fomc minutes · September 29, 1997
FOMC Minutes
A meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee was held in the offices of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, September
30, 1997, at 9:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Greenspan, Chairman
Mr. McDonough, Vice Chairman
Mr. Broaddus
Mr. Guynn
Mr. Kelley
Mr. Moskow
Mr. Meyer
Mr. Parry
Ms. Phillips
Ms. Rivlin
Messrs. Hoenig, Jordan, Melzer, and Ms. Minehan, Alternate Members of the Federal
Open Market Committee
Messrs. Boehne, McTeer, and Stern, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of
Philadelphia, Dallas, and Minneapolis respectively
Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Mr. Coyne, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Mr. Baxter, Deputy General Counsel
Mr. Prell, Economist
Messrs. Cecchetti, Goodfriend, Eisenbeis, Hunter, Lindsey, Promisel, Siegman,
Slifman, and Stockton, Associate Economists
Mr. Fisher, Manager, System Open Market Account
Mr. Ettin, Deputy Director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors
Messrs. Madigan and Simpson, Associate Directors, Divisions of Monetary Affairs
and Research and Statistics respectively, Board of Governors
Messrs. Alexander, Hooper, and Ms. Johnson, Associate Directors, Division of
International Finance, Board of Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Mr. Varvel, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Ms. Browne, Messrs. Dewald, Hakkio, Ms. Krieger, Messrs. Lang, Rolnick,
Rosenblum, and Sniderman, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of
Boston, St. Louis, Kansas City, New York, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Dallas, and
Cleveland respectively
Mr. Judd, Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held
on August 19, 1997, were approved.
The Manager of the System Open Market Account reported on developments in foreign
exchange and international financial markets in the period since the previous meeting on
August 19, 1997. There were no open market transactions in foreign currencies for System
account since that meeting, and thus no vote was required of the Committee.
The Manager also reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System
open market transactions in government securities and federal agency obligations during the
period August 19, 1997, through September 29, 1997. By unanimous vote, the Committee
ratified these transactions.
The Committee then turned to a discussion of the economic outlook and the conduct of
monetary policy over the intermeeting period ahead. A summary of the economic and
financial information available at the time of the meeting and of the Committee's discussion
is provided below, followed by the domestic policy directive that was approved by the
Committee and issued to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that economic activity had expanded
briskly further in the third quarter. The expansion was paced by robust growth in consumer
spending and substantial further increases in business investment expenditures. Housing
demand seemed to have been well maintained over the summer. Employment and production
had risen considerably further since midyear. Despite widespread indications of tight labor
markets, increases in labor compensation had been moderate in recent months, and price
inflation had remained subdued.
Private nonfarm payroll employment rose substantially over July and August despite the
retarding effects of a work stoppage at a major package shipping firm. Aggregate weekly
hours of production or nonsupervisory workers were considerably above their second-quarter
average over the two months. The civilian unemployment rate, at 4.9 percent in August, was
marginally above its low for the current economic expansion.
Industrial production increased considerably in July and August, extending a relatively brisk
advance over the first half of the year. The output of business equipment rose strongly over
the two months, with sizable gains in all major categories, and the output of consumer
nondurables turned up after having displayed some weakness in earlier months of the year.
The production of consumer durables also increased on balance over the two months. After
rising somewhat in other recent months, the utilization of total manufacturing capacity was
up appreciably in August, reaching its highest level since the spring of 1995.
Retail sales were up substantially over the summer after having edged lower during the
spring. The upturn in recent months included a rebound in sales at automotive dealers
following some weakness in earlier months. Sales at non-auto durable and at nondurable
goods stores also strengthened after having declined on balance during the second quarter.
The pickup in consumer spending occurred against a backdrop of further strong gains in
incomes and household net worth that, according to recent surveys, had fostered high levels
of consumer confidence. In addition, credit continued to be readily available to most
consumers. Total private housing starts and building permits declined in August to levels
somewhat below their averages in earlier months of the year, but data on overall home sales
and builder ratings of new home sales continued to suggest that demand for single-family
housing was still relatively buoyant.
Real business fixed investment had remained on a steep uptrend since midyear, with
exceptional ongoing demand for computers and communications equipment and relatively
robust demand in other categories of business equipment as well. Nonresidential construction
activity appeared to have rebounded somewhat in late spring and early summer after having
declined moderately earlier in the year. While new construction contracts displayed little
trend, favorable conditions for nonresidential construction were suggested by low vacancy
rates, rising prices for commercial real estate, and a widespread availability of financing.
The accumulation of nonfarm business inventories slowed substantially in July (latest data)
from its average pace in the second quarter. Inventory investment in manufacturing was only
a bit below its pace in the second quarter, but the inventory-shipments ratio for the sector
remained at a very low level. In wholesale trade, stocks fell after a sharp buildup in June, and
the stock-sales ratio for this sector was at the middle of its relatively low range for the past
year. At the retail level, a rise in inventories in July about matched that in June and the
inventory-sales ratio for the sector also was near the middle of its range for the past year.
The nominal deficit on U.S. trade in goods and services widened substantially in July,
reflecting both a decline in exports and a rise in imports. The lower exports of goods and
services were associated with decreases in most trade categories and left total exports slightly
below their relatively high level of the second quarter. The July increase in imports also was
spread among nearly all trade categories and brought total imports of goods and services to a
level somewhat above the average for the second quarter. The available information
suggested that economic activity expanded further in recent months in all the major foreign
industrial countries except Japan. Growth remained relatively robust in Canada and the
United Kingdom, and activity apparently picked up in France and Germany after having been
sluggish early in the year. Economic activity in Japan declined appreciably in the second
quarter, and more recent information provided little clear evidence of subsequent strength.
Price inflation has remained subdued. Consumer price inflation picked up slightly in July and
August from a slow rate of increase in each of the previous four months; reduced but still
appreciable increases in food prices contributed to the larger advance in both months and a
sizable rise in energy prices held up the consumer price index in August. At the producer
level, the price index for finished goods rose moderately in August after having fallen for
seven consecutive months; the August rise largely reflected a jump in energy prices. Over the
twelve months ended in August, consumer prices were up considerably less than in the
previous twelve months, while producer prices of finished goods were down slightly after
having increased moderately in the previous twelve months. The behavior of these broad
measures of inflation excluding the effects of food and energy prices also was favorable over
the year ended in August, albeit slightly less so. Average hourly earnings of production and
nonsupervisory workers picked up in August from a much reduced pace in July; the rise in
such earnings over the twelve months ended in July was slightly above that in the previous
twelve months.
At its meeting on August 19, 1997, the Committee adopted a directive that called for
maintaining conditions in reserve markets that were consistent with an unchanged federal
funds rate averaging about 5-1/2 percent. The directive included a bias toward the possible
firming of reserve conditions and a somewhat higher federal funds rate to reflect a consensus
among the members that the economic risks remained biased toward higher inflation.
Although the members did not see a high probability that likely developments would warrant
a tightening of policy during the intermeeting interval, they continued to anticipate that the
next policy move was more likely to be in the direction of some firming than toward some
easing. The reserve market conditions associated with this directive were expected to be
consistent with some slowing in the growth of M2 and M3 to more moderate rates over
coming months.
Open market operations were directed throughout the inter-meeting period toward
maintaining the existing degree of pressure on reserve positions, and the federal funds rate
averaged just slightly above the Committee's intended level of 5-1/2 percent. Most other
interest rates in short-term markets were little changed over the period. Rates on longer-term
obligations were down somewhat on balance, apparently reflecting a reassessment of the
outlook for inflation by some market participants in the light of unexpectedly low inflation
and other statistics released during the latter part of the period. The downward movement in
long-term interest rates resulted in some further flattening of the slope of the yield curve and
appeared consistent with an interpretation that market participants saw little likelihood of any
tightening of monetary policy in coming months. Share prices in equity markets continued to
display considerable volatility but increased appreciably further on balance over the
intermeeting interval.
In foreign exchange markets, the dollar experienced mixed changes in relation to major
foreign currencies, largely reflecting diverging economic developments abroad. On balance,
the dollar's trade-weighted value in terms of the other G-10 currencies declined somewhat
over the intermeeting period. The dollar was down considerably against the mark as data
suggesting a pickup in German economic activity and inflation led to market speculation
concerning a possible increase in short-term German interest rates. The dollar also registered
sizable declines over the period against a number of other European currencies. On the other
hand, the dollar rose appreciably in relation to the Japanese yen, which came under selling
pressure against the background of continuing sluggish economic conditions in Japan,
persistent problems in its financial system, and concerns about the potential effect on Japan
of the recent depreciations of Southeast Asian currencies. The dollar also strengthened
somewhat in terms of the British pound, in part as a result of some indications that economic
activity in the United Kingdom was not as strong as expected and the sizable declines that
had occurred recently in that nation's long-term interest rates.
M2 expanded at a rapid pace in August and continued to grow at a still robust though
diminished rate in September according to the limited data available for that month. The
strength of M2 and also that of M3 was related at least in part to changes in the allocation of
financial assets and liabilities rather than to the growth in spending; in particular, the
volatility in the stock market evidently fostered a redirection of funds to M2 assets, among
others, and included heavy inflows to the money market funds component of M2. For the
year through August, M2 rose at a rate somewhat above the upper bound of the Committee's
range. M3 grew at an exceptionally rapid rate over the summer months, with only few signs
of moderation in September according to the partial data available for that month. Apart from
the strength in its M2 components, the increase in this aggregate reflected bank substitution
of large time deposits for foreign borrowings to finance credit growth and also reflected
substantial inflows to institution-only money funds. For the year through August, M3
expanded at a rate well above the upper bound of its range. Total domestic nonfinancial debt
continued to increase at a relatively moderate rate in recent months.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that the economy would expand at a
pace significantly above that anticipated earlier for the second half of the year and the early
part of 1998, but economic growth was likely to moderate appreciably to a more sustainable
rate later. In the near term, business fixed investment appeared to be providing surprisingly
strong impetus to income growth, and rising levels of wealth were stimulating robust
consumer demand. With sales so strong, the downward adjustment in inventory investment
that had been anticipated in the previous staff forecast seemed likely to occur more gradually.
The projected strength in aggregate demand appeared likely to intensify pressures on
resources and lead to some pickup in inflation. Less accommodative financial market
conditions were anticipated to damp these tendencies over time.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic developments, members
commented on the continued remarkable performance of the economy. Strength in consumer
spending and further acceleration in capital investment sparked faster-than-expected growth
in the third quarter, and relatively brisk economic expansion seemed to be in prospect for a
period ahead in the context of very positive business and consumer sentiment, strong
demands for capital goods, and favorable financial conditions. The rate of expansion might
subsequently be expected to slow as stocks of business capital and consumer durable goods
built up relative to sales and incomes, inventory investment moderated somewhat, and the
recent strength of the dollar began to exert a drag on exports. It was an open question,
however, as to whether these influences would be sufficient to slow the growth of demands
for goods and services to a more sustainable pace, and many members suggested that the
risks to the forecast were on the side of increases in final demands that would press more
intensely against the available resources. Despite high levels of resource utilization, inflation
and inflationary expectations had remained subdued to date, reflecting to some extent special
influences like the rise in the foreign exchange value of the dollar. Moreover, sizable gains in
productivity combined with moderate increases in wages and salaries seemed to have
contributed to keeping unit labor costs and prices under control. However, the growing
tightness in labor markets in many parts of the country was being accompanied by some
signs of rising pressures on labor compensation, including the use of special bonuses and
other innovative compensation initiatives that are not included in the usual statistical
measures of labor costs. In the circumstances, members saw a risk of added wage and price
inflation if economic activity did not slow to a more sustainable pace consistent at a
minimum with no further appreciable increase in labor utilization rates.
With regard to the prospects for final demand in key sectors, members took note of the
rebound in consumer expenditures after a sluggish second quarter. Solid gains in
employment, incomes, and household net worth were seen as sustaining further robust
expansion in consumer spending. In addition, members anticipated that continued further
rapid expansion in investment expenditures by business firms for equipment and structures
would provide strong underlying support for the economic expansion. High rates of return on
investments in equipment, particularly for computers and communications equipment where
prices were falling rapidly, coupled with ready financing from both internal cash flows and
external sources were inducing firms to undertake large investment programs. Such
investments would expand capacity, improve productivity, and lower costs of production.
Anecdotal reports suggested a mixed picture in nonresidential real estate markets. In much of
the country, commercial and office vacancies were declining from already low levels and
lease rates were rising. Shortages of construction workers were said to be holding back
construction in some areas, but in other parts of the country there were indications of some
moderation in construction activity and of emerging overcapacity in some markets. The
ready availability of financing was a supportive factor in the outlook for nonresidential
construction.
A gradual decline in housing activity was expected to exert only mild restraint on the
increase of economic activity. Solid job and income growth, the high level of household
wealth, and the low cash-flow burden of homeownership would continue to provide good
support for housing demand. In this regard, recent statistical and anecdotal information
indicated that home sales were holding up well across the country, although higher-priced
homes appeared to be selling relatively slowly in some areas.
In the Committee's discussion of the prospects for inflation, members discussed the relative
absence of price pressures in an environment of increasingly tight labor markets across the
country and rising levels of manufacturing capacity utilization. In labor markets, costs were
increasing much less than would have been expected on the basis of previous experience
under similarly tight conditions. Among the possible explanations for this outcome were
persisting concerns about job security; the muted rise in worker benefits, notably health care;
and the increasing use by employers of more flexible and innovative means to attract and
retain workers that were in high demand. Moreover, it was suggested that, at least in
manufacturing, productivity had risen unusually rapidly of late, allowing corporations to hold
the line on prices despite increases in labor costs. While the underlying reasons for the
favorable inflation trends were not entirely clear, the members noted that, in addition to
subdued increases in labor costs, the appreciation of the dollar and the relatively sluggish
performance of many foreign industrial economies seemed to be contributing to the betterthan-expected inflation performance by holding down prices in world commodity markets
and prices of imported goods more generally. These developments also added to competitive
pressures on businesses, which together with customer resistance were making it very
difficult for firms to raise prices to reflect their higher costs.
The members commented that while few signs of rising price inflation had surfaced, the
widespread tautness of labor markets and the emergence of scattered indications of increased
pressure on wages and other labor costs were cause for concern. Anecdotal reports suggested
that increases in health care costs were likely to turn up, and there were indications that fears
about job security might be diminishing and that workers were becoming less reluctant to
leave their jobs before finding better ones. In addition, businesses were reporting increasing
difficulty in hiring and retaining qualified workers. Growth in labor demand had been
outpacing sustainable increases in labor supply; these reports suggested that the risk of an
acceleration in labor compensation was rising.
In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period ahead, all the members
endorsed a proposal to maintain an unchanged policy stance, but several also indicated that
economic developments could well require a tightening of policy in the relatively near future.
Members observed in this regard that some factors that had contributed to a currently
subdued rate of inflation, notably the appreciation of the dollar, damped wage demands, and
relatively limited increases in the cost of health benefits, were not likely to continue to exert
the same restraining influence. Moreover, final demands had been unexpectedly strong, with
economic activity and the associated demand for labor expanding at an unsustainable pace
for some time, and it was unclear whether without policy action overall demands would
moderate sufficiently to avoid increasing pressures on resources. In the circumstances, the
risks to the economy appeared to be strongly tilted toward rising inflation whose emergence
would in turn threaten the sustainability of the expansion. Several members emphasized in
this regard that a tightening move could be most effective if it were implemented
preemptively, before inflation had time to gather upward momentum and become embedded
in financial asset prices and in business and consumer decisionmaking.
There were, nonetheless, a number of reasons for delaying a tightening of policy. The
behavior of inflation had been unexpectedly benign for an extended period of time for
reasons that were not fully understood. Forecasts of an upturn in inflation were therefore
subject to a considerable degree of uncertainty, and the expansion of economic activity could
still slow to a noninflationary pace. Members also commented that a policy tightening was
not anticipated at this time and such an action might therefore have unintended adverse
effects on financial markets. Members recognized that from the standpoint of the level of real
short-term interest rates, monetary policy could already be deemed to be fairly restrictive.
Several noted, however, that credit from a wide variety of lenders appeared to be amply
available in financial markets on favorable terms, perhaps overly so in present circumstances,
and some also noted that the strength in the broad measures of money in recent months
suggested that policy was not restraining liquidity or financial conditions more generally. In
the course of the Committee's discussion of these diverging considerations, a consensus
emerged for maintaining a steady policy course at this time, but members also expressed the
need for a heightened degree of vigilance as they continued to assess ongoing developments
for signs that inflation might intensify in the future.
In their discussion of possible adjustments to policy during the intermeeting period, all the
members indicated that they wanted to retain in the operating paragraph of the directive the
existing asymmetry toward restraint that was initially adopted at the May meeting. Such a
directive was consistent with their view that the risks continued to be biased toward rising
inflation and indeed with the view of most members that those risks might have increased.
Accordingly, while the probability that the incoming information would warrant a tightening
move during the intermeeting period might not be high, the members continued to view the
next policy move as more likely to be in the direction of some firming than toward easing.
At the conclusion of the Committee's discussion, all the members supported a directive that
called for maintaining conditions in reserve markets that were consistent with an unchanged
federal funds rate of about 5-1/2 percent. All the members also agreed on the desirability of
retaining a bias in the directive toward the possible firming of reserve conditions and a higher
federal funds rate during the intermeeting period. Accordingly, in the context of the
Committee's long-run objectives for price stability and sustainable economic growth, and
giving careful consideration to economic, financial, and monetary developments, the
Committee decided that a somewhat higher federal funds rate would be acceptable or a
slightly lower federal funds rate might be acceptable during the intermeeting period. The
reserve conditions contemplated at this meeting were expected to be consistent with some
moderation in the expansion in M2 and M3 over coming months.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York was authorized and directed, until instructed
otherwise by the Committee, to execute transactions in the System Account in accordance
with the following domestic policy directive:
The information reviewed at this meeting suggests that growth of economic
activity remains brisk. In labor markets, hiring continued robust over the
summer months and the civilian unemployment rate, at 4.9 percent in August,
remained near its low for the current economic expansion. Industrial production
increased considerably further in July and August. Retail sales have risen sharply
over recent months after a pause during the spring. Housing starts declined in
July and August, but home sales have been strong. Business fixed investment
has increased substantially further since mid-year and available indicators point
to further sizable gains in coming months. After narrowing somewhat in the
second quarter, the nominal deficit on U.S. trade in goods and services widened
substantially in July. Inventory investment in July was well below the average
pace in prior months of 1997. Price inflation has remained subdued and
increases in labor compensation have been moderate in recent months.
Most market interest rates are about unchanged on balance since the day before
the Committee meeting on August 19, 1997. Share prices in equity markets have
increased considerably over the period, with some stock price indexes reaching
new highs. In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar
in terms of the other G-10 currencies declined somewhat on balance over the
intermeeting period.
Growth of M2 appears to have moderated somewhat in September from a very
rapid pace in August, while expansion of M3 remained very strong in both
months. For the year through August, M2 expanded at a rate somewhat above
the upper bound of its range for the year and M3 at a rate substantially above the
upper bound of its range. Total domestic nonfinancial debt has continued to
expand in recent months at a pace near the middle of its range.
The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions
that will foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. In
furtherance of these objectives, the Committee at its meeting in July reaffirmed
the ranges it had established in February for growth of M2 and M3 of 1 to 5
percent and 2 to 6 percent respectively, measured from the fourth quarter of 1996
to the fourth quarter of 1997. The range for growth of total domestic
nonfinancial debt was maintained at 3 to 7 percent for the year. For 1998, the
Committee agreed on a tentative basis to set the same ranges as in 1997 for
growth of the monetary aggregates and debt, measured from the fourth quarter of
1997 to the fourth quarter of 1998. The behavior of the monetary aggregates will
continue to be evaluated in the light of progress toward price level stability,
movements in their velocities, and developments in the economy and financial
markets.
In the implementation of policy for the immediate future, the Committee seeks
conditions in reserve markets consistent with maintaining the federal funds rate
at an average of around 5-1/2 percent. In the context of the Committee's long-run
objectives for price stability and sustainable economic growth, and giving
careful consideration to economic, financial, and monetary developments, a
somewhat higher federal funds rate would or a slightly lower federal funds rate
might be acceptable in the intermeeting period. The contemplated reserve
conditions are expected to be consistent with some moderation in the growth of
M2 and M3 over coming months.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough, Broaddus, Guynn,
Kelley, Meyer, Moskow, Parry, Mses. Phillips and Rivlin.
Votes against this action: None.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Wednesday,
November 12, 1997.
The meeting adjourned at 12:45 p.m.
Donald L. Kohn
Secretary
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APA
Federal Reserve (1997, September 29). FOMC Minutes. Fomc Minutes, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/fomc_minutes_19970930
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_fomc_minutes_19970930,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {FOMC Minutes},
year = {1997},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Fomc Minutes, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/fomc_minutes_19970930},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}