newyorker | hen we all finished filing our tax returns last
week, there was a little something missing: two trillion dollars. That’s
how much money Americans may have made in the past year that didn’t get
reported to the I.R.S., according to a recent study by the economist
Edgar Feige, who’s been investigating the so-called underground, or
gray, economy for thirty-five years. It’s a huge number: if the
government managed to collect taxes on all that income, the deficit
would be trivial. This unreported income is being earned, for the most
part, not by drug dealers or Mob bosses but by tens of millions of
people with run-of-the-mill jobs—nannies, barbers, Web-site designers,
and construction workers—who are getting paid off the books. Ordinary
Americans have gone underground, and, as the recovery continues to limp
along, they seem to be doing it more and more.
Measuring an
unreported economy is obviously tricky. But look closely and you can see
the traces of a booming informal economy everywhere. As Feige said to
me, “The best footprint left in the sand by this economy that doesn’t
want to be observed is the use of cash.” His studies show that, while
economists talk about the advent of a cashless society, Americans still
hold an enormous amount of cold, hard cash—as much as seven hundred and
fifty billion dollars. The percentage of Americans who don’t use banks
is surprisingly high, and on the rise. Off-the-books activity also helps
explain a mystery about the current economy: even though the percentage
of Americans officially working has dropped dramatically, and even
though household income is still well below what it was in 2007,
personal consumption is higher than it was before the recession, and
retail sales have been growing briskly (despite a dip in March). Bernard
Baumohl, an economist at the Economic Outlook Group, estimates that,
based on historical patterns, current retail sales are actually what
you’d expect if the unemployment rate were around five or six per cent,
rather than the 7.6 per cent we’re stuck with. The difference, he
argues, probably reflects workers migrating into the shadow economy.
“It’s typical that during recessions people work on the side while
collecting unemployment,” Baumohl told me. “But the severity of the
recession and the profound weakness of this recovery may mean that a lot
more people have entered the underground economy, and have had to stay
there longer.”
The increasing importance of the gray economy
isn’t only a reaction to the downturn: studies suggest that the sector
has been growing steadily over the years. In 1992, the I.R.S. estimated
that the government was losing $80 billion a year in income-tax revenue.
Its estimate for 2006 was $385 billion—almost five times as much (and
still an underestimate, according to Feige’s numbers). The U.S. is
certainly a long way from, say, Greece, where tax evasion is a national
sport and the shadow economy accounts for twenty-seven per cent of
G.D.P. But the forces pushing people to work off the books are powerful.
Feige points to the growing distrust of government as one important
factor. The desire to avoid licensing regulations, which force people to
jump through elaborate hoops just to get a job, is another. Most
important, perhaps, are changes in the way we work. As Baumohl put it,
“For businesses, the calculus of hiring has fundamentally changed.”
Companies have got used to bringing people on as needed and then
dropping them when the job is over, and they save on benefits and
payroll taxes by treating even full-time employees as independent
contractors. Casual employment often becomes under-the-table work; the
arrangement has become a way of life in the construction industry. In a
recent California survey of three hundred thousand contractors,
two-thirds said they had no direct employees, meaning that they did not
need to pay workers’-compensation insurance or payroll taxes. In other
words, for lots of people off-the-books work is the only job available.
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