speeches · February 19, 2001
Regional President Speech
Cathy E. Minehan · President
It is a~easure to be with you this morning to kick-off of
your timely conference. I'd like to thank Gian Camuzzi, treasurer
of Gillette, for asking me to speak to this international group. As
it turns out, you are a perfect audience to engage in thinking
about a topic of some interest to us in the Federal Reserve -
what does the prospects or at least the possibility, of significant
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U.S. fiscal surpluses in the next decade, and a related decrease in
the value of U.S. Treasury securities outstanding, mean for how
money markets here in the U.S. and worldwide deal with issues
of liquidity and risk. But before we get into that, let me first give
you my perspecti{e on the prospects for the U.S. economy.
It goes without saying that, after four barn-burner years and
a decade of rising rates of expansion, the US economy slowed
significantly at the end of last year. In many ways, this
slowdown is not surprising--most forecasters had seen a less
severe version of it coming, albeit incorrectly, at the beginning of
each of the previous three years. And, as each year, and
especially 1999, proved better than the last, an eventual slowing
in growth seemed more likely. In fact, some deceleration was
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necessary. From the second half of 1999 through the first half of
2000, U.S. GDP grew at better than a 6 percent pace. That rate
of expansion was rapidly straining capacity, as evidenced by the
decline in the unemployment rate over this period. In fact, labor
markets were getting so tight that it was nearly impossible to find
the workers needed to sustain that rate of growth. It is in just
such an environment that inflation tends to rise.
1-tt:link most-w.ould---agr-e that1his rapid expansion of
demand was simply unsustainable. One need look no further than
motor vehicles to find a market in which the growth in demand
had outstripped previous concepts of long-run sustainability. In
the first quarter of last year, motor vehicle sales hit the
unprecedented rate of over 18 million units a year-a few million
over the recent average. At that pace, I wonder if the U.S. was
about to run out of driveway space. This largely reflected an
adjustment to the increased level of wealth and income of U.S.
households at the end of the millennium, the confidence they had
as a result of higher wealth and income, and their willingness to
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save less out of disposable income than ever before. Inevitably,
these trends had to slow.
The investment boom of the 1990s was also unsustainable.
Until the second half of this year, business fixed investment had
grown at solid double digit rates for at least the previous 4 years,
and spending on computer equipment and software had grown at
an amazing 45 percent. Although most expansions have spurts in
overall investment of a similar magnitude, not since the 1960s
have we had a burst that lasted as long. Technological
improvements in computing power, software, and
telecommunications increased firms' demand for these goods.
And, no doubt, continued technological improvements will help
propel such investment in the future. But the rates of investment
in the late '90s, fed by ebullient consumer demand and
accommodating financial markets, could not continue when
demand flattened, and markets became more discriminating.
Residential investment also outpaced its long-run
fundamentals at the beginning of last year. Starts and permits hit
their cyclical peaks at the beginning of 1999 - a level roughly
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equal to past cyclical highs. At that pace, the stock of homes
was increasing significantly faster than households were being
formed. Again, a trend supported for a time by rising consumer
wealth and confidence, but not sustainable over the longer run.
At the beginning of last year, I believed that the question
was not whether the economy was going to slow down, but what
the environment would look like when it did. The slowdown
could occur with a glut of new homes, high office vacancy rates,
and significant over-investment in unused business equipment and
consumer durables, or it could occur when these stocks were
closer to their desired levels. Obviously the latter case is
preferred.
To help attain this better-balanced environment, the Federal
Reserve began tightening monetary policy in the middle of 1999.
By the beginning of 2000, other sources of increasing restraint
became evident as well. Financial markets became far less
expansionary. Uncertainty about profit projections resulted in
declines in asset values, particularly in the high tech sector.
Credit markets, which had never returned to the headiness of the
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1997 global pre-crisis period, became even more discriminating in
early 2000. Yield spreads, particularly for lower-rated securities,
widened considerably in the spring and again in the fall. Lending
standards at major commercial banks tightened as well. The
increase in the price of oil, which continued through much of
2000, and, more importantly, price increases in natural gas,
began to bite into the real incomes of consumers, and the profits
of businesses. These events both signaled and helped cause the
second half slowdown.
However, the suddenness and intensity of the deceleration
took almost everyone by surprise. Growth averaged 1. 7 percent
in the second half of last year, less than one-third the 6 percent
average in the 4 quarters prior to that. Some ask whether or not
the economy is or will be in recession, but in many ways that is
the wrong question. The economy may well be growing, albeit
quite slowly, but for those hard hit by this sudden slowdown--the
manufacturing sector especially--this deceleration clearly is
painful.
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A number of explanations for the intensity of this slowdown
have been highlighted in the press. Consumer demand slowed
more sharply than anyone expected, driven in part by the effect
on confidence of sharp drops in the NASDAQ. Moreover, since
the consumption of durable goods, especially motor vehicles,
declined most significantly, it may be that consumers finally
reached their "saturation" levels of these goods. Finally, stormy
weather throughout most of the country in December and early
January had an effect as well.
A similar story may apply to the decline in firms' investment
in plant and equipment. In the wake of extraordinary spending
growth on equipment, and reflecting tighter credit and financial
markets, firms may have grown concerned about over
investment. Reports of sharp curtailment in the motor vehicle
industry may have triggered the reassessment of consumer
attitudes in December. In turn, this may have spread the narrow
weakness in motor vehicles to broader spending categories.
Finally, the rapid change from very strong to slumping sales
growth likely led to an unexpected overstocking of inventories.
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This inventory overhang and the related retrenchment in
business and consumer attitudes pose challenges for the U.S.
economy in the short run. But in many ways, the economy is
better positioned to weather these short-run adjustments than it
was in previous periods of weakness.
First, the major positive force that has propelled this historic
expansion is still with us--the amazing acceleration in U.S.
productivity. The development of and investment in new
technologies to enhance business processes has provided a
tremendous spur to productivity growth. Even as such
investment slowed in late 2000, productivity remained
surprisingly strong. This gives further evidence to the assessment
that the underlying, or structural, growth rate of U.S. productivity
has stepped up significantly over its pace of the '80s and early
'90s. Reflecting this, the sheer determination on the part of U.S.
businesses to work harder and smarter in the face of domestic
and global competition seems, if anything, stronger now.
Another imbalance that has preceded almost all post-war
recessions has been significantly rising inflation. However,
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inflation has been well behaved recently even in the face of
continued, tight labor markets. Labor costs have accelerated, but
core inflation has remained at a relatively low, stable level.
Fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices will have a transitory
effect on both the headline and core CPls, but the potential for
broader price increases seems small at present. Thus, containing
inflation is not an immediate concern.
Third, although an inventory overhang exists in some
sectors, just-in-time inventory processes and rapid production
adjustments have probably limited the buildup. These processes
should help reverse the overhang more quickly than is usual.
Long expansions often spawn imbalances in real estate
markets. Certainly, significant overbuilding in commercial real
estate was evident by the end of the 1980s. Vacancy rates for
commercial properties were high and rising before the recession
of the early '90s. Currently, however, vacancy rates in many
markets are low and prices for commercial and residential
buildings are solid. These facts seem inconsistent with significant
overbuilding.
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Assets in the banking sector remain reasonably healthy,
especially relative to capital, despite problems in particular sectors
like telecommunications. Loan standards tightened in 2000, and
credit markets discriminated sharply between investment grade
and other credits, for the most part a desirable and prudent
response to heightened uncertainty about current and future loan
quality.
Unlike the late 1980s as well, large government budget
deficits are not crowding out private investment, or creating the
need for fiscal austerity. On the contrary, government budgets at
both the national and local level remain supportive.
Finally, of course, the economy now has 100 basis points of
easing in the pipeline. This may help shore up confidence,
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creating some rebound in spending by both firms and consumers. l
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Recent signs are at least somewhat encouraging her7' In these
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circumstances, it goes without saying vigilance on the part of the 1
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Federal Reserve is necessary. ·1fV I
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Thus, in my view, the economy is likely to continue feeling
the effects this quarter of a significant but relatively short-lived
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inventory correction. The correction is the result of an
unexpectedly rapid adjustment toward more sustainable growth in
demand. The longer-run underpinnings -technology-driven
productivity growth, benign inflation, bank balance sheets, fiscal
balance sheets-appear sound. There are risks for sure, the level
of private savings and the softness in domestic demand in many
foreign economies, to name two. Nonetheless, I expect activity
to increase later in the year, and growth for the year to average ~
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around 2 percent. rvv0 f{u.1.1;\. lP..~
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One of the major underpi.inings to the decade of expansion 1,~
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in the '90s was the gradual declin\ and eventual elimination, of
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the U.S. federal deficit. I don't nee1~ explain the benefits of (J.,,W,IJ--- f e.,,
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reduced government deficits to thi-~/\ience. For one thing,
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lower long term interest ratefsf ma de possible by a declining
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demand by the government unding figured prominently in the
capital investment boom of the '90s. But it is easy to forget how
hard it was to get to this f<tvorable situation, and how hard we
should work to ensure it remains .
Cite this document
APA
Cathy E. Minehan (2001, February 19). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010220_cathy_e_minehan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20010220_cathy_e_minehan,
author = {Cathy E. Minehan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2001},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010220_cathy_e_minehan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}