speeches · January 11, 1993
Regional President Speech
Robert P. Forrestal · President
TiN-fcU
THE OUTLOOK FOR THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOUTHEAST IN 1993
Remarks by Robert P. Forrestal, President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
To the Kiwanis Club of Atlanta
January 12, 1993
It is a great pleasure to address the Kiwanis Club of Atlanta. I have been asked to
deliver my economic forecast for 1993, a rather pleasurable task because prospects are a bit
better than a year ago. In addition to sharing with you my projections for U.S. economic
performance, I will briefly discuss how Georgia and the Southeast will fare and also to raise
several policy issues that are of particular significance at this juncture. I am speaking, of
course, of the fact that we are entering not only a new year but also the beginning of a new
Administration and a new Congress.
The U.S. Economy
Turning first to the U.S. economy, last year gross domestic product, or GDP, expanded
by around 2 percent. Inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, should average 3
percent. At the same time, productivity gains were better than expected and they dampened job
growth. As a result, the unemployment rate actually increased and averaged 7.4 percent during
the year.
In 1993 I expect GDP to expand, on an annual average basis, by close to 3 percent. The
unemployment rate should average around 7 percent and could end the year slightly below that
level. Indeed, employment clearly began to grow in 1992 after shrinking the year before. The
CPI should remain in the same range as in 1992, although, with the pick-up in business activity,
we could see a final number a shade above 3 percent since prices tend to move with business
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activity.
The main sources of strength underlying the U.S. economy as it moves forward into an
expansion phase will be consumer spending (particularly on durables), residential construction,
and capital investments by businesses especially on computers and other equipment. Lower
interest rates are a factor in all of these areas. First of all, they have enabled households and
businesses to restructure their balance sheets. Consumer debt service as a percent of income,
for example, has fallen to levels not seen since 1986. As a result, households are in a better
position to purchase goods that are typically financed with credit and the cost of doing this is
much lower than before.
Also on the consumer side, several positive factors are at work in addition to the lagged
effects of lower short-term interest rates. Recent improvements in employment reports have
raised hopes for sustained job and income growth. The reduced fear of job loss is likely to
foster more consumer spending. Moreover, the gradual absorption of the large inventories of
homes built in the 1980s, the fact that house buying activity had been so soft for a long period,
as well as the decline in mortgage rates spurred better demand for housing. Greater activity in
the housing sector boosts demand for construction materials and major appliances and furniture.
Moreover, there is pent-up demand in that durables simply wore out during the period of slow
growth. Since the decline in interest rates over the last few years has enabled many households
to adjust their debt levels and with employment likely to remain on an upward trend, these
purchases are now more affordable-even at moderate rates of income growth.
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At the same time, the aging evident in most of our population, despite the recent uptick
in births, will constrain any jump in demand for either housing or consumer durables.
Fortunately, or unfortunately, as the case may be, the impacts of demographics are fairly
predictable. The numbers of people reaching certain age groups, aside from infancy, can be
readily predicted. Thus, it seems certain that demand for cars, household appliances, and the
like will not rebound as sharply as it did during other post-recession expansions in the past two
decades. These demographics will also delay the turnaround in construction of multifamily
housing in most cases, a sector that remains overbuilt. While there are still too many apartments
and condominiums on the market, the good news is that this component of the construction
industry may be approaching its trough.
On the business side, capital spending will be enhanced by the reduction in borrowing
costs, and businesses are likely to focus on efficiency-promoting equipment like computers. As
the pace of growth accelerates, expenditures for industrial machinery will pick up this year.
Still, commercial construction is not likely to turn around for the foreseeable future because
excess office and retail space remains substantial. Nevertheless, nonresidential building should
be less of a drag on growth than in the past few years.
Areas of weaknesses include not only commercial construction but also government
spending and, for the first time in many years, international trade. With the new Administration
just taking office, it is somewhat risky to forecast government spending. Clearly, though, there
are well-defined plans in place and in progress to reduce defense expenditures. Thus, on
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balance, I believe that in 1993, as in 1992, government spending will not add to growth.
More troubling is the shift in exports from the positive to the negative side of the growth
ledger. The dollar’s modest appreciation in the wake of last fall’s European currency crisis is
not really the culprit. U.S. goods can still compete on price. The main factor is that growth
in most other major industrial nations has been slowing, and some countries have been verging
on recession. Germany’s high interest rates are constraining demand, not only in that country
but in Europe generally. Japan is going through a protracted adjustment to the drop in its very
high asset values and the aging of its economy. This weakness is not likely to be completely
reversed in 1993, nor is slackened demand for U.S. products in the advanced economies likely
to be offset by rising demand in Latin America and the Pacific Rim. Their rapid growth rates
are not enough to make up for their relatively small share of U.S. exports. At the same time,
a pick-up in GDP growth in the United States usually leads to a rise in imports. As a result,
the merchandise trade gap should widen after narrowing steadily since the late 1980s.
Southeastern Outlook
In the Southeast the outlook for 1993 is brighter than it has been in several years and the
region should also outpace the nation. It is true that industries that specialize in nondurable
goods, most prominently apparel, will contribute less than they did during the recovery period.
Apparel plants began to reduce employment rolls last year, and longer term apparel producers
face increasing competition from countries where unskilled and semi-skilled workers are willing
to work for less because they are poor. However, the positive national prospects for single-
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family housing and increased consumer spending bode well for several other important
southeastern industries.
The Southeast is a major nationwide supplier of lumber used in residential construction.
Recent environmental issues in the Pacific Northwest have worked to the benefit of southeastern
lumber producers. The region’s large textile industry tends to fare well when the residential
building industry is doing well since many textile products are turned into carpets, draperies,
and other home furnishings. Several southeastern states are important producers of home
appliances, which are also in greater demand when home buying and building is on the upswing.
Not only will national demand for these products expand in 1993, but regional demand will
receive a temporary boost as well in the wake of rebuilding going on in south Florida and
Louisiana as a result of Hurricane Andrew.
More generally, the expected increase in demand for consumer durables is good news
for the region’s many car, furniture, and appliance factories. Textiles mills too should gain
since many textile products are destined for automobiles. However, the region is not a major
capital goods producer, and so the expected strength in capital spending by businesses on
equipment will be less of an advantage. Still, the region’s relatively small dependence on
exports means that the weakness in foreign demand will be less significant. Likewise, the
decline in defense spending nationally will have a smaller impact on the Southeast because, for
the most part, defense-related industries are less important in this region than in areas like the
Northeast and the Far West. On balance, regional manufacturing should gain strength.
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Another industry lending strength to the expansion regionally is construction, which is
likely to continue the growth begun in 1991. Most building activity will be concentrated in
single-family housing, as in the nation, but at least the long slide in multifamily and
nonresidential construction appears to be nearly over. There are areas of potential weaknesses.
It remains to be seen, for example, whether the trend toward consolidation and layoffs in
banking, communication, transportation, and other professional and business services has
bottomed out. This dynamic has been a blow to several large southeastern cities, just as it has
been nationally. Overall, however, the region should grow at a faster pace in 1993 than in
1992.
The factors that will propel the region as a whole should help Georgia resume its
traditional role as one of the faster growing southeastern states now that it made significant
progress on its commercial real estate imbalances. While prospects of shrinking airline payrolls
could retard growth, the worst is probably behind the state. In 1993 housing-and auto-related
manufacturing, single-family home building, improved retail activity (especially for durables),
and a pick-up in convention travel should propel faster growth.
Policy Issues for 1993
Summing up the outlook for 1993, economic growth promises to be somewhat better,
both nationally and regionally, than in 1992. Nonetheless, I recognize that certain sectors will
decelerate and others still have excess inventories to be worked off. Moreover, moving from
2 to 3 percent GDP growth is not the typically robust acceleration we usually see in the early
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phases of an expansion. It is clearly not fast enough to push unemployment down quickly. In
addition, there are other pressing economic problems like health care, education, and more
generally, families at risk that affect all of American society in some way. While the Federal
Reserve has been grappling with the problems of the economy in recent years, it is appropriate
and necessary for us to develop broader approaches to economic policy.
As we address near-term concerns, however, it is important to keep our eyes on
long-term considerations. We have already placed a substantial burden on future generations,
and we must begin to reduce the burden. Our failure to develop a rational fiscal policy during
the expansion phase of the 1980s virtually mandated the long period of substandard growth that
we have been experiencing. By the time we needed fiscal policy to mitigate the economic
downturn, it was simply not available as a tool. In fact, the size of the deficit kept real long
term interest rates relatively high and crowded out private investment as well.
I do not want to leave the impression that I am among those who regard public policy
as not particularly effective. In my view, both monetary and fiscal policy have important roles
to play in an advanced economy. Aside from the potential countercyclical role that fiscal policy
can play, for example, I believe government spending in such areas as education can raise the
nation’s productivity and hence its long-run potential for growth. The problem with the deficit
buildup of the 1980s was that much of the fiscal stimulus was not targeted toward such
investment. In this sense a very serious side-effect of the large deficits we have had is that they
created a cynicism about policy on the part of Americans. Many people came to believe that
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fiscal policy could do little to help us become a productive nation—quite the opposite of the
situation in other countries, where public investment in infrastructure and human capital are seen
as increasing the potential to grow.
As we consider the composition of government spending, we must also remember that
we should remain vigilant in regard to inflation and not be lulled into complacency by current
low rates. I am very pleased with the progress this country has made during the last ten years.
Inflation reached double-digit rates in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The Fed was able to bring
this rate down to around 4 1/2 percent by 1984, a vast improvement. Moreover, for a number
of years the CPI did not accelerate despite robust economic growth. While price pressures
began to mount late in the 1980s, the Fed succeeded in reining them in as well as in lowering
inflation significantly—so that it is now close to 3 percent. I do not need to lecture to this group
about the positive effects of low inflation. Nonetheless, I do want to emphasize this very
important accomplishment because it is too often overlooked in the negative assessments of U.S.
economic performance that have become commonplace.
Moving forward, we must not forget that our high degree of indebtedness as a nation can
predispose us to a more inflationary posture. We all know that inflation reduces the pain of debt
repayment by making the amount of that repayment less in real terms. While the recent
recession prompted households and businesses to reduce their debt levels, there was no such
reduction in the burden of accumulated federal debt. Given our inability as a society to agree
on a way to distribute the burden of deficit reduction, inflation remains a tempting de facto tax.
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While fiscal and monetary issues are the immediate responsibility of the government and
the Fed, we must remember that our public policy institutions ultimately reflect and respond to
the society that created them. Thus, as concerned citizens each of us bears responsibility for
the kinds of pressures and expectations we put on our government and the central bank.
Conclusion
Having expressed these caveats about policy directions in the year ahead, let me close
by expressing my fervent hope for this significant year. We have not only a new president but
also a new Congress. If they set out to work together in developing a fresh and far-sighted
approach to some of the major problems that beset the U.S. economy, like the deficit, health
care, and our long-term productive capacity, I am certain that the old saw, "Well begun is half
done," will apply. Businesses, bankers, financial market participants, consumers, workers, all
of us must be ready and willing to support public policies that hold the promise of improving
the performance of the U.S. economy over time. Unless we do this, we will find ourselves
unable to compete in the global marketplace that is already with us and unable to improve living
standards significantly in the future. I look forward with excitement to 1993 and to the
development of a policy framework that prepares us for the twenty-first century.
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Cite this document
APA
Robert P. Forrestal (1993, January 11). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19930112_robert_p_forrestal
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19930112_robert_p_forrestal,
author = {Robert P. Forrestal},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1993},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19930112_robert_p_forrestal},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}