The Productivity Illusion: Why the Latest Fed Sermon Rings Hollow
The Federal Reserve Board, in its latest pronouncement, is leaning heavily on a familiar, comforting narrative: **Productivity** growth hinges on investment. It’s the classic economic mantra. But while the Fed talks about capital deepening and technological adoption, they are studiously ignoring the elephant in the room: Who is actually capturing the gains from this supposed investment boom? The current discourse around economic productivity is dangerously incomplete, focusing solely on the supply side while ignoring the structural capture of wealth.
We are told that smart investments—AI, software, new machinery—will unlock a new era of efficiency, leading to higher wages and broader prosperity. This is the idealized model. The reality, however, is that for decades, the correlation between productivity increases and median wage growth has been brutally severed. This disconnect is the central crisis the Fed refuses to address head-on. The conversation about US economic growth is stuck in a 1980s textbook loop.
The Unspoken Truth: Investment for Whom?
When the Fed discusses investment, they are primarily tracking *corporate* investment. This capital expenditure often flows into automation that replaces labor, or financial engineering that benefits shareholders, not line workers. If a company invests $10 million in software that allows ten people to do the work of one hundred, productivity explodes on paper. But where do the wages for the ninety displaced workers go? They don't vanish; they redistribute—upwards, to capital owners and highly specialized tech elites.
This isn't just about technology; it’s about power dynamics. The true bottleneck to widespread prosperity isn't a lack of capital investment; it’s the declining bargaining power of labor and regulatory capture that allows efficiency gains to be hoarded. We see record corporate profits, yet real median wages struggle to keep pace with inflation. This is the core failure of the current investment thesis.
The Manufactured Scarcity of Human Capital
The Fed’s focus on capital investment implicitly devalues human capital that isn't immediately adaptable to the latest tech stack. If you aren't coding the AI, you are deemed economically inefficient. This creates a manufactured scarcity of high-end skills, driving those wages up, while simultaneously creating a glut of easily automatable skills, suppressing the rest. This isn't natural market evolution; it's a feedback loop reinforced by decades of policy that favored asset appreciation over wage stability.
Consider the infrastructure investment push. While beneficial, if that investment is primarily used to accelerate logistics chains that further concentrate market power (think Amazon or Walmart), the productivity gains accrue to the platform owners, not the drivers or warehouse workers. The system is optimized for speed to the shareholder, not equity for the worker. For a deeper dive into historical productivity shifts, see analyses from institutions like the Brookings Institution.
What Happens Next? The Prediction of Bifurcation
My prediction is stark: Without a radical policy shift prioritizing labor share of income—perhaps through universal basic services or mandatory profit-sharing tied to automation gains—the productivity gains heralded by the Fed will only accelerate economic **bifurcation**. We will see an even smaller elite experiencing massive wealth increases driven by capital efficiency, while the majority of the workforce stagnates or falls behind, leading to profound social and political instability. The current path guarantees a two-tiered economy where productivity metrics mask rising societal fragility. The only way to fix this is to redefine what 'successful investment' looks like in national accounting—it must include the stability and growth of the median household income. For context on historical wage stagnation, look at data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The Fed sees the numbers; they must see the consequences. Ignoring the distribution of productivity gains is not oversight; it is a choice. And it’s a choice that will define the next decade of American life. We must demand that investment policies serve the many, not just the few who own the means of digital production. For more on the structural issues, see reporting from The Wall Street Journal on corporate balance sheets.