speeches · January 14, 2002
Regional President Speech
Cathy E. Minehan · President
Thank you. It's a pleasure to be among you again. I think
it's been just over two years since I was with you last. The
timing is fortunate as well--the beginning of the year is a good
time to both look backward at the prior year and forward to
the prospects for the next. Certainly after such a tumultuous
2001, this process of reflection is a particularly important one.
The past year evokes powerful social, economic and
personal memories. The tragedy of September 11 stands out as
an historic watershed in terms of its enormous consequences
for this country, for the lives of thousands of families who lost
loved ones, and for the heroic public servants who continue to
labor at ground zero. Truly it was a time when--in the words
of one of my colleagues--ordinary people did extraordinary
things. Directly in the wake of that horrible day, U.S. financial
markets were tested in ways never conceived, and came
through, keeping market problems from adding to the
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concerns facing this country. Reserve Banks played a key role
here, a role of which I am very proud. The Federal Reserve
monitored the financial system and supplied sizeable amounts
of liquidity in the days after the crisis. This kept the payments
system working, eased the markets' reopening, and made a
difficult situation easier to deal with. Clearly, the Reserve
Banks and the rest of the financial sector were prepared for
contingencies--Y2K, if nothing else, had seen to that--but a lot
was learned about what else needs to be done to better address
contingency situations. So we have our 9/11 projects to
complete this year, and I expect many of you do as well.
Beyond the tragedy, however, 2001 also witnessed the
beginning of the first recession in about a decade. Obviously
September 11 made things worse, but it is also possible that a
recession might have occurred in any event given the slowdown
that preceded that historic day. Since then, many aspects of
the economy--the consumer, the equity markets just to name
two--seem to have rebounded from the immediate shock of the
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tragedy. But levels of economic activity are still very slow.
Much of the incoming data now suggest there may be some
bottoming out and a recovery may be in the works for 2002.
The big question is what that recovery will look like. Will it be
the rapid pickup seen by so many forecasters? Or will it be
something that takes place more slowly?
As I seek to answer that question, I find myself reflecting
on a few lessons drawn from 2001 that will guide my thinking
in 2002--call them New Year's resolutions. I'd like to share
these resolutions with you this morning, as we all assess what is
likely to happen, and where the risks are.
1. First resolution- View Every Economic Forecast as Just
That--A Forecast.
Over the last several years economic forecasts have often
been wrong, sometimes markedly so. First, nearly all
underestimated the economy's potential to grow and
overestimated the degree to which inflation might be a
problem. Then, just as many were getting the hang of
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predicting a high growth, low inflationary economy, growth
started to stall. Last year saw errors on the opposite side, at
least as it regards growth, with most forecasts of GDP revised
downward with every passing month.
In some ways this is no surprise. Economic forecasting is
based on the idea that the future will obey the rules of the past.
Thus, forecasting is particularly difficult when economic
fortunes change direction, or when the rules of the present
truly are different from the past. Last year saw an important
economic turning point, so it's not surprising that after the
longest period of economic expansion in U.S. history, a
downturn was hard to predict. But the last several years truly
have been different as well. The last half of the decade and the
first years of the new millennium were unlike any in thirty
years or so. During the late nineties, economic growth was fed
by rising levels of productivity. This was spurred in part by
large business investments in new technology, accommodative
financial markets, and rising consumer and business
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confidence and demand that fed on itself to create even faster
growth. And, except for periods of oil price increases, this
growth occurred without the surge in inflation that
accompanied most expansionary periods in post Second World
War history.
Remember the last quarter of 1999, when the economy
grew at a 8.3% pace? Even with rising productivity, mature
economies with slowly growing labor forces cannot maintain
that pace for long without severely straining resources. As
Herb Stein said-if something can't continue it doesn't.
Businesses saw profits eaten away by rising wages paid to ever
harder to come by skilled workers, and by increases in energy
costs. They began to cut back by trimming workforces and by
cutting costs particularly in the area in which they had spent so
much in the last half of the nineties--capital goods, especially
high-technology-computers, software and anything to do with
telecommunications. As businesses stopped spending in the fall
of 2000, economic growth slowed suddenly as well--to remind
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you in the first half of that year the economy grew by 4%; by
fourth quarter it was growing at a pace about one-half of that.
And that pattern of very slow and eventually negative growth
continued through 2001.
But even the slowdown has been different from the
normal recession. Usually a downturn in business fixed
investment follows rather than leads an economic slowdown or
a recession. The usual, though simplified, recession timeline
goes like this: fast-paced growth strains the economy's
resources raising the potential for rapidly rising inflation. The
Fed steps in to return the economy to a more sustainable level
of growth and the interest sensitive sectors of the economy
begin to slow. Consumer spending on houses and other big
ticket items contracts and the rest of the economy follows suit.
But, in this recession exactly the opposite has happened
consumer spending has maintained some strength but capital
spending has been slowing or declining for over a year.
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Most forecasts now see what is being termed a short,
shallow recession with a resumption of growth at a very solid
pace by the last half of 2002. There are good reasons to expect
this. After nearly a year of vigorous inventory reductions in
the face of weak sales, businesses are likely to ease the pace of
inventory trimming, especially if demand strengthens. This
could add strength to industrial production. Further,
businesses may be poised to resume spending on technology.
Signs of this can be seen in data on chip production, new
orders for durable goods and in surveys of purchasing
managers. If business investment just stops falling, as a result
of more stable inventory levels or new technology spending,
GDP growth would be nearly 1 percentage point higher, all
other things being equal. That alone might bring us back to
positive growth territory.
But my New Year's resolution is to take forecasts with a
large grain of salt, and I believe this skepticism is warranted.
First, for the 1.5 million workers who have lost their jobs as
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manufacturing came to a sudden slowdown 18 months ago, this
recession hardly seems short and shallow. And for those
marginal workers drawn into the workforce as a result of labor
shortages, the last in, first out phenomenon has likely
destroyed more than a few dreams.
Second, most of the rest of the world is following the U.S.
into recession, as well, with forecasts of world growth below
2% for at least the first half of 2002. Growth outside the U.S.
had been driven by overheated U.S. demand in the late
nineties, rather than by homegrown domestic demand. Thus,
it seems unlikely that foreign demand, independent of a
resurgence in U.S. growth, will act to cushion U.S. economic
activity anytime soon. Finally, one has to be skeptical about
whether U.S. business investment will grow at a solid pace if
anything should happen to the remarkable resilience of the US
consumer. Which takes me to my second New Years
resolution:
2. Keep Your Eye on the Consumer.
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Consumption is two thirds of gross domestic product-it is
very hard for the economy to grow if consumers are not willing
to spend. This has never been more evident than in the past
year when, despite the recession and September 11, consumers
bought autos and new homes at near-record clips. How has this
been possible?
First, despite sharp increases in the unemployment rate,
the vast majority of the workforce is working and earning
incomes that are growing at a solid pace. Second, consumers,
while worried about the present, have displayed tremendous
resiliency, particularly after September 11. They are relatively
more confident about the future and getting more so as time
passes. That level of confidence makes purchasing big-ticket
items a bit easier in uncertain times. Third, consumers have
been able to leverage rising asset values-especially their houses
and use that cash to spend more freely.
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In many ways the strength of the consumer is testimony
to the efficacy of monetary policy-aggressively easing policy
last year has created an environment in which it has been
easier for consumers to borrow and spend, thereby putting a
floor under a weak economy. If, for example, consumer
spending had fallen as it usually does during the early stage of
a recession, GDP growth would have been about 1 and a half
percentage points weaker than it has been in the relatively mild
downturn we have seen, at least to date. So the consumer has
really saved the day.
But the real question is whether the consumer will stay
the course long enough to revive business investment. And
here one can reasonably have doubts. On the positive side,
monetary policy has eased considerably and some of the effects
of that ease are still in the pipeline. Moreover, there are some
signs that the pace of job losses has begun to slow, though the
unemployment rate should continue to rise a bit even as the
economy recovers. On the negative side, consumer
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indebtedness can continue to grow only so long before
consumer finances become a drag on spending and overall
financial health. Even now, outstanding amounts of consumer
debt are at high levels historically, and interest payments as a
share of disposable personal income are high and bankruptcies
are as well.
And we should remember that the spending spree of the
last couple of years really can't continue-just take automobiles
as an example. Consumers have been buying new cars at a
record 16 million unit a year pace for some time now. One
wonders how many cars U.S. consumers can own or how many
driveways they have. Mortgage rates have risen recently
likely taking a cut out of homebuying. Thus, the pace of
consumer spending growth might not continue, bringing with
it the potential that such spending will not be the usual source
of strength that it has been in a recovery. During the initial
stages of recoveries since the Second World War, consumers
often respond with pent-up demand--given the pace of big-
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ticket spending in 2001, one has to ask whether there is much
pent-up demand.
Finally, both consumers and equity markets are
displaying a growing optimism about the coming year. One
can see this in the long end of the yield curve where yields have
fallen little over the past twelve months, despite eleven
reductions in overnight funds rates by the Open Market
Committee, the onset of the recession in March, and the real
contraction in GDP growth by third quarter. These relatively
elevated long-term rates don't seem to reflect inflationary
concerns--l'll get to that next--but may be a sign that yields will
need to be higher to equate the supply and demand for longer
term financing as the economy surges. Optimism is also
reflected in rising equity price-earnings ratios, which for the
S&P 500 are about double their long-run average. And this
after a year in which corporate profits plunged about 20%,
and profit levels are down to those last seen in 1995. Analysts
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are optimistic about 2002, to be sure, but their projections of
profit growth in the range of 16-30 percent are eyeopening.
Perhaps this optimism is reasonable; certainly it seems to
agree with the thrust of at least the most optimistic economic
forecasts. But I have to wonder here as well. If the consumer
retrenches a bit in the face of high levels of debt; if the external
sector provides no help; and business spending recovers, but
only modestly, will corporate profits be that strong? And if
corporate profits don't hold up, what happens to equity
markets, and to business and consumer confidence?
3. My Final Resolution - Be Wary About Price Movements.
Of course, as a central banker I have to make a resolution
to stand firm against inflation every year. But inflation no
matter how measured was truly quiescent in 2001, and is
expected to decline further this year. Survey-measured
inflation expectations have declined as have expectations
inferred from the yields on the Treasury's inflation protected
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securities. Declining inflation means higher real interest rates,
rather than lower, and some have argued that this may be one
reason why the aggressive easing of monetary policy over the
past year seems less effective than it otherwise might have
been. Frankly, I don't agree with that description of the
impact of monetary policy, but it has been suggested. In fact,
some have argued that avoiding deflation ought to be the Fed's
worry right now.
My own view is more measured. With aggregate inflation
as low as it is, there is a balancing act going on--not all prices
are growing when inflation is rising at 2 % or so--particularly if
one considers the rapid rate of increase in the price of some
things, like medical services. When price growth is this low,
prices of some things--like commodities, or computers--are
going down, while other prices--fo r business or medical or
other types of services--are going up. Moreover, wages and
personal income continue to rise. This is a low inflation
environment, and not the downward spiral usually thought of
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as deflation. In my view, many factors--the resilience of the
U.S. consumer, the willingness of banks and markets to lend,
the health of the U.S. banking system, just to name three--all
point in the direction of more rather than less stability in price
levels and overall economic growth.
One of the biggest--and most pleasant--surprises of the
late '90s was the economy's ability to grow at an historically
fast pace without inflation taking off. This was at least in part
the effect of rising rates of productivity growth that help the
overall economic pie to grow without pinching resources. Now,
as the recession may be bottoming out, productivity has
remained surprisingly strong, with all that that can mean for
the longer-run capacity of the economy to enjoy solid rates of
non-inflationary growth. Will inflation be a cyclical problem
when the recovery is in full swing? That's hard to say, but it is
certainly an area that bears some watching.
In sum, my New Year's resolutions--be mindful about
forecasts, keep your eye on the consumer, and be wary of
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inflation--all point in one direction--the need to make careful
choices in the face of economic uncertainty. The American
economy has had to absorb some extraordinary shocks over
the past year or more. It has done so in remarkable fashion,
even in the wake of the tragedy of September 11. There is
much that is good news in incoming economic data--glimmers
of hope for manufacturers, and a slowing in the pace of job
losses--and the New Year has brought a surge of optimism.
But in the midst of this optimism it's good to remember that
risks remain, and some caution is in order.
Cite this document
APA
Cathy E. Minehan (2002, January 14). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020115_cathy_e_minehan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20020115_cathy_e_minehan,
author = {Cathy E. Minehan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020115_cathy_e_minehan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}