speeches · September 3, 2008
Regional President Speech
Janet L. Yellen · President
Speech to Community Leaders Luncheon
Salt Lake City, Utah
By Janet L. Yellen, President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
For delivery Thursday September 4, 2008, 11:30 AM Pacific, 12:30 PM Mountain
The U.S. Economic Situation and the Challenges for Monetary Policy1
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for coming. It is always a pleasure to
visit Salt Lake City. Our branch office was established here in 1918, and the Fed’s ties to
this community are long and deep. This morning, the directors of our Salt Lake City Board
met with their counterparts from Seattle and Portland to discuss economic trends and to
share insights on factors affecting the outlook for both our region and the nation as a
whole. The Fed’s Twelfth District comprises nine western states, 20 percent of the
American population and economy, and one-third of the country’s landmass. We are by far
the largest and most diverse Reserve District in the nation, so we rely extensively on our
directors—those of our four branches and of our head-office Board in San Francisco—and
members of the larger business communities we serve to help us identify emerging
economic trends. The main focus of my remarks today will be on conditions in the U.S.
economy as a whole and their implications for monetary policy. But I will touch on some
of the unique factors that are affecting the Utah economy as well.
Regrettably, the nation’s economy has been in rough waters for over a year now.
Last summer, a precipitous slide in house prices triggered a crisis in financial markets and a
credit crunch that is making it hard for consumers and some firms to borrow. These
developments are ongoing and perhaps deepening, as banks and other financial
1 I would like to thank the Economic Research staff for support in preparing these remarks and, in
particular, John Judd, Reuven Glick, Rob Valletta, and Judith Goff.
1
intermediaries are continuing to delever by scaling back their balance sheets and shrinking
their lending activity. Indeed, some sources of funding have completely dried up. In the
face of these developments, firms and consumers have also been pulling back, causing
unemployment to rise. As if this cycle of events feeding back on each other weren’t bad
enough, oil and other commodity prices have surged in recent years, generating worrisome
numbers for headline consumer inflation. So, the problems facing the Fed have been
myriad, complex, and difficult. We have had to balance concerns about economic
weakness with equally compelling, but conflicting, concerns about inflation.
Quite recently, there has been a bit of a shift in the inflation picture, however.
Commodity prices—most notably oil prices—have fallen well below their earlier peaks. I
will argue that this development probably largely reflects a weakening in economic
conditions in many industrialized countries, including European nations and Japan. By
reducing the worldwide demand for commodities, weaker global growth should relieve
upward pressure on U.S. inflation. Lower commodity prices should also be good for U.S.
economic growth, although this benefit is likely to be counterbalanced to some degree by
the detrimental effects of slower foreign economic growth on our exports, which have been
surging. If commodity prices keep falling—or even if they remain at current levels—the
Fed’s objective of promoting both price stability and full employment will become more
readily achievable.
Before I turn to a brief review of where the U.S. economy stands now, I want to
remind you that my remarks represent my own views and not necessarily those of my
colleagues in the Federal Reserve System.
2
Housing
Because the “boom and bust” cycle in the housing market was the trigger for many
of the developments I’ll be discussing, I would like to start there. Since the end of 2005,
outlays for residential construction have been falling at double-digit rates, in inflation-
adjusted terms, and house prices have fallen by 15 to 20 percent, depending on the measure
you use. In what may be a ray of hope for the future, sales of new homes show tentative
signs of stabilizing—albeit at a level that is a mere 40 percent of their 2005 peak—and the
pace of price declines has slowed in the past several months, although these prices are still
down substantially from year-ago levels.
Behind these national figures, of course, lies considerable geographic diversity.
Salt Lake City and Utah have fortunately done much better than the national average in
terms of prices; house prices continued to rise at a healthy pace in 2007, and show only
modest declines thus far in 2008. Nonetheless, the state is not immune from the housing
slump. The pace of home sales in Utah is down substantially since peaking in 2006, and
new home construction plummeted at the start of this year.
The effect of the collapse in the national housing market on our economy has been
profound. First, the decline in the pace of housing construction directly subtracted a full
percentage point from overall real GDP growth in 2006, 2007, and the first half of this
year, and slower economic growth has pushed up the national unemployment rate to 5.7
percent—almost a full percentage point above the level that, in my view, is consistent with
“full employment.” Going forward, it seems unlikely that construction activity will pick up
any time soon—inventories of unsold homes remain at elevated levels, and although home
3
sales have shown signs of leveling off recently, the volume of sales, as I noted, remains
quite weak.
Second, the drop in house prices has weakened the financial condition of many
consumers because the value of their homes is an important part of their wealth and equity
in those homes serves as collateral for home equity loans and other types of borrowing.
The result is that consumers are likely to spend less, reducing the pace of economic
activity. Declining house prices also appear to be the single biggest factor behind the
recent rise in mortgage delinquencies and home foreclosures. When families face financial
difficulties due to illness, job loss, or divorce, an equity cushion often allows them to get
through the hard times by borrowing needed funds or even selling the house. But when
home price declines have wiped out home equity or driven it into negative territory, people
often end up in delinquency or foreclosure. Indeed, the vitality of the subprime mortgage
market appeared to depend on continued home price appreciation, and, of course, it is now
in shambles. After posting delinquency rates in the single digits in 2005, around 20 percent
of subprime mortgages are currently delinquent or in foreclosure nationwide. Delinquency
rates on prime mortgages, which are far lower, are nonetheless also on the rise.
Utah has been fortunate that mortgage delinquencies barely budged during 2007
and early 2008, remaining at historically low levels while they were rising precipitously in
other parts of the nation. Home foreclosures in the state have risen over the past few
quarters, though, and further increases are likely before the slowdown ends.
Financial Markets
4
The third profound effect of the national housing market collapse, of course, has
been felt in the financial markets since last August. Unfortunately, the turmoil is still alive
and well, and conditions remain very fragile. For example, spreads between the rates that
must be paid by risky borrowers over those on Treasury securities remain very high. The
debt ratings for several important bond insurers have been cut, and stock prices for
financial institutions have plummeted. We’ve begun to see a growing number of failures
of depository institutions—notably IndyMac, which represented the largest failure in
decades.
In addition, many financial markets are still not operating efficiently or effectively.
In particular, the market for so-called private-label securitized mortgages of even the
highest quality remains moribund. These complex instruments were the primary source of
financing for nonconforming residential mortgages, including subprime loans.
Outside of expanded lending by the FHA, there is now little or no lending to
higher-risk residential mortgage borrowers. Jumbo mortgages for prime borrowers are
available, but at historically high spreads over rates on conventional mortgages, as banks
have been reluctant to make these loans. Beyond higher rates, many depositories are
tightening the terms of their lending, capping or terminating some home equity loans, and
in general trying to reduce their exposure to credit losses by reducing the scale of their
lending. Importantly, the government-sponsored agencies—Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the largest of all mortgage lenders—have suffered credit losses and are having to pare back
their crucial roles in the mortgage market. The result of all of this is a severe economy-
wide credit crunch, comparable to the one that hit the economy in the recession of the early
1990s.
5
The story of how falling house prices, and, in particular, their effects on the
subprime mortgage market, triggered the problems in financial markets is well-known. At
the most basic level, financial market participants suddenly realized that house price
declines could result in substantial losses on subprime mortgages through delinquencies
and foreclosures, that the extent of those losses was highly uncertain, and that the
complexity of mortgage-backed securities and the collateralized debt obligations
incorporating them made it difficult to know which participants would suffer the losses.
The story of how these problems will ultimately be resolved is far less clear.
Obviously, it would help a lot if house prices stopped falling. But even though the rate of
decline of house prices has shown signs of moderating, it still appears that these prices will
keep heading down for some time. The ratio of house prices to rents—a kind of price-
dividend ratio for housing—still remains high by historical standards, despite having fallen
substantially from its historical peak in early 2006, suggesting that further price declines
are needed to bring housing markets into long-run balance. Moreover, large inventories of
unsold homes can be expected to continue to put downward pressure on housing prices. In
view of these factors, it’s not surprising that the futures market for house prices predicts
further declines this year.
Going forward, the ability and willingness of commercial banks and other
intermediaries to extend credit depends in part on their capital levels, which have been
harmed by large losses, and their capacity to expand equity capital. It is encouraging that
financial institutions have raised a considerable amount of new capital over the past year.
Even so, balance sheet pressures and broader financial market dislocations may well be
with us for some time. My guess is that market functioning will improve in 2009, but
6
things could get worse before they get better. One major concern is that home prices could
fall more than markets now expect, leading to larger losses for financial institutions, which
would further impair their ability to make new loans. The deepening of the credit crunch
could then lead to further declines in house prices, intensifying the adverse feedback loop
that seems to be operating in our economy.
Commodities
Beyond the many repercussions of falling house prices, another factor putting a
damper on economic activity has been surging prices for commodities, including energy,
food and metals. There’s plenty of debate about where this surge in commodity prices
came from. Indeed, some have argued that speculative trading in commodity markets is the
main cause. Personally, I’m not yet persuaded by that explanation. For example, if
speculators were important in driving prices up, then inventories would have risen as these
speculators sought to profit from future sales at higher prices. However, inventories have
instead been declining in most commodity markets, apparently reflecting high fundamental
demand from buyers who actually use the commodities in the production of other products.
In fact, in general, I’m more persuaded by arguments based on the fundamentals of
demand and supply—and I think they explain not only much of the run-up in commodity
prices, but also the recent declines. In the run-up, demand was boosted by rapid worldwide
economic growth, with China and other developing countries accounting for a good deal of
the increase. At the same time, new supplies of oil have been harder to come by. As for
food prices, supply has been constrained by a number of factors, including drought
conditions that hampered wheat production in Australia, and demand for biofuels that has
diverted crops away from food usage.
7
The fundamental forces of supply and demand can also explain the drop in energy
and some other commodity prices since June. Most important is that the demand for
commodities has most likely fallen in response to a weakening of economic growth in
many industrialized countries. Economic growth of industrialized countries slowed
markedly in the second quarter. In fact, growth was only barely positive in the OECD bloc
as a whole. The OECD is a Paris-based organization comprising 30 developed nations.
Japan, France, Germany and Italy all experienced outright contractions. Moreover,
prospects for growth do not appear to be that good for the second half of this year; for
example, the OECD Economic Outlook projects growth of only 1¼ percent for Japan, the
euro area, and the total of 30 OECD countries in this period.
Several factors are behind the worsening outlook abroad. First, as in the U.S.,
higher oil and food prices have cut into consumer spending. Second, although most of
Europe had little subprime lending of its own, deteriorating U.S. financial market
conditions have affected banks and markets abroad that invested in structured products
originated in the U.S.; this is particularly true for banks in the United Kingdom,
Switzerland, Germany, and France. As in the U.S., this exposure has led to higher funding
costs, tighter bank lending standards, and wider spreads for riskier borrowers. Third,
several countries, including Spain, Ireland, and the U.K., have experienced their own
housing booms and downturns, creating further stress on their banking sectors. Fourth,
slower growth in the U.S. and the appreciation of their currencies against the dollar will
tend to dampen European and Japanese exports.
Finally, monetary policy in Europe has been less accommodative during this period
than in the U.S. For example, while the Fed cut its target interest rate substantially to 2
8
percent during the course of the credit crisis that began last summer, the European Central
Bank kept its policy interest rate steady throughout, and then tightened by 25 basis points
to 4¼ percent in July. Part of the reason for the difference is that the European Central
Bank’s mandate requires it to focus on controlling headline inflation, which reached 4
percent for the twelve months ending in July—a rate well above its official objective of
below, but close to 2 percent. In addition, even though much of the recent increase in
inflation is attributable to commodity prices, and therefore likely to be a temporary
phenomenon, the central bank has been worried about second-round effects on inflation
expectations, wages, and other costs, and justifiably so. The euro zone has a greater degree
of wage indexation and collective bargaining than the U.S.2 So it is more likely that higher
headline inflation will fairly quickly get built into wages there, setting off a wage-price
spiral that could be persistent and difficult to stop.
Now that growth appears to be weakening outside the United States, and prospects
for inflation have improved with recent declines in commodity prices, financial markets
have revised down expected future levels of interest rates in the euro zone and elsewhere.
As a result, in recent months the course of the dollar has changed from the steady decline
over the prior six years to an appreciation. A stronger dollar will tend to weaken demand
for our exports, reinforcing the effects of weaker growth abroad.
2 According to the ECB, wage indexation exists for roughly 13 percent of workers in France, 2/3 in Spain
and Cyprus, and 100 percent in Belgium and Luxembourg (“Wage growth dispersion across the euro area
countries,” ECB Occasional Paper No. 90, July 2008). In other cases, wages are indirectly linked to
inflation through collective bargaining agreements. For example, the IG Metal trade union negotiated a 5.2
percent wage increase in the German steel industry. Other sectors, such as the automotive industry or the
civil service, also won wage increases above 4 percent.
In the euro zone, 18 percent of private sector workers and 22 percent of all workers are unionized.
In the U.S., 7.5 percent of private sector workers and 12 percent of all workers are unionized. Moreover, in
Europe, big unions often engage in centralized negotiations with employer associations to set wages for
large sectors of the labor force (WSJ, Aug. 22, 2008).
9
U.S. Outlook
Now let me turn to the outlook for our own economy, starting with a brief look at
conditions in Utah. This state had been among the nation’s fastest-growing in recent years;
indeed in 2007, the pace of real GDP growth here—5¼ percent—placed it first among all
states. Not surprisingly, Utah also has had one of the lowest unemployment rates in the
nation over the past few years. However, the national slowdown now seems to have caught
up with Utah’s economy. Growth in the state has slowed noticeably this year, and the more
general slowdown in national consumer spending and travel activity has been reflected in a
drop in visitor counts and hotel occupancy rates in the state in recent months.
Turning to the national economy, it was recently reported that growth in the second
quarter came in at a fairly robust rate of 3¼ percent. This seems like good news--
especially considering what the economy has just been through. Growth slowed sharply in
the fourth quarter of last year, and, indeed, the data show that activity actually contracted
slightly. Though growth turned positive in the first quarter, it was tepid at best.
While one might be tempted to interpret the recent strong numbers as a sign that
things are turning around, there are three important reasons to think that the strength will
not hold up, and that economic performance will be decidedly subpar in the second half of
the year. First, consumer spending in the second quarter came in at only a moderate rate,
even though it was boosted by substantial tax rebates. But there are no plans in place to
repeat those rebates, so by the fourth quarter, the economy will no longer benefit from that
fiscal stimulus.
Second, export growth alone contributed one-half of the total real GDP growth
registered in the second quarter. This element has been an important source of strength in
10
our economy for over a year, being buoyed by strong growth abroad and by the weakening
of the dollar. However, as I discussed, in recent months the dollar has risen somewhat and
economic growth in many of our industrialized trading partners has slowed or even turned
negative, suggesting that we can no longer count on exports as an important source of
strength.
Third, the problems in the housing markets, financial markets, and labor markets
continue to be a drag on growth and employment. Fortunately, the recent fall in
commodity prices should help to cushion some of this downward pressure on activity.
Overall, I anticipate that real GDP growth in the second half of this year will come
in below the growth of potential output which implies that the unemployment rate will rise.
On its own, this obviously is not good news. And its interaction with the housing and
financial markets raises the potential for worse news—a deepening of the adverse feedback
loop I’ve been describing: more unemployment causing more people to fall behind on their
mortgage payments, leading to further delinquencies and foreclosures, tighter credit
conditions and further downward pressure on activity and employment. This kind of
process represents a downside risk for the economy, especially if it intensifies the sagging
consumer and business confidence we’ve seen.
Now let me turn to inflation where recent performance has been a serious concern.
As of July, the headline PCE Price Index was up by a whopping 4¼ percent over the past
year, compared to 2½ percent over the prior year. An important reason why inflation was
so high, of course, was because of the steep increases we experienced in food and energy
prices. Moreover, the rise in commodity prices raised the costs of the wide array of
businesses that use them as inputs and some have responded by passing those cost
11
increases through to their own prices. The consequence is that core inflation, which
excludes food and energy is also up. The core PCE Price Index rose by 2½ percent over
the past twelve months, which is somewhat above the range that I consider consistent with
price stability, but close to its pace of increase over the last several years.
What can we expect going forward? Headline inflation is likely to remain much
higher than I would like for a quarter or two as previous increases in commodity prices
boost the prices paid by consumers for food and energy. With regard to core inflation, I
wouldn’t be surprised if it runs modestly higher for a while, too, as businesses pass on
some of their higher energy, transportation, and other costs to customers. However, for
several reasons, I expect both headline and core inflation to move down to a much more
moderate rate of just over 2 percent next year.
One obvious reason is the recent decline in commodity prices, and the prospect that
they will remain at present levels, thus ceasing to put direct upward pressure on headline
inflation. Indeed, commodity prices may drop further. While this is by no means certain, it
does seem more likely than it did just a few months ago since the odds have risen that
activity in most industrialized economies will weaken further, translating into downward
pressure on commodity prices. Furthermore, the current slack in labor and product markets
—together with prospects for more slack in the future—will impart some downward
pressure on the growth of labor compensation. The pace of wage and salary increases has
been modest and stable in recent years and a weak labor market may cause it to decline
even further.
But there is more to inflation than these direct pressures. We also have to pay close
attention to inflation expectations and the dynamics that they can generate. If the public
12
were to conclude that the recent experience of high inflation will be long-lasting and not
temporary, then workers might demand higher compensation and firms might satisfy those
demands, setting off a wage-price dynamic that would be costly to unwind. I argued earlier
that such a wage-price spiral was less likely here than in Europe because our economy has
less wage indexation than exists in the euro area. However, that does not mean that we can
afford to ignore the risk that such a damaging spiral could develop here.
Fortunately, I do not see signs of this development at this point. First, the reports of
our directors and business contacts are consistent with the view that no such dynamic has
taken hold. Outside of a few booming sectors such as energy, we hear no reports of
escalating wage pressures even though higher food and energy prices have eroded the real
incomes of American workers. Our contacts note that high unemployment is holding down
labor turnover, suppressing the need to raise wages more rapidly. The two broad measures
of national labor compensation that we monitor have shown remarkably small increases
recently and over the past year. Taking productivity growth into account, growth in labor
costs per unit of output in the overall economy has been quite modest.
Moreover, various measures of longer-term inflation expectations suggest that they
remain relatively well contained. With the recent decline in commodity prices, inflation
expectations for the next five years have edged down slightly in both the Michigan Survey
of households and the Philadelphia Fed’s Survey of Professional Forecasters. Furthermore,
since June, compensation for inflation and inflation risk over the next five years—as
measured in markets for Treasury Inflation Protected Securities—has dropped noticeably
and is now under 2 percent. For the period from 5 to 10 years ahead, compensation has
dropped a bit and remains at the lower end of its trading range of recent years. In
13
summary, it seems clear that inflation risks have diminished somewhat in recent months as
commodity prices have come down from their highs. But they have by no means
disappeared and are very much at the forefront of the FOMC’s attention.
Monetary Policy
This brings me to my views on monetary policy. The Committee responded to the
difficult economic conditions that emerged last year by easing monetary policy
substantially, cutting the federal funds rate to 2 percent, which is more than 3 full
percentage points below where it was just last summer. Today, there is a great deal of
debate about just how accommodative the stance of policy actually is. This issue is
especially acute given that the Fed has been facing a difficult policy choice, with risks to
both economic activity and inflation.
In measuring the stance of policy, it’s common to look at the real federal funds rate
—the nominal rate less a measure of the rate of inflation that is likely to prevail over the
period ahead. For inflation, I have tended to use core PCE price inflation, that is, without
the effects of food and energy prices. Of course, food and energy are important costs faced
by consumers, but I think it appropriate to exclude them in this computation because, as I
argued, their effects on overall inflation are likely to be temporary. As a result, recent core
inflation is often a good indicator of future overall inflation. In my view, this is true right
now. As I said earlier, core PCE price inflation averaged 2½ percent over the past year,
well below the 4¼ percent headline number, but I’m expecting both core and headline
inflation to come in a bit over 2 percent in 2009 as a whole.
14
Doing the math leaves us with a slightly negative real federal funds rate. Does this
mean that policy is highly accommodative? Normally, a negative real funds rate would
imply that the answer is “yes” because it is typically associated with low borrowing costs
and easy credit terms—that is, easy overall financial conditions. But, as I discussed,
overall financial conditions are probably more restrictive now than when the financial crisis
struck a year ago, so the slightly negative real funds rate does not imply a highly
accommodative policy stance. In other words, policy must be calibrated to push through
the substantial headwinds the economy faces. While the economy did well in the second
quarter, that strength, as I indicated, is likely to prove ephemeral. My forecast is for
sluggish growth in the second half of this year, with substantial downside risks—especially
emanating from the financial system.
Overall inflation over the past year has been unacceptably high. But, the prognosis
going forward is favorable. Inflation expectations remain relatively well contained,
reducing the chance that a wage-price spiral will develop. Moreover, if new lower
commodity prices hold, even at today’s high levels, we are likely to see improvements in
overall and core consumer inflation coming through the pipeline soon.
In summary, the recent drop in commodity prices has improved the policy choice
facing the Committee. However, going forward, it is clear that we must keep a close eye
on both inflation and inflation expectations to ensure that we continue to earn the inflation
credibility that we have built up over the past two and a half decades.
15
Cite this document
APA
Janet L. Yellen (2008, September 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20080904_janet_l_yellen
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20080904_janet_l_yellen,
author = {Janet L. Yellen},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2008},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20080904_janet_l_yellen},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}