speeches · January 5, 2017
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Economic Outlook, January 2017
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Maryland Bankers Association, First Friday Economic Outlook Forum
Baltimore, Maryland
January 6, 2017
This speech was delivered by Kartik Athreya, executive vice president and director of research.
It is a pleasure to be with you again for the second year in a row. This is once again an
interesting time to be looking forward and discussing what might be in store for the U.S.
economy in the years ahead. Forecasters often are tempted by the sin of claiming that uncertainty
is greater than usual at the present time. But I think we can all picture reasons why such a claim
might not be unreasonable right now.
Before looking ahead and assessing various risks, however, I’d like to start by reviewing the
recent performance of the economy. As always, the views I express are my own, and are not
necessarily shared by my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.1
The first fact worth noting is that we are in the eighth year of an economic expansion. For
comparison, since World War II the average expansion has lasted 4 ¾ years, measured from the
bottom of the recession to the beginning of the next recessionary contraction. Most forecasters
foresee continued growth in 2017. One might think this expansion is getting long in the tooth,
and that as a result we are “due,” so to speak, for a correction. The statistical evidence is pretty
clear, however, that business cycle expansions do not die of “old age.” What I mean by that is
that the probability of a recession in any given time period does not vary with the age of the
expansion.2
This expansion, however, has been weaker than past expansions. Real GDP — our broadest
measure of production and incomes — grew at a 2.2 percent average annual rate from the end of
the recession through the fourth quarter of 2015. Before the Great Recession, real GDP during
the postwar era had increased at about a 3 ½ percent average annual rate, and there were periods
in which growth was even higher. During the 1960s, for example, real GDP grew at a 4 ½
percent average annual rate.3
There are good reasons why matching those golden age growth rates on a sustained basis might
be a stretch. For one thing, the labor force is expanding much more slowly. During the ’60s, the
labor force grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate, driven by a growing population and rising
participation of women in the workforce. But the labor force participation rate of women peaked
in 1999 and has been declining since then. Moreover, the aging of the baby-boom generation is
tilting the mix of the working-age population toward age cohorts with lower participation rates.
At present, some economists estimate it could only take annual employment growth of around
six-tenths of 1 percent (or 60,000 jobs per month) to keep up with the growth in the working-age
population.4
1
Another reason GDP growth has been lower of late is that productivity has been rising less
rapidly. Over the last five years, GDP per worker has grown at an annual rate of only ½ of 1
percent. Before the Great Recession, that measure of productivity increased at a 1 ¾ percent
rate; during the macroeconomic golden age of the 1960s, that measure gained about 2 ½ percent
per year. Because real (inflation-adjusted) incomes per worker closely track productivity growth
over time, the current productivity slowdown is likely to be having a significant effect on
American households’ attitudes toward the economy and related public policy issues.5
Productivity and employment trends are key to the outlook for overall economic growth. Last
year at this gathering, I said I expected recent trends to continue. I anticipated productivity
growth to continue at a disappointing pace, around ¾ of a percent. Employment had been
growing more rapidly than the labor force, implying a decline in the unemployment rate. So I
expected employment growth to remain above trend but to slow gradually as the difficulty in
finding qualified workers in a tight labor market increasingly restrained new hiring. As a result, I
projected real GDP to grow 2.2 percent at an annual rate but to slow gradually to around a 1 ¾
percent pace, consistent with sustainable trends.
Looking back at 2016, real GDP slowed sooner than I thought and is on track to come in a touch
below 2 percent. Employment growth slowed as well, from over 220,000 per month in 2015 to
around 180,000 a month. But that rate of growth is still unsustainably high — we need less than
half that rate to keep pace with population trends. The unemployment rate fell to 4.6 percent as
of November, a relatively low rate by historical standards. Because the unemployment rate
cannot continue to fall forever, employment growth is likely to continue to slow and converge to
population growth.
Strong (albeit slowing) employment growth has been supporting solid consumer spending.
Inflation-adjusted household expenditures grew at a 2.7 percent annual rate through November.
Similarly, real disposable income grew at a 2.5 percent annual rate over that period. I expect
continued strength in consumer spending this year, despite slowing job growth, because wage
rates have been rising at an increasing pace. Average hourly earnings rose at a 2.7 percent annual
rate last year, well above the overall rate of inflation. And tightening labor markets are likely to
add to wage pressures this coming year. So even if consumer spending growth slows, it’s likely
to remain above 2 percent.
While consumer spending boosted overall growth in 2016, surprisingly weak investment was a
drag on growth. After a strong start, residential investment hit an unanticipated soft spot in mid-
year, actually falling in the second and third quarters. The largest portion of this investment
category is single-family home construction, and here the outlook is positive. New single-family
housing starts are up more than 8 percent for the first 11 months of 2016, household formation is
rising and household finances are strong. I expect residential investment to make a solid
contribution to real GDP growth in 2017.
Business investment also has been unexpectedly sluggish, falling in the last quarter of 2015 and
the first quarter of 2016, and then growing slowly in the next 2 quarters. A portion of the
weakness was due to sharply lower oil and natural gas drilling, a natural response to low oil and
gas prices. But other business equipment spending has disappointed as well, in part due to the
2
strengthening of the dollar on foreign exchange markets last year, which intensified competition
for many domestic producers and resulted in lower output and lower investment plans. The
fundamentals for business investment have remained reasonably sound, however, so I was
forecasting an imminent upturn as last year progressed.
Taking on board the data we’ve seen on spending and labor markets, it looks as if economic
activity has evolved largely as I anticipated at the beginning of 2016. Both real GDP and
employment appear to be converging to paths governed by productivity and demographic trends,
and these trends are currently low by historical standards.
A year ago, inflation was expected to rise gradually toward 2 percent, and it has done so, perhaps
even a bit more rapidly than some had anticipated. Recent data have given us no reason to expect
that this trend will not continue. If anything, the pickup of inflation could quicken temporarily,
given recent increases in oil prices. So I expect inflation to be close to 2 percent this year.
The outlook I’ve just described is conditioned on only the flow of hard economic data we’ve
seen, which basically runs through last October, together with some preliminary figures for
November and December. Of course, we have also had an election here in the United States. The
results of that election took many observers by surprise and appear to have left a sizable imprint
on financial asset prices. While there is considerable uncertainty about how a new
administration’s policies might affect the near- and longer-term economic outlook, the nature of
financial markets’ response suggests that investors may be anticipating some combination of tax
reductions and increased military and infrastructure spending. Some commentators have also
suggested that regulatory changes could contribute to an increase in underlying growth trends.
On the other side of the ledger, some have expressed concerns about the potential effects of
policies that are less friendly to international trade and which thus might impede growth.
To the extent that the equity market movements since the election are either the cause of or the
effect of a more optimistic outlook on the part of business enterprises, or both, a more positive
outlook for business investment would be warranted. If so, the unanticipated softness in capital
spending last year may have been attributable to a desire to delay irreversible investment
commitments until after the election, and a release of pent-up spending plans may be in the
offing. Still, the investment outlook could well fluctuate as uncertainty about the anticipated
contours of the policy environment is resolved.
A prudent course for a forecaster to take right now, I believe, is to build in at least some modest
fiscal stimulus and at least some measure of stronger business investment. Such an approach
would split the difference between complete faith in market ebullience and an assumption of no
change in the fiscal and investment outlook. For me, this suggests a forecast for real GDP growth
of 2.0 percent for 2017, falling to a long-run trend of around 1 ¾ percent in 2018 and beyond.
The rise in longer-term U.S. interest rates in the month following the election was roughly
evenly split between real rates and compensation for inflation. Even more striking is the
movement in the implied probabilities of very high and very low inflation derived from options
markets. These have flipped from a tilt toward lower inflation being much more likely than high
inflation to the opposite; inflation above 3 percent is now seen as about twice as likely as
3
inflation below 1 percent. In addition, the estimated term premium on 10-year Treasury
securities has moved from negative territory to closer to zero, suggesting that investors see less
value in Treasuries as a hedge against deflation and are becoming more concerned about the
exposure of the nominal Treasuries to the risk of inflation. These developments could reflect the
dissipation of downside inflation risks and a return to a more symmetric inflation outlook.
Do post-election economic developments have implications for monetary policy? Any significant
shift in the fundamental factors underlying the economic outlook is likely to have monetary
policy consequences. While there is currently tremendous uncertainty around the shape and size
of any federal policy initiatives, the direction of the effect on monetary policy seems pretty clear.
Pursuing our congressionally mandated objectives for price stability and employment means that,
all other things equal, greater fiscal stimulus implies higher interest rates than would otherwise
be warranted. Otherwise, inflation pressures are likely to become elevated, as we saw in response
to expanded fiscal deficits in the late 1960s.
Some would argue that changes in regulatory policy could improve economic efficiency and
expand the potential supply of goods and services over time, thereby easing resource pressures
and reducing the need for higher policy rates. It’s worth pointing out, however, that such effects
are likely to unfold gradually over time. Moreover, to the extent they raise our economy’s
underlying real growth rate, they will also increase the trend real interest rate to which rates must
converge over time (in the absence of shocks).6 More rapid productivity growth generally
implies higher real interest rates, all else held constant.
The economic projections that FOMC participants submitted prior to the December meeting
show a slight uptick in the median projected path for the target range for the federal funds rate,
relative to submissions prior to the September meeting. (Participants are called upon to submit
projections for every other meeting, under the assumption of “appropriate monetary policy.”)
While a more stimulative fiscal policy outlook may have contributed to the uptick, the first since
target rate projections began being released in 2012, several other factors could well have been
relevant. For one, improvement in measures of inflation compensation were underway well
before the election, and realized inflation has come in a bit firmer than many analysts had
projected earlier in the year. In addition, while real GDP growth was depressed early in 2016 by
temporary factors that were expected to fade, confirmation did not emerge until the arrival of
third-quarter data. And finally, employment growth has not decelerated in 2016 as much as some
forecasters had projected.
More broadly, I have been arguing for some time that the Fed’s interest rate target is
exceptionally low and that upward adjustment is needed.7 I have based that in part on the
behavior of benchmarks that capture the historical behavior of interest rates — that is, how
policy rates respond to inflation and employment — during times when monetary policy has
been relatively effective. These benchmarks, often referred to as “policy rules,” come in slightly
different formulations and are useful for assessing the stance of monetary policy. At this point,
with unemployment at or below levels corresponding to maximum sustainable employment and
with inflation very close to our announced target of 2 percent, almost all benchmarks recommend
higher interest rates, in most cases substantially higher rates.
4
Historical experience strongly suggests that significant deviation from these benchmarks can
increase the risk of adverse outcomes. In particular, delaying interest rate increases when
unemployment falls below levels corresponding to full or maximum employment can result in an
unanticipated rise in inflation pressures that necessitates relatively sharp upward adjustments in
rates. Such rapid adjustments can be hard to calibrate, and they heighten the risk of overdoing it
and sending the economy into an unnecessary recession. In contrast, sustaining unemployment at
or below full employment is associated with pre-emptive rate increases, before inflation
pressures are clearly visible.
To sum things up before I close, my outlook for 2017 is for GDP to grow by about 2.0 percent,
reflecting some probability of a boost from fiscal policy, and then to fall back to a long-run trend
of about 1 ¾ percent in 2018 and beyond. That said, the real outlook is somewhat more uncertain
than is typically the case, due to the possibility of substantial changes in fiscal, regulatory and
other economic policies. Inflation should continue to converge on 2 percent over the next year.
Monetary policy rates are likely to increase, and my view is that they may need to increase more
briskly than markets appear to expect, depending on developments as the year unfolds.
Thank you for your kind attention.
1 I would like to thank John Weinberg, Roy Webb and Jessie Romero for assistance in preparing these remarks.
2 Glenn D. Rudebusch, “Will the Economic Recovery Die of Old Age?” Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Economic Letter no. 2016-03, February 4, 2016.
3 Growth from fourth quarter 1959 to fourth quarter 1969. The peak 10-year average real growth rate, 5.0 percent,
was reached in the second quarter of 1968.
4 Rhys Bidder, Tim Mahedy, and Rob Valletta, “Trend Job Growth: Where’s Normal?” Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco Economic Letter no. 2016-32, October 24, 2016.
5 For a discussion of various theories of why productivity growth may have slowed in recent years, see Aaron
Steelman and John Weinberg, “A ‘New Normal’? The Prospects for Long-Term Growth in the United States,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond 2015 Annual Report.
6 In other words, increased growth in potential output should raise r*, the so-called natural rate of interest. See
Thomas Lubik and Christian Matthes, “Calculating the Natural Rate of Interest: A Comparison of Two
Approaches,” Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Brief no. 15-10, October 2015; Thomas Laubach and
John C. Williams, “Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest,” Review of Economics and Statistics, November 2003,
vol. 85, no. 4, pp. 1063-1070; and Kevin J. Lansing, “Projecting the Long-Run Natural Rate of Interest,” Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic Letter no. 2016-25, August 29, 2016.
7 Jeffrey M. Lacker, “Interest Rate Benchmarks,” Speech to the Virginia Association of Economists and the
Richmond Association for Business Economics, Richmond, Va., September 2, 2016; and “Economic Outlook,
October 2016,” Speech at the West Virginia Economic Outlook Conference, Charleston, W.Va., October 4, 2016.
5
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2017, January 5). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170106_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20170106_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2017},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170106_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}