speeches · January 6, 1988
Regional President Speech
Robert P. Forrestal · President
PROSPECTS FOR THE U.S. ECONOMY IN 1988;
THE VIEW FROM THE CENTRAL BANK
Remarks by Robert P. Forrestal, President
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
To the Dade Economic Outlook Conference
January 7, 1988
Good morning! It is a pleasure and an honor for me to initiate what promises to be
a stimulating morning of presentations and discussion on the prospects for the national
and local economies in the year ahead. This conference gives us a running start in a year
which will undoubtedly provide more than its share of public policy debate as the
presidential election draws the attention of candidates in both parties and the public
generally to economic issues. This is fortunate because several of those issues warrant
thoughtful consideration at this moment in our nation's history.
Last October the stock market dramatically signaled investors' uneasiness with the
current or anticipated future state of affairs. While I do not share the view of those who
see a recession on the horizon, I do believe that the market's warning must be heeded. In
particular, we must seriously grapple with the issue of global competitiveness lest we
sacrifice our own and our children's future standard of living. Because the manner in
which we address this issue will have a profound effect on our long-term economic
performance, I feel it is appropriate to give competitiveness a prominent place in this
morning's proceedings. For that reason, I will begin by presenting a brief outlook for the
nation, the Southeast, and Florida in particular. After that, I will discuss why our
competitiveness is threatened and what we must do about it.
The National Outlook
In the year just ended, GNP grew about 3 percent, a rate of expansion that helped
keep the unemployment rate at or below 6 percent throughout the second half. The final
figure on inflation should come in at between 4 1/2 and 5 percent on average for the
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year. Looking to 1988, as I just mentioned I see no recession but rather a continuation of
expansion at a slower pace of 2 percent or a little higher. With decelerating growth,
unemployment should stay near the 6 percent mark or perhaps rise somewhat. Inflation
is likely to be about the same as last year. My outlook for continued growth in GNP rests
on three areas of strength: continued modest advances in consumption, further gains in
capital spending on new equipment, and a fairly significant improvement in the foreign
trade sector.
Consumer spending is likely to advance, albeit modestly, in 1988, in spite of the
stock market crash last fall. Well before October 19 household consumption had slowed
considerably from its pace earlier in the expansion. Perhaps consumers were reading the
writing on the wall even before the gurus of Wall Street were. At any rate, the main
source of momentum for growth will not be consumption but rather net exports, which in
real, or inflation-adjusted terms, have been trending up since late 1986. The dollar's
substantial drop in value against foreign currencies makes our goods more attractive to
foreigners. This development has boosted production and employment in our
manufacturing sector. In addition, West Germany and Japan have recently begun to
stimulate their economies, which should further bolster our sales of U.S. manufactured
goods abroad.
However, given the extent of the dollar's fall, we have yet to see import prices rise
as much as anticipated, a factor which would curb imports and foster more domestic
consumption of U.S.-made goods. Foreign producers have been able to cut profits in
order to hold on to U.S. market share or to divert sourcing to countries whose currencies
have not appreciated as much against the dollar. Overall, therefore, foreign goods
continue to come into the country in large volume. Nonetheless, export growth should
continue to boost ongoing gains in the manufacturing sector, in turn spurring investment,
especially in equipment. Early surveys of capital spending plans suggest fairly good gains
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in this area.
Probably the weakest sector of the economy during the eoming year will be
commercial and residential construction. Substantial amounts of office, condominium,
and apartment space remain to be absorbed. In addition, the stock market's decline could
make it harder for businesses to raise capital for major new projects. Government
spending will not exactly be a weak spot. Indeed, the federal budget deficit is likely to
increase moderately in 1988. Last year's reductions were achieved in part through one
time occurrences such as asset sales. Nonetheless, the attention paid the deficit
following the stock market crash means that fiscal stimulus will be less than in recent
years. Together these factors suggest that GNP growth will continue in 1988, but not
quite as rapidly as in 1987.
Turning to inflation, oil prices are likely to stay in their present range despite some
discord in OPEC at year's end. However, last year's further decline in the dollar should
push non-oil import prices up even more. As this happens, the dollar-related increase in
domestic manufacturing could exert upward pressure on labor costs, especially since
capacity utilization has been rising and unemployment is close to the ''natural rate" at
which further efforts to stimulate growth result in more wage pressures than job gains.
Hence, I expect prices to advance at about the same rate this year as last i.e. 4 1/2-5
percent. In all, with slower but still moderate growth in GNP and no acceleration in
price increases in the offing, we can look forward to another year of decent economic
performance.
Outlook for the Southeast
In its diversity the southeastern economy reflects the strengths and weaknesses of
the nation as a whole. The likelihood of continued or even faster growth in
manufacturing bodes well—at least for those regional factories that have been
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modernized. Although last year the dollar finally began to depreciate against the
currencies of developing countries in the Pacific basin and Canada—the chief
competitors of many regional industries like apparel, the amount of currency realignment
is quite small compared to the dollar's fall against the yen, deutsche mark, and
currencies of other advanced economies. Moreover, cost structures in many of these
developing countries are far more favorable to the kind of low-wage, labor-intensive
production that became the staple in much of the South as the labor force shifted out of
farming. Thus, for many of the region's industries the likelihood of substantial
improvement is not high. Fortunately, the outlook for agriculture, while not rosy, is
brighter than it has been in some time, as worldwide supply and demand move closer to
some sort of balance. The situation for natural resources like oil is similar.
In terms of specific states, Louisiana and Mississippi will do better than last year,
which appears to have been the trough. The rise in cotton prices is helping Mississippi's
large farming sector. However, the upturn in manufacturing that the rest of the country
has been experiencing may largely bypass Mississippi since so much of its factory output
is in the low-wage sector, where developing countries have a decided advantage.
Louisiana's situation is in some ways worse because its economy is so lacking in balance.
Even its small manufacturing sector is tied largely to energy. However, if oil prices
remain fairly stable, the modest recovery in drilling activity should continue and expand
in 1988.
Alabama should continue to occupy the middle ground economically as well as
geographically. Manufacturing gains should help this state further the advances begun
last year, since its economy remains heavily oriented toward industrial production
despite growing health and educational services, especially in Birmingham. In addition,
with somewhat brighter prospects for farming and energy, Alabama's still important
natural resources sector should experience some improvement. Indeed, coal production
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had already begun increasing last fall.
The states in the eastern portion of the region—Georgia, Florida, and Tennessee—
can expect to see more of the good performance they have experienced of late. These
states enjoy diversified economies, in which more technologically advanced
manufacturing and a growing service sector help offset weaknesses, whether in industries
like apparel which have been battered by imports or the production of phosphates and
other commodities whose prices remain depressed in world markets. Of course, rapid
population growth is also a boon, especially to Florida and Georgia.
Looking specifically at Florida, it is likely that the feverish pace of tourism and in
migration witnessed in 1987 will abate somewhat in 1988. Even if these two engines of
growth slow, however, they should be sufficient to keep the state's economy moving
ahead at a rate above the national average. I look for population growth to be near 3
percent and add some 350,000 new residents who will help employment in the trade and
service sectors to expand at a moderately fast pace, though not as rapidly as in 1987.
New Floridians should also keep homebuilders at work and help fill up shopping malls and
office buildings. Nonetheless, I don't foresee housing starts reaching last year's levels,
and commercial real estate remains overbuilt, retarding the construction industry in
general. Sagging construction will probably cause the state's goods-producing sector,
which also includes mining and manufacturing, to show weaker growth than the goods
sector nationally. In manufacturing, chemicals, paper, and several durable goods
industries such as metals and machinery should turn in good performances this year.
However, there are relatively few Florida producers in these industries that can be
expected to reap significant competitive benefits in domestic and foreign markets from
the cheaper dollar. Still, Florida's vibrant economy, fueled by the flow of temporary
visitors and permanent residents into the state, should lead to an expansion in
employment of about 3.5 percent in 1988. This continued growth in Florida will also be
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one of the primary factors leading the Southeast to outperform the nation as a whole
again in 1988.
Competitiveness—The Only Answer to Our Twin Deficits
At first glance this outlook would seem to suggest it is "business as usual.'1 After
all, the United States has had more than five years of continuous growth, and the
economic indicators point to more expansion in the near term. Yet a number of signs
indicate that all is not well—the stock market crash, our slow progress in narrowing the
trade deficit, and, perhaps most important, the growing level of debt. In the same period
that we have enjoyed our longest postwar economic expansion, we have gone from being
the world's largest creditor nation to becoming its greatest debtor. In 1981, the world
outside owed us about $140 billion, more than at any time in the past. At the end of
1987, we owed nearly $400 billion to foreigners, also a record amount. More
significantly, this debt was not used to finance an expansion of our productive capacity
but rather to pay for current spending, especially by the government.
This remarkable turnaround from creditor to debtor helps explain the feeling of
uneasiness that exists in the midst of our apparent prosperity. We have rightly begun to
question how we are going to make the "monthly payments" on all the purchases we have
put on the national "credit card." When the bull market came to an abrupt halt on Black
Monday, the stock market was saying that the future was just too uncertain. Investors no
longer believe we can pay up without either changing the way we do business or becoming
content with reduced living standards for ourselves and our children.
As a result of massive federal budget deficits, we have been exporting IOUs in the
form of Treasury securities for the past five years or so. In order to service and
ultimately retire our huge external debt, we must be able to run substantial export
surpluses—and soon. The longer we wait to start paying these bills, the harder it will
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be. For one thing, the debt service burden will be that much larger. Moreover, our living
standard will be adversely affected because future generations will have to earmark a
higher portion of their incomes to interest payments abroad and less to personal
consumption. Thus, our trade deficit is, indeed, a problem. It is imperative that we start
shipping overseas more of our future increases in output. However, our fitful and slow
progress on narrowing the trade deficit implies that this is going to be more difficult
than we thought. The reason, in my opinion, is that we remain focused on the wrong
strategy for improving our competitiveness. We are fighting the last war, so to speak.
Competitiveness is basically the relationship between the price and quality of one's
own goods compared to the similar goods produced by someone else. These factors in
turn are influenced by productivity—how much we get out of our resources and, in global
markets, by exchange rates. One way of regaining our competitiveness is to focus on
reducing the price of U.S. goods. Those who advocate protectionism are really taking
this stance. Even though their rhetoric stresses other nations' unfair trade practices as
the culprit, their solution—an attack on those practices through protectionist measures
of our own—would lower the price of U.S. goods relative to products from abroad by
erecting tariff barriers, import quotas, and the like. Those who focus on the dollar also
support this price-reduction tactic. They maintain that we can let the dollar do all the
work for us by falling so low that our products become a bargain to foreigners while their
goods become increasingly more expensive to Americans.
As for protectionism, I have been on record for some time as opposing anything less
than optimally open markets. Particularly in the wake of the most serious disruption in
the stock market since 1929, it is a cruel deceit to promote protectionist legislation as a
panacea for competitive ills. It was precisely such illogic that led to passage of the
Smoot-Hawley tariff after the 1929 crash and propelled the world into the Great
Depression. Protectionism in the past as now means only that everyone consumes less in
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the long run because trade barriers merely stifle competition and so raise prices and
limit consumer choices. In other words, in the end it lowers living standards, the very
result toward which we fear our present course is propelling us. I grant that there are
inequities in the present playing field, but these can be resolved at the bargaining table
in the manner of the past year's successful negotiations with Canada. Taking a
confrontational position at this point will not hasten our progress in similar negotiations
with other trading partners.
With regard to the dollar, I feel we are reaching the point of diminishing returns
from the currency realignment that has been occurring for nearly three years now. The
dollar fell to postwar lows against the yen and deutsche mark last November and
December. Should the dollar continue to drop so precipitously, the likelihood of
increased inflation would become much greater. So would the probability of economic
downturns in those foreign economies to whom we hope to export more. Alternatively,
defensive maneuvers on the part of our trading partners could lead to a series of
competitive devaluations and trade wars. As in the worst-case protectionism scenario,
such jockeying for position might lead to global depression. In any of these eventualities,
the ultimate consequence of raising competitiveness through dollar depreciation would be
a lower living standard here.
The problem with both protectionism and real, as opposed to nominal, dollar
depreciation as strategies for solving the competitiveness problem is that they are cost
minimization strategies. As such, they keep our thinking lodged in the past when this
approach was a legitimate way of selling more U.S. products. America's comparative
advantage once did rest on being the low-cost producer for the mass market. We left to
Europe the specialized markets for high quality goods. This time is long past and a
cost-minimization approach will not work for the United States in a truly global
economy. In the 1980s American workers have restrained their wage gains appreciably.
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Yet, countries like Taiwan, Korea, Mexico, Brazil, and China can still undercut our labor
costs substantially. Do we really want American workers to cut back their incomes and
living standards to the level that would allow us to offset the labor advantage of China?
The fallacy of thinking we can simply return to the status quo ante as the world's
low-cost producer should be apparent, particularly to those of us in the South, since we
have experienced first-hand the long-term disadvantages of depending on cheap labor as
a competitive ploy. After World War II, the South attracted textile, apparel, and other
labor-intensive industries from the North with the promise of low wages and low taxes.
This recruitment policy seemed to work until other countries came on line with effective
production and even lower labor costs. At that point, industries which were once drawn
to the South moved "offshore" where even lower costs were readily available. The South,
however, lost more than just industries from this shift in production. The tax breaks that
had been used as an enticement to lure businesses left southern states with poor
educational systems and an inadequate infrastructure-areas of public investment that
had been sacrificed to keep taxes low. This legacy made it harder for workers to adjust
to the structural changes of the '80s and less attractive for new, more technologically
advanced industries to relocate here. It is difficult to imagine that we would be so out of
touch with the structural challenges still being faced in many parts of the Southeast that
we would favor a return to this no-win mode of operation.
If cost minimization, whether through protectionism or the falling dollar, cannot be
counted on to enhance our competitiveness, where does that leave us? We must look at
the other basic determinants of competitiveness—productivity and quality. To increase
productivity we need to invest more in both our physical and human capital. We cannot
expect to squeeze much more out of labor costs. I do not deny that we have made
considerable productivity gains in manufacturing during the 1980s, largely in response to
heightened foreign competition. The textile industry's comeback in the past several
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years is a good example of how this can work. Beset by competition from abroad, textile
mill owners retooled and returned to profitability. Yet not all U.S. industries can boast
of such progress. Unfortunately, much of our recent investment has not been directed to
resource-saving equipment or new factories but rather has been sunk into hotels, offices,
and the like—perhaps so we can spend more time meeting to discuss productivity!
The kind of investment we need goes beyond the narrow classifications made in
constructing the GNP components. In addition to spending more on new equipment,
research, and so on, we must also invest more in our public infrastructure—roads, mass
transit, and the like. We must pay particular attention to building up human capital even
though in an accounting sense such government expenditures are considered
consumption. Unless U.S. workers are better educated, they will be unable to use new
technologies. Moreover, they will lack the flexibility to make the necessary adjustments,
not only to technologically advanced production processes or ways of providing services
but also to another fundamental change we must make—toward higher quality.
In the past, Americans have tended to make standard, mass-produced goods
especially for our large home market. We made the Ford family sedans and the Kodak
Instamatics and let others turn out specialized, high-quality products—Mercedes and
Leicas—for a variety of markets. Again, the arrival of much lower cost producers has
meant that we can no longer hope to survive by concentrating on low-end goods. As we
rethink our production objectives and move into the better quality niches, U.S. business
leaders and workers alike will be called on to change old habits and ways of thinking, and
this shift requires a better educated work force at all levels. We need managers who can
think analytically and creatively, who have the vision to see market opportunities in the
far corners of the world. Yet our schools seem to have difficulty teaching students to
read and write, to compute, and to master even the basics of science, history, and
geography.
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Policy Directions and Personal Responsibilities
Clearly, we need to invest more to achieve the productivity and quality needed to
maintain our living standard to be competitive in world markets and so retire our
external debt. Our problem is like that of many less developed countries: being so
indebted, they have great difficulty eliciting new capital infusions. Whichever way we
turn, the alternatives end up looking very much like the austerity programs upon which
LDCs embark periodically.
On one hand, we must learn to consume less and save more; in particular, to save at
a level consistent with the position we hope to maintain in the world economy. We have
also been looking to the government to cut its deficit spending and thereby free up more
funds for private investment. It is easy to blame the federal budget deficit as setting the
tone for borrowing in order to consume—a bit too easy, perhaps. The deficit is not a new
problem. Again, it is something about which I have voiced my opinions for several
years. To be sure, we need to keep pressure on policy makers to continue reducing the
gap between revenues and outlays. At the same time, there may be limits to how far we
can go in reducing government spending. Many budgetary outlays—estimates range from
40 to 80 percent—have become locked into place. Entitlements, with their inflation
indexing, place a particularly unrelenting demand on spending priorities. Cutting them
requires more resolve than politicians—and we who vote for them—seem able to muster.
Other large portions of the budget that cannot really be touched are interest on the
money borrowed in the past and the funds it takes to maintain an acceptable level of
defense. What is left to cut? Shall we make even less investment in public
infrastructure than the insufficient amount we have been making? Shall we further
minimize our commitment to education? In my view, such a strategy would be extremely
short-sighted because it could hinder our attempts to enhance our productivity and
quality, and thereby pay off our debt to foreigners by exporting more.
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Thus, despite the mounting frustration we may feel at the lack of progress on this
front, we must stop blaming the government. Instead, it is time for all of us to say we
have met the government, and it is us. Through our votes, the American people have the
final voice in policy matters, and we overwhelmingly reaffirmed the policies that led to
our deficit by our votes in the past.
What can and should we do? A starting point might be further progress toward a
truly neutral tax system. The one we now have still encourages consumption relative to
saving. It also extends more favorable tax treatment to debt relative to equity financing
by taxing corporate dividends twice. We cannot pass the buck entirely to Washington,
though. Rather, we must curb our personal proclivity for consumption and rein in our
huge household debt. We should also give more support to local and state policy makers
who are attempting to upgrade our nation’s schools. That means viewing these efforts as
investments for which we should willingly pay through property, sales, and other taxes.
While these measures mean that a smaller portion of income growth will be available for
consumption, we must remember that in the long run they are the only way we can work
to preserve the living standard that has come to be the envy of the world.
Conclusion
Before I began to address the related problems of competitiveness and debt, I
started out by saying that we could look forward to another reasonably good year in the
national and regional economies. If I have rained on the parade a bit, it is because I
wanted to impart my own sense of urgency that we address these latent problems from a
position of relative strength. For all my rhetoric, our huge debt has not placed us in the
position of an LDC. We still have time to correct our course and minimize the damage,
but first we have to muster the resolve—personally and publicly—to do so. I am hopeful
that in the year ahead we will give careful thought to these issues and meet this
challenge boldly.
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Cite this document
APA
Robert P. Forrestal (1988, January 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19880107_robert_p_forrestal
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19880107_robert_p_forrestal,
author = {Robert P. Forrestal},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1988},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19880107_robert_p_forrestal},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}