The current state of the world’s economies,
from great to small, shows a change that appears to have been missed by the
economic planners. It appears that the
change is likely to be permanent, and by not understanding the significance of
it, the political leaders and, more particularly, the financial leaders of the
economies are tending to use tools of economic management that are outdated and
increasingly ineffective.
The economic history of the recession that
started in 1989 is a clear indicator of what is now happening on a world
scale. The basic cause of that recession
tends to be overlooked or, perhaps, misunderstood. The collapse of Communism in Europe gave West Germany the opportunity to reunite, the
fulfilment of an aspiration held as a prime objective of West Germany
since the end of the Second World War.
That reunification brought with it an intensive investment effort, to
bring the 15 000 000 East German people up to the economic standard
of the wealthy West Germany
population of 65 000 000. The
Government commenced pumping huge amounts of money into East Germany ,
taking the funds first from its own Budget, then imposing a tax levy on the
West German people. They responded with
characteristic German discipline, and the investment proceeded. Soon, the Government found that even that
huge source of funding was insufficient to remedy the destruction of the
once-thriving East German economy that had been wrought by Communist
policies. The German Government turned
to the world financial markets, using the strength of the German economy to
borrow huge amounts of money. These
funding efforts drained the world economy of free funds, depriving the capital
markets of the ability to supply the credit needed by the world to support
international trade and investment. The
world economies faltered, and, as in the recent situation of reduced lending by
the world’s banks, the general economy went into a nosedive. In West Germany , the results were
dramatic. Faced with reducing demand and
a rising cost of supporting their borrowings, the industrialists cut costs in
whatever way was possible, attempting to maintain their legendary quality while
reducing prices in order to remain competitive and thereby to hold sales at a
survivable level. Inevitably, the factor
of labour was a prime field for the cost-cutting efforts. Within a matter of months, the number of
unemployed started rising, going from about 2 000 000 to over
12 000 000. Where a factory
had previously employed two men per machine, they now automated their
production processes, using one man to tend five machines. Where the work could not be automated
sufficiently to cut costs by the desired amount, those manufacturing processes
were exported, to China , Vietnam
and the other low-labour cost countries.
Although Germany
lost hundreds of previously profitable companies, these actions saved the bulk
of the German manufacturing base, now in a much stronger state than before the
recession, and better able to face the changing world that had emerged from the
ruins of Communism and the distortions that the Cold War had brought. The picture of German industry changed
dramatically with a few years, going from having large numbers of
highly-skilled workmen, to few workers and many automated machines.
The financial crash of 2008, that followed
the excessive lending of the banks in the pursuit of profits for the
shareholders, the drive for ever-growing quarterly profit improvements with
concomitant share price growth, and incredibly high bonuses for the bankers in
control of the policies of their companies, resulted in a recession that bears
remarkable similarities to the experience of Germany following 1989.
The (artificial) shortage of loan funds to
businesses and consumers has resulted in a dramatic and massive loss of jobs
and failure of otherwise capable businesses.
The efforts of the world’s central banks, by means of reducing interest
rates, sometimes to 0%, and by increasing the supply of money in the economy,
to drive funds to these markets have been largely unsuccessful. The world’s economies remain stubbornly
sluggish, and the number of unemployed remains high. Where growth in employment has taken place,
the numbers have been small, and the economic growth has not been
commensurately reflected in a reduction of unemployment. There is even a suspicion that at least some
of the economic growth has, in fact, reduced the numbers employed in those
sectors. Even China, the recipient of
many of the labour-intensive industrial activities exported from Germany and
other Western countries after 1989, has developed a cost structure that now
forces its previously high growth in GDP down towards the minimum level
necessary to appease its citizens and hold an anti-Communist revolution at
bay. Yet the major economies of the
world appear to be oblivious to the central fact of the modern industrial
economy, a fact that is illustrated clearly by the brilliant economic
performance of German, the only country, apparently, that has learned the
lesson of the past.
It is simple:
in the modern world economy, high-labour-cost low-labour-productivity economies
must expect a declining level of employment or, at best, a stagnant rate of
employment. Economic growth in these
countries will take place, when it happens, with only a minimal growth in the
number of people employed.
The lesson to be learned is equally
simple. A high level of employment, in
the absence of an increasing level of labour productivity, is a target that cannot
be achieved without a means of holding the labour bill at the same level. That means that the total cost of employment,
including the wages, the cost of safety and welfare measures, the cost of
administration related to employment in its widest sense, the cost of hiring
and firing of people in response to changes in market conditions, must, in
total, be reduced if the number of people to be employed is to increase. An automated machine is an expensive
investment in terms of capital, but, once it is installed, it does not require
more than a minimal cost of maintenance.
It does not require annual wage negotiations with, often,
above-inflation demands supported by strikes, it does not require a pension
fund or a medical aid contribution, it does not require a lengthy negotiation
or large compensation payment if it is put out of service for a month or a
year. It stands in its allocated
position and produces on demand to its full capacity, without long tea breaks
or annual leave, without strikes in support of other ‘machine unions’ making
demands that cannot be met by employers who must earn a sufficient net profit
to remain in business. It is, in short,
an ideal employee!
Governments may make statements about the
‘obligation’ of businesses to support Government policies, to provide
employment for this class or that, to make investments that will create jobs,
to provide in some way for people who have not earned that provision. These demands may be effective in the short
term. Coercion does work, in the short term. However, in the long run, the market will
determine where businesses are established and where they will continue to
operate. It will determine where jobs
are created, and where they are destroyed.
It will determine how much, in total, is paid for a particular job, and
whether that job will be done by a human employee or by a machine. A business is not a factory or a labour
force. It is a human who sees a
potential, and who will go to wherever that potential can best be realised, and
set up the organisation that will achieve that potential in the way that is
most beneficial to the businessman.
The market is able to be manipulated in the
short term, but it will prevail in the long term. It is very large and very powerful. Britain once spent huge amounts of
its reserves to prop up its currency against a speculation that it would
fall. Britain , one of the major
economies, failed to win that competition.
The market won.
In the current world situation, only one industrial
economy has consistently continued to maintain strength, facing the same
conditions as all the other economies. Germany learned
the lessons of the 1989 recession, and came out of that trial stronger and more
efficient. The industries became
hyper-efficient and the workers upskilled to become one of the best-educated
and most highly productive workforces in the world. The other economies of the world must now
learn the same lesson. They must choose
to be labour-based or to go the route of technology. They cannot afford to sit on the fence. They cannot afford to believe that mediocre
education is sufficient. They cannot
afford to be influenced by the Trade Union movements, whose motivations are
based on higher wages and lower output by more members. Those motivations are internally
inconsistent. You can have higher wages
for fewer employees, or lower wages for more employees, given a consistent
productivity. You cannot have more
expensive benefits paid by the employer without a sacrifice in terms of a lower
wage paid to the employee. In the end, a
higher total cost of labour must be at least balanced by an equally higher
production by the labour force and, if the labour force is to remain at the
same level, the increase in production must exceed the increase that would be
brought about by increased employment of machines. The businessman is coldly rational, driven by
the imperative to produce a profit each year sufficient to warrant the
investment made in the business. Ultimately, the world is not very far from
totally automated factories, and the drive of the trades unions to increase the
net benefits to their members is acting as a powerful driver towards that
state. If you doubt this, look at the
work now being done to automate mining and agriculture, two of the seemingly
most impregnable bastions of the large labour force. These developments are disguised under the
banner of safety, but, ultimately, it is the total cost of labour that is
driving them.
If the Governments of the world wish to
increase employment or, better still, to increase economic activity, or to
postpone the time when almost no labour will be employed, they must act now,
not to prevent businesses from driving towards a reduction of labour, but to
make the employment of labour a more favourable option. The carrot is the only way. The stick, a favoured method of many
Governments, will only serve to drive the businessmen to jurisdictions which
are smart enough to learn the lessons that the Germans did two decades ago. The world is a large place, and globalisation
dictates that the market will prevail.
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