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2005 News Releases
For immediate release:
February 7, 2005
Media contact:
James Hoard
Phone: (214) 922-5307
e-mail: james.hoard@dal.frb.org
Southwest Economy
Examines Texas Economy, Social Security and Medicare,
Technology and the Economy, and Russia’s Transition
to Capitalism
DALLAS—The Texas economy,
Social Security and Medicare, technology and the economy,
and Russia's churn are explored in the latest issue
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas' Southwest
Economy.
In "Don’t Mess with
Texas," economist Fiona Sigalla sees the Texas
economy growing in 2005 but at a slower rate than its
traditionally fast pace.
Historically, Texas has experienced
faster growth than the national economy; however, she
writes, "domestic and global forces are now reshaping
the Texas economy and restraining growth.”
Employment in the airline and
manufacturing sectors is shrinking, while the service
industry is expanding. Nearly all 2004 job growth was
in the service sector.
Enhanced productivity and domestic
competitive pressures have been especially instrumental
in restructuring the economy.
“Globalization gets a lot
of attention, but domestic forces have been the overwhelming
driver of restructuring in manufacturing,” Sigalla
states. Issues such as public school financing in Texas
also are creating uncertainty and may alter the business
climate.
While restructuring of the Texas
economy plays out, Sigalla cautions that efforts to
protect failing industries raises taxes, increases costs
and restrains economic growth. The restructuring ultimately
will lead to economic strength and more jobs, the author
concludes.
Social Security and Medicare pose
a long-term budgetary challenge, write senior economist
Jason Saving and senior economist and research officer
Alan Viard in "Social Security and Medicare: No
Free Lunch."
These programs are big and getting
bigger, outpacing future revenue growth.
"Large tax increases or benefit
cuts will occur to address this shortfall, no matter
how much we might wish they could be avoided,”
the authors write.
Social Security and Medicare
currently make transfer payments from workers to retirees;
no funds are actually saved.
A reform that scales back these
transfer payments would increase national saving and
give future generations a better standard of living,
Saving and Viard write; however, it would also impose
a transition cost on current generations, who would
continue to pay for the retirement of their parents
while also saving for their own.
"Many people hope
for a free lunch that avoids this transition cost. Unfortunately,
there is none. Current generations must choose whether
to sacrifice for the sake of future generations, and
no policy proposal—not even privatization—offers
an escape from that burden. If future generations are
to be made better off, the transition cost must be paid,”
the authors state.
In "Where IT's @: Technology
and the Economy," senior economist and policy advisor
Thomas Siems and senior economist and vice president
Mine Yücel review presentations from a Dallas Fed
conference. They find that because IT is now pervasive
in the global economy, businesses must continuously
improve their information management and effectively
integrate IT into their organizations’ culture
to experience benefits.
Speakers at the conference included
Hal Varian of the University of California at Berkeley,
Erik Brynjolfsson of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and Nicholas Carr, former editor of the Harvard
Business Review.
Varian stated that business survival
depends on understanding how the information economy
has changed, while Brynjolfsson stressed that market
values rise for firms following “digital organization”
practices and investing heavily in IT applications.
In a departure from other speakers, Carr offered this
advice: “Spend less; follow, don’t lead;
innovate when risks are low; and focus more on vulnerabilities
than opportunities.”
Economic analyst Julia Kedrova
describes Russia's progress through its transition from
communism to capitalism in “Russia’s Churn:
So Far Along, So Far to Go.” She finds the country
is still suffering from remnants of the past, which
hinders its ability to compete for markets and capital
with other countries that are pursuing free enterprise
reforms more aggressively.
Russians initially embraced economic
freedom by creating private companies to meet consumer
needs, according to Kedrova. Jobs are steadily shifting
from the government to the private sector, and the country
has developed capitalistic tools, including a stock
market.
However, she writes, “the
infrastructure is ill-suited to a modern economy. The
manufacturing base is dilapidated. Trade barriers are
high. Complex regulations still impose burdensome costs.”
“To finish making enterprise
truly free, Russia needs to embrace the churn,”
she concludes. “It has no choice.”
Find the January/February issue
of Southwest Economy online at www.dallasfed.org.
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