speeches · May 18, 2009
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Embargoed until Tuesday, May 19 at 1:20 p.m. Eastern Time
Financial Conditions and the Economic Outlook
Gary H. Stern
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Willmar Lakes Area Chamber of Commerce
Willmar, MN
May 19, 2009
Introduction
About two weeks ago, I had the opportunity to testify before the Senate
Banking Committee on policies to address the too-big-to-fail (TBTF) problem.
TBTF is a critical public policy issue, and I will offer further comments on the
topic shortly. Indeed, my plan this afternoon is to cover a broad range of issues,
including progress toward restoration of financial stability, policies essential to
reducing the probability of future financial crises, the current state of the economy,
and the economic outlook. There should be time for questions and discussion, and
I will remind you that, as always, I am speaking only for myself and not for others
in the Federal Reserve.
Financial Institutions and Markets
Beginning about 21 months ago, financial markets were rocked by a series
of shocks which ultimately had global implications and whose repercussions
remain significant to this day. While conditions in credit markets generally have
improved over the past several months, perceptible strains persist. The
improvement we have witnessed appears to be due, in part, to the aggressive policy
response of the Federal Reserve as well as programs introduced by the Treasury
and FDIC.
The Federal Reserve, in particular, has reduced short-term interest rates
significantly, worked to improve liquidity both in important markets and for a
range of financial institutions, and purchased longer-term debt instruments in
volume in order to decrease those rates as well. Reflecting the scale of these
actions, the Federal Reserve balance sheet has increased from about $1 trillion last
September to something in excess of $2 trillion now. While it is still too early to
fully tally results, there has been progress, and I anticipate further improvement in
credit conditions as select programs become fully operational, participation
increases, and confidence picks up.
The Role of the Financial System
A healthy, smoothly functioning financial system is essential to sustained
economic growth, because businesses and households alike require the ability to
finance projects at competitive terms and conditions, be they investment in plant
and equipment or purchases of homes and durable goods. Right now, the financial
system remains impaired, and there is considerable rhetoric about a so-called credit
crunch. To be sure, some borrowers are encountering substantial difficulty in
obtaining funding, but conversations with numerous bankers and their customers
reveal a diverse set of circumstances, ranging from “business as usual” on the one
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hand to appreciable credit restriction on the other. One size clearly does not fit all,
and it is important to recognize that the demand for credit from some sectors
appears to have diminished, and its composition has shifted as well.
Besides a role in financing investment, there are other compelling reasons
why restoration of sound financial institutions and markets is of the highest
priority. Markets that are impaired obviously do not provide robust prices for the
financial instruments that normally trade on them, and such pricing is critical to
resource allocation and reallocation. In particular, the reallocation of resources
that should occur in a recession and that is fundamental to economic recovery is
inhibited when financial markets are not functioning or are functioning poorly.
Unless conditions improve, such market failures threaten to prolong the recession.
Further, the commercial banking system has long been thought of, and
indeed has served as, a principal backup source of liquidity for many other
financial institutions and markets. Banks continue to play this role but, for a
variety of reasons, it has become more challenging to do so. For one thing, the so-
called shadow banking system grew rapidly relative to the traditional banking
sector over the past two decades or so. And now the demands on the banks from
these nonbank financial institutions are that much greater, making it difficult for
banks to respond adequately to all customers. Restoration of a healthy banking
system would help to mitigate this problem.
Too-Big-to-Fail
In view of the severity of the financial disruptions of the past 21 months, it is
essential that we begin immediately to give serious thought to avoiding a
recurrence of these events and to addressing the too-big-to-fail issue, now widely if
belatedly acknowledged as an exceedingly costly problem. While not constituting
“proof,” it is striking that most of the losses suffered to date during the financial
crisis have been at the largest institutions operating in the country.
I have in fact spoken and written extensively – some might say obsessively –
about TBTF over the past five years. In 2004, I co-authored (with my colleague
Ron Feldman) a book on the subject titled Too-Big-to-Fail: The Hazards of Bank
Bailouts, just rereleased in paperback by the Brookings Institution. I think it fair to
say that Feldman and I, unlike most other policymakers and analysts, recognized in
a timely way that TBTF was a severe and growing problem, that it had not been
addressed effectively by the FDICIA legislation of 1991, and that it would
eventually and inevitably lead to excessive risk-taking, turmoil in financial
markets, and disruption in the economy. It is also revealing that there is
considerable overlap between the 19 large banking organizations just put through
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the “stress test” and the list of TBTF institutions Feldman and I identified in 2004.
I think an important question is: How is it that we put high priority on the
growing TBTF problem and its ramifications when others did not? The short and
direct answer to this question is that we focused on understanding the incentives of
uninsured creditors of large, complex financial institutions, the incentives of
management of such institutions, and the incentives of policymakers responsible
for economic and financial stability. And we understood the implications of such
incentives.
The bottom line of our analysis is that creditors of such complex financial
institutions expected, on the basis of relatively well-established precedents and on
an understanding of policymakers’ motivations, protection if failure threatened.
As a consequence, they had at most modest incentive to be concerned about the
condition and prospects of these large institutions, leading to underpricing of risk-
taking. With risk underpriced, these institutions took on excessive amounts of it,
leading eventually to the precarious position of some of them. And policymakers,
fearing massive, negative spillover effects to other institutions, financial markets
more generally, and the economy itself, provided protection and validated creditor
expectations.
This emphasis on incentives is not merely historical background. To the
contrary, I am convinced that just as incentives were at the heart of the TBTF
problem, they necessarily must be at the heart of the solution. Our proposal to
correct TBTF, called systemic focused supervision (SFS), is designed to better
align incentives so as to significantly reduce both the TBTF problem and the
probability of future episodes of major instability. The keys to this are, in fact,
reforms which make policymakers confident that they need not intervene if a large
institution encounters difficulty and to put creditors on notice that they are likely to
experience losses in such circumstances.
Rather than review the specifics of SFS this afternoon – they are described
in many of my speeches of the past eight months – let me instead speculate a bit
about the possible course of action with regard to the risk-taking of large, complex
financial institutions. I would think that such institutions may well, in the future,
be subject to higher capital requirements, “taxes” on activities that pose systemic
risk, and a bank-like resolution regime to help contain spillovers. Among other
things, such steps would help to level the playing field between TBTF firms and
community-oriented financial organizations. However, I am deeply concerned that
proposals which purport to address TBTF, but which fail to correct incentives, will
prove to be less than fully successful. In particular, proposals to “shrink” the
largest financial institutions or to rely on heightened regulation and supervision of
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and increased capital for such institutions do not address the fundamental problem.
The Economy
Let me turn now to the state of the economy and its prospects. As you are
no doubt well aware, the national economy is in the midst of a serious recession
which began about a year and a half ago, a downturn which has affected most
industries and virtually every region of the country. The recession, moreover, is
global in nature. In this country, employment has declined significantly during the
contraction in activity, and the unemployment rate has climbed to 8.9 percent
nationwide.
Given the breadth of the downturn, it is difficult at this stage to identify with
conviction the engine, or engines, of expansion that will propel the recovery of the
national economy. In my experience, this is always the case in the midst of
recession. Still, I continue to think that improvement in business activity is not far
off. Interest rates are low and financial conditions are improving; the improvement
is gradually becoming more broadly based. Major fiscal policy stimulus is under
way and should add to aggregate demand in a timely way unless consumers and
businesses turn exceedingly cautious.
Moreover, adjustments which typically occur in a contraction ultimately
help to lay the foundation for renewed growth. For example, as business continues
to reduce output and employment, inventories shrink, and at some point aggregate
supply falls below even the diminished level of demand, leading to increases in
hours worked, net new hiring, and a general pickup in activity. There are,
moreover, signs that consumer spending is in the process of stabilizing after its
sharp decline during the second half of last year; indeed, consumer spending
increased in the first quarter, according to the recently released GDP report. And
progress is under way in working off the inventory of unsold, unoccupied homes
and condos.
Once the economic recovery begins, the pace of the expansion is likely to be
subdued for a time. There is historical precedent for this, since the recovery of the
early 1990s was initially quite modest, as was the recovery earlier this decade.
More importantly, in view of the state of the credit markets and the decline in the
value of equities and homes, it seems a fair bet that it will take time for momentum
to build. But with the passage of time – as we get into the middle of 2010 and
beyond – I would expect to see a resumption of healthy growth.
It is also likely to take some time for labor market conditions to improve
meaningfully. Again, there is ample precedent for this and, more fundamentally,
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employment may well continue to fall in industries which are contracting –
finance, construction, autos – even as it picks up elsewhere.
What of the outlook for inflation? Concerns today appear to have coalesced
around two competing perspectives, namely: (1) concern for future inflation,
stemming from the Federal Reserve’s provision of huge amounts of liquidity in
response to the financial crisis; (2) deflation, resulting presumably from the
downturn in global economic activity and the concomitant increase in excess
capacity.
Neither concern can be readily dismissed but, if economic growth resumes
in the United States as I expect, the threat of deflation should diminish
commensurately. And to date, there is scant evidence of deflation in so-called core
measures of inflation. As for liquidity provision and inflation, it is important to
emphasize that the relation between growth in the money supply and the path of
prices holds in the long run, over periods of at least five and more likely 10 years.
Thus, there is ample time for the Federal Reserve to withdraw excess liquidity,
although to be sure, policymakers will have to be acutely sensitive to acting as
soon as appropriate.
Asset Prices
A few moments ago, I alluded to the decrease in home and equity values and
its implications for near-term business activity. Changes in home and equity
prices, two principal items on the household balance sheet, exert so-called wealth
effects on consumer spending, which is to say that while such spending depends
mainly on after-tax income, wealth influences outlays as well. While policymakers
have acknowledged that asset price excesses and their subsequent correction can
potentially have meaningful consequences for the economy, they generally have
preferred to try to cushion the repercussions of an asset price collapse rather than
to address an asset price run-up in its early stages. There are good reasons for this
attitude, having to do with the difficulty of identifying asset “bubbles” in a timely
way, the need to build public support for action, and the challenge of weighing the
costs and benefits of action for the broad economy. Nevertheless, in view of the
damage resulting from the decline in housing values, as well as the aftermath of the
collapse of prices of technology stocks earlier this decade, I think it essential to
revisit these issues.
Identification of excesses in asset prices, although challenging, does not
appear to be beyond the realm of possibility. There is some work in academic
circles, and at least some practitioners agree, that when common ratios (the ratio of
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stock prices to earnings or dividends, for example, or the ratio of housing values to
rents) exceed the bounds of historical experience, it is likely that a price correction
will follow, although its timing is unpredictable. It would seem likely that
misidentification will occur occasionally and, in particular, that some events may
be classified as bubbles when they are not. The implication of this possibility is, in
my view, to ensure that the policy response to a perceived excess in asset prices is
measured, so that even if in error the ramifications for the economy will be modest.
This consideration illustrates, perhaps, the critical issue in addressing asset
price excesses. When all is said and done, will the benefits outweigh the costs,
assuming policymakers have made the correct identification? Monetary policy, for
which we in the Federal Reserve are responsible, is a blunt instrument with
economywide effects. We should not pretend that actions taken to rein in those
asset price increases which seemingly outstrip economic fundamentals won’t in the
short run curtail to some extent economic growth and employment; after all, such
actions are likely to require raising interest rates earlier and probably more than
otherwise would be the case. There is a trade-off here, involving short-run costs in
exchange for the benefits of greater stability and growth in the long run. Before
taking action, policymakers need to weigh these elements carefully.
Further, monetary policy is not made in a vacuum; the central bank must
have public support for the actions it pursues, and it is easy to imagine resistance to
concerns about asset price levels. Nevertheless, as the anti-inflation experience of
1979-82, for example, illustrates, it is possible to build considerable support (as
Paul Volcker did), or at least tolerance, for policies that some considered risky and
unappealing.
Conclusion
Let me reiterate just a few points, in wrapping up these remarks. First,
appreciable financial strains persist, and credit issues are likely to weigh on the
economy for some time. Overall, it is essential to restore the health of financial
institutions and markets, so that long-lived projects can be financed, so that
resource reallocation is facilitated, and so that liquidity improves. In part as a
consequence of the state of the credit markets, the recession is likely to persist for
several more months, and the initial stage of the recovery seems likely to be
subdued. Nevertheless, in view of the policies already in place here and abroad, a
resumption of growth should not be too far off, especially given the economy’s
fundamental resilience. Before long, attention will appropriately turn to banking
issues and policies, and especially to addressing the vexing issue of TBTF. This
effort should be among our highest priorities and should focus on correcting the
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incentives that contributed to the problem and the instability that followed from it.
And policymakers also should begin to reconsider their attitude toward excesses in
asset prices because it has proven exceedingly difficult and costly to deal with the
aftermath of such excesses.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2009, May 18). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20090519_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20090519_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2009},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20090519_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}