speeches · December 8, 1986
Regional President Speech
Robert T. Parry · President
IERAL RESERVE RANK OFFICE OF
' SAN FRANCISCO THE PRESIDENT
A PERSPECTIVE ON THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ROBERT T. PARRY
PRESIDENT
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO
JOINT MEETING
OF
THE SALT LAKE CITY ROTARY CLUB
AND
THE SALT LAKE AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ DECEMBER 9, 1986
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
1
- -
Good morning ladies and ge n tl eme n, It certainly is a
PLEASURE TO BE ABLE TO SHARE SOME THOUGHTS WITH YOU ON THE
OUTLOOK FOR THE ECONOMY, BUT I ALSO WANT TO MENTION A FEW
UNCERTAINTIES THAT ARE CLOUDING THE CRYSTAL BALL, FINALLY/
I'D LIKE TO MENTION VERY BRIEFLY SOME OF THE CHALLENGES TO
MONETARY POLICY PRESENTED BY THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK AND BY
THOSE TROUBLING UNCERTAINTIES.
AS I'M SURE MOST OF YOU KNOW/ ECONOMIC GROWTH IN THE
United States has slowed re c e n t l y , raising concern in many
QUARTERS THAT THE CURRENT EXPANSION IS COMING TO AN END.
After growing at an acceptable, but unspectacular, 3
PERCENT RATE DURING 1985, GROWTH IN THE ECONOMY'S OUTPUT
HAS SLOWED TO A 2.4 PERCENT ANNUAL RATE SO FAR THIS YEAR.
Over the past year and a-half, the U.S. unemployment
RATE HAS BEEN STUCK BETWEEN 6 3/4 AND 7 1/4 PERCENT "
SOMEWHAT higher than the 6 TO 6 1/2 PERCENT THAT APPEARS TO
REPRESENT "FULL" EMPLOYMENT IN THE U.S. ECONOMY.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
2
- -
Mo r e o v e r , capacity utilization in manufacturing actually
HAS DECLINED RATHER SUBSTANTIALLY,
Despite these relatively lackluster national
STATISTICS, I BELIEVE THAT A PICK~UP IN THE U.S. ECONOMY IS
IN THE OFFING. OVER THE NEXT YEAR, I THINK THAT THE U.S.
ECONOMY WILL GROW AT AROUND A 3 PERCENT RATE, AND THAT SOME
PROGRESS WILL BE MADE TOWARDS ACHIEVING A FULLER EMPLOYMENT
OF BOTH LABOR AND CAPITAL.
The outlook for the U.S. economy is subject to a
NUMBER OF MAJOR UNCERTAINTIES, PERHAPS MORE THAN USUAL.
And just as these uncertainties create difficulties for
THOSE OF YOU MAKING BUSINESS PLANS FOR THE COMING YEAR,
THEY ALSO MAKE THE Fe d 's JOB OF FORECASTING ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENTS AND OF DESIGNING MONETARY POLICY MORE
DIFFICULT.
The Fundamentals
' There are two fundamental factors that lead me to my
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
3
- -
FAIRLY OPTIMISTIC OUTLOOK FOR THE ECONOMY NEXT YEAR,
F irst, the international value of the dollar has
DROPPED SUBSTANTIALLY WITH RESPECT TO MAJOR CURRENCIES
since February of last y e a r , This drop enables U.S.
EXPORTERS TO COMPETE MORE EFFECTIVELY IN MARKETS ABROAD,
WHILE FOREIGN PRODUCERS FIND IT MORE DIFFICULT TO SELL
THEIR GOODS AND SERVICES IN OUR MARKETS, I BELIEVE OUR
TRADE DEFICIT IS BEGINNING TO IMPROVE AND THAT IT SHOULD
CONTRIBUTE SIGNIFICANTLY TO ECONOMIC GROWTH NEXT YEAR,
Second , interest rates in the United States have
FALLEN SHARPLY THIS YEAR, CONTINUING A TREND THAT BEGAN IN
THE LATTER HALF OF 1984, LOWER INTEREST RATES PROVIDE
SUPPORT TO THE INTEREST-SENSITIVE SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY,
INCLUDING SPENDING FOR PLANT AND EQUIPMENT, CONSUMER
DURABLES, AND RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES, THIS DECLINE IN
INTEREST RATES HAS BEEN FACILITATED AND ENCOURAGED BY
Federal Reserve monetary p o l i c y , Four times this y e a r , the
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
n -
-
DISCOUNT RATE HAS BEEN CUT/ FOR A TOTAL REDUCTION OF 2
PERCENTAGE POINTS, LOWER INTEREST RATES HAVE BEEN AN
IMPORTANT FACTOR IN KEEPING THE ECONOMIC EXPANSION GOING
INTO WHAT IS NOW ITS FOURTH YEAR.
Mortgage rates have been a part of the general fall in
RATES/ PRODUCING SIGNIFICANT EXPANSION IN HOMEBUILDING,
W ith the support of lower interest r a t e s , construction of
SINGLE-FAMILY HOUSES IN THE U.S. SHOULD CONTINUE AT A
HEALTHY RATE THROUGH THE END OF NEXT YEAR. HOWEVER,
PASSAGE OF THE TAX REFORM BILL ALREADY HAS BEGUN TO
DISCOURAGE NEW MULTI-FAMILY CONSTRUCTION, AND I WOULD NOT
BE SURPRISED TO SEE MULTI-FAMILY STARTS DOWN SUBSTANTIALLY
IN 1987 COMPARED WITH THIS YEAR.
The DECLINE IN LONG-TERM INTEREST RATES HAS NOT YET
STIMULATED BUSINESS SPENDING FOR CONSTRUCTION AND
EQUIPMENT. This PROBABLY IS A RESULT OF LARGE UNUSED
CAPACITY, DISLOCATIONS IN THE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRIES/ AND
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
5
- -
HIGH OFFICE VACANCY RATES. HOWEVER/ I EXPECT MORE ACTIVITY
OF THIS TYPE THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY AS THE ECONOMY BEGINS
TO EXPAND MORE RAPIDLY AND SALES PROSPECTS IMPROVE, So,
GENERALLY I'M OPTIMISTIC. BUT MY OPTIMISM IS TEMPERED BY
SEVERAL AREAS OF UNCERTAINTY.
Areas of Uncertainty
ONE MAJOR UNCERTAINTY IS HOW MUCH OF AN IMPROVEMENT IN
OUR TRADE DEFICIT ACTUALLY WILL RESULT FROM THE DECLINE IN
THE DOLLAR. DATA THROUGH THE SECOND QUARTER DIDN'T GIVE
ANY SIGNS THAT THE TRADE DEFICIT HAD BEGUN TO IMPROVE/ EVEN
THOUGH THE DOLLAR HAD BEEN DEPRECIATING FOR MORE THAN A
YEAR .
Recently released statistics for the third quarter
PROVIDE MORE ROOM FOR OPTIMISM. ALTHOUGH THE INCREASE IN
EXPORTS OF GOODS AND SERVICES CONTINUED TO FALL SHORT OF
THE INCREASE IN IMPORTS, A GOOD PART OF OUR IMPORTS WERE
OIL. If WE EXCLUDE OIL IMPORTS, WHICH ARE PRICED IN
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
6
- -
DOLLARS AND THUS ARE NOT VERY RESPONSIVE TO EXCHANGE RATES/
OUR FOREIGN BALANCE ACTUALLY IMPROVED IN THE THIRD QUARTER,
This is encouraging, but we should not forget that our
TRADE DEFICIT STILL IS FAR LARGER THAN WE EXPECTED, GIVEN
THE HUGE DROP IN THE DOLLAR.
One REASON FOR A DELAYED IMPROVEMENT IN THE TRADE
BALANCE APPEARS TO BE THAT EXCHANGE RATE CHANGES AREN'T
BEING PASSED THROUGH TO IMPORT PRICES AS QUICKLY AS THEY
USED TO BE, THE PRICE OF IMPORTED GOODS OTHER THAN
PETROLEUM DIDN'T PICK UP SIGNIFICANTLY RELATIVE TO DOMESTIC
PRICES UNTIL THE SECOND QUARTER OF 1986, MORE THAN A YEAR
AFTER THE DOLLAR BEGAN ITS SHARP DEPRECIATION,
A SECOND REASON FOR THIS DELAYED IMPROVEMENT IS THAT
THE DOLLAR HAS DROPPED A LOT LESS AGAINST THE CURRENCIES OF
SOME OF OUR TRADING PARTNERS THAN IT HAS AGAINST THOSE OF
OTHER PARTNERS, SUCH AS JAPAN AND THE MAJOR EUROPEAN
COUNTRIES. IN SOME CASES THE DOLLAR HAS ACTUALLY RISEN
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
7
- -
AGAINST THE CURRENCIES OF SOME TRADING PARTNERS — CANADA
AND A FEW OF THE SO-CALLED NEWLY INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES/
OR NICS FOR SHORT, THE LARGE DROP IN THE DOLLAR WE ALL
HAVE READ ABOUT PROBABLY IS SOMEWHAT OVERSTATED/ BECAUSE
MOST OF THE COMMONLY CITED EXCHANGE-RATE STATISTICS EXCLUDE
NICs.
Trade with these countries has become very
SIGNIFICANT, THE SIX MOST IMPORTANT NICs “SOUTH KOREA/
Hong Ko n g , S ingapore/ Tai w a n , Mexico and Brazil — accounted
FOR FULLY 36 BILLION DOLLARS OF THE TOTAL U.S. TRADE
DEFICIT OF 149 BILLION DOLLARS IN 1985. AND SINCE EXCHANGE
RATES WITH THESE COUNTRIES HAVEN'T CHANGED MUCH IN RECENT
YEARS, TRADE DEFICITS WITH THEM MAY NOT IMPROVE MUCH IN THE
YEAR AHEAD.
F iscal Policy
Another major source of uncertainty in the outlook is
FISCAL POLICY. THE EXTENT TO WHICH THE GRAMM-RUDMAN
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
8
- -
DEFICIT-REDUCTION LEGISLATION ACTUALLY WILL LEAD TO LOWER
FEDERAL SPENDING HAS BEEN A SOURCE OF SPECULATION IN THE
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR SOME TIME. On PAPER/ THE CONGRESS
OVERSHOT THE 144 BILLION DOLLAR GRAMM-RUDMAN TARGET FOR THE
DEFICIT IN FISCAL YEAR 1987 BY THE TEN BILLION DOLLARS THAT
THE LEGISLATION ALLOWED. HOWEVER, BECAUSE OF THE PECULIAR
BUDGET ARITHMETIC PERMITTED BY THE LEGISLATION, THE ACTUAL
DEFICIT FOR 1987, INSTEAD OF BEING 154 BILLION DOLLARS, IS
LIKELY TO REACH 180 BILLION DOLLARS. STILL, THAT WOULD BE
A SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION FROM AN ESTIMATED DEFICIT OF 221
BILLION DOLLARS FOR FISCAL 1986. A REDUCTION IN THE
DEFICIT OF THIS MAGNITUDE WOULD GREATLY SLOW THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT'S CONTRIBUTION TO ECONOMIC GROWTH NEXT YEAR,
OFFSETTING A LARGE PART OF THE EXPANSIONARY EFFECT OF
TODAY'S WEAKER DOLLAR AND LOWER INTEREST RATES.
Some industries could be particularly affected by the
SLOWDOWN IN GOVERNMENT SPENDING. FOR EXAMPLE, DEFENSE
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
9
- -
CUTBACKS WILL LIKELY CUT GROWTH PROSPECTS FOR THE AREOSPACE
INDUSTRY, ALTHOUGH THE IMPACT COULD BE DELAYED UNTIL 1988
OR LATER BECAUSE OF DEFENSE ORDERS ALREADY IN THE PIPELINE.
Bu t , as with the trade ba l a n c e , we face a good measure of
UNCERTAINTY ABOUT HOW MUCH THE BUDGET DEFICIT REALLY WILL
DECLINE, I DON'T THINK WE'LL HAVE A GOOD FIX ON THAT UNTIL
ABOUT THE TIME WE FIND OUT THE WINNER OF THE 1987 WORLD
Series--a BIT LATE FOR FORECASTING PURPOSES.
ON THE REVENUE SIDE OF THE BUDGET, THE TAX REFORM BILL
ALSO RAISES UNCERTAINTIES ABOUT THE FUTURE PERFORMANCE OF
THE ECONOMY. ASIDE FROM QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE EFFECT OF
THE TAX CHANGE ON THE ECONOMY'S LONG-RUN GROWTH RATE, THERE
ARE MORE IMMEDIATE QUESTIONS CONCERNING ITS IMPACT ON NEXT
YEAR. THE COST OF CAPITAL FOR BUSINESS WILL BE RAISED
SIGNIFICANTLY BY THE ELIMINATION OF THE INVESTMENT TAX
CREDIT, THE LENGTHENING OF SERVICE LIVES FOR DEPRECIATION,
AND THE ELIMINATION OF THE TAX ADVANTAGES TO LIMITED
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
10
- -
BUSINESS PARTNERSHIPS, ALTHOUGH THE REDUCTION IN THE
CORPORATE TAX RATE WILL PROVIDE SOME OFFSET/ THE NET EFFECT
STILL IS LIKELY TO BE UNFAVORABLE FOR BUSINESS INVESTMENT
IN 1987.
Eve n t u a l l y , this negative effect on growth will tend
TO BE OFFSET BY HIGHER HOUSEHOLD SPENDING IN RESPONSE TO
LOWER PERSONAL INCOME TAXES. HOWEVER, BECAUSE OF THE WAY
THE TAX REFORMS FOR INDIVIDUALS ARE PHASED-IN OVER TIME/
THE MAJOR STIMULUS TO PERSONAL CONSUMPTION PROBABLY WON'T
come until 1988. Thus tax reform should have a net
NEGATIVE IMPACT ON GNP, LOWERING REAL GROWTH BY CLOSE TO
1/2 PERCENT. But, ONCE AGAIN/ it's VERY DIFFICULT TO BE ON
SOLID GROUND PREDICTING THE EXACT IMPACT, GIVEN THE
TREMENDOUS NUMBER OF TAX CHANGES BEING MADE SIMULTANEOUSLY,
O il Prices
A FINAL MAJOR SOURCE OF UNCERTAINTY ABOUT FUTURE
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
11
- -
ECONOMIC GROWTH IS THE EXTENT AND DURATION OF DISLOCATION
IN THE OIL INDUSTRY CAUSED BY THE DROP IN THE PRICE OF OIL
this y e a r , Prospects for some improvement in this area
WERE ENHANCED WHEN THE NEW OPEC PRODUCTION QUOTAS CAUSED
THE PRICE OF OIL TO JUMP TO THE H TO 16 DOLLAR PER BARREL
RANGE, COMPARED WITH JUST OVER 11 DOLLARS PER BARREL IN
late July, If the price of oil stays at around its present
LEVEL/ THE MAJOR DISLOCATIONS IN THE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRIES
PROBABLY ARE BEHIND US/ AND WE SHOULD SEE SOME RECOVERY IN
EMPLOYMENT AND CAPITAL SPENDING LATER THIS YEAR AND
THROUGHOUT NEXT YEAR, OF COURSE/ THIS ASSESSMENT COULD
TURN OUT TO BE OVERLY OPTIMISTIC FOR THESE INDUSTRIES/
SINCE THE OPEC AGREEMENT TO LIMIT PRODUCTION IS VERY
FRAGILE.
Uncertainty about the future price of oil also raises
a question about what will happen to inflation next y e a r .
The dramatic drop in oil prices this year caused both
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
12
- -
CONSUMER AND PRODUCER PRICES ACTUALLY TO FALL FOR THE FIRST
FOUR MONTHS OF THIS YEAR, AND SHOULD HELP TO KEEP INFLATION
TO AROUND 2 1/2 PERCENT FOR ALL OF 1986. THIS WOULD BE THE
LOWEST RATE OF INFLATION, AS MEASURED BY THE GNP DEFLATOR,
REGISTERED SINCE 1967. ALTHOUGH THIS IS VERY ENCOURAGING
WE SHOULD NOT FORGET THAT, WITH THE OIL-PRICE "SHOCK",
INFLATION THIS YEAR PROBABLY HAS BEEN BELOW ITS LONG-RUN,
OR UNDERLYING RATE.
Next y e a r , if the price of oil stays at its present
LEVEL, AND THUS DOES NOT PROVIDE ANOTHER DOWNWARD THRUST TO
PRICES, THE WEAKER DOLLAR FEEDING THROUGH IN THE FORM OF
HIGHER COSTS OF IMPORTS WILL BE THE DOMINANT INFLUENCE ON
PRICE MOVEMENTS. In THIS CASE, INFLATION COULD RISE BY AS
MUCH AS A FULL PERCENTAGE POINT OVER ITS EXPECTED RATE OF
INCREASE THIS YEAR. HOWEVER, A COLLAPSE OF THE RECENT OPEC
AGREEMENT AND CONSEQUENT FALL IN OIL PRICES AGAIN COULD
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 13 -
PUSH INFLATION BELOW ITS UNDERLYING RATE NEXT YEAR, So,
ALONG WITH A LOT OF OIL, OPEC SUPPLIES US WITH A LOT OF
"iFS" FOR OUR INFLATION FORECAST.
Challenges to Monetary Policy
These uncertainties in the outlook -- the trade
BALANCE, FISCAL POLICY, AND OIL PRICES ” PROVIDE
FORMIDABLE CHALLENGES FOR MONETARY POLICY, THE ECONOMY'S
FAILURE TO SHOW CLEAR SIGNS OF SUSTAINED, HEALTHY GROWTH,
MAKES IT TEMPTING TO ARGUE THAT, FOR SAFETY'S SAKE,
MONETARY POLICY SHOULD LEAN FURTHER TOWARD BOOSTING
PRODUCTION.
Current statistics, however, can be a misleading
g u i d e . It takes time for the effects of monetary policy to
WORK THEIR WAY THROUGH THE ECONOMY. COMPLICATING MATTERS
EVEN FURTHER, THERE ARE LAGS IN RECEIVING RELIABLE DATA ON
WHAT ACTUALLY HAS HAPPENED TO IMPORTANT INDICATORS SUCH AS
REAL GNP AND THE BALANCE OF TRADE. SOMETIMES WE DON'T
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
14
- -
REALLY KNOW WHERE WE'VE BEEN UNTIL WE'RE ALREADY SOMEWHERE
e l s e . G iven these difficulties, a policy of continually
LOWERING INTEREST RATES UNTIL THERE IS UNAMBIGUOUS EVIDENCE
OF AN IMPACT ON THE ECONOMY RUNS A REAL RISK ~ A RISK THAT
POLICY INADVERTENTLY WILL BECOME TOO STIMULATIVE, RAISING
THE SPECTER OF REEMERGING INFLATIONARY PRESSURES.
By MY CALCULATIONS, THE EASING OF MONETARY POLICY OVER
THE PAST YEAR SHOULD BE CONSISTENT WITH THE ECONOMY GROWING
AT A HEALTHY, SUSTAINABLE PACE NEXT YEAR. BUT ALTHOUGH
THIS OUTLOOK IS APPEALING, WE MUST RECOGNIZE THAT WITH THE
ECONOMY POISED TO MOVE TOWARD A FULLER UTILIZATION OF ITS
RESOURCES, INFLATIONARY PRESSURES COULD RE"EMERGE.
This inflationary risk is heightened in my mind by
THE RECENT BEHAVIOR OF THE MONETARY AGGREGATES, WHICH WE AT
THE Fed USE AS INDICATORS OF THE FUTURE IMPACT OF MONETARY
p o l i c y . The broader monetary aggregates, M2 and M3, both
ARE NEAR THE UPPER BOUNDARIES OF THEIR TARGET RANGES THIS
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
15
- -
YEAR ,
Th u s , although Federal Reserve Policy actions must
REFLECT CONCERN ABOUT THE CURRENT SLUGGISHNESS OF THE
ECONOMY, WE MUST BALANCE THIS CONCERN AGAINST THE RISK THAT
TOO MUCH EASE MIGHT LEAD TO PROBLEMS WITH INFLATION IN THE
YEARS TO COME, BALANCING THESE CONCERNS IS THE WAY WE AT
THE Fed CAN DO OUR JOB BEST " PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE
ECONOMIC GROWTH, WHILE ENSURING THAT CONTINUED PROGRESS IS
MADE TOWARD PRICE STABILITY,
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 16 -
Overview of the Utah Economy
Ut a h 's ec onom y, like the n ati on's has experienced
WEAKENING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY DURING THE PAST FEW MONTHS,
Civilian employment growth in Utah registered 3,2 percent
between October 1985 and October 1986, which was slower than
THE YEAR-OVER-YEAR GROWTH RATE OF 4.8 PERCENT REGISTERED IN
January but still faster than the U.S. employment growth
RATE OF 2,2 PERCENT, THE MINING AND MANUFACTURING SECTORS
in Utah have been weak for the past few y e a r s , but
STAGNATING CONSUMER SPENDING IN UTAH ALSO HAS CONTRIBUTED TO
THE YEAR'S SLOWDOWN, SOME EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT
MANUFACTURING AND MINING ACTIVITY MAY STRENGTHEN DURING THE
COMING MONTHS. As A RESULT, GROWTH IN EMPLOYMENT AND
PERSONAL INCOME SHOULD BE A LITTLE STRONGER NEXT YEAR THAN
IT WAS THIS YEAR,
AS HAS BEEN TRUE NATIONALLY, TRADE AND SERVICE
ACTIVITY HAS BEEN STRONGER THAN HAS THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 17 -
But in Utah a noticeable weakening has taken place this
y e a r . While employment growth in trade and services
registered 5.8 percent between January 1985 and January
1986/ THAT PACE HAD FALLEN TO 3 PERCENT BY OCTOBER. A
SURVEY CONDUCTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH SURVEY RESEARCH
Bureau suggests that the slowdown in consumer spending may
CONTINUE DURING THE COMING MONTHS. ACCORDING TO THE SURVEY/
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE AMONG UTAH RESIDENTS FELL 9 PERCENTAGE
POINTS BETWEEN JANUARY AND SEPTEMBER. NEVERTHELESS, IT IS
IMPORTANT TO NOTE THAT THE UTAH CONSUMER CONFIDENCE INDEX IS
STILL HIGHER THAN IT WAS A YEAR AGO AND ALSO IS MUCH HIGHER
THAN THE LEVELS REGISTERED DURING THE LATE 1970s AND EARLY
1980s. THUS, WHILE THE CURRENT STATISTIC REPRESENTS A
DECLINE SINCE JANUARY/ ITS CURRENT LEVEL REMAINS HIGH BY
HISTORICAL STANDARDS.
The CONSTRUCTION SECTOR LIKEWISE HAS SUFFERED FROM
WEAKNESS IN RECENT MONTHS/ AS THE 8.5 PERCENT DECLINE IN
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 18 -
CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYMENT DURING THE ONE-YEAR PERIOD FROM
October 1985 to October 1986 indicates, Weakness is
EXPECTED TO CONTINUE IN THE NONRESI DENT IAL AND MULTIFAMILY
SEGMENTS OF THE MARKET, BUT, AS IS TRUE NATIONALLY, SINGLE
FAMILY BUILDING SHOULD GROW IF INTEREST RATES REMAIN LOW.
The MANUFACTURING AND MINING SECTORS HAVE BEEN
WEAKENING UTAH'S ECONOMY, LIKE THE NATION'S, FOR THE PAST
FEW YEARS, SOME PRELIMINARY SIGNALS SUGGEST THAT THESE
SECTORS MAY BE IN FOR A TURNAROUND IN THE MONTHS AHEAD. THE
DECLINING VALUE OF THE DOLLAR IS EXPECTED TO IMPROVE U.S.
MANUFACTURERS' COMPETITIVE POSITIONS ON WORLD MARKETS.
Preliminary trade data suggest that the long-awaited
IMPROVEMENTS MAY BE IN THE PIPELINE AT LAST. In ADDITION,
ANECDOTAL EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT ORDERS FOR SOME U.S.-MADE
PRODUCTS ARE INCREASING FROM EUROPE, JAPAN, AND TAIWAN, IN
RESPONSE TO THE LOWER DOLLAR, AS WELL AS BECAUSE OF ATTEMPTS
TO DETER PROTECTIONIST MEASURES.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 19 -
Many observers expect that mining activity will turn
AROUND DURING THE COMING YEAR. THE SHAKEOUT OF COPPER
PRODUCERS THAT HAS TAKEN PLACE OVER THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS
HAS LEFT AN INDUSTRY WITH MUCH LOWER COSTS THAN HAD EXISTED
PREVIOUSLY/ AS A RESULT OF WAGE CONCESSIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS
IN CAPITAL EQUIPMENT. In ADDITION, THE RAPID EXPANSION IN
WORLDWIDE PRODUCTION CAPACITY APPEARS TO HAVE HALTED,
REMOVING A MAJOR DOWNWARD FORCE ON PRICES. KENNECOTT COPPER
IS COUNTING ON SUCH AN IMPROVEMENT, WITH ITS PLANS TO REOPEN
its Utah o p e r a t i o n s , The copper producer already has hired
800 workers and plans to hire about 1300 more next y e a r .
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
Robert T. Parry (1986, December 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19861209_robert_t_parry
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19861209_robert_t_parry,
author = {Robert T. Parry},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1986},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19861209_robert_t_parry},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}