Economic advice for Donald Trump and Jerome Powell: First, do no harm
The US economy has experienced strong growth driven by increased productivity and a dynamic labor market. However, sustaining this growth requires fostering innovation, reducing barriers to new businesses, and avoiding excessive interest rate hik...

That was essentially the question put to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell recently after a speech in Dallas. It would be more constructive to examine the premise — why is growth so good? — and ask what the Fed and others can do to keep it that way.
Real GDP is on track to exceed its pre-pandemic trend for the second straight year. Typically, the Fed might worry that strong growth is a sign that the economy is in danger of overheating, but not this time. Inflation fell. The extra growth largely reflects higher productivity and a faster-growing workforce. Supply-driven growth is not inflationary; to the contrary, it can be crucial for rebalancing supply and demand and lowering inflation.
Underpinning the success is the growth in labor productivity, which has averaged 2.3% in the past two years, about half a percentage point faster than in the four years before the pandemic. While it may not sound like much, that difference would shave almost 10 years off the time it takes to double the level of real GDP. Except for a brief period in the 1990s, however, sustaining a higher pace has long been difficult.

Judging the sustainability of the current productivity uptick requires examining its roots. One encouraging sign is that the sizeable pickup in new business applications that started early in the pandemic is ongoing. Moreover, research shows that the applications led to new businesses with employees, especially in the innovation-heavy tech sector. After decades of a falling startup rate, since the pandemic the US economy has slowly become more dynamic.

The productivity pickup is not just about new, innovative firms. It’s also about workers moving to jobs that better match their skills. While disruptive, the so-called “Great Resignation” of 2021-22 allowed many workers to move to jobs that allowed them to be more productive. Researchers have pointed to the high churn of workers earlier in the pandemic as a key reason for the recent upturn in US productivity. New business applications were also higher in industries and geographical areas with higher levels of job-quitting. A dynamic labor market is directly tied to a dynamic business environment.
But a few years of higher productivity is not enough. The question now is how to extend the gains. While another round of income support is unlikely, there are other ways to lower barriers to entry for new businesses.
The new administration has pledged to eliminate federal regulations across the board. It should focus on regulating judiciously — which could mean adding or subtracting from the existing code — in a way that supports competition and innovation. That would support startups, particularly in new areas like generative artificial intelligence. By concentrating on the issues facing small, young businesses — as opposed to large, well-established corporations with a lot of lobbyists — the administration could foster innovation and further recent trends in business formation.
The cooling of the labor market, albeit gradual, is also a cause for concern. The rate of employees quitting jobs (often to move to a new opportunity) has fallen back to levels last seen in 2015, when productivity growth was notably slower. Moreover, the quits rate shows no signs of stabilizing.

It’s not the dramatic weakening common in a recession, but protecting the dynamism of the labor market should be a priority. The Fed correctly set “no further cooling” as its test for the labor market. The current strength in growth should reinforce that judgment.
For both the Fed and other policymakers, now is not the time for complacency. Watch the labor market and the rate of business formation: If they slip back and become less dynamic, then productivity and supply-driven growth could slip away, too. The US economy has come too far in the last few years to allow that to happen.
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