Higher Employment Levels Not Energizing The Economy

 | Jan 29, 2017 06:04AM ET

I have written on many occasions about the economic reset which occurred somewhere around the turn of the century. Inflation adjusted family incomes and prime age employment have little changed since 2000.

Follow up:

I am a boomer. I have seen much better economic times. I know that demographics are part of the negative dynamics affecting the current economy. For instance, the population of the 25 to 54 age group in the USA has increased only 5% since 2000 - versus 16% for the population overall. Before 2000, at least as far back as the 1950s, total employment grew faster than population. See graph below. Since 2000, population has grown faster than employment.

Further, the employment level of this 25 to 54 prime working-age group is unchanged since 2000.

I smile when I hear economists lecturing China for them to revamp their economy from an export driven to internal consumption - but who lectured the western economies to prepare for the demographic shift. Negative dynamics need to be countered by positive dynamics. Is / were there no economic remedies to mitigate the affects of an aging population?