May 3, 2013

CU prof: Uncertainty hinders job growth

BOULDER – Uncertainty about national policies is causing the sluggish recovery of U.S. jobs, according to a study led by a University of Colorado-Boulder finance professor.

Sanjai Bhagat, a professor of finance at CU-Boulder’s Leeds School of Business, and the lead author of the study, concluded that the sluggish recovery of U.S. jobs since the recession began is attributable to companies being mired in business uncertainty about national policies rather than other hiring and financial roadblocks.

Businesses are uncertain about the yet-to-be-realized costs of policies such as health care, tax reform and environmental cap and trade as regulations take shape and are implemented, according to Bhagat. If business uncertainty were to revert to levels that were observed in prerecession 2005, corporate employment would increase by about 3.35 million jobs, he said.

“We’re not seeing a normal bounce back from the latest recession,” Bhagat said. “On average, it takes about 24 months for the economy to regain prior employment benchmarks. In this case, about 60 months have elapsed and we’re still 3.2 million jobs short of where we were at the peak in 2007.”

Contrary to what some have argued, company access to capital is not the prevailing issue, according to Bhagat.

“Some of these corporations are sitting on hundreds of millions to billions of dollars of cash,” he said. “But they don’t know if they should be hiring more people, investing in other facets of their businesses, like (research and development) and manufacturing plants, or just wait.”

Bhagat presented the paper with co-author Iulian Obreja, an assistant professor of finance at the Leeds School, to the American Economic Association in January.

To measure business uncertainty levels, the authors looked at stock market volatility and also tracked negatively worded headlines – including terms such as “risk” and “uncertainty” – in U.S. business media from 1985 to 2010, finding strong correspondence between the two sets of information. They also applied econometric models to the data to calculate business uncertainty through the years and compared the results with unemployment rates.

“What’s unique about our research approach is that it’s the first to use an economic model to show econometrically a direct correlation between the increase in business uncertainty and the decrease in corporate employment,” Bhagat said.

“Our findings suggest that if policymakers would like companies to increase their hiring and investments, they should focus on policies that decrease business uncertainty,” Bhagat said. “In other words, a meeting of the minds in D.C. to offer clarification and timelines on things like health-care costs, both corporate and personal tax rates, and carbon emission regulation could be helpful.”

To view a copy of the paper visit http://ssrn.com/abstract=1923829.


BOULDER – Uncertainty about national policies is causing the sluggish recovery of U.S. jobs, according to a study led by a University of Colorado-Boulder finance professor.

Sanjai Bhagat, a professor of finance at CU-Boulder’s Leeds School of Business, and the lead author of the study, concluded that the sluggish recovery of U.S. jobs since the recession began is attributable to companies being mired in business uncertainty about national policies rather than other hiring and financial roadblocks.

Businesses are uncertain about the yet-to-be-realized costs of policies such as health care, tax reform and environmental cap and trade as regulations take shape and are…

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