August 4, 2022

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Demographic dilemma: Slowing population growth, not pandemic, at the root of US worker shortage

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Supply chain struggles have been widely blamed for the inability to meet consumer and business demand throughout the pandemic. While fixing the supply chain should be a top priority, it is worker scarcity, driven by the lack of basic, long-term population growth that is the true underlying cause—and a critical future challenge for the economies of the United States, and particularly California, according to a new analysis released today by the UCR School of Business Center for Economic Forecasting and Development.

"For several decades there has been a substantial slowdown in the growth of Americans in their prime working years," said Christopher Thornberg, director of the Center for Economic Forecasting and the report's author. "Whether it's the missing factory worker, delivery truck driver, or salesclerk, the scarcity of workers is hindering the ability to connect demand to supply and is slowing ."

According to the analysis, long-run population growth of people between the ages of 25 and 54 accelerated dramatically in the U.S. in the 1970s, peaked in the mid 1980s at over 2% growth per year, and then collapsed just as fast, driven by sharp declines in birthrates. International migration into the United States jumped in the 1990s, offsetting some of this baby bust, but that too slowed sharply after the turn of the century. Today, the population growth rate of prime working age people in the nation is 0.2%, one-tenth of what it was 40 years ago.

Thornberg notes that these population trends have been observed in the data for many years, but because it's the kind of thing that happens gradually, the issue simply hasn't been a primary focus for policymakers or .

The mass wave of retirements that occurred during the pandemic both accelerated and exacerbated today's worker shortage, but it is not the root cause. "This is a long-term demographic problem, not a short-term cyclical one," said Thornberg. "It is not going to disappear as the COVID crisis fades."

As bad as the is nationally, it is worse in California, especially Southern California, according to the analysis. The state's lack of housing acts as a functional cap on population and labor force growth, degrading affordability and driving workers and businesses to other locations. Moreover, the state's demographic forecasts do not paint an optimistic outlook for future trends.

According to the analysis, all of this means and policymakers need to concentrate on increasing labor supply and helping employers adapt to a new world where workers are a scarce resource. In the immediate term, there is a relatively passive way leaders can help: they can relax labor market regulations to allow employers maximum flexibility in how they hire their workforce.

Specifically, the analysis calls out the following:

More information: The Big Shortage: California's Worker Scarcity and Economic Growth. ucreconomicforecast.org/wp-con … _Scarcity_July22.pdf

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