Job Loss and Infrastructure Job Creation Spending During the Recession

Abstract

After the long economic expansion that characterized much of the current decade, the nation entered its 11th postwar recession in December 2007. The subsequent decrease in jobs and comparison of the latest recession to the Great Depression intensified congressional interest in passing legislation early in 2009 aimed at encouraging creation of new jobs and warding off further loss of jobs. To mitigate all but one recession since the 1960s, Congress chose to increase federal spending on public works (infrastructure). (See CRS Report 92-939, Countercyclical Job Creation Programs.) Public works expenditures traditionally have gone to certain types of construction activities (e.g., building highways and bridges, dams and flood control structures) which indirectly increase demand in industries that supply their products to construction firms (e.g., manufacturing). Today, the definition of infrastructure has been expanded to include green economic activities (commonly referred to as green jobs), which include industries that utilize renewable resources (e.g., electricity generated by wind), produce energy-efficient goods and services (e.g., mass transit), and install energy-conserving products (e.g., retrofitting buildings with thermal-pane windows). A question that typically arises during congressional consideration of economic stimulus legislation is which approach produces the most bang for the buck. In the instant case, this means how many jobs might be supported by federal expenditures on traditional and green infrastructure projects. Once stimulus legislation is signed into law, the focus of Congress customarily turns to estimates of the number of jobs that result as federal funds are allocated to specific activities.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 26, 2010
Accession Number
ADA522254

Entities

People

  • Linda Levine

Organizations

  • Library of Congress

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Budgets
  • Business Administration
  • Civil Engineering
  • Commerce
  • Construction
  • Construction Materials
  • Economic Analysis
  • Economic Impact
  • Employment
  • Flood Control
  • Governments
  • Health Services
  • Infrastructure
  • Law
  • Mass Transportation
  • Materials
  • State Governments

Readers

  • Educational Psychology
  • Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Engineering.
  • International Relations and European Studies