speeches · January 15, 2003
Regional President Speech
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. · President
For Release on Delivery
12:30 p.m., EST
January 16, 2003
The Economic Outlook for 2003
Remarks by
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
to the
Charlotte Economics Club
Charlotte, North Carolina
January 16, 2003
It is a pleasure to be with you today. Each year I receive several invitations to give talks
on the economic outlook for the year ahead, and this is my first such talk for 2003. I enjoy
preparing these forecast talks, since I prepare them during the holiday season when I have a
little more time than usual to review the latest economic data, and also to read what other
economists and policymakers are saying about the outlook. So hopefully I have a little clearer
handle on things than I sometimes do, and I hope these remarks will be useful to you.
Obviously the last three years haven’t been particularly happy ones for the economy,
neither here in the U.S. nor elsewhere in the world. After four years of sustained high growth in
the late 1990’s, the economy slowed sharply in the year 2000. It slowed further and entered a
recession in 2001 before apparently beginning to recover in the final quarter of that year. As
2002 began, most economists expected the recovery to continue to accelerate, and to deepen.
I remember summarizing that kind of concensus outlook when I made the 2002 edition of this
talk a year ago. And indeed the recovery did continue, and growth did accelerate last year, but
it did not appear to grow the kinds of economic roots needed to develop into a broad, sustained
business expansion. In particular, a sizable portion of last year’s growth reflected the
aggressive new car sales incentive programs in place at various times during the year. Since
these programs were scaled back late in the year, most forecasters now expect real GDP
growth in the fourth quarter to come in at only about 1 percent at an annual rate when the initial
GDP report for that quarter is released January 30.
More broadly, I think 2002 will be remembered as the year when the economy did begin
to recover, but the recovery wasn’t really firmly grounded and remained unbalanced. Consumer
spending was reasonably healthy, and housing activity was exceptionally robust. But business
investment remained weak overall, as did export demand. There were also substantial
imbalances on a sector-by-sector basis. Many service industries did reasonably well; others –
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like the airline industry – did not. And I hardly need to tell an audience in this region that many
manufacturing industries lost additional momentum last year. Indeed, the manufacturing sector
as a whole shed more than half a million jobs in 2002. Actually, the performance of the job
market overall in 2002 was a good proxy for the performance of the economy as a whole. The
job market was stronger in 2002 than in 2001, but on net about 180,000 jobs were still lost
during the year – a relatively small decline in an economy with over 130 million jobs, but still a
negative number. You’ll remember the recovery from the 1990-91 recession was – and still is –
widely referred to as “the jobless recovery,” and 2002 may eventually come to be known as
“jobless recovery II.”
Having said all these unenthusiastic things about the economy in 2002, I think it is
important to keep a few positive things about last year’s performance in mind so that we don’t
lose perspective. When you think about it, it is really quite remarkable that the economy grew at
all last year considering what it was up against: continuing threats of more terrorists attacks,
extraordinary revelations of deficiencies in corporate governance, severe budgetary problems in
many state governments, and, towards the end of the year, sharply rising oil prices due to the
increased risk of war with Iraq. The ability of the economy to at least initiate a recovery in this
hostile economic environment says a lot, all of it positive, about the underlying strength and
resilience of our economy and our economic system.
I think it also reflects some notable improvements in our economic fundamentals in
recent years. In particular, productivity growth has remained high. Output per hour rose at a
5½ percent annual rate over the four quarters ending in the third quarter of last year. That’s a
remarkable productivity advance given the sluggishness of the recovery. There’s not as much
talk about a “new economy” these days, but to the extent that accelerated productivity growth
was a central attribute of the new economy, it is still around. Ironically, this faster productivity
growth does have a downside in the very short run: with productivity growth higher, business
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firms have been able to meet the current moderate growth in demand without hiring additional
workers. This is one reason employment has been growing so slowly.
But the benefits of stronger productivity growth have outweighed the negatives, even in
the short run. It has helped keep inflation low. Perhaps most importantly, it has allowed firms to
pay higher real wages to those who do have jobs. This is one reason that real, after-tax
household income rose markedly last year, which, in turn, is a key reason consumer spending
held up well despite slow growth in jobs and the other headwinds buffeting the economy that I
mentioned earlier. And of course the continued growth in consumer spending, along with
continued strong housing activity, was one of the main supports of the recovery last year.
Consumer spending also benefited from cashouts from home mortgage refinancings and other
forms of increased household borrowing, but the hefty growth in disposable income was the
main driver, and, again, the strong income growth resulted primarily from strong productivity
growth.
The other big positive in last year’s economic performance was continued low inflation.
To long-time Fed people like me, who have spent most of our careers confronting inflation, it is
really quite remarkable, not to mention comforting and gratifying, that there is little concern
about the risk of inflation currently in financial markets or the general economy. This absence of
underlying inflation expectations allowed the Fed to maintain a very stimulative monetary policy
throughout 2002, punctuated by the 50 basis point reduction in the federal funds rate we
executed at our FOMC meeting on November 6 in response to the so-called “soft-patch” in the
recovery. Not many years ago, when the Fed’s credibility for low inflation was not as well
established as it is now, we could not have acted so aggressively. And of course the absence
of inflation expectations has helped keep long-term interest rates low. In particular, the lowest
mortgage rates in a generation have fostered the sustained strong growth in home sales and
construction.
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One other positive in last year’s performance – not as impressive as the strong
productivity growth or the low inflation I just described, but worth noting – was some limited
improvement in one category of business spending, specifically, spending on new equipment
and software. Equipment spending declined for six consecutive quarters through the first
quarter of last year. But it turned up moderately in the second and third quarters, which is a
modestly hopeful sign with respect to prospects for business spending in the year ahead.
Let me turn now to the future and comment on the outlook for 2003. Early each year
various business publications put out compilations of forecasts made by professional
forecasters, and econometric forecasting services publish detailed model-based projections.
I’ve faithfully read many of them this year as I try to do every year. I won’t dwell on the so-called
consensus forecast that emerges from all these individual forecasts because you probably are
already broadly familiar with it. Briefly, it calls for continued recovery featuring a modest
acceleration of real GDP growth from about 2¾ percent in 2002, to about 3¼ percent in 2003.
Many forecasters are not explicit about their assumptions regarding the potential conflict with
Iraq. Those who are explicit generally expect – rightly or wrongly – a relatively brief and
successful engagement sometime in the first half of the year, and I sense that those who are
silent have broadly the same expectation. Partly because of the assumed timing of the conflict,
most forecasters expect growth to be slightly slower in the first half of the year than in the
second half: a little under 3 percent the first half, rising to a little over 3½ percent by year end.
Growth at this pace would reduce the unemployment rate somewhat from its current 6 percent
level – or possibly from a somewhat higher level, if the rate ticks up temporarily early in the
year – to about 5¾ percent. In the absence of a sustained run-up in fuel prices, inflation is
projected to remain well behaved at about 2¼ percent as measured by the CPI. This would
translate to about 1½ percent on the core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index,
which is probably a better measure of underlying inflation than the CPI even though it is not as
well known.
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Backing off a minute from all the numbers, and using plain English, the consensus
forecast calls for a second year of very moderate – some would say subpar – recovery from the
2001 recession. This is not a particularly inspiring forecast, and there are downside risks in it. If
there is war with Iraq, and it turns out to be more protracted than now expected, and the crisis in
Venezuela continues, oil prices likely will rise more than now expected. This would restrain
growth, not only in the U.S. but in other industrial countries and many developing countries as
well. A longer and stickier conflict with Iraq also could reduce consumer confidence and restrain
consumer spending. And there are obviously other downside risks in the consensus projection,
like another terrorist attack or even greater weakness in the global economy than we are
currently experiencing. Japan is in a protracted downturn accompanied by deflation, the
European economy is soft, and a number of developing economies – especially in Latin
America – are very seriously challenged currently.
So again there are downside risks in the consensus outlook. My own feeling, though –
and this is really the bottom line of this speech – is that the consensus is plausible, and that
there is at least some chance that the economy may turn out to be stronger in 2003 than the
consensus projects. The accelerated productivity growth I discussed earlier seems set to
continue this year. At least there is no obvious reason to expect it not to continue. Continued
strong productivity growth may retard job growth to some degree, but it will continue to
underwrite healthy growth in disposable income for those who are working, and hence
household spending. Beyond this, monetary policy currently remains very accommodative. The
funds rate, at 1¼ percent, is at its lowest level in several decades. Since the core inflation rate
is currently about 1½ percent, the real funds rate is negative, which constitutes very stimulative
monetary policy by historical standards. And of course the President has recently proposed
additional fiscal stimulus.
Finally, 2003 may be the year when business spending begins to strengthen. I don’t
want to overstate the prospects for capital outlays. Business capital spending responds above
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all to evidence of rising aggregate demand, and demand growth is currently still subdued.
Moreover, overall capacity utilization, especially in manufacturing, remains low. But as I said a
minute ago, continued robust productivity growth will induce some businesses to buy new
equipment and software in order to capture the productivity increase for their own operations so
they can remain competitive and enhance profitability in an environment where pricing power is
still limited. Further, both corporate profits and cash flow have been increasing, which positions
businesses to finance capital expenditures internally. Again, I don’t want to exaggerate the
case for stronger business capital spending. There’s not much evidence of a meaningful actual
firming yet. But the financial and other conditions that might foster such a firming are
increasingly evident. Needless to say, a material increase in capital investment would be a big
plus for the economy because it would ensure the transition from a recovery to a broad,
balanced business expansion.
So to repeat my bottom line: I think the recovery will continue. And while there obviously
are still downside risks in the outlook, for the first time in a while, I think the chances that actual
growth will exceed the consensus forecast somewhat are about equal to the chances that it will
come in below it. I’m going out on a limb a little in saying this, but I think it’s realistic.
Let me now make a few closing comments about monetary policy. The environment in
which the Fed conducts monetary policy has changed materially recently. For most of the last
30 years we’ve been fighting inflation – struggling either to keep it from rising further or to
reduce it. Over the last several years, however, we seem to have finally achieved price stability,
the Holy Grail of monetary policy. The core PCE inflation index has been below 2 percent since
the mid-1990s. Moreover, we now have credibility for price stability in the sense that both
financial market participants and the general public have confidence that we will maintain this
stability pretty much indefinitely. We absolutely need to do this. It would be difficult in my view
to overstate the significance of this policy achievement. Credible price stability has reduced risk
in the economy, which has increased the economy’s potential longer-term growth. And it has
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permitted the Fed to act much more aggressively recently to counter the temporary but
substantial negative shocks to the economy – like the stock market decline – that might
otherwise have undercut the recovery.
One other key difference in the current policy environment is that the risk to price
stability is now two-sided rather than just one-sided. Obviously, we could experience renewed
inflation at some point. But with inflation currently quite low, it might be easier to shift towards
deflation than when inflation was high. Neither risk looms large at present, and the Fed is
committed to ensuring that both risks stay well contained. I’m confident we can do it – which is
something I wouldn’t have said not very many years ago.
With respect to deflation, candidly, I worried about it a little in the immediate aftermath of
9/11, when both aggregate demand in the economy and employment plummeted temporarily.
We eased policy promptly and materially after the attacks, which brought the funds rate down
from 3½ percent at the time of the attacks to 2½ percent in early October, and then
subsequently to 1¾ percent in early December. These actions helped stabilize the economy
and provided a foundation for the recovery. Not surprisingly, today some people worry that with
the funds rate only a point and quarter above zero – and taking account of recent experience in
Japan – we could “run out of ammunition” if for some reason the economy weakened abruptly
and sharply. I don’t think we would run out of ammunition, since even if the nominal funds rate
did approach zero, we would still be able to add substantial liquidity to the economy through
open market operations. But the most effective way to deal with deflation – which can be every
bit as damaging to the economy as inflation – is to act decisively to preempt it, that is, to prevent
it from arising in the first place. We understand this at the Fed, and this is a principal reason I
don’t think deflation is a serious threat currently.
The other risk to price stability, of course, would be a reemergence of inflation, which is
the more familiar concern for most of us. Again, the Fed has now achieved high credibility for
low inflation, and while the recent run-up in oil prices bears watching, I don’t think renewed
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inflation is a clear and present danger either. Having said this, the big monetary policy lesson of
the last 30 years is how difficult and costly it is to restore credibility for low inflation once it has
been lost, as it was in the 1970’s and early 80’s. We don’t want to go there again. With that in
mind, a number of economists and policymakers, myself included, favor introducing explicit
numerical inflation targets as a device for “hardening” our anti-inflationary credibility. Such
targets have been widely and successfully used to contain inflation and inflation expectations by
central banks in other leading industrial countries. While inflation targets are certainly no
panacea, I think they would be a material aid to the Fed in sustaining price stability, and
sustained price stability will foster a stronger recovery as effectively as anything I can think of.
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Cite this document
APA
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. (2003, January 15). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20030116_j_alfred_broaddus_jr
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20030116_j_alfred_broaddus_jr,
author = {J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2003},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20030116_j_alfred_broaddus_jr},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}