Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Beyond the Business Cycle: The Need for a Technology-Based Growth Strategy

Published

Author(s)

Gregory C. Tassey

Abstract

Facing the worst economic slowdown since the Great Depression, efforts to reestablish acceptable growth rates for the U.S. economy are relying almost entirely on short-term “stabilization” policies. However, the massive monetary and fiscal “stimulus” applied since 2008 has had only a modest impact on economic growth. In the presence of a structurally sound economy, such policies are designed to expand demand and thereby, through the multiplier effect, provide incentives for investment that can drive sustainable positive rates of growth. However, these macrostabilization policies can do relatively little to overcome accumulated underinvestment in economic assets that create the needed larger multipliers. This underinvestment has led to declining U.S. competitiveness in global markets and subsequent slower rates of growth—a pattern that was underway well before the “Great Recession.” The prolonged current slowdown is a manifestation of these structural problems. Yet, they are barely discussed. Thirty-five years of U.S. trade deficits for manufactured products can neither be explained by business cycles, currency shifts, or trade barriers, nor by alleged suboptimal use of monetary and short-term fiscal policies. High rates of productivity growth are the policy solution, which can be accomplished only over time from sustained investment in intellectual, physical, human, organizational, and technical infrastructure capital. Implementing this imperative requires a public-private asset growth model emphasizing investment in technology. The correct growth model actually involves a “fiscal” policy, but it is both long-term and an integral part of a national “bottoms up” growth strategy. This approach is distinctly different from the Keynesian and neoclassical philosophies that are not capable of dealing with the underinvestment trends currently compromising the U.S. competitive position in global markets.
Citation
Science and Public Policy

Keywords

monetary and fiscal polocies, innovation policies, government roles, economic growth

Citation

Tassey, G. (2012), Beyond the Business Cycle: The Need for a Technology-Based Growth Strategy, Science and Public Policy, [online], https://doi.org/10.1093/scipol/scs106 (Accessed March 19, 2024)
Created December 19, 2012, Updated November 10, 2018