speeches · January 11, 2016
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Economic Outlook, January 2016
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Annual Meeting of the South Carolina Business & Industry Political Education Committee
Columbia, South Carolina
January 12, 2016
It is a pleasure to discuss the economic outlook with you here today. Before I begin, I should
note that I am speaking for myself, and my remarks should not be attributed to anyone else in the
Federal Reserve System.1
It’s fair to say that the Federal Reserve received a substantial amount of media attention last
year. For most of the year, the focus was on when the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
would increase its target interest rate. Naturally, there was a good deal of press coverage when
finally, on Dec. 16, we announced our decision to raise rates. That coverage was well deserved,
since it was our first rate increase since we lowered short-term interest rates to virtually zero
seven years earlier, in December 2008. Raising interest rates marks a significant milestone in this
expansion, because it reflects the fundamental strength of the U.S. economy.
Now that the first interest rate increase is out of the way, attention naturally turns to the question
of how fast interest rates will rise in the coming year. As always, the future is uncertain, and
neither I nor anyone else can give you a definitive answer. That said, the FOMC has provided
some helpful thoughts based on our understanding of how economic conditions are likely to
evolve and how we are going to need to respond. In a statement issued on Dec. 16, the FOMC
stated that “The Committee expects that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will
warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate….”
That statement naturally raises the question of what “gradual” means. The Committee has not
formally adopted a definition of gradual, but one can glean some information from the
projections that meeting participants submitted in December and published in a document called
the Summary of Economic Projections. The median projection for the year-end federal funds rate
target over the next three years rises at about a percentage point per year. This is notably slower
than the pace of rate increases in the last tightening cycle — June 2004 to June 2006.
But one needs to interpret this with care: These are projections, not promises. Later in the same
paragraph, the FOMC said that “the actual path of the federal funds rate will depend on the
economic outlook as informed by incoming data.” This contingent nature of policy is worth
emphasizing. As I said earlier, the future is uncertain, and we know that the appropriate path of
monetary policy should depend on how economic conditions evolve. So one should expect the
Fed’s interest rate target to rise at a pace that is gradual but dependent on the economic outlook.
And that makes a discussion of the economic outlook today especially relevant.
To put the current outlook in perspective, recall that the U.S. economy hit a low point during the
Great Recession in June 2009. Since then, we’ve seen steady cumulative growth. Real GDP, an
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estimate of total production in the economy, has risen at an annual rate of 2.2 percent,
employment has risen by almost 12 million jobs and the unemployment rate has fallen from a
high of 10 percent to the current rate of 5 percent.
My view is that growth in output and employment is likely to continue in 2016. The basis for
that view is that the household sector is relatively healthy and likely to remain so. Real consumer
spending has risen by a solid 2.5 percent over the last 12 months due to strong fundamentals.
Real disposable personal income has grown more rapidly than spending, rising by 3.5 percent
over the last 12 months; household debt remains well below the levels reached seven years ago;
and the net worth of households has risen by $28 trillion over the last six years.
A strong labor market is a key factor supporting consumer spending gains. Over the last 12
months we’ve added over 2.6 million new jobs, and the unemployment rate has fallen by eight-
tenths of a percentage point. We are beginning to see some hints of an acceleration in wage rates
as well. For example, average hourly earnings have risen by 2.3 percent over the last 12 months,
versus a 2.0 percent annual rate over the previous five years.
Putting this all together, I would be quite surprised if consumer spending growth is not robust
again this year. And since consumer spending by itself accounts for more than two-thirds of
GDP, that’s critical for GDP growth as well. To see this, suppose that real consumer spending
increases by 3 percent this year — very close to the average we’ve seen over the last two years.
Then, with no growth in any other spending categories, real GDP would still grow by just over 2
percent, not far from the 2.2 percent average growth of this recovery.
But we are likely to do better than no growth outside consumer spending. The housing market
also depends on the economic well-being of households and also is likely to contribute to GDP
growth this year. Over the last four years, real residential investment has grown at an annual rate
of 8.4 percent. Granted, real residential investment fell sharply in the Great Recession and
remains well below its level at the peak of the housing boom. So the housing market may still
seem sluggish to some. But we have seen real momentum and a steady advance in home prices
over the last three years. New housing starts have increased by 16 percent over the last 12
months, and employment in residential construction has increased by 5 ½ percent. Taking into
account the prospects for household incomes, employment and wealth, I expect residential
investment to continue to add to GDP growth this year.
What about other types of investment? Nonresidential fixed investment has grown at a solid 5 ½
percent annual rate over the last six years, but growth has fluctuated over time. It’s been as high
as 12 percent early in the recovery but was only 2.2 percent last year. The largest portion of
nonresidential investment spending is in the equipment category, which grew rapidly
immediately after the recession and continues to expand. Investment in intellectual property —
which includes computer software, business research and original artistic creations — has grown
steadily since the recession. Spending across these two categories accounts for over three-fourths
of business fixed investment, and has grown at more than 3 percent over the last 4 quarters.
The remainder of business fixed investment is in nonresidential structures. Spending in this
category grew rapidly from the end of the recession through the first quarter of 2014, but it has
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contracted somewhat since then. The source of the decline is clear: New oil wells are counted as
structures, and oil producers have slashed capital spending in response to lower oil prices.
Looking ahead, it seems clear that many businesses continue to identify profitable opportunities
to install new capital. Corporate cash flows are strong and financing is readily available for an
array of firms. I expect solid growth in overall business investment this year, despite the drag
from energy sector spending.
Rounding out the domestic picture, government spending has subtracted from GDP growth since
stimulus-related spending peaked right after the recession. More recently, growth in state and
local tax revenues has fueled spending growth that has offset the drag on GDP growth from
declining federal spending. The recent budget deal will provide a boost to federal spending this
year, however, and state and local spending in much of the country should continue to benefit
from growing revenues.
Net exports, on the other hand, are likely to subtract from growth this year as the trade deficit
widens. Many domestic producers now face stiffer competitive pressures from overseas, due to
the value of the dollar on foreign exchange markets having risen by over 20 percent in the last
year and a half.
Putting all this together suggests that in the near term real GDP is likely to continue to grow at a
pace very close to the 2.2 percent rate we’ve seen since the end of the recession. Growth at that
rate would generate strong employment gains and a further decline in unemployment. The
unemployment rate is already fairly low, however, and arguably has reached a level consistent
with notions of longer-run maximum employment. As a result, we should expect growth in
employment and real GDP to start tapering off over the next year or two to a rate consistent with
growth in the working age population of about a ½ percent per year. If productivity continues to
advance at about 1 ¼ percent per year, as it has during this expansion, that implies convergence
to real GDP growth of around 1 ¾ percent.
The economic outlook is not complete until we discuss inflation. The FOMC’s 2 percent
inflation target is based on a particular measure, the price index for personal consumption
expenditure, which is produced as a byproduct of the national income accounts that cover overall
economic activity. This measure has risen by only 0.4 percent over the 12 months that ended in
November. Obviously, the major factor here is energy prices. The price of crude oil has fallen
from over $100 per barrel in mid-2014 to $35 per barrel recently. The accompanying declines in
the prices of gasoline, heating oil and natural gas have held down headline inflation. Energy
prices cannot register substantial declines forever, though, and in fact futures markets suggest an
upward near-term trend.
Stripping the volatile energy and food components out of the overall price index yields the core
price index that often provides a better gauge of where overall inflation is likely to head. Core
inflation has averaged 1.3 percent over the last 12 months, closer to the FOMC’s target. An
important factor holding down core inflation has been the rise in the dollar on foreign exchange
markets, which has reduced import prices.
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In short, inflation has been held down by two factors, the falling price of oil and the rising value
of the dollar. But neither factor is likely to depress inflation indefinitely. After the price of oil
bottoms out, I would expect to see headline inflation move significantly higher. And after the
value of the dollar ultimately tops out, core inflation should move back toward 2 percent.
Measures of expected inflation from asset prices and surveys are consistent with that projection.
Thus I remain confident that, barring subsequent shocks, inflation will move back to the
FOMC’s 2 percent objective over the near term.
Now would be a good time to return to the question of how fast interest rates are likely to rise.
As I noted earlier, the pace is going to depend critically on the evolution of the economic outlook
as we see the incoming data. If oil prices bottom out and the value of the dollar peaks, but
inflation does not soon move back toward 2 percent, a shallower path for interest rates would
make sense. If inflation moves rapidly back toward 2 percent, however, a more aggressive path
would be in order.
While there is uncertainty about the pace at which monetary policy rates will rise, the case for an
upward adjustment in rates should be clear. One way to see the case is to look at real interest
rates — that is, interest rates adjusted for expected inflation. The federal funds rate has been near
zero for over seven years. A variety of measures indicate that over that time inflation has been
expected to trend back to 2 percent or higher. The difference — the funds rate minus expected
inflation — is the real interest rate, and it has been negative for more than seven years.
This is an exceptional occurrence by historical standards. The way to understand this is to
recognize that a real interest rate is the price at which businesses and households can exchange
purchasing power today for purchasing power in the future. This price should depend on the
relative supply of and demand for goods today and goods in the future. Low or even negative
real interest rates make sense when economic activity is weak, to encourage people to shift
spending from the future to the present. Conversely, when economic activity is strong or growing
rapidly, real interest rates ought to be higher. The current strength of U.S. economic growth,
particularly the robust growth in consumer spending, is a powerful argument for higher real
interest rates.
Apart from cyclical movements in real interest rates, however, there are longer-run swings in real
interest rates that policymakers need to take into account. The supply of and demand for savings
and investment can shift noticeably over time in response to more gradual economic
developments. Demographic shifts, changes in productivity growth and improvements in
financial intermediation are all capable of altering the trend real interest rate, around which
short-term fluctuations take place. Economists call this the “natural” real interest rate, to
distinguish it from the real interest rate that actually prevails at any one time.
If you look back over the last several decades, a downward movement in actual real interest rates
is clear, suggesting that the natural real rate has fallen. In recent years, economists using a
variety of models have estimated that the current natural real rate is quite low — most estimates
cluster around zero or just above. This is one reason to expect that in this expansion short-term
interest rates are not likely to reach the levels reached in previous expansions, an assessment that
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is consistent with the longer-run funds rate projections of FOMC participants as reported in the
Summary of Economic Projections.
I agree that we are in a period of lower-than-average real interest rates, and that this has
implications for monetary policy. The important point to recognize, however, is that actual real
interest rates — at about negative 1 ¾ percent — are now substantially below estimates of the
current natural rate, which as I noted are around zero. Moreover, while the natural interest rate is
lower than usual right now, over time one might expect it to rise as it reverts toward its longer-
run mean. So despite the relatively low natural real interest rate, there are still strong reasons to
expect real short-term interest rates to rise in the near term.
The broad takeaway, I’d suggest, is that even though interest rates are likely to be lower than
usual for the next few years, monetary policy is still highly accommodative right now. Interest
rate increases within the range envisioned by FOMC participants would be relatively slow by
historic standards, and would still leave policy in an accommodative stance. Such increases
should be viewed as a sign of the strength of the U.S. economy, and to me, that is good news.
1 I am grateful to Roy Webb and John Weinberg for assistance in preparing these remarks.
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Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2016, January 11). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160112_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20160112_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2016},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160112_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}