speeches · April 24, 2002
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Economy | Federal Reserve Bank ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/the-unce...
HOME CAREERS CONTACT
About the Fed Banking Supervision Economic Research Regional Economy Community & Education News & Events Publications
Home> News & Events> President's Speeches> The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Economy
All Speeches President's Speeches RSS Latest Content from
the Minneapolis Fed
The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Sovereign Default Risk and Firm
Heterogeneity
Economy Staff Report
Gary H. Stern | President, 1985-2009 Container Imports and the Advantage of
Size
Economic Policy Papers
The 12th Annual Hyman P. Minsky Conference on Financial Markets
Why I Dissented
April 25, 2002 Messages
Exchange Rate Policies at the Zero
TWEET SHARE EMAIL PRINT Lower Bound
Working Paper
The key words in the title of this conference, as far as I am Independent Reviews
concerned, are “uncertain times.” They are key because there is Banking in the Ninth
almost always considerable uncertainty when it comes to
economic policymaking. I recognize this statement may sound Connect
typically like a Federal Reserve official trying to build sympathy MinneapolisFed on Twitter
Minneapolis Fed on Facebook
largely for imaginary difficulties in policymaking, but I will try to
RSS Feeds
convince you that uncertainty is real and has significant
implications for policy. I also recognize that, as the last speaker at
a daylong conference, I am in an unenviable position, especially
because earlier participants were both distinguished and
knowledgeable. Thus, I take as my charge: to be mercifully brief
and to be provocative, at least by Federal Reserve standards. Let
me note, in this regard, the now obligatory disclaimer that I am
speaking only for myself and not for others in the Federal
Reserve.
As a monetary policymaker, I cannot avoid making forecasts of
future economic performance, because I would like policy to be
anticipatory and to head off prospective economic problems, or
simply to contribute to stability if that is all that is required. We are
all familiar with the story of long policy lags which make
preemptive or anticipatory policy desirable. But the other
traditional characteristic of policy lags, their variability, is almost
synonymous with uncertainty and suggests caution in pursuing
preemptive policy.
In any event, anticipatory policy requires forecasts and requires
that I pay some attention—give some weight—to them.
Unfortunately, neither my personal forecasting record, nor that of
the economics profession, is particularly good. To illustrate this,
consider a couple of episodes from recent experience; I pick
these because they are at hand, but since I have been at this for
more than 30 years now, I could find many other examples if need
be.
2nd half of 1999
1st half of 2000
2nd half of 2000
Q4 2001
Q1 2002
1 of 4 3/22/2017 3:31 PM
The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Economy | Federal Reserve Bank ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/the-unce...
The facts are, no one has sustained a good record of forecasting
the
short-term performance of the U.S. economy. What does this
mean for policymaking? The normal prescription is that, in the
face of substantial uncertainty, policy actions should be modest
and infrequent so that, at worst, they will not be destabilizing. I
endorse this conclusion and would add a couple of observations.
First, with regard to real growth, I think we have seen over the
past twenty years that the U.S. economy is terrifically resilient.
Recall that the economy grew uninterruptedly from late 1982 till
mid 1990, then again from the spring of 1991 till the spring of last
year. This was a gratifying performance made even more so by
the shocks and storms the economy weathered along the way,
including the stock market crash of October 1987 (and several
other corrections of note); financial crises in Latin America, parts
of Asia, Russia, and so on; significant downsizing of the defense
industry in the wake of the collapse of the USSR; virtual demise of
the S&L industry and domestic banking problems of note; and so
on.
Despite this litany of problems, economic growth proceeded, and I
think it is fair to say that on average over the past twenty years
the surprises largely have been on the upside. To be fair, some of
these shocks and disruptions did in fact provoke a policy
response, and thus we do not have a clean test of resilience, but I
for one am under no illusions that policy was so appropriate and
precise that it deserves the lion's share of the credit for this
economic performance.
Upside surprises in economic growth are usually easy to take,
especially if they are accompanied by persistently low inflation, as
was the case in much of the 1990s. As noted earlier, we appear to
have had another bout of this in the last quarter or two, with
growth exceeding earlier expectations. Interestingly, while I think
most forecasters estimate growth of at least four percent in the
first quarter, many in the business community remain quite
cautious about the economy and its prospects. This divergence
between the views of business leaders and those of economists is
not trivial, and yet the numbers are “neutral,” speak for
themselves, and are undeniably positive. What accounts for the
divergence?
The short, honest answer to this question is “I don't know,” but I
am willing to speculate a bit. In a nutshell, I think many
businesses are still adjusting to a low inflation environment. In
general, profits cannot be improved by price increases because
such increases will not stick. In a highly competitive, low inflation
environment, cost containment or outright cost reduction is critical
to improved profitability, but this will not necessarily be easy to
achieve. Thus, I would speculate, business continues to
experience bottom line pressure even though the recovery is well
underway in at least several sectors.
The preceding commentary was a bit of a digression but it serves
the purpose of introducing the subject of inflation, another topic
challenging in my view to those responsible for short-term
forecasts and to monetary policymakers. There is a voluminous
body of evidence for the long run indicating that monetarists are
correct about inflation. In the long run, inflation is a monetary
phenomenon, where by the long run I mean periods of five or ten
years or more.
2 of 4 3/22/2017 3:31 PM
The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Economy | Federal Reserve Bank ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/the-unce...
But this relation doesn't get us very far if accurate short-term
forecasts of inflation are the goal. One favorite way to produce
short-term, say annual, forecasts of inflation today is with some
variation of the Phillips curve, usually involving the concept of
NAIRU (nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment). The
underlying notion, albeit perhaps an oversimplification, is that
unemployment is a reasonable proxy for labor market pressure
and that labor market pressure ultimately translates into inflation,
presumably because of its implications for wages, compensation
more broadly, and unit labor costs. NAIRU is key because
significant upward pressure on compensation, say, is expected
only when actual unemployment drops below it.
Depending on your “tastes and preferences,” this may be a
compelling story, but for this policymaker an important question is
how well do the NAIRU models work in practice? The answer to
this question is, in short, “not well,” and this has been true since
1984 according to our (FRB Mpls.) analysis. In short, our research
suggests that unemployment has not contributed significantly to
forecasts of inflation for quite some time.
Specifically, two of our economists, Andy Atkeson and Lee
Ohanian, both now faculty members at UCLA by the way,
reviewed a variety of inflation forecasting models. Their results
revealed that, beginning in 1984, Phillips curve type NAIRU
models did no better at forecasting inflation than a simple model
which assumed that next year's inflation rate would equal last
year's. And as a practical matter, many of you may recall that
many forecasters generally overpredicted the pace of inflation,
from about the mid 1990s on.
In light of this evidence, am I ready to discard the NAIRU concept
in its entirety? No, although it's tempting. But I do think, speaking
only for myself, that the burden of proof has shifted to those who
believe it's a valuable concept. In fact, the whole exercise is
beginning to remind me of the gyrations in which we used to
engage in the 1980s to try to preserve or to resurrect various
short-run demand for money equations as they went increasingly
off track. Ultimately, the exercises proved futile and we
surrendered.
What are the policy implications of these circumstances? In my
view, they exacerbate the degree of uncertainty and, other things
equal, ought to contribute to caution in the response of monetary
policy to changes in conditions and forecasts. Indeed, one way of
interpreting the conduct of policy from about 1996 through 2000 is
that a good deal of caution was in fact exercised. To remind us,
the economy was into its sixth year of expansion by the spring of
1996 and the unemployment rate dropped below five percent by
1997. It continued to decline, on average, through 2000, yet there
was at most minor tightening of monetary policy through this
episode. Recall, finally, that virtually all estimates of NAIRU at the
time were in excess of five percent, and some were as high as six
percent.
Two obvious reservations about a persistent policy prescription of
caution are in order. First, such a prescription runs counter to
desires to be preemptive and, secondly, it would seem to risk an
inadequate response to a serious problem should one arise. I take
these reservations seriously but am not yet overly concerned.
Effective preemptive policy action in fact requires an ability to
forecast short-run fluctuations in the economy accurately, and I
3 of 4 3/22/2017 3:31 PM
The (Uncertain) Resilience of the U.S. Economy | Federal Reserve Bank ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/the-unce...
have already expressed reservations on this score. Perhaps more
importantly, I have also emphasized the fundamental resilience of
the U.S. economy and would add that much of the time excesses
in the economy, positive or negative, largely self correct. Policy
rarely has to try to save the day. Put another way, given the
fundamental soundness and strength of the U.S. economy, it is
important that we get policy approximately correct, but it is not
necessary that we get it precisely correct. And the costs
associated with overreacting are probably at least as great as
those associated with caution.
Top
TWEET SHARE EMAIL PRINT
Minneapolis Fed Other Federal Reserve System Sites
About the Fed Privacy and Terms Board of Governors Kansas City
Banking Supervision Disclaimer Atlanta New York
Economic Research Accessibility Boston Philadelphia
Regional Economy Glossary Chicago Richmond
Community Careers Cleveland San Francisco
News & Events Contact Us Dallas St. Louis
Publications loading
4 of 4 3/22/2017 3:31 PM
Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2002, April 24). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020425_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20020425_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020425_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}