2017
DOI: 10.1080/08911916.2017.1407742
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The New Normal: Demand, Secular Stagnation, and the Vanishing Middle Class

Abstract: The U.S. economy is widely diagnosed with two "diseases": a secular stagnation of potential U.S. growth and rising income and job polarization. The two diseases have a common root in the demand shortfall, originating from the "unbalanced" growth between technologically "dynamic" and "stagnant" sectors. To understand how the short-run demand shortfall carries over into the long run, this article first deconstructs the notion of total-factor-productivity (TFP) growth, the main constituent of potential output gro… Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…In particular, we observe a U‐shaped relationship for the technological gap – and a positive effect for both the leader’s TFP growth and human capital – when explaining future TFP growth. The results for human capital are in line with Storm’s () priors regarding the bifurcation of the US economy into dynamic sectors with high‐skilled labour where productivity increases are manifest, and into stagnant sectors with relatively low‐skilled labour where productivity increases are less manifest.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…In particular, we observe a U‐shaped relationship for the technological gap – and a positive effect for both the leader’s TFP growth and human capital – when explaining future TFP growth. The results for human capital are in line with Storm’s () priors regarding the bifurcation of the US economy into dynamic sectors with high‐skilled labour where productivity increases are manifest, and into stagnant sectors with relatively low‐skilled labour where productivity increases are less manifest.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 83%
“…These prescriptions – grounded in the management scholarship on organizational decline and transformational activities – stand in addition to the policy prescriptions offered up by economists engaged in the new‐normal discourse (e.g., Summers, , ; Tuelings and Baldwin, ). There, economists have offered up a number of recommendations – i.e., improving education systems; investing in physical infrastructure; removing barriers to labour mobility; stimulating aggregate demand; enhanced application of anti‐monopoly laws, and permanent incomes (Adler et al, ; Tuelings and Baldwin, ; Storm, ) – to reverse the flagging pace of innovation and technological change in order to escape the new‐normal business landscape by stimulating productivity improvements. Yet the unique insights and perspective of management scholarship has until this point been missing in the new‐normal discourse.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More precisely we can talk about the reoccurrence of a dual economy in developed countries (Temin, 2015;Storm, 2017). One of them is the technologically advanced sector, characterized by high total factor and labour productivity and with a declining trend in the share of labour employed in it -currently about 30% in the USA, according to Temin (2015).…”
Section: Reoccurrence Of Dual Economy and Deindustrializationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The remaining 70% of workers are employed at low level and stagnant productivity services. According to Storm (2017), the majority of workers in the USA had to find jobs in services-sector activities, mostly featuring below-average labour productivity growth: 18.9 million of workers are currently located in so-called EHS sector (education, health, and private social services), 16.2 million in PBS sector (professional and business services), 14.3 million in the so-called "other" sector (art, -entertainment, recreation, food services and other), 13.5 million in the public sector, and 5.7 million of worker in FIRE sector. Even when paid decently, jobs in the above sectors are often precarious or uncertain.…”
Section: Reoccurrence Of Dual Economy and Deindustrializationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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