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Productivity growth did increase, as compared to the business cycle of the 80s. But it was still considerably lower than the growth of the 50s and 60s business cycles. If we adjust for the increased share of output that was used up in more rapid depreciation—mostly computers and software—the productivity growth of the 90s cycle does not even beat the 70s. And wage growth for a typical worker was a paltry 0.5 percent a year. So much for the "new economy." Still, it was a long expansion, and a pleasant memory compared to what we are facing right now. So what was behind it, if the official story doesn't hold up to the numbers? Most importantly, there was a consumption boom that was driven by an enormous bubble in the stock market. Personal savings rates fell to zero as upper-income households—the ones that hold stocks—saw the value of these assets soar. The Fed's change in policy allowed the expansion to continue. Prior to 1995, it would slow the economy when unemployment fell below 6 percent, on the theory that this was the best we could do. But this drastically important policy change—even today, we have millions of additional jobs as a result—could have been made at any time. It was not a result of 1990s productivity increases, but rather the Fed's belated realization that its prior theory was wrong. Understanding the 1990s expansion, and its collapse, is vitally important to getting us out of the current recession. The evaporation of $8 trillion in stock market wealth translates into more than $300 billion in reduced consumption. This means we need a stimulus package more than twice as large as the one that Senate Democrats are proposing (the House Republican plan contained hardly any stimulus at all, consisting mostly of tax breaks for corporations and high-income households). Diehard policymakers and economists—including many Democrats—still cling to the notion that fiscal conservatism brought us prosperity. They ache to resume paying off the entire national debt at the earliest opportunity. Many others welcome the re-inflation of the stock market bubble—which still exists, and has lately been growing. And while the Fed has been doing the right thing by lowering interest rates since the slowdown began, it could still revert to its old ways before the recovery is on track. This is especially true if our overvalued dollar—another largely unnoticed bubble from the 1990s expansion—were to drop sharply, raising the price of imports. The new economy may be dead, but the mythology that created it survives. Let's hope that it doesn't cause us any further trouble. Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot are co-directors of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C., and co-authors of Social Security: The Phony Crisis (University of Chicago Press, 2000). ###
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