speeches · May 24, 2010
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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The Road to Economic Recovery Following the Financial Crisis
From the President
May 25, 2010
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Distinguished Speakers Seminar, European Economics and
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and Commentary Financial Centre, London
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I appreciate assistance and comments provided by my
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colleagues at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Marcela M. Williams, Special Research Assistant to the
President, provided assistance. I take full responsibility for
errors. The views expressed are mine and do not
necessarily re ect o cial positions of the Federal Reserve
System.
James Bullard
It is a great pleasure to be here today to speak to you on
President and Chief
the state of the global economy and the policy challenges
Executive O cer
faced by the Federal Open Market Committee and other
Bio
central banks worldwide. I think we can all agree that these
are di cult times for macroeconomic policymakers. I Curriculum Vitae
intend to outline some of my main thoughts on the present
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situation as well as what may be some of the key topics in
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the policy discussion going forward. Hopefully my
comments will set up a vigorous question and answer Photos
session.
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"Rationally, let it be said in a
My comments are divided into two parts. In the rst, I whisper, experience is certainly
worth more than theory."
discuss the status of the global macroeconomic recovery Amerigo Vespucci
from the very severe shock suffered during the second half
of 2008. That recovery generally remains on track, but has
recently been called into question because of events in
Europe. I will give several reasons why one might hope that
the volatility in Europe does not constitute a
macroeconomic shock severe enough to derail the global
recovery.
In the second part of the talk, I turn to the possibility that a
new, more volatile macroeconomic era is upon us. I will
suggest that just such an era may be unfolding, for two
reasons. One is that governments have now taken
numerous unprecedented actions, and so it will take time
to transition back toward the types of credible, rules-based
policies we know will deliver higher quality macroeconomic
outcomes in the long run. The other is that there are clear
limits to what can be accomplished through regulatory
reform. These two factors combine to suggest that
macroeconomic volatility may be higher in the next few
years, as compared with the "Great Moderation" years from
about 1984 to 2007.
Let's get started by turning to the state of the economic
recovery in the U.S. and globally.
Global Recovery
In the U.S., the recession likely ended in the summer of
2009, although the actual end may not be announced by
the NBER dating committee for some time. Growth in real
GDP is expected to continue through the current quarter,
making for a full year of growth in national income. If
current consensus private sector forecasts are realized,
in ation-adjusted national income will surpass its 2008
peak later this year.
Global growth has returned as well. According to the April
2010 IMF World Outlook, 2009 was a year in which global
real GDP actually contracted. That is something that did
not occur in the 1970s, the 1980s, the 1990s, or any year in
the current decade before 2009. I had major concerns
about the whole global economy being in recession at the
same time. Yet, today, global growth is projected to return
in 2010, at 4.2%, and continue in 2011, at 4.3%.
In all, the economic situation in the US and globally is not
very different from median forecasts made at the depth of
the recession in late 2008 and early 2009. Since that time
there have been several moments when it may have
appeared that the global economic recovery would be
derailed, but, as it turned out, the recovery has remained on
track so far.
But now a new threat to global recovery is looming in the
form of a sovereign debt crisis in Europe. In part as a
response to the global recession, countries have now
moved to larger levels of de cit spending and have
accumulated higher levels of debt. The ability and
willingness of some countries to repay has been called into
question.
There are several reasons why this new threat to global
recovery will probably fall short of becoming a worldwide
recessionary shock.
To begin with, this is a question of sovereign debt, and
sovereign debt crises have been with us for many, many
years. There is nothing intrinsic about such crises that they
need to become important shocks to the broader, global
macroeconomy. Countries do default or restructure their
debt from time to time, and the world goes on. To be sure,
such an outcome is stressful both for the borrowing
country and for the holders of the sovereign debt and can
lead to substantial volatility in global nancial markets.
One example would be the Russian default in 1998. Still, in
most cases there is little reason to think that such events
by themselves have the power to trigger global recessions.
Of course, it is always possible that "this time will be
different" and maybe it will be, but that would be unusual
given the historical evidence.
Many have noted that the European sovereign debt crisis is
occurring against the backdrop of a weakened nancial
system in Europe and the US, and that to the extent the
holders of troubled debt are these very same weakened
rms, there may be some prospect for contagion to
reignite the type of nancial shock last seen in the fall of
2008. While this is certainly possible, I do not think this is a
likely scenario. If we consider CDS prices for major US and
European banks, we see that they have moved sharply
higher in recent weeks, but not to the extreme levels seen
during parts of late 2008 and the rst half of 2009.
Why should this be the case? I think government
guarantees are playing a major role here. Governments
have made it very clear over the course of the last two
years that they will not allow major nancial institutions to
fail outright at this juncture. Because these too-big-to-fail
guarantees are in place, the contagion effects are much
less likely to occur. "Too big to fail" is a controversial policy,
but it does have its upside in the current situation.
Let me also stress that the current agreement in Europe
does buy substantial time for European governments to
enact scal retrenchment programs. It will take time for
those programs to be enacted and to gain credibility with
nancial markets. This is a process that will probably play
out over years, not weeks. Certainly, governments have to
act now to gain credibility with markets in the near term,
but continuing vigilance is then also needed to keep the
consolidation moving. If scal consolidation does not
work, then debt restructuring may become the only
alternative, but, if necessary, that can be accomplished in
an orderly way over time and with minimal damage to
global markets. Even in an extreme case, I do not see any
necessary impediments to the successful operation of a
common currency.
The U.S. may actually be an unwitting bene ciary of the
crisis in Europe, much as it was during the Asian currency
crisis of the late 1990s. This is because of the ight to
safety effect that pushes yields lower in the U.S. Of course
the U.S. also has its own scal problems that must be
directly addressed in a timely manner if the nation is to
maintain credibility in international nancial markets.
Let me now leave the details of the current crisis to talk
more broadly about macroeconomic volatility.
The Return of Volatility
A large part of successful macroeconomic policy is clear
delineation of how the government will act in various
states of the world. This means that the government
implements a stable, rules-based policy that is well
understood by the private sector. Policies that have this
character are known, in both theory and reality, to produce
the highest quality macroeconomic outcomes.
In the last two years, governments and central banks in the
US and in Europe have, of necessity, taken actions that
would previously have been considered extremely unlikely.
Markets and private-sector actors have been surprised,
even if they have also agreed that some or most of the
actions were necessary. In my view, this nontraditional
policy has eroded some of the credibility for stable, rules-
based policy that had been built up over the last 25 years.
Clearly, this erosion was unintended, because actions were
taken in response to crisis; still the effect has been to make
the private sector keenly aware of the possibility that
governments may make very aggressive and unusual
policy moves. Exactly how governments will behave going
forward is a question loaded with uncertainty in the
aftermath of this crisis.
So, re-establishing credibility for the type of successful
rules-based policy we were previously accustomed to will
be a key challenge over the next several years. We know
that it can take a long time to establish credibility. We also
know that credible policies are more effective. While the
crisis remains fresh, it may not be possible to attain rst-
best, full-commitment outcomes for the macroeconomy.
Instead, policies may for a time be less effective than
otherwise and private-sector actors may remain overly
sensitive to the prospect of unusual, aggressive policy
actions. This means that macroeconomic volatility may be
higher than normal for a period of time.
The now-concluding regulatory reform debate in the US
also suggests that the economic environment may remain
more volatile. The debate has shown that while some
issues can be addressed legislatively, many problems
cannot be addressed effectively either because of political
constraints or, more likely, because it is simply not that
clear which changes in current law might support the best
economic outcomes. This suggests that some of the
problems we have faced over the last three years will
simply remain with us, and so will the volatility that was
associated with those problems.
One example is the issue of runs on non-bank nancial
rms. Non-bank nancial rms accounted for about 2/3 of
the top 80 percent of the assets in the S&P Financials for
the U.S. in late 2007. These were names such as Lehman
Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Hartford
Insurance, American International Group, as well as thrifts
like Washington Mutual and Countrywide. This list provides
a simple who's-who of the nancial crisis in the U.S. It was
all part of the shadow banking sector, a less regulated set
of nancial rms.
It is a hallmark of the crisis in the US that these rms
turned out to be susceptible to run-like phenomena. We
know what to do about bank runs—institute deposit
insurance plus prudential regulation. There is no palatable
analog for runs on non-bank nancial rms. Additional
capital requirements do not solve this problem. Since this
problem is central to the nancial crisis, and since we do
not have a good solution at hand, I expect the problem of
runs on non-bank nancial rms to remain part of the
macroeconomic landscape for the foreseeable future.
In summary, then, there are two reasons to think that the
next few years may be more volatile than they would
otherwise be. One is that it is harder to run a fully credible
policy in the current environment, where governments have
just taken many unprecedented actions in response to
crisis conditions. And another is that there are clear limits
to available legislative remedies, so that we will be left to
fend with some of the problems of the crisis going forward.
Conclusion
I hope these remarks today are enough to generate some
interesting discussion. I really appreciate the opportunity to
be here and to interact with this exceptional group. While
these are challenging times for macroeconomists, I think
we are also learning a great deal about how the global
macroeconomy works and about policies that may be
helpful going forward. Thank you very much.
References
International Monetary Fund. World Economic
Outlook (WEO). Rebalancing Growth. April 2010.
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2010, May 24). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100525_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20100525_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100525_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}