speeches · October 13, 2016
Regional President Speech
Eric Rosengren · President
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“After the Great Recession, a Not-So-Great
Recovery”
Eric S. Rosengren
President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston’s
60th Economic Conference
Boston, Massachusetts
October 14, 2016
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“After the Great Recession, a Not-So-Great Recovery”
Eric S. Rosengren
President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston’s
60th Economic Conference
Boston, Massachusetts
October 14, 2016
Good morning and welcome to the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston’s 60th Economic
Conference. I am looking forward to the presentations and discussions over the coming days.
While much has been written about the causes and severity of the so-called Great
Recession, much less has been written to date about the not-so-great recovery that has followed.
With this conference, we hope to fill some of that gap – as we discuss papers and analysis
covering some of the key anomalies in this recovery.
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We are looking forward to hearing from our keynote speaker, Federal Reserve Chair
Janet Yellen, a little later today. I would also like to welcome some of my fellow Fed
policymakers who are joining us. It is wonderful to have them here, as well as all of our
presenters and discussants, and all of you who are attending.
At a high level, what are the facts that make this recovery unusual? First, during this
recovery, growth in real GDP has been quite subdued – with growth rates that are percentage
points slower than the historical average. Second, despite the tepid growth, the unemployment
rate has fallen quite a bit faster than many expected. And finally, inflation has lingered
stubbornly below the Federal Reserve’s inflation target of 2 percent.
Understanding why this recovery has been different is important for monetary
policymakers. Understanding the sources of the difference will shape expectations going
forward, views on how to calibrate policy, and perspectives on the extent to which monetary and
other macro policies can support a return to more normal levels of long-run growth.
Questions abound. Is a slow recovery the unavoidable consequence of a severe
recession? Or of a financial crisis? What role is played by the changing demographics in the
United States? Will what may seem like temporary anomalies become the “new normal” for the
economy or economic cycles? Answers to questions like these will help us understand whether
firms and households have changed behavior in ways that are likely to be more permanent than
transitory, whether slow growth in productivity is transitory or permanent, and whether recent
trends in personal saving behavior are likely to persist well into the future. In view of recent
global inflation trends, the answers to these questions also have bearing on whether the global
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economy will continue to face bouts of undesirably low – rather than high – inflation,
challenging policymakers in novel ways.
Again, the answers to these questions not only impact our understanding of the economy
during this recovery, but may also have important consequences for setting policy well into the
future. For example, will a persistent change to long-run growth and long-run real interest rates
require that nontraditional monetary policy actions become part of the traditional “tool kit” of
central banks? Has this recovery changed views around using monetary policy rather than fiscal
policy to address slow recoveries? And does the experience of a persistently slow rebound alter
views on how quickly to address any emerging risks to the current recovery?
This morning, I am going to briefly touch on some of the “puzzles” that we have asked
the presenters to address at this conference – leaving the difficult job of answering the questions
to our paper givers and discussants. I will then briefly examine how some of these puzzles have
impacted financial markets and how we might interpret financial market reactions to this
“nonconformist” recovery.
Before I begin, let me note that the views I will express are my own, not necessarily those
of my colleagues at the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors or on the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
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Economic Anomalies and the Current Recovery
Figure 1 displays the pace of the recoveries from the last three recessions. This recovery
has been notably weaker than the previous two. Growth has averaged just a little over 2 percent
during the current recovery. The slope of the line is quite a bit flatter, but relatively constant –
that is, there has been no substantial surge in growth, as sometimes occurs at the beginning of
recoveries, but rather a decidedly gradual recovery of GDP from a very deep recession.
Despite the only gradual increase in real GDP, the unemployment rate has fallen faster
than in the previous two recoveries. Given the slower growth, this is somewhat surprising.
Given the unusually high unemployment rate coming out of the Great Recession, this more rapid
decline in unemployment was certainly welcome – but the pairing of slower, sustained real GDP
growth with a rapid decline in the unemployment rate is one of the clear puzzles of the recovery.
The falling unemployment rate has also been accompanied by falling labor force participation, as
demographic aging of the U.S. workforce causes people to leave the labor force. However, as
Figure 2 shows, even within age cohorts there have been declines in participation rates during
the recovery, with declines in the labor force participation of both prime working age men and
women. These trends may have implications for how we might expect the economy to evolve,
going forward.
At least one of the reasons for relatively slow growth has been the pattern of the saving
rate. As Figure 3 shows, the earlier recoveries (the periods following the recession shading on
the chart) were accompanied by periods of secular decline in the personal saving rate. This
allowed for somewhat stronger consumer spending, which served as one of the foundations of
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earlier recoveries. At least to date, the decline in the saving rate prior to the Great Recession has
been followed by a higher saving rate, which may suggest different savings behavior stemming
from the experience of the Great Recession. Should this pattern persist, it has implications going
forward for consumption patterns and the economy more broadly.
Core inflation has also remained subdued during the recovery from the Great Recession,
as shown in Figure 4. However, core inflation was also below 2 percent after the 2001
recession, but returned to a bit above 2 percent once labor markets tightened. In contrast, while
unemployment is now quite close to most economists’ estimates of the natural rate, the core PCE
inflation rate has remained consistently below the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target over most
of the recovery period, and currently stands at 1.7 percent.
The real federal funds rate in the current recovery also differs markedly from previous
recoveries, as shown in Figure 5. Reflecting the depth of the Great Recession, the real federal
funds rate has been significantly lower, and consistently negative, in contrast to the two earlier
recoveries. The need for more monetary policy accommodation is not surprising, given the
severity of the recession. What is surprising, however, is that even near full employment, the
real rate is still so much lower than in the earlier recoveries. By the fourth year of those two
earlier recoveries, the real federal funds rate had almost reached 2 percent (following the 2001
recession) or had exceeded 2 percent (following the 1991 recession).
In contrast, in the current recovery the real federal funds rate has not rebounded,
remaining quite negative. And as Figure 6 shows, now seven years into the recovery, the real
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federal funds rate remains below the nadir of the earlier two recoveries, even though the
economy has returned to near full employment.
Economic Anomalies and Asset Prices
The very short-term real federal funds rate is not the only segment of the yield curve that
is unusually low, as shown in Figure 7. The 10-year Treasury rate minus 10-year inflation
expectations (from the Survey of Professional Forecasters) remains unusually low, even late in
the recovery. There are a number of possible reasons for this, including the Federal Reserve’s
holdings of a significant quantity of longer-duration Treasury bonds; depressed long rates
globally, stemming from weak national economies inducing asset purchases by their central
banks; and concerns that central banks in many parts of the world may have difficulty achieving
their inflation targets.
However, looking at Figure 8, it is noteworthy that in the seventh year of the recovery,
the 10-year real U.S. Treasury yield remains negative – in other words, purchasers of 10-year
Treasuries are willing to accept a return that does not even compensate them for the inflation
expected over the holding period. This suggests a lack of confidence in U.S. and global growth
prospects, and in the ability of policy authorities to offset weak growth.
With both the real federal funds rate and the longer-term Treasury rate unusually low,
one might also expect other asset prices to behave differently than in earlier recoveries. Figure 9
shows the price to operating earnings ratio for the S&P 500 in the period covering the past three
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recoveries. While the price to earnings ratio for stocks is elevated, it still remains well below
levels reached prior to 2001.
Figure 10 shows an index of price to rent for residential housing. While the index has
been trending up more recently, it still remains much lower than in the years leading up to the
Great Recession.
Figure 11 shows real commercial real estate prices during the past three recessions and
recoveries. The recovery from the 1991 recession saw declines in real commercial real estate
prices at the beginning of the recovery; even seven years later, prices had not returned to their
level in the trough, in real terms. Of course, commercial real estate had been a major cause of
that recession, spurring significant bank failures. Unlike the 2001 recession, in which
commercial real estate suffered only collateral damage, it was many years before commercial
real estate prices stabilized after the 1991 recession. Interestingly, the past two recoveries have
contained relatively rapid appreciation in commercial real estate prices.
Figure 12 shows the overall capitalization rate for commercial real estate over the past
two recessions and recoveries. Cap rates now stand at historic lows.
Overall, anomalies in this recovery are leaving an imprint on only some financial asset
classes. Price to earnings ratios for stocks and price to rent for residential real estate are only
somewhat elevated and are well below previous peaks in these series. In contrast, 10-year
Treasury rates and commercial real estate capitalization rates are unusually low relative to the
past. Figure 13 shows that the duration of the Federal Reserve System Open Market Account
(SOMA) holdings rose as asset-purchase programs increased the holdings of longer-term
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Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities. More recently, there has been some decline in
the duration of the Federal Reserve’s portfolio as the previously purchased, longer-term
securities holdings continued to age. However, if one were concerned about the historically low
10-year Treasury and commercial real estate capitalization rates, perhaps because of potential
financial stability concerns, the balance sheet composition could be adjusted to steepen the yield
curve.
Concluding Observations
This recovery has been full of surprises, most of which have not been good. Hopefully,
the discussions that we have over the next two days will help us better understand these
anomalies, and whether they are likely to have a more permanent impact on the economy. They
may also have implications for the pricing of financial assets as the policy normalization process
proceeds.
While one must always be cautious about assuming that current trends reflect something
different from historical experience, it is important to consider whether this time has indeed been
different. If it has, then the lessons from this recovery – perhaps an understanding of a “new
normal” environment – may very well impact how we should be thinking about monetary policy
going forward.
Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
Eric Rosengren (2016, October 13). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20161014_eric_rosengren
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20161014_eric_rosengren,
author = {Eric Rosengren},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2016},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20161014_eric_rosengren},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}