speeches · March 29, 2023
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2023
The Virginia Council of CEOs
University of Richmond
Richmond, Va.
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The challenge in assessing today’s economy is reconciling the strength of the recent
data with the potential for weakness coming from the banking system.
•
It is possible that tightening credit conditions, along with the lagged e�ect of our rate
moves, will bring in�ation down relatively quickly. But I still think it could take time
for in�ation to return to target.
•
Policy will need to be nimble. If in�ation persists, we can react by raising rates
further. If I am wrong about the pricing dynamics at play, or about credit conditions,
then we can respond appropriately.
Thank you for that kind introduction and for having me here today.
You follow the news. One of the 20 largest banks, one with heavy sectoral and regional
exposure, was caught wrongfooted. There was a run on the bank. The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) took over in the second largest bank failure in U.S. history.
Depositors were protected, but it was a shock, nonetheless. In order to control higher-than-
desired in�ation, the Fed chose not to back o� its plan to continue tightening. You know
this story. But I’m not talking about Silicon Valley Bank. I’m describing the 1988 failure of
First Republic Bank in Texas. There’s no connection to the bank with the same name in the
news today.
Why do I start with that story? It’s not a perfect historical parallel, but it’s worth
remembering that not every bank failure becomes Lehman Brothers. We are all
understandably scarred by that memory, but banks have failed throughout our history,
many without creating a broader crisis. Thirty-�ve years later, few of us remember First
Republic Bank in Texas (which by the way was also sold to a North Carolina bank — one
now called Bank of America).
How does that story relate to today? F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote: “The test of a �rst-rate
intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time ...” My dad
put it simpler, saying I “needed to learn to walk and chew gum.” The challenge in assessing
today’s economy is reconciling the strength of the recent data with the potential for
weakness coming from the banking system. Let me take you through how I am thinking
about each, and the potential implications for Fed policy. These are my thoughts alone and
not necessarily those of anyone else in the Federal Reserve System.
Let’s start with the banking system. The past few weeks brought the failure of two banks
overexposed to crypto, and one with a severe asset/liability duration mismatch. Depositors
got nervous and moved with unprecedented speed. The resulting systemic risk brought
strong interventions. To mitigate the risk of comparable runs at other banks, the FDIC
guaranteed all uninsured deposits at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature. To reduce liquidity
risk, the Fed Board, with Treasury approval and backstop, created an emergency lending
facility particularly attractive to banks holding Treasury and mortgage-backed securities
with unrealized losses.
The broader implications of these events aren’t yet clear. There are still, to be sure, a few
individual banks working through their own issues. But overall deposit �ows appear
relatively stable. Banks have worked with intensity to ensure they have adequate liquidity.
And, as I’ve talked to banks in my district, I’ve been encouraged by the resilience I’ve seen.
But even resilient banks can impact the broader economy if, to minimize their liquidity risk
and protect capital, they choose to tighten access to credit. Research shows that such a
pullback would limit consumer spending and curtail business investment. But it is too early
to know whether that will happen now, or not.
These failures hit at a time when economic data was coming in strong. 351,000 jobs were
added on average over the past three months — about four times the pace needed to keep
up with labor force growth. Unemployment remains historically low, at 3.6 percent.
In�ation, though down from peak, continues to come in hot. Headline CPI was at 6 percent
in February, and core was at 5.5 percent. Monetary policy is famously said to work with long
and variable lags, but our 475 basis points of rate hikes over the past year have not yet
compellingly moved in�ation back toward our 2 percent target.
It is possible that tightening credit conditions, along with the lagged e�ect of our rate
moves, will bring in�ation down relatively quickly. But I still see three reasons why it could
take time for in�ation to return to target.
First, the pandemic is still with us. Not the public health crisis, thankfully, but the economic
dislocation it caused. Over a trillion dollars in excess savings and trillions more in equity
and housing wealth are funding consumption. Fiscal outlays are continuing, like the
infrastructure bill and state tax cuts. Order backlogs are still being worked down.
Inventories remain short in autos and homes, supporting prices in those sectors. The labor
market remains historically tight, as I said earlier, in part because employers who have
struggled to �nd workers are reluctant to let them go.
Second, �rms and workers are intent on recapturing lost ground. I hear from a number of
sectors (like health care, utilities and food) that margins have compressed and that they
now feel the need to restore them through further price increases. Similarly, workers
whose real wages fell are pressing to catch up. Both of these imply further in�ationary
pressure.
And third, and perhaps most fundamentally, two years of high in�ation and ubiquitous
conversation about in�ation have surely had an impact on �rm behavior. I think about it
like this: For a generation, business leaders learned not to count on pricing to drive pro�ts.
Large retailers resisted every price increase and had options to redirect their business to
lower-cost suppliers overseas. Consumers found that they had power as well through price-
shopping enabled by e-commerce. The Fed had earned real credibility for its ability to
deliver stable prices; you could say we played a role in every wage and every price
negotiation.
But now pricing is back in play. Its impact is considerable as successful increases �ow
straight to the bottom line. Businesses have found inelasticity they hadn’t had the courage
to test for previously and are looking to �nd more. Supply chain challenges have worn
down purchasing departments; they seem now more willing to accept increases, at a time
when volatility has made supplier cost structures more opaque and availability more
important. In most companies, there is a continual tug of war between a �nance team that
sees price as a path to pro�ts and a sales team that fears loss of business and market
share. Sales won for years, but �nance is winning now and will continue to keep pressure
on prices until customers and competitors reassert themselves.
Let me now turn to our most recent meeting. I saw substantial in�ationary pressure and a
resilient banking system. So, I supported raising rates 25 basis points. I am heavily
in�uenced by the experience of the 70s. If you back o� on in�ation too soon, in�ation
comes back stronger, requiring the Fed to do even more, with even more damage. With
in�ation high, broad-based and persistent, I didn’t want to take that risk.
But policy will need to be nimble. Most forecasts of our policy path seem to average the risk
of higher in�ation with the risk of further contagion in banking. I still see the range of
potential outcomes as pretty wide. If in�ation persists, we can react by raising rates further.
It was only a few weeks ago that some were calling for a 50-basis-point increase. And if I am
wrong about the pricing dynamics at play, or about credit conditions, then we can respond
appropriately.
I started by quoting two great Americans: F. Scott Fitzgerald, and my dad. So let me close by
quoting a third one: Ted Lasso, who said, “There’s two buttons I never like to hit … And
that’s ‘panic’ and ‘snooze.’” So, I am keeping calm in these uncertain times, and watching
carefully.
Thanks, and I look forward to your questions and comments.
In 1988, 40 bank subsidiaries and one credit card subsidiary of the First RepublicBank
Corporation in Dallas — the 14th largest bank holding company at the time — failed.
(Source: FDIC in Managing the Crisis: The FDIC and RTC Experience).
In�ation Monetary Policy
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2023, March 29). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230330_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20230330_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2023},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230330_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}