speeches · January 22, 1990
Regional President Speech
Robert P. Forrestal · President
THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR 1990
By Robert P. Forrestal, President
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
To the Financial Executives Institute
January 23, 1990
Good evening! It is a pleasure and an honor for me to speak to the Financial
Executives Institute. The beginning of a new year is a good time to take stock of our
prospects in the coming months, and I would like to take this opportunity to give you my
views on the outlook for the national and regional economy in 1990. I would also like to
look a little further ahead since we are at the beginning not only of a new year, but also
a new decade. I think the next ten years hold signs of brilliant promise. The globalizing
of markets that gathered momentum in the past decade should continue to bring greater
benefits to people here and around the world. I am particularly encouraged, as I know
you must be, at the virtual stampede among Eastern Europeans to join the market-
oriented economies. Of course, there are obstacles that must be overcome before these
promises are fully realized, and I would like to talk about some of these in addition to
highlighting the positive economic developments I see in the offing. Before I do that,
however, I will give you my thoughts on how the national economy and the region should
perform in the year ahead.
The National Outlook
I believe that growth in this country will slow in 1990. Real gross national product
should decelerate to 2 or 2 1/2 percent for the year. Even though we could see a quarter
or two of very subdued business activity after a rebound from the Boeing strike, I see few
signs that suggest it will end in the near term. Indeed, the rate I am projecting is close
to our nation's average rate over the past four decades, that is, pretty close to our long-
range potential. With slower growth than in 1989, though, the jobless rate could edge up
slightly to 5 1/2 percent. But slower growth should also ease price pressures, holding
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inflation to around 4 1/2 percent after a spurt early in the year.
Unlike recent years, when consumption or export-driven manufacturing has been a
clear leader in pushing growth, I do not expect one particular sector to set the pace in
1990. Indeed, the kind of growth I anticipate should be largely a result of momentum
from past expansion that is rather evenly distributed among the various parts of the
economy. Among these, personal consumption, spurred by continued growth in
employment and personal income, should be one force helping the economy along. In
addition, the decline in inflation I foresee will translate into higher reed wages in the
year ahead and continue to encourage spending.
A second, though more moderate, positive input is likely to come from business
fixed investment, especially for computers, aircraft, and industrial equipment—as
opposed to investment in new factories and the like. However, capital spending for
industrial equipment could well slow after the large additions to capacity made over the
past few years and the squeeze we have seen in corporate profits.
Real net exports, too, will contribute by improving modestly in 1990. The dollar
has appreciated only about 4 percent against the currencies of our major trading partners
since its trough of just over a year ago. And the economies in the industrialized
countries are much stronger than when the dollar was previously at this level. Finally, I
look for a good year in agriculture in most of the country, assuming the weather
cooperates. Farmers should continue to rebuild agricultural inventories diminished by
the 1988 drought. Foreign sales of U.S. farm commodities should be healthy also.
On the other hand, auto sales, residential construction, and government purchases
are the weaknesses I see in next year’s economic picture. It seems people may be holding
onto their cars longer, perhaps because of improved quality or the growing use of five-
year financing. The resulting decrease in demand for new cars combined with higher
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prices for many new models should keep sales soft. Demographic factors should hold
housing demand in check as well. In the generation following the so-called baby boom
fewer families are being formed each year compared with the situation in the last
decade. Government spending is also slowing—though not quickly enough to suit me.
Still, fiscal stimulus will probably diminish.
Aside from these soft spots, the dark cloud on an otherwise bright horizon is still
inflation. I suspect we are in danger of congratulating ourselves too much for a modest
near-term slowing in inflation. Let me remind you, however, that at a 4 1/2 percent
inflation rate, which we could experience this year, prices double in about 16 years.
Moreover, in addition to temporary weather-induced pressures, we will continue to
experience growing labor shortages due to demographic shifts. These fundamentals
suggest that no letup in price pressures is likely in the early years of this decade unless
we are willing to tolerate slow growth for a sustained period. Thus while the nation
enjoys respectable growth 1990, we need to keep a watchful eye on inflation.
Regional Outlook
Turning to the regional outlook, I think the Southeast will perform about on par
with the nation on average in 1990 after a year of lagging behind. Economic activity
here slowed a bit more sharply than in the country as a whole last year. In particular,
the in-migration that has been one of our chief sources of strength for many years
tapered appreciably in 1988 and 1989. One cause of the slowdown was the renewal of
manufacturing in some areas of the country that had earlier lost people to booming
Sunbelt states. The increased availability of factory jobs kept workers at home and
encouraged others to defer retirement or return from places to which they had
relocated. Industries sensitive to population growth like construction, services, and trade
suffered setbacks or a noticeable deceleration as the inflow diminished. This year,
however, I see manufacturing slowing in the nation, and thus we may see in-migration
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begin to pick up slightly in the Southeast, though not at the rate we enjoyed earlier in the
1980s.
As usual, services and trade will lead the region’s employment growth. Tourism
should continue to draw numerous visitors from this country and abroad to the expanding
number of regional attractions in 1990 and lend sustained strength to business activity.
Increased in-migration could provide some impetus to the construction industry this
year. Although housing, commercial office, and retail construction will be sluggish at
best because of past overbuilding, we should outperform the rest of the nation in this
area because much of the adjustment is, I hope, behind us in this region.
I expect manufacturing here to perform at a subdued level. Slowing domestic
demand makes the outlook for chemicals, paper, and apparel less bright. The apparel
industry also remains battered by foreign competition. However, the Southeast's
machinery-production industries, along with its aerospace and certain other types of
transportation equipment makers—auto parts destined for export, for example-should
help offset some of the weakness foreseen in the region's auto plants.
Even more than construction and manufacturing, agriculture should be a source of
strength to the Southeast after a positive year in 1989. Debt among farmers who
survived 1988's drought is down, and foreign as well as domestic demand promise to
remain strong enough to allow for profitable expansions of output in the year ahead.
I look for Georgia and the Atlanta metropolitan area to grow at about the national
average. Construction and manufacturing have been particularly weak, and I cannot say
that any dramatic improvement is on the horizon. After a difficult year in 1989,
residential building may improve somewhat in 1990. However, I am concerned that in
Atlanta the pace of office building is outstripping potential demand. Eight buildings of
650,000 square feet or more are slated for completion in the next three years, and pre-
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leasing figures for several of these are lower than for similar projects in the past.
After major layoffs at auto and aircraft assembly plants last year, manufacturing
of transportation equipment could suffer declines in 1990 as defense spending is cut
further and auto sales remain weak. The anticipated softness in consumer spending on
durables like cars and in construction suggest that the state's textile industry will be
unable to sustain 1989's strong rate of growth. Prospects for modest consumer demand
also suggest that the apparel industry, which is still battered by import competition, can
hope for stable employment at best. Nonetheless, strength in services and trade and the
good performance I expect from the state's farmers should offset these weaknesses
sufficiently to give us about the same level of economic performance we experienced
last year.
Issues for the 1990s
Thus the first year of the 1990s shapes up as a reasonably good one, and looking
further down the road, I anticipate developments that can keep the United States and
much of the world on a path toward further growth. In particular, I believe the
globalizing marketplace offers future opportunities we can barely perceive at present.
The dramatic changes taking place in Eastern Europe could carry market integration in
new directions, for example. And more restrained but no less stimulating developments
in the European Community and elsewhere indicate to me that the pace of globalization
may be accelerating.
Still, there are obstacles to overcome before we can reap the full benefits of these
economic changes. Let me take just a moment to mention these since most of you are
quite familiar with my views. The first is the federal budget deficit, which will remain
far too high for yet another year in 1990. The second is related to the first: our need to
finance excess government spending with imported capital has led to continuing
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imbaiances in trade between the United States and our major trading partners.
Another detriment to market expansion is the debt of the less developed countries
(LDCs). Early last year Treasury Secretary Brady took a step in the right direction by
raising the possibility of debt reduction for these countries. Aside from a reduced debt
burden, though, what the LDCs need is an influx of capital to get their economies rolling
once more. Ideally, we would be making loans to these countries to help them import the
capital equipment and other goods they need. However, our federal budget deficit has
helped make us a net debtor nation when we should be acting as a creditor not only for
third world countries but also for Eastern Europe.
Having noted these problems areas in the process of globalization, let me turn to
the reasons I am optimistic about the world's economic future. Some of the past year's
most exciting news came from two fronts in Europe. These were the sudden turn of
events in Eastern Europe and the great strides made toward the European Community's
market unification scheduled for 1992. In 1989, we marvelled as Marxism-Leninism
seemed to be withering away before our eyes. Daily we read in our newspapers of some
astonishing development in Eastern Europe: Solidarity won the national election in
Poland, Hungary abolished one-party rule, the Berlin Wall was dismantled. These
countries want and, I believe, will move toward the political and economic self
determination their European neighbors enjoy. As they do, they could provide fertile
markets for outside goods and services as well as sources for labor, materials, and
technical innovations. Equally important, their emergence from isolation may mean that
the world can begin spending less of its energies and resources arming for war and more
on raising living standards.
Of course, the process of change in the communist bloc may not be smooth in
either an economic or a political sense over the next few years. For one thing, these
countries have no experience with market mechanisms and also lack the financial
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infrastructure to interact effectively with outside countries. They also need an infusion
of capital to get started, and, as I said earlier, we are not in a position to help out.
Additionally, let us not forget that our hopes outstripped reality in the case of China in
May and June of last year. Still, I feel the move toward market and political
liberalization is inexorable in the long run in China as well as the rest of the nonmarket
economies. There is simply no way to eliminate the weaknesses from their systems of
production without fundamental reforms.
A second important European story was the EC's progress toward market
integration at a rate that would have seemed impossible even two years ago. It seems
more certain than ever that in the first few years of this decade Europeans will draw
together into a market with more consumers than the United States. This will have a
major impact on the future course of business in Europe and among the EC's trading
partners, including the United States. Most immediately, the dismantling of barriers to
shipping and selling goods should open this large market for the kind of retailing to which
we are accustomed here. Our industries are geared toward large manufacturing runs that
supply products to nationwide retail outlets and distributors with numerous local
accounts. It seems likely that post-1992 Europe will tend toward a similar market
structure, and this should prove advantageous to U.S. producers. Also, freer flows of
capital within the EC will probably hasten the consolidation of industries there. We
should see large new firms join the ranks of the multinationals. Such pan-European
giants promise to raise the level of competition in Europe and eventually in this country
as well.
Unfortunately, the industry with which I am most familiar and which plays a
keystone role in our economy~the financial services industry—is being kept from gearing
up for the global market by certain antiquated regulations. At present the world's
largest financial instititutions are overwhelmingly European and Japanese. Further
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deregulation built into plans for Europe *92 could lead to the formation of more large
banks there, and such a development could have important implications for the
competitiveness of American institutions. Multinational corporations look for banks that
can offer "one-stop” convenience in meeting their requirements. As international trade
grows, this demand requires financial institutions to maintain a presence in all the
important economic centers and the capacity to handle sizable transactions.
U.S. banks are presently underrepresented among the world's top banking
institutions in part because of interstate banking restrictions and limitations on the types
of businesses in which they can engage. If size is in fact a competitive advantage in the
global market, the partially completed state of deregulation in this country acts to the
detriment of our banks. It is important that Congress remove this impediment by
repealing Glass-Steagall prohibitions on activities in which banks can engage. I would
also like to see legislation in favor of nationwide interstate banking. By 1992, the
individual states will have achieved de facto interstate banking on their own. However,
we will still have a hodgepodge of laws that could retain some of the inefficiencies of the
present system.
In the latter regard, by the way, the states in the Southeast, which were among the
first to opt for a regional intersate arrangement, are now falling behind in taking the
next step by allowing full access to all outside banks. The longer we resist, the more we
limit the horizons of our own banks. Thus, until Congress begins to move on this issue, I
think we need to act swiftly in Georgia and other states in the region to join the
nationwide interstate movement.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I think the year ahead will be a good one for the United States and
the Southeast. By "good” I mean I expect reasonable growth with diminishing price
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pressures, though we cannot afford to become complacent about inflation. Meanwhile,
the 1990s are beginning with encouraging signs that the global market may be expanding
in scale and scope. The consolidation of the EC and the possible inclusion of Eastern
Europe and other communist bloc nations holds great potential for economic betterment
around the world. I would hope that in the midst of this promise we can find ways to
balance our federal budget and free up more of our savings for investment at home and
abroad. If we can get our fiscal house in order we will be better able to take up the
great challenge of the 1990s; extending the reach of globalization by opening new
markets and making existing markets more open.
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Cite this document
APA
Robert P. Forrestal (1990, January 22). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19900123_robert_p_forrestal
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19900123_robert_p_forrestal,
author = {Robert P. Forrestal},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1990},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19900123_robert_p_forrestal},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}