speeches · April 25, 2002
Regional President Speech
Thomas M. Hoenig · President
THE ECONOMY IN 2002:
A CHALLENGING TIME FOR MONETARY POLICY
Thomas M. Hoenig
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Nebraska Bankers Association Annual Meeting
Embassy Suites
Omaha, Neb.
April 26, 2002
I appreciate this opportunity today to share my views with you on the national economic
outlook for 2002.1 don’t have to tell you that the U.S. economy has not performed well
over the past two years. The cunent recession, which officially started in March of last
year, marked the end of the longest peacetime expansion in our nation’s history.
Moreover, the tragic events of September 11 cast a long shadow over the prospects for
economic recovery hi the corning year.
Recently, however, we have received some very positive information on the economy,
suggesting that economic activity is rebounding much more rapidly than expected. As a
result, the economic outlook for 2002 now appears to be much brighter than it was a few
months ago, and many economic forecasters now believe that the recession has ended and
an economic recovery is under way.
Today, I would like to offer an assessment of the U.S. economic outlook and also provide
my perspective on some of the challenges for monetary policy in the coming year. Most
people agree, it seems to me, that the cunent stance of monetary policy is very
accommodative. While such a policy stance is appropriate for an economy in recession, it
will, if it remains unchanged as the economy strengthens, impinge on efforts to maintain
long-run price stability. The difficulty in saying this of course is that determining the
timing of future policy adjustments is to some degree art and not just science. As always,
the FOMC must balance the need to anticipate inflationary pressure and the conditions
that facilitate it against the existence of uncertainty about both the strength of the
recovery and the behavior of productivity.
The outlook for 2002
Let me begin by looking at some of the reasons behind the improved economic outlook.
If we go back a few months — to the period just after September 11 — we find that the
consensus economic forecast was for negative real GDP growth hi the third and fourth
quarters of 2001 and very weak growth in the first half of this year. At that time, most
forecasters saw sustained economic recovery beginning only in the latter half of this year.
In fact, to many individuals’ surprise, growth turned out to be positive in the fourth
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quarter, and strong data for the first quarter have led many forecasters to up their
estimates of first quarter growth to a range of 3 to 5 percent.
One reason why last fall’s forecasts were so far off the mark is that the economic effects
of September 11 turned out to be somewhat different than expected. Although the direct
effects of these events on sectors such as the airline and travel industries were large and
persistent, the overall effects on the macro economy appear to have been smaller and
more temporary than originally thought. In particular, consumer confidence and spending
chopped sharply in the weeks after September 11 but then rebounded toward the end of
the year. Record consumer spending on autos, spurred by zero interest financing, was a
significant factor behind fourth quarter growth. Moreover, the events of September 11 led
to sharply higher federal government spending for defense and national security. Taken
together, higher consumer and government spending in the fourth quarter offset other
negative factors, such as a record decline in business inventories.
As to the improved outlook for the first quarter of this year, much of the additional
economic strength reflects a turnaround in the inventory situation. After a year and a half
of allowing inventories to shrink, businesses are beginning to gear up production to adjust
inventories to more noimal levels. Consequently, a lesser pace of inventory reduction
followed by a restocking of inventories to desired levels will likely give a shaip boost to
output growth in the first half of this year.
For the remainder of the year, however, there is more uncertainty about the strength of
the recovery. Currently, the consensus forecast of business economists is for solid growth
to continue in the second half of the year and into 2003. Realistically, though, there are
likely to be sectors of strength as well as areas of weakness. Depending on how they
balance out, they will determine to what degree growth is stronger or weaker than the
consensus outlook.
One likely source of strength is federal government spending, which reflects both greater
defense and security outlays and a continued high level of payments to agriculture.
Another source of strength, which could be something of a surprise, is business fixed
investment. As you know, the collapse of business investment spending is one of the
principal causes of the current slowdown. And, certainly, there is still considerable excess
capacity in some sectors, notably telecommunications equipment and business structures.
However, we are seeing signs of stabilization in other areas of business equipment
spending, and the recent fiscal stimulus package provides considerable tax incentives for
businesses to accelerate their investment purchases as we move forward into 2003. Thus,
there is a reasonable case to be made that we could see stronger than expected investment
spending during the course of this and next year.
On a more cautionary note, two other areas of recent strength — inventories and housing
— are likely to be less stimulative going forward. The positive effects of inventory
rebuilding are likely to diminish after midyear as stocks settle in at desired levels.
Moreover, housing, which has been unusually strong throughout the slowdown, is likely
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to make a smaller contribution to growth in the period ahead, as the recent rise in
moil gage rates deters new home purchases and reduces the incentive to refinance.
There are also some key sectors, notably foreign trade and state and local govenunent
spending, which are likely to be a drag on the economy in the coming year. Like the
United States, many other industrialized and developing countries have experienced an
economic slowdown during the past year. Then recoveries while likely to occur, are also
likely to lag that of the U.S. Although our imports should rise noticeably as our economy
strengthens while our exports are restrained both by slower foreign growth and a strong
dollar. Consequently, most forecasters see the trade balance as a continuing drag on U.S.
economic performance.
Additional weakness may come from the deteriorating fiscal position of many state and
local governments. Because the recession has led to a significant shortfall in revenues,
many state and local governments are facing the prospect of substantial tax hikes or
spending reductions to achieve budgetary balance in the current fiscal year. Thus, the
weakened condition of state and local finances is likely to offset some of the stimulus at
the federal level.
hi the presence of these conflicting forces, the consumer will continue to hold the key to
the strength of the economic recovery. One of the primary reasons why the current
recession has been less severe than previous downturns is that the consumer has
continued to spend despite rising unemployment and a weaker stock market. Indeed, as I
noted earlier, consmner spending was exceptionally robust in the fourth quarter of last
year in response to low-interest automobile financing. In the first quarter of this year,
while consmner confidence has risen, spending has slowed somewhat, and we will want
to watch how the consumer behaves as we move thr ough the remainder of this year. In
any event, I believe businesses’ attitudes toward investment and the strength of the
recovery itself will depend importantly on what the consumer does over the balance of
the year.
Challenges for monetary policy
I would like to take a closer look at some of the challenges facing monetary policy in the
current economic environment. As you know, the Federal Reserve responded to the
economic slowdown and the events of September 11 by aggressively lowering its target
federal fimds rate from 6 % percent to 1 % percent during the course of the year. Short
term interest rates are currently the lowest they have been in almost forty years.
As economic conditions have improved during the past few months, however, talk in the
financial press has shifted abruptly from whether the Federal Reserve will ease further to
when the Federal Reserve will begin to move to a less accommodative posture. As you
are aware, the Federal Open Market Committee left the federal funds rate target
unchanged at its first two meetings this year. Moreover, at its March meeting, the FOMC
altered its assessment of the balance of risks in the economy to reflect the improved
economic outlook. Market interest rates have also moved higher in recent weeks.
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suggesting that financial market participants are anticipating some upward movement in
policy later this year. Both investor surveys and interest rate futures suggest that the
federal funds rate could reach 3 percent by year-end and move still higher next year.
In thinking about the implementation of monetary policy in the period ahead, it might be
helpful to distinguish between the likely direction of interest rate movements and the
timing of possible changes. I would like to take a few minutes to provide my perspective
on these issues.
Direction of interest rate changes
As to the direction of interest rate changes, as I said earlier, most analysts perceive that
the current level of short-term interest rates is clearly accommodative and unsustainable
in the longer run. Real short-term interest rates (nominal interest rates minus expected
inflation) are essentially zero. The longer rates stay at this level, the greater is the
likelihood that credit-financed growth will accelerate to the point that inflationary
pressures begin to develop. In fact, many economists believe that monetary policy
contributed to the severe inflation problems in the 1970s and early 1980s because real
interest rates remained too low for too long.
A second reason for adjusting policy might be a concern about excessive credit creation
and its implications for debt burdens, and the fragility of the financial system. The easing
of monetary policy during the past year has provided substantial liquidity to the financial
system. In a recession, this is appropriate, as increased liquidity and lower borrowing
costs help stimulate spending and assist in relieving financial stress for consumers and
businesses. With the real cost of short-term borrowing near zero, however, going forward
there is a risk that credit availability will become too easy. If so, one result could be an
undesirable increase in the debt burden of households and businesses. Another possible
outcome is a speculative increase hi asset prices fueled by easy credit availability. To the
extent that these developments increase the fragility of the financial system, they also
increase the downside risks for long term economic growth.
Timing of monetary policy actions
In contrast to the direction of policy, the timing of monetaiy policy actions is a more
complex issue. As I outline above, moving too slowly runs the risk of allowing
inflationary pressures to build up. However, moving too quickly could hinder the
economic recovery.
I believe that we can gain some insight regarding this issue by looking at past situations
where the Federal Reserve was faced with a similar issue of how to unwind an
accommodative monetaiy policy stance. One interesting episode is the recovery from the
1990-1991 Gulf War recession. As you may recall, rather than tightening monetaiy
policy early in that recovery, the Federal Reserve actually lowered its federal funds rate
target dining the next year and a half. In fact, monetaiy policy did not become more
restrictive until early in 1994. One reason for this, of course, was that the banking crisis
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in the early 1990s acted as a significant brake on the strength of the recovery. In this
environment, the Federal Reserve determined that additional liquidity was needed for a
prolonged period to counter the effects of the reduction in bank credit availability.
hi contrast, two episodes where a monetary policy easing was unwound more rapidly
occurred in the aftermath of the 1987 stock market crisis and the 1998 Asian financial
crisis, hi the 1987 episode, after easing policy from October 1987 through January 1988,
the Federal Reserve moved quickly to a less accommodative stance in March 1988. More
recently, after easing policy in the fall of 1998, the Federal Reseive began to tighten
policy in Time 1999. In both of these situations, compared with the early 1990s, the
effects of the financial shocks on the economy tinned out to be less persistent and less
pernicious than originally thought, leading to a faster reversal of its earlier easing.
The lesson that I would draw from these historical episodes is that we need to look
carefully at the magnitude and persistence of the factors that have contributed to the
current economic slowdown and that might also hinder the recovery. Take for example
the fact that the macroeconomic effects of September 11 seem to have been smaller and
more temporary than we first anticipated. In this situation, one could argue at least that it
would be prudent to unwind the policy actions taken in response to September 11 in a
relatively timely fashion. At the same time, given the current uncertainty about the
economic outlook, we may need additional information before we can conclude that the
economy is on the road to full recovery so that the remaining monetary stimulus can be
safely removed.
One piece of information that is likely to be especially important in this regard is the
behavior of trend productivity growth. As you may know, an increase in trend
productivity growth was a key factor behind the exceptional performance of the U.S.
economy in the latter half of the 1990s. Increases in productivity raised the potential
growth rate of the economy and helped dampen inflationary pressures. We have also seen
unusually strong productivity growth during the current recession, suggesting that
productivity gains may be continuing. If productivity growth remains strong, inflationary
pressures may not develop as rapidly as in past recoveries. Conversely, if productivity
growth should falter, inflationary pressures could materialize more rapidly. Thus, the
behavior of productivity deserves considerable attention in monetary policy deliberations
in the period ahead.
Concluding comments
Let me conclude with a somewhat broader perspective on the events of recent months and
their implications for the future. During the past few months, we have weathered not only
a slowing economy but also significant domestic and international challenges. These
events have given me a greater appreciation of the underlying strength and resilience of
our economy and our economic system. As a result, I am optimistic that the worst is now
behind us and, with appropriate monetary and fiscal policies in place, we can re him to
strong, noninflationary growth in the period ahead.
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Cite this document
APA
Thomas M. Hoenig (2002, April 25). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020426_thomas_m_hoenig
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20020426_thomas_m_hoenig,
author = {Thomas M. Hoenig},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020426_thomas_m_hoenig},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}