speeches · June 2, 2010
Regional President Speech
Thomas M. Hoenig · President
The High Cost of Exceptionally Low Rates
Thomas M. Hoenig
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Bartlesville Federal Reserve Forum
Hosted by Bartlesville Chamber of Commerce
Bartlesville, Okla.
June 3, 2010
The views expressed by the author are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve System,
its governors, officers or representatives.
I appreciate the opportunity to join you here today. Bartlesville plays an especially
important role in the history of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. After Congress passed
the Federal Reserve Act nearly a century ago, a special committee was appointed to determine
where the nation’s 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks would be located and what regions those
banks would serve. When that committee met in Kansas City to discuss business relationships in
the central United States, Frank Phillips was among those who attended and spoke in favor of
locating our Bank in Kansas City and having it serve Oklahoma. The support from Mr. Phillips
and others from Oklahoma was absolutely critical to the eventual decisions that established the
Bank in Kansas City and included Oklahoma in the Tenth Federal Reserve District that we serve.
A few years after our founding, we opened our Oklahoma City Branch. This morning, the
conununity and business leaders who serve on the Branch’s Board of Directors - including
Bartlesville’s own K. Vasudevan - met here in Bartlesville, which seems especially appropriate.
This is not the only connection between the Federal Reserve's founding and Oklahoma.
The Senate sponsor of the Federal Reserve Act was one of Oklahoma's first senators, Robert
Owen. Senator Owen, like Mr. Phillips, recognized the importance of having the central bank of
the United States tied directly to America’s Main Streets and not isolated in Washington or on
Wall Street. That structure is at least as important today as it was a century ago. It is my hope
that, after much debate, the regulatory reform legislation now under discussion in Washington
will affirm in its final version the importance of these regional responsibilities.
It is our job as the regional headquarters of the nation’s central bank to serve as the link
between our communities and national policy deliberations. Although these policy issues are
always important to our nation, today we find ourselves at a unique and difficult point. We are
attempting to support an economic recovery, but in doing so, also avoid fostering the next crisis.
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It is this challenge that I would like to spend the next few minutes discussing and sharing with
you my views.
Economic outlook
At this point, the U.S. economy appears on the path to recovery. Subject to the risks I will
discuss a bit later, the general outlook is good. GDP grew at nearly a 4 percent pace in the
second half of last year, after bottoming out last summer. I anticipate growth will be slower this
year, coming in between 3 and 3 1/2 percent.
What is perhaps most encouraging now is the changing composition of growth that we
are seeing. Last fall, a good portion of the GDP growth could be traced to temporary factors
related to fiscal stimulus and inventory adjustments by firms that had scaled back during the
worst of the recession. At that time, there was considerable uncertainty about what might happen
once these temporary factors subsided. However, more recent data suggest that the recovery is
more broad-based and self-sustaining, and perhaps even stronger than anticipated.
Consumer spending, which makes up more than 70 percent of GDP, has been expanding
at a solid pace. While consumers have been cautious about big-ticket purchases, we’re starting to
see some signs that this is changing as consumer confidence improves. Manufacturing activity
continues its sharp rebound, and nonmanufacturing activity has been expanding as well. With
businesses seeing a recovery in demand, business purchases of equipment and software have
been robust.
Jobs, of course, remain a critical issue. Improvements in labor markets boost household
income prospects and enables Americans to take care of themselves and their families and to
save for their future. So of course jobs are a crucial component in the transition to self-sustaining
growth. We are now seeing clear signs that the process of job creation is taking hold. Payrolls
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have risen in each of the first four months of this year. In April, payrolls increased by a strong
290,000. The recent uptick in the unemployment rate from 9.7 to 9.9 percent actually reflects an
improved outlook, as workers who dropped out of the job market are gaming confidence and
beginning to reenter the workforce. Solid job gains in the months ahead will translate into a
downward trajectory for the unemployment rate later this year and into next year.
Nevertheless, while the economy is unproving, recovery in certain sectors will be
prolonged. Notably, the construction industry has yet to convincingly turn the corner. The
residential housing market received a boost from federal homebuyer tax credits last fall and
again this spring, but given the overhang of unsold homes, building activity will remain subdued
through most of this year or longer. Nonresidential construction will likely continue to contract
this year, due to high vacancy rates in that sector. These are important negatives but by
themselves should not derail the recovery.
Looking at the economy more broadly, inflation has drifted lower in recent months,
which is typical following a recession. While energy prices have kept consumer price inflation
around 2 percent, inflation in non-food and non-energy prices - which is core inflation - has
been running at rates of around 1 percent. These inflation rates are likely to continue for the next
year or so. However, as the economic recovery continues or picks up momentum, I expect
inflation to drift higher.
As for risks to this outlook, there are several. The fluid situation in Greece and Europe
reminds us to be wary. The European debt problems have increased uncertainty and a renewed
aversion to risks, and are causing investors to flee riskier assets such as stocks and junk bonds for
safer assets such as U.S. Treasury debt. These shifts will have a modest negative net effect on
U.S. economic growth in the near term. As an aside, I would note this episode illustrates the
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longer run danger of running persistent budget deficits - a situation that we must soon address in
the United States.
Monetary Policy
It is within the context of this outlook and its longer run implications that the Federal
Open Market Committee must balance its objectives of supporting short-run economic growth
and long-run stable growth and low inflation. It also is within the context of this outlook and
these objectives that policy must be normalized, as reflected in the level of real interest rates and
the size and composition of the Federal Reserve’s combined balance sheet.
Achieving such multiple objectives requires deft handling. But most certainly, the first
step toward a more normal policy is to move policy rates off zero, back toward neutral.
In saying this, I have no illusions about the challenges of moving away from zero. But in
my judgment, the process should begin sooner to avoid the danger of having to over compensate
later, as so often happens in policy.
I would begin the normalization of policy by outlining for the public a two-step process:
First, the Federal Reserve would continue to unwind its extraordinary policy actions
implemented as a response to the financial tunnoil that began in the fall of 2008. The market’s
need for these facilities has eased and we have closed most of them, returning the discount
window to more normal operations. As part of this first step, the FOMC would also eliminate its
commitment to maintaining “exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended
period.”
Second, with these steps taken, with the improvements in market conditions and liquidity,
and with an improving outlook, the FOMC would be prepared to raise the fluids rate target to 1
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percent by the end of summer. This would continue the current highly accommodative policy,
but would move nominal rates away from zero and real rates to a less negative level.
We would then pause, maintaining the funds rate at 1 percent while we assess the
economic outlook and emerging financial conditions. This would provide time to judge whether
and to what degree further policy adjustments are warranted to assure long-run financial
equilibrium and stability.
Based on the current outlook consensus, it seems reasonable that the economy would be
well-positioned to accept this modest increase in the funds rate. As a reminder, the hinds rate
target remained between 1 and 2 percent even after the intensification of the crisis in the fall of
2008. It was reduced to its current target range of zero to 1/4 percent in mid-December 2008.
Relative to the depths of the crisis, conditions today are much improved from where we were 18
months ago. Financial stress is clearly reduced and a sustainable economic recovery appears
under way. It is also important to emphasize that the 1 percent fed hinds rate target, coupled with
the Federal Reserve's large balance sheet, provides an extraordinarily accommodative monetary
policy environment and one that would ensure the economy’s continued progress in the recovery.
Setting out such a plan would be a more orderly move toward unwinding the earlier
extraordinary actions and would serve to reduce the likelihood of a buildup of new financial
imbalances.
Let me him now to the subsequent steps that might be taken to more hilly restore policy
to a long-run equilibrium policy level. Given the relatively modest expected trajectory of growth
and inflation, these added moves will involve some quarters to complete. But the direction
should be firmly established now with the timing dependent on the performance of a
combination of financial, inflation and growth variables. Experience tells me that a clear
commitment now to such action would mitigate the likely need to later tighten beyond our
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estimate of neutral that so often comes with delay. More specifically, these next steps mvolve
raising the funds rate from 1 to above 3 percent reasonably quickly as we gain confidence that
GDP and employment are on a steady path toward potential. The final steps would take rates to
between 3.5 and 4.5 percent as economic growth approaches long-run potential.
If we are to achieve a steady rate environment, it is also important that the Federal
Reserve's balance sheet be restored to its pre-crisis size and composition. Obviously this requires
the careful process of selling the Federal Reserve's $1.3 trillion portfolio of mortgage-backed
securities. Various approaches to this can be identified but most agree that it should be done with
the process or time horizon clearly set out for all to see. I also would suggest it begin at least
when the fed funds rate rises above 1 percent or sooner if conditions provide the opportunity.
Monetary Policy and Unemployment
Finally, I want to spend a few minutes suggesting why it is important to move the federal
funds rate off of zero even though the unemployment rate remains above 9 percent. It has been
argued, with some supporting evidence, that the Federal Reserve’s commitment to very low
interest rates in 2003 and 2004 was too low for too long and contributed to the housing and credit
boom and subsequent busts.
Between August 2002 and January 2005—two-and-a-half years—the federal funds rate
was below the rate of core inflation. Such low interest rates encourage borrowing and a buildup
of debt, sometimes in ways we do not fully appreciate until much later with the benefit of
hindsight. In addition, low interest rates - especially with a commitment to keep them low - led
banks and investors to feel “safe” in the search for yield, which involves investing in less-liquid
and more risky assets. In addition, financial institutions often search for yield by increasing the
amount of assets supported by each dollar of net worth - leverage. For example, leverage at
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securities broker dealers rose dramatically. After averaging just 13-1/4 between 1970 and 2000,
leverage climbed to a high of 40 in the third quarter of 2007 - the start of the financial crisis.
It was after a period of too-low interest rates, too much credit, too much leverage that the
collapse of the housing bubble, the rapid deleveraging and the ensuing financial crisis occurred.
And it was after these events that unemployment rose to more than 10 percent and the United
States lost 8.4 million jobs. In 2010, we have only gamed back 573,000 jobs.
In another period, the mid-1970s and early 1980s, low interest rates also triggered an
extreme swing in the economic cycle. The real fed funds rate was kept negative for a span of
nearly three years, from November 1974 to September 1977. The low interest rate environment
led initially to a drop in the unemployment rate. But rising inflation and asset bubbles eventually
dictated a restrictive monetary policy implemented by Fed Chairman Paul Volcker and his
FOMC colleagues. In the end, the nation paid a high price for the low rates of the 1970s, when
unemployment reached 10.8 percent in the recession of the early 1980s.
In the drive to achieve price stability and stable growth, monetary policy is a powerful
tool. Certainly lowering interest rates is the appropriate monetary policy response to the onset of
an economic recession and rising unemployment. But it is also a blunt instrument that has a wide
set of intended but also unintended consequences that can and have worsened economic
outcomes including misallocation of precious resources, inflation and long-term unemployment.
That is why we want to return to a sustainable long-term equilibrium policy rate, starting soon.
The economy is improving and policy should reflect that fact, carefully but confidently.
Although we find ourselves in a unique environment, history offers us some important lessons. If
we do not learn from past mistakes, we will find ourselves repeating them yet again.
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Cite this document
APA
Thomas M. Hoenig (2010, June 2). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100603_thomas_m_hoenig
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20100603_thomas_m_hoenig,
author = {Thomas M. Hoenig},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100603_thomas_m_hoenig},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}