speeches · May 31, 1978
Regional President Speech
John J. Balles · President
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO
FIGHTING INFLATION
Remarks of
John J. Balles, President
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Meeting with Salem Community Leaders
and Board of Directors, Portland Branch,
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Salem, Oregon
June 1,1978
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Fighting Inflation
I'm happy to have this chance to visit one of our nation's true
garden spots, to rub elbows with Governor Straub and the other leaders
of Oregon's capital city. I am especially pleased that I can meet with
you today under the sponsorship of the Board of Directors of our Portland
office -- an extremely able and diverse group of individuals.
I'd like to bring to your attention today the need to make an all-
out fight on inflation, especially in view of the way that inflation
undermines the national housing industry, and thereby Oregon's key lumber
industry. But before I begin, I would like to spend a few moments reviewing
the important role performed by directors of a Federal Reserve Bank, which
is unique among the central banks of the world. Only in the United States
does the nation's central bank benefit from a "grass-roots" input to
policy. Our directors are concerned with each of the four major jobs
delegated by Congress to the Federal Reserve -- that is, provision of
"wholesale" banking services such as coin, currency and check processing;
supervision and regulation of a large share of the nation's banking system;
administration of consuner-protection laws; and above all, the development
of monetary policy. We are fortunate in the advice we get from our directors
in each of these four areas.
The value of their advice is given greater weight by the diversity
of the occupations and groups which they represent. We have consistently
obtained the services of a wide range of very competent businessmen, bankers,
academicians and agriculturists. But in addition, I'm proud of the fact
that, among our five offices, our District has been the first in the Federal
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Reserve System to appoint a woman director, a Black director, an Asian-
American, and a Latin-American to these key positions. In Ken Smith's
case, I recently found that another Reserve Bank had preceded us in
appointing a Native-American director -- so Ken, with his many other
distinctions, will have to be known as the second Native-American Fed
director.
Scope of Directors' Advice
Let me give some examples of the ways in which the directors help
us evaluate and form recommendations on important policy issues, especially
those concerning the problem of inflation. On one recent occasion, Dr.
Jean Mater suggested that we look into the inflationary cost increases
associated with anti-pollution legislation. This led to the preparation
of an article on that subject by one of my staff members, David Condon,
in our Winter 1978 Economic Review. He pointed not only to the dollar
costs of pollution-control equipment, but in particular to the costly
delays resulting from uncertainty and the permit process, which tend to
reduce new capital spending and thereby create inflationary bottlenecks.
Again, Stub Stewart suggested that we look into the inflationary cost
increases for the housing industry associated with below-optimal cutting
of timber in the National Forests. (I understand that Governor Straub
has discussed this matter with President Carter; in fact, everyone in
Oregon seems to have discussed this problem with the people in Washington.)
This suggestion led to the preparation of an article by Yvonne Levy in the
same issue of our Economic Review, and to a full-scale presentation by the
author before the Portland Chamber of Commerce several weeks ago. Mrs. Levy
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
3
- -
pointed out that the National Forest Service's present harvest policy
fails to meet economic-efficiency criteria — that we need a more flexible
harvest strategy, better tailored to meet the requirements of the market,
to alleviate upward pressures on forest-product prices.
Our directors provide us not only with advice on policy issues, but
also with a constant flow of information on an area which is a key supplier
to both the national and the international economies. Thanks to them, we
realize now what a major role Oregon plays in the Sun Belt — a name which
I assume applies to the business climate rather than the meteorological
climate. Among the larger states, Oregon stood fifth in the nation in
terms of population growth over the 1970-77 period. That 13.6-percent
population increase thus has laid the foundations for a broad and diver
sified economy, and has reduced the state's dependence on the nation's
volatile housing industry. In typical Sun Belt fashion, Oregon's employment
last year alone increased by 8 percent -- more than double the strong increase
recorded elsewhere. And despite some signs of weakness in the national
housing picture, Oregon's economy should benefit this year from other
important developments -- such as the nationwide upturn in nonresidential-
building activity, the turnaround in the cattle market, the improvement
in crop prospects because of the end of the drought, and the improvement
in export prospects because of the depreciation of the dollar.
State of the Economy
But now, since Oregon depends so heavily on national trends, let's
consider what's going on in the U.S. economy. First the good news -- a
1 ittle-recognized piece of good news, by the way. The $2-tri11ion national
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
4
- -
economy is still in the midst of the strongest and the longest peacetime
expansion of the past quarter-century. The Korean War expansion was
somewhat stronger, and the Vietnam War expansion of the 1960's was somewhat
longer. But no other expansion of the past generation could match the
economy's recent performance -- an ability to churn out the yardage,
quarter after quarter, ever since the dismal days of early 1975. The
expansion has proceeded at a healthy 5.2-percent annual growth rate over
that three-year period, and only two of the quarters in that period have
been substandard in growth — including the weather-affected first quarter
of 1978.
Many experts have seriously underestimated the strength of this ex
pansion. One reason may be because time was needed to offset the preceding
recession -- the sharpest and steepest downturn of the past generation.
Another reason may be because of the continued high level of reported un
employment. However, we have created almost 10 million new jobs in this
three-year-old business expansion -- about as many as in the preceding
eight years put together. Indeed, the economy now seems to be effectively
fully employed. Scarcities of trained workers are developing, the index
of help-wanted advertising is at least a third higher than a year ago, and
the jobless rate among household heads is down to 3.7 percent. Admittedly,
there is a serious unemployment problem among some groups, such as black
teenagers. But those individuals can find employment only if we develop
better training programs or create more low-wage entry-level jobs -- and
not if we overheat the economy through shotgun-type programs of economic
stimulus.
At this stage, the big question is whether the expansion can continue,
or whether it will drift into recession. On balance we could expect some
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
5
- -
deceleration in activity, because of the strains beginning to show up in
the economy, but we should still be able to avoid recession. Housing and
autos, the sparkplugs of the earlier stages of the recovery, have again
strengthened in recent months. Still, they may weaken later, partly because
of the heavy load of debt assumed by consumers over the past several years.
Meanwhile, we are seeing a speed-up in activity by some of the former slow-
growing sectors of the economy. Spending by state and local governments
should accelerate, bolstered by Federal grants and by the expanding economy's
boost to tax revenues. Defense spending may become more expansive, as
indicated by the growth of military prime-contract awards, which are run
ning sharply above a year ago.
The prospects for this expansion, and for much else besides, depend
heavily on what occurs in business plant-and-equipment spending. At long
last, we're beginning to get some optimistic signals from this sector.
Indeed, the latest spending surveys suggest a definite turn in sentiment.
Moreover, the leading series for business capital investment — capital-
goods orders and construction-contract awards — both indicate a significant
upturn in this key sector of the economy.
Inflation Problem
Altogether, there still seems to be considerable life left in the
business expansion. But now let's turn to the bad news -- the upsurge
in prices. Indeed, the relatively optimistic outlook for the economy
could be undermined by a worsening of inflationary expectations among
consumers and business people. Hence, I want to stress today the vital
need to come to grips with the inflation problem.
The President's Economic Report early in the year said that an inflation
rate of about 6 percent had become imbedded in the economy. Unfortunately,
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
6
- -
events seem to have overtaken even that dismal statistic. Food prices,
always highly visible, increased at a 16-percent annual rate during the
first quarter of the year. Consumer prices exclusive of the volatile
food and energy components-- that is, items accounting for three-fourths
of the entire consumer market basket -- rose at an 8-percent rate during
the winter months, in contrast to their much lower 5-percent rate of
increase during the second half of 1977. Then in April, wholesale prices
rose sharply, while the closely watched monthly survey of corporate pur
chasing agents showed a very sharp increase in the number who reported
paying higher prices. Everyone is now paying more for steel -- that basic
metal underpinning our entire economy -- and everyone is now paying more
for other essential materials. On the inflation front at least, Murphy’s
Law seems to have taken over.
Well, what are we going to do about it? If we believe in the old
definition that inflation means too much money chasing too few goods, we
can see the necessity for a double-pronged attack. First, let's consider
how we can overcome bottlenecks and provide more goods to the economy.
I've already mentioned some of the proposals our directors and staff have
made about ways to overcome inflationary cost increases. And over the
long run, we've got to find more ways of boosting the supply of products
for households and business firms through improvements in efficiency.
Steady increases in productivity, at a 2.2-percent annual rate over the
past half-century or more, have brought us our present high standard of
living, and further increases are necessary for providing us with the
supplies we need today at stable prices.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
7
- -
Boosting Productivity
We can't take future productivity growth for granted. As I've
suggested, there are lots of extra costs -- for environmental and safety
legislation, for example — which create substantial benefits but tend
to lower productivity in the process. In the 1970's, the cost of such
programs has been about one-fourth as large as the annual average pro
ductivity increase of the several preceding decades. But there are also
some prospective plus signs in the productivity outlook. That famous
baby-boom generation — the one that we parents despaired of in the 1960's
-- is now being magically transformed into a bumper crop of experienced
and productive adults. To reach their full potential, however, they need
lots of new capital equipment to work with.
Our future productivity growth -- which means our future standard of
living -- thus depends on increased investment. And how do we stimulate
growth in the nation's capital stock? First of all, through tax measures
designed to enhance investment. We should reduce the corporate tax rate,
as a means of boosting after-tax profits and thus providing business firms
with more funds to invest. We should liberalize the investment-tax credit,
specifically by extending the credit to business structures and not simply
to short-lived assets. We should also extend that credit to research-and-
development spending, because R&D provides us with the precious seed corn
necessary for the productivity advances of future decades. But we also
need a stable financial environment so that business firms will be willing
to risk their funds -- which brings us back to the other (and more im
mediate) requirement for curbing inflation.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
8
- -
Curbing Deficit Spending
We must, above all, curb the excess creation of dollars. That means
we must deal with the overstimulus achieved through massive Federal budget
deficits, which in turn have created pressures on the Federal Reserve to
ensure the financing of those deficits. Our recent worries, including
the decline of the dollar overseas, can be traced in large part to the
highly inflationary implications of a widening Federal deficit in the-midst
of a strong business expansion, from $45 billion in fiscal 1977 to $53
billion in fiscal 1978. And despite the reduction and postponement of the
proposed income-tax cut — which was a badly needed move in the right
direction — the deficit is likely to exceed $50 billion again in the
next fiscal year. At this stage of the business cycle, we should be
moving rapidly toward a budget balance or even a surplus, primarily by
bringing spending under control. Instead, Congress voted recently to
boost spending $45 billion to $499 billion next year -- a sharp 10-percent
increase.
We all welcome President Carter's threat to exercise his veto author
ity to keep spending under control. We also appreciate his call for
private decision makers to keep wage and price increases significantly
below the averages of the past two years. But we should recognize the
limitations of such incomes policies, which tend to treat symptoms rather
than causes. In the present case, organized labor has already rejected
the idea of wage restraints, preferring to see first what happens to
prices. And in the last analysis, the historical record clearly shows
that incomes policies don't work against inflation, in the absence of
fiscal and monetary restraints.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
9
- -
Inflation and Monetary Policy
Up to now, the Federal Reserve has carried most of the burden of
fighting inflation. The Fed is playing its accustomed role, attempting
to balance the amount of credit available with the U.S. economy's ability
to produce goods and services. In recent months, with excess demand
showing up in the economy, the Fed has had to act by tightening up on
bank reserves -- and as a result, we've seen a significant rise in short
term interest rates.
Now, the Fed certainly does not take any perverse pride in watching
interest rates go up. It acts to tighten money only as a means of curbing
inflation, because it knows fully well that the only certain way to keep
rates low in the long run is to wring inflation expectations out of the
economy. (After all, it is these expectations that cause lenders to demand
more and more for the use of their money.) To achieve its goals, the Fed
specifically intends to maintain money growth at a slower pace this year
than last, especially since we overshot our targets on money-supply growth
last year. This point emphasizes the Fed's firm commitment to a gradual
reduction in money growth to a pace more nearly consistent with reasonable
price stability, while still providing adequate money and credit for con
tinued economic growth.
Concluding Remarks
All in all, the economy and the financial markets remain in relatively
good shape at this stage of the business expansion. But to continue on the
right path, we must reverse the accelerated inflation that has occurred so
far in 1973. And bringing inflation under control requires a joint effort
on the part of all sectors of the economy — government and private alike.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
10
- -
Federal Reserve Chairman Miller recently said that the Fed will be doing
its "day-to-day, week-to-week, month-to-month job of leaning against in
flation," but the Fed can’t do the job alone. In fact, final success in
the fight against inflation means curbing Federal deficit spending.
For Oregonians, the fight against inflation should be even more
crucial than it is for others, because of inflation's double impact on
the state's economy. Oregonians, like everyone else, suffer from the
cutback in purchasing power caused by inflation. But you also suffer
from the impact of rising prices on the nation's housing industry, and
thereby on the state's crucial lumber industry. As you've seen in the
past, the upward pressure of inflation on market interest rates could lead
to an outflow of funds from the nation's thrift institutions, and could
thus reduce the amount of funds these institutions have available to lend
on mortgages. Moreover, the high rates the thrifts would then have to
charge for mortgage money would sharply increase the amounts needed to
carry monthly payments, and thus force increasing numbers of families out
of the housing market. So my final message is this -- until inflation is
defeated, Oregon's key industry, and the state's economy as a whole, could
remain at the end of the line in a continuing game of crack the whip.
# # # #
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
John J. Balles (1978, May 31). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19780601_john_j_balles
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19780601_john_j_balles,
author = {John J. Balles},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1978},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19780601_john_j_balles},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}