On the Move.
American.gov | 2013-01-24 14:14

Most U.S. workers, including these Fairchild Semiconductor employees, face continued technological change. (© AP Images/Joan Seidel)

Integration with the world economy offers challenges but also real benefits
 
(The following article is taken from the U.S. Department of State publication, USA Economy in Brief.)
 
Economic expansions don't go on forever, of course. Since 1854, the U.S. economy has gone through 32 cycles of expansion and contraction. In modern times, the expansions have become longer and the contractions shorter on average: In the 10 cycles 1945-2001, expansions averaged 57 months, contractions 10 months; during all 32 cycles, by comparison, expansions averaged 38 months, contractions 17 months.
 

Participants at a New York City career fair hope to find that next economic opportunity. (© AP Images/Mark Lennihan)

Continually increasing productivity – output of a worker per hour – is the only way to achieve continually increasing economic expansion and rising incomes. Gains in U.S. productivity have been slowing down since peaking in 2002.
 
Middle-class U.S. workers' anxiety about job security is mounting as they face continued technological change and competition from low-wage foreign workers. While most economists promote unequivocally the enormous gains from trade, a small but growing number are warning that perhaps tens of millions of U.S. jobs could move to foreign lands and that the United States could even lose entire industries.
 
Yet retreating from integration with the world economy seems almost unthinkable. Two-way trade of goods and services represented 27 percent of U.S. GDP in 2005, up from 11 percent in 1970. The jobs of at least 12 million U.S. workers now depend on exports.
 
While many U.S. workers face big challenges ahead, none more crucial than attaining adequate education and training, optimists view the United States as well positioned to benefit in a churning global economy because of its strong positive record on adapting to change.
 
“The United States will almost inevitably be a smaller part of a growing world economy due to the structural changes under way across the globe," the Council on Competitiveness says. "But there is no reason why the United States cannot retain its position as the most prosperous country in the world.”
 
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