.
15
See Julie Berry Cullen, Steven D. Levitt, Erin Robertson, and Sally Sadoff, “What Can Be Done to Improve
Struggling High Schools?” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2013, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 133-152.
16
Matthew Wiswall and Basit Zafar, “How Do College Students Respond to Public Information about Earnings?”
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report no. 516, September 2011, revised January 2013.
17
For example, see Caroline M. Hoxby and Sarah Turner, “Informing Students about Their College Options: A
Proposal for Broadening the Expanding College Opportunities Project,” Hamilton Project Discussion Paper, June
2013; and Scott E. Carrell and Bruce Sacerdote, “Late Interventions Matter Too: The Case of College Coaching
New Hampshire,” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper no. 19031, May 2013.
7
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2014, June 25). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140626_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140626_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140626_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}