U.S. Green Jobs

From the National Center For Policy Analysis   

Green Jobs: Hope or Hype?

No. 679

Thursday, November 19, 2009

by Pete Geddes

In October, the unemployment rate in the United States reached 10.2 percent. Most economists consider about 5 percent to be full employment. Not surprisingly, job growth is a hot political issue.

President Obama has directed funds from various federal agencies and the $787 billion economic stimulus bill to create five million "green" jobs. These jobs involve work to preserve, restore or improve environmental quality, mainly through increased energy efficiency and renewable power production. He claims these jobs will "pay well and can't be outsourced." The president has proposed spending $150 billion over the next decade on programs that create green jobs. These projects would include subsidies for wind and solar power, increased energy efficiency standards for appliances and buildings, retrofitting homes, and upgrading the electrical grid.

But the president's proposal does not

consider several major costs of

government spending on green jobs,

 such as the loss of nongreen

employment in other sectors of the

economy. Indeed, subsidizing green

jobs could cause more job losses than

gains.

An Economic Shell Game. Green jobs

creation is simply another program

designed to transfer wealth from

businesses, taxpayers and consumers

to politically favored uses. In recent

testimony before the Senate Energy

and Natural Resources Committee,

Congressional Budget Office Director

Douglas Elmendorf warned, "The net

effect [of a green jobs policy] ... would

 likely be some decline in employment

during the transition ... The fact that

jobs turn up somewhere else for some

 people does not mean there aren't

substantial costs borne by people,

communities, firms and affected

industries."

Flawed Analysis Leads to Misleading Job Numbers. The Obama administration and its allies have cited studies from the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the American Solar Energy Society, the Center for American Progress and the United Nations Environment Programme, among others, to support their claims that green investments will provide millions of new jobs. These analyses share a number of flaws.

First, they confuse efficient and inefficient production. Productivity is the amount of output per unit of input. Producing the same amount of a good with fewer inputs makes it more affordable, freeing labor, natural resources, equipment and capital for other uses. This improves a country's economic welfare.

The green jobs model, however, is built

on the inefficient use of labor, favoring

technologies that employ large numbers

of people over technologies that use

labor efficiently. For example, according

to the United Nations Environment

Programme, solar energy requires nine

times as much labor per megawatt of

energy generated as natural gas,

and nine times as much labor per

megawatt of energy as coal.

[See Figure I.]

Furthermore, on average, solar energy

costs three to five times as much per

megawatt as electricity from natural

gas or coal.

Second, many of the jobs "created" by government subsidies will not be filled by the unemployed but by workers shifting from one job to another. Thus, job creation could be overstated significantly. For instance, proposed global warming legislation threatens to shutter a number of fossil-fuel power plants while boosting employment at wind and solar facilities. Moving engineers from traditional power plants to renewable energy facilities should not count as new jobs creation. Finally, these studies only examine jobs created by the government programs, ignoring the jobs destroyed by higher energy prices and the taxes to pay for the increased spending.

Evidence from Abroad. Experience in Europe, which has taken the lead in green job creation, confirms that this is an economic shell game. For example, according to a study of Spain's renewable energy initiatives:

The Spanish government created approximately 50,000 green jobs, but as a result about 110,000 other jobs were lost.

 Only 1 in 10 new jobs were permanent.The average green job created since 2000 added $774,000 in costs to consumers' bills. The high cost of green energy has driven energy-intensive Spanish industries to countries with lower energy costs.

The report concluded, "These costs do not appear to be unique to Spain's approach but instead are largely inherent in schemes to promote renewable energy sources." Extrapolating from Spain's experience, the authors note that even if President Obama's initiatives manage to produce five million green jobs, about 11 million jobs could be lost in other sectors. [See Figure II.]

Conclusion. Most people agree America's energy sources will change, but no one is certain what the replacement will be. The transition could resemble 17th-century England when coal replaced wood, or the 19th century when oil displaced coal.

Markets are highly efficient information-processing systems. Inefficient processes are abandoned unless government protects them. Free societies become more energy-efficient and thus greener.

Promoting high-cost renewables will artificially inflate the cost of energy that the economy relies upon. The best job creation policies allow markets to work and become more efficient through competition.

Pete Geddes is an adjunct scholar with the National Center for Policy Analysis.

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