Thursday, January 7, 2010

An Indirect Impact of the Housing Burst on the Economy: Through Workforce Immobility

I keep hearing that the low mobility of people between European countries is a challenge to the Euro zone. Now it looks like the U.S. may be suffering from the same issue, due to the extremely poor liquidity of residential real estate.

In a Bloomberg article today: "The ability to relocate for employment, which helped the U.S. recover quickly after previous deep recessions, is the latest victim of the housing bust. About 12.5 percent of Americans moved in the year ended March 2009, the second-lowest ever, estimates Brookings Institution demographer William Frey, after a 60-year record low of 11.9 percent the previous year."

The impact on the economy is not just theoretical. In the same article: "The stagnant workforce may raise the long-term trend rate for unemployment by 1 percentage point and lower economic growth 0.3 percent a year through 2012, said Michael Feroli, an economist in New York for JPMorgan Chase & Co. It has already contributed to keeping the jobless rate as much as 1.5 percentage points higher than would have been suggested by the depth of the recession, Peter Orszag, director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, estimated in July."

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