Jobs may be slow to return, some experts believe

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NEW YORK – Politicians, pundits and even the Federal Reserve chairman have declared the recession over, but what’s coming next is likely to prove as vexing as the deep economic crisis that Americans hope to leave behind.

As the economy begins to grow again, the nation faces a huge challenge: Consumers drive roughly 70 percent of U.S. economic activity, but job growth is expected to be quite slow even as the recovery gains steam. Without a rebounding job market, consumer spending is unlikely to return to robust levels, slowing a return to full employment.

Think of it as America’s chicken-and-egg dilemma: The economy needs a big jump in consumer spending to spur exceptional growth, but that won’t happen as long as unemployment remains high.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke acknowledged this dilemma when he predicted that growth next year would be moderate at best. The economy faces strong “headwinds,” he warned, raising prospects for a jobless recovery like the ones that followed the recessions in 1990-91 and 2001.

“Unless the economy grows significantly faster than its longer-term growth rate,” which economists peg at about 3 percent annually, “it will be relatively slow in creating jobs over and above people coming into the labor force,” Bernanke said. “And therefore the unemployment rate would tend to come down quite slowly. That’s a risk, a possibility.”

That’s a problem for President Barack Obama, who has promised jobs, and for Bernanke, whose mission includes steering the economy to full employment. The unemployment rate, now 9.7 percent, is expected to rise above 10 percent soon.

They must find a way to encourage job creation to replace the more than 7 million positions already lost, plus about 1 million new entrants into the work force annually. To get back to an unemployment rate below 5 percent will require about 12 million to 14 million new jobs.

“The problem here is that once the economy makes the turn, and once we’re not only out of recession but out of this period that feels like recession ... even then the economy is not going to be growing fast enough consistently to bring down the unemployment rate,” said Ken Goldstein, an economist with the Conference Board, a business research center in New York.

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