speeches · January 5, 1949
Regional President Speech
Karl R. Bopp · President
BUSINESS AND BANKING PROSPECTS FOR 1949
address by
KARL R. BOPP
Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
before the
FINANCIAL ANALYSTS
Homestead Restaurant, Phila., Pa* - January 6, 1949
Introduction
1. Have no communion with burning bush*
2* Beginning of year statements
"Business is just aa changeable and unpredictable as the
weather* No sooner are the skies clearing and the winds
stilled when we read the morning weather forecast - in
creasing cloudiness today, with snow beginning late tonight;
cloudy and colder tomorrow.
"By tomorrow the snowstorm blowing in from the northwest
may be joined by another blowing in from the Atlantic. Or
both may be precipitated into rain by unexpected southerly
winds.
"In like manner the elements that make up our business
climete are always changing* About the only thing we can
be sure of is that tomorrow will be different. How much
different we do not know, nor whether it will be better
or worse."
3* Text: "I have been faithful to thee, Cynara, in my fashion."
- Ernest Dowson
Meaning depends on emphasis.
I. Is the boom running out?
A. How near is closer? - year 2000
B. Postwar adjustments
1. Demobilization - reconversion
reduced Governmental expenditures
2. The fall of 1946 - sharp break in stock prices
- implication for business expansion
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- a -
3« The first half of 1947 - weakness in non-durables
Inventories appeared excessive - shazp break in
Consumer resistance said to be high
4« First quarter 1948 - February break in farm prices
Large Treasury cash surplus
5. Summer 1948 - bumper crops
6. November-December - slump in retail sales
C. Interpretations of why we rode through these readjustments
1. Extraordinary strength of inflationary forces
(a) Large backlog demands and liquid assets
(b) Ready availability of credit at low rates
(c) Non-resistant wage policies
(d) Government spending
(e) Foreign demand
2. Readjustments reflect basic weakness - we have been
saved only by fortuitous shots in the arm
(a) End of 1945 - business inventories
(b) All of 1946 - rapid increase in equipment and construction*
Rapid increase in consumer durable goods.
(c) Spring of 1947 - net exports
(d) Sumner of 1947 - strategic coal wage increase
(e) Fall of 1947 - short corn crop
Cashing Veterans1 leave bonds
(f) 1948 - EBP
Larger defense
Reduction in personal taxes
D. At any rate we have had inflation
1939 - October 1948
Consumer prices / 75*
Wholesale " / 120
Weekly factory earnings / 126
Corporate profits (after tax) / 300
/
Net incone of faxm propr. 320
Digitized for FRASER
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 3 -
E. Why hasn't more been done about inflation?
1. Great increase in standard of living
Since 1939
19U
Since 1939 because we are fully employed
Since 1944 because we are producing civilian goods
2. Increases widely distributed
Not equally - some ^ proportion of total but T absolutely
Very few, not politically powerful, have had decreases
in real income
3. iear of deflation
II. Indications of weakness - the case for early recession
A. Raymond Rodgers' "Why Slump?"
1. Record harvest
2. Retail sales have stopped climbing - "real" volume
(a) Household appliances
washing machines (FRB Chicago -
(b) Men's suits j ewelry
(c) Women's wear entertainment
(d) Shoes drugs
(e) Used cars shoes
men's clothing
3. Inventories can't go much higher radios
auto accessories dept.)
(a) Cotton
(*) Stainless steel
(c) Hardwood lumber
(a) Secondary brass and aluminum
(e) Some vegetable oils
Export boom off
5« Housing boom weakening
6. Increase in saving - residual item
B. Impressive list - reason for pause
Before we are convinced, let us take a systematic look at
expenditure and production prospects
Digitized for FRASER
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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III. Expenditure and production prospects
(Memo)
IV. Wherein does post-War II differ from I?
A. Public versus private debt
Availability of funds for expansion
B. Preparedness and armament
Boom superimposed upon restocking boom
C. Greater concern for full employment
V. Implications for banks
Over-all versus shifts
Digitized for FRASER
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
DISTRIBUTION OF GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT FOR SELECTED PERIODS
(Percentage of total by types of expenditures)
1948, 1946,
third first
Type of expenditure 1944 1939 1929
quar quar
ter ter
Government purchases of goods and services . 14.7 17.9 45.5 14.4 8.2
8.7 13.4 41.9 5.7 1.3
6*1 4.6 3.5 8.7 6.9
15.2 10.9 3.0 10.0 15.2
5.8 3.7 1.1 4.4 7.5
8.4 4.5 2.5 5.1 6.2
Change in farm and nonfarm inventories • 1.1 2.7 - .6 .5 1.5
- ItP 1*9 t7
— *1
Personal consumption expenditures . , »J2i£ 69.8 52.5 74.6 75.9
9.2 6.2 3.2 7.4 9.0
Nondurable goods............. . • • 40.2 42.2 31.8 39.0 36.4
Services • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 20.3 21.3 17.5 28.2 30.5
Gross national product, total:
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
255.9 196.1 212.2 90.4 103.8
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT
Annual Bates Annual Bates
Billions $ Billions ^
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
Karl R. Bopp (1949, January 5). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19490106_karl_r_bopp
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19490106_karl_r_bopp,
author = {Karl R. Bopp},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1949},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19490106_karl_r_bopp},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}