speeches · July 24, 1997
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
3/20/2018 Remarks at the American Farm Bureau Midwest Presidents & Administrators Conference | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
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Good morning. It's a pleasure to have this opportunity to address
you on issues of mutual concern. We at the Federal Reserve
Bank of Minneapolis have had a longstanding interest in Connect
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agriculture and its central role in the economy of the Ninth District.
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Considerable space in our regional publication, the fedgazette, is
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devoted to the sector. In addition, we have long been involved in
issues related to economic growth and questions such as: why do
some nations' economies grow more rapidly than others? Why do
some regional economies far outpace the performance of others?
What contribution can government policy make toward economic
growth?
These questions are important because to a considerable extent
growth determines a country's standard of living. That is, given its
population, or a path of population over time, the more rapidly the
economy expands, the higher living standards will climb. Growth,
therefore, is largely the key to economic well being.
Despite its significance, we do not know as much about growth as
we might like. Nevertheless, in my remarks this morning I would
like to review with you some of what we do know about this critical
subject, with emphasis, in particular, on the role of government
policy. Actually, I should say "roles" of government policy, for
government can contribute constructively to growth both on the
aggregate level and through appropriate micro policies and
programs. Let me now move on to some specifics about these
issues.
Although the U.S. is well into its seventh consecutive year of
economic expansion, some observers remain uneasy about the
health of the economy. They claim, among other things, that
recent performance does not measure up when compared with
that of the first twenty-five years of the postwar period.
In assessing this claim, I think it important and appropriate to look
both at objective measures of business activity and at more
general indicators of economic well being. The thrust of this
analysis is that the assertion that our recent economic
performance does not measure up to the past is at least
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questionable. Indeed, our economy has performed well in recent
years, and many have benefited in the process.
By many, although not all, objective measures of economic
performance, the US economy has done and is continuing to do
well. Nationwide, unemployment is a relatively low 5 percent of
the labor force, and it is a good deal lower in many of the states of
the Ninth Federal Reserve District. Perhaps more importantly,
since its low in 1991, employment has increased by about 13.5
million workers, or at a rate of more than 2 million net new jobs
per year. Moreover, sizable gains in employment are not a new
phenomenon in our economy; for example, from the end of the
recession in 1982 to the end of the succeeding expansion in
1990, about 20 million jobs were added.
I do not intend to inundate you with statistics, so let me just add
that, in addition to employment gains, the past six plus years have
been characterized by modest inflation, thriving corporate profits,
strong financial markets, and sustained economic growth. To a
considerable extent, similar language can be used to describe the
period from 1982 to mid 1990 as well. In short, objective
measures say we have done well over an extended period.
If we put aside the statistics and consider products and services
that have proliferated over the past decade or two, the increase in
our prosperity becomes ever clearer. Specifically, I am thinking
about how commonplace VCRs, CD players, computers, boats,
snowmobiles, jet skis, air travel, mutual funds, and long distance
communication have become. And it is not just high income
families that avail themselves of these products and services for, if
that were the case, the markets for and volumes of these products
would be far smaller than they in fact are.
Anecdotal evidence also testifies to the strength of the expansion.
In meetings with business and other community leaders, we are
told constantly of severe labor shortages, of renewed strength in
commercial construction activity, and, in some locations, of very
tight housing markets. Clearly, a lot has been going on in the
economy, and much of it is positive. There is a school of thought
which says that many of the newly created jobs are in the service
sector and are relatively low paying. This statement is half right.
The service sector of the economy has grown rapidly but,
according to the Council of Economic Advisers, many new jobs in
services are in relatively well-paid managerial and professional
positions.
It is important to ask how this favorable performance has come to
pass? This is not an easy question to answer for, if we knew the
formula, we could bottle and sell it. But at least three factors can
be cited as significant, if not all inclusive, contributors to this
period of sustained growth: they are technology, trade, and
government policy. Let me discuss each of these factors in turn.
For some time, it has been recognized that improvement in the
state of technology—that is, technological progress—is a key
factor determining economic growth. This is because the available
state of technology, which refers to the efficiency with which a
given set of productive inputs is employed, influences the
productivity of labor. In short, technological progress raises labor
productivity, which in turn raises growth.
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Research has shown that the state of technology in a country
depends, in part, on the pool of world knowledge available at a
given time and, perhaps more importantly, on internal institutional
arrangements that promote or retard the use of this knowledge.
Technological progress, therefore, depends on the rate at which
world knowledge grows and on the extent to which a country's
institutions provide incentives for employing that expanding world
knowledge. Recent evidence shows, further, that the state of
technology of a country is related positively to factors such as
openness to foreign trade and to deregulation. That is, it appears
that the more an economy participates in trade and the less
regulated it is, the better its state of technology: competitive
pressures undoubtedly hasten adoption of new technology.
Conversely, countries which erect barriers to the use of world
knowledge—barriers which limit international trade, constrain
business practices excessively, or reduce competition—tend to
have relatively poor states of technology. In taking such actions,
countries usually are not trying to resist technology so much as
protect a particular industry or sector from competition or change.
According to this reasoning, openness to foreign trade is positive
for economic growth because of its implications for technological
progress and labor productivity. But this reasoning aside,
empirical studies that have looked at trade alone have concluded
that it has a distinctly positive effect on a nation's growth and
living standards. In this connection, it is interesting to note that
both US exports and imports have increased annually at double
digit rates, in inflation adjusted terms, since their lows of the early
1980s. Our exports have grown over this period from about 8
percent of GDP to nearly 12 percent at present, while the import-
GDP ratio has climbed comparably from roughly 9 percent to 13
percent. To be sure, these observations do not demonstrate
causality, but the economy has certainly done well as trade has
expanded, and we should bear this in mind when issues like
NAFTA arise. The record seems sufficiently impressive to suggest
that we should encourage growth in trade to the extent possible.
The third factor earlier identified as contributing to economic
growth—namely, government policy—is relevant in several ways,
one of which has already been touched upon. Government policy
can have an appreciable impact on technological progress by
ensuring that a country's organizations and institutions have
incentives to use and to adapt world knowledge. In this regard,
the commitment in the US to measure more carefully the costs
and benefits of regulations, to deregulation of several industries,
and to open trade have undoubtedly been positive for
technological progress and productivity. A second aspect of
government policy—namely, progressive steps taken in recent
years toward balancing the federal budget—has been positive as
well, largely, I suspect, through their favorable implications for
business capital investment.
I would be remiss if I did not add that the Federal Reserve,
through our conduct of monetary policy, has also contributed to
the favorable performance of the economy. Notably, in this decade
as well as through much of the expansion of the 1980s, inflation
has been contained to moderate rates, a characteristic shared by
the way by the long expansion of the economy during the 1960s.
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Causality is difficult to demonstrate in economics, but we
nevertheless seem to be building a considerable body of evidence
which suggests that, at least in the United States, modest inflation
and prolonged periods of growth go hand in hand. I suspect that
one key in this relation is the stability provided by a low inflation
environment. In such an environment, there is less uncertainty
about the future, and business and consumers can make
decisions and take actions with confidence. Such an environment
is likely to favor savings and investment, to the long-run benefit of
economic performance.
The evidence about the relation between low inflation and
economic growth is directly relevant to the Federal Reserve and
our responsibility for monetary policy because there is widespread
agreement that inflation is ultimately a monetary phenomenon; it
results from a long-term pattern of money creation which is
excessive relative to the economy's ability to produce goods and
services. Further, there is agreement that the supply of money is
determined by the central bank in the long run. Thus, with policy
which limits money creation appropriately, the Federal Reserve
can in fact achieve and maintain low inflation.
The role of government policy, however, goes beyond
encouragement of trade and technological progress, and beyond
sound monetary and fiscal policies, important as they may be. As
I suspect you recognize full well, government provision of certain
public goods, including transportation infrastructure, can be critical
in fostering development and growth.
Transportation infrastructure is particularly important to the
economy of the Ninth Federal Reserve District since we are far
from export ports, such as New Orleans and Portland. Moreover,
transportation costs are the principal wedge between world prices
of wheat, corn, and soybeans and farm gate prices. The more
expensive transportation is, the less Ninth District farmers receive.
Fortunately, the US has the lowest cost transportation system in
the world for agricultural products. By way of example, it costs
Brazilian farmers more than twice as much to move soybeans 300
miles from western Parana state to the coast as it does to move
Ninth District soybeans 1,500 miles to the Gulf Coast. And US
port charges are about half of Brazilian port charges.
The Mississippi and Missouri rivers have played a central role in
the economic development of the region for more than a century.
Steamboats linked St. Paul with the rest of the nation, went as far
up the Minnesota River as Mankato, and 4-foot draft
steamwheelers clawed their way up the Missouri as far as
Montana in the 1880s. But the development and maintenance of
the 9-foot channel in the Mississippi between the wars has been
the most important factor for low-cost movement of Ninth District
agricultural products. Locks and dams at St. Paul, Hastings, Red
Wing, between Wabasha and Winona, as well as near
Trempealeau and La Crosse, Wisconsin have helped to facilitate
the large shipment of district products downriver and inputs such
as fertilizer upriver.
The Mississippi, to be sure, provides a fundamental physical
underpinning to the prosperity of Ninth District agriculture. But
successful utilization of this resource has depended as well on
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government infrastructure investments—the channel, locks, and
dams—cited earlier.
So the government can and has, in fact, played several significant
roles in fostering economic growth. Macroeconomic policies,
which have promoted stability, have provided a sound
underpinning on which the private sector has thrived. Further, we
have had an environment generally favorable to technological
progress, a key element in productivity improvement. And, finally,
government infrastructure investment has played a positive role
as well, to the benefit of many sectors of the economy.
Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (1997, July 24). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19970725_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19970725_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1997},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19970725_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}