speeches · October 12, 2023
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
Economic Outlook for Delaware and the Nation
Delaware State Chamber of Commerce
2023 Economic Outlook
Philadelphia, PA (virtual)
October 13, 2023
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System
or the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
Economic Outlook for Delaware and the Na�on
Delaware State Chamber of Commerce
2023 Economic Outlook
Philadelphia, PA (virtual)
October 13, 2023
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Execu�ve Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good morning, everyone.
First, to President Mike Quaranta and the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce, thank you for invi�ng
me for what has become our annual opportunity to be together — even if just virtually.
And, to each of you with us, thanks for allowing me to be part of your Friday.
I know we have a lot of ground to cover and only an hour in which to do it. And as much as I enjoy
providing you with my outlook, I much more enjoy the ability to drill deeper into issues through a
conversa�on. So, let’s just get right into this.
Of course, I must begin with the standard Fed disclaimer: The views I express today are my own and do
not necessarily reflect those of anyone else on the Federal Open Market Commitee (FOMC) or in the
Federal Reserve System.
Or, as I’ve become fond of saying, when you’re telling your colleagues about this morning’s conversa�on,
you can just say, “Pat said,” not “the Fed said.”
Now, as you can imagine, the two topics I get asked about most are interest rates and infla�on. And that
makes sense, given the impact they have on the decisions made by both businesses and families. So, I’ll
start there.
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A�er the last policy rate hike in July, I went on the record with my view that, if economic and financial
condi�ons evolved roughly as I expected, we could hold rates where they are. And while I have been
proven wrong in less than two months before, I am happy to say that so far economic and financial
condi�ons are evolving as I expected, if not perhaps even a tad beter.
Disinfla�on is under way. Economic ac�vity has been resilient. Labor markets are coming into beter
balance. Moreover, these condi�ons aren’t just where I see the na�onal economy but also our regional
economy and, specifically for today’s discussion, Delaware’s. And I’ll note those points in turn.
So, I remain today where I first announced myself in early August: Absent a stark turn in what I see in the
data and hear from contacts, both in one-on-one conversa�ons and in forums like this, I believe that we
are at the point where we can hold rates where they are.
Look, we did a lot, and we did it very fast. In barely more than a year, we increased the policy rate by
more than 5 percentage points and to its highest level in more than two decades — 11 rate hikes in a
span of 12 mee�ngs prior to September.
We also turned around our balance sheet policy, and we turned it around fast — and we con�nue to
�ghten financial condi�ons by shrinking the balance sheet.
But the workings of the economy cannot be rushed, and it will take some �me for the full impact of the
higher rates to be felt. Holding rates steady will let monetary policy do its work. I am sure policy rates are
restric�ve, and as long they remain so, we will steadily press down on infla�on and bring markets into a
beter balance.
By doing nothing, we are s�ll doing something. And, actually, we are doing quite a lot.
We are also giving ourselves a chance to navigate some of the current uncertainty — labor strikes, oil
prices, and the not-fully-exorcised specter of a government shutdown included.
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I am more and more confident that not only is monetary policy currently working, but it will con�nue to
work. Headline PCE infla�on remained elevated in August at 3.5 percent year over year, but it is down 3
percentage points from this �me last year. About half of that drop is due to the vola�le components of
energy and food. So, despite both of those being basic necessi�es of life, economists typically exclude
them in the so-called core infla�on rate, which gives a more accurate assessment of the pace of
disinfla�on and its likely path forward.
Well, core PCE infla�on has also shown clear signs of progress, and the August monthly reading was its
smallest month-over-month increase since 2020. So, yes, I do see a steady disinfla�on under way, and I
expect it to con�nue, with infla�on dropping below 3 percent in 2024 and leveling out at our 2 percent
target therea�er.
However, there can be challenges in assessing the trends in disinfla�on. For example, yesterday’s release
of September’s CPI report came out modestly on the upside, driven by energy and housing. Let me be
clear about two things. First, we will not tolerate a reaccelera�on in prices. But second, I do not want to
overreact to the normal month-to-month variability of prices. And for all the fancy techniques, the best
way to separate a signal from noise remains to average data over several months. Of course, to do so,
you need several months of data to start with, which, in turn, demands that, yes, we remain data
dependent but pa�ent and cau�ous with the data.
Meanwhile, I con�nue to see GDP growth that is outperforming es�mates from earlier this year. This
economy is proving to be nothing if not resilient. I do expect GDP gains to con�nue through the end of
2023, before pulling back slightly in 2024. But even as I foresee the rate of GDP growth modera�ng, I do
not see it contrac�ng. I do not an�cipate a recession.
In Delaware, the signals point in the same forward direc�on. And, in fact, business forma�on in
Delaware, including for high-propensity businesses, remains strong, having risen con�nually since the
pandemic.
Delaware’s Coincident Index, the Philadelphia Fed’s summary metric of economic ac�vity, increased 3.3
percent year over year according to August data, reflec�ng generally posi�ve condi�ons. And, in fact,
Delaware’s three-month increase of 0.6 percent matched the na�onal rate of increase. In the
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Philadelphia Fed’s most recent business outlook surveys, which survey manufacturing and
nonmanufacturing firms in the Third District, including Delaware, firms overall reported declines in the
current month, but their six-month outlooks are op�mis�c for growth.
Recognizing the importance of tourism to Delaware, I do note that the number of summer overnight
tourist stays captured by the Rehoboth Beach–Dewey Beach Chamber of Commerce showed
accommoda�on room counts down from last year’s high levels between Memorial Day through Labor
Day. However, we know there is probably much influencing these numbers beyond infla�on or other
economic factors, including the weather.
All this aside, I fully recognize and appreciate these challenges that monetary policy is presen�ng to you
and your businesses.
There are outside factors — factors that bring uncertainty with them — which con�nue to parallel the
more restric�ve stance we have pursued through the FOMC. For example, while we are now six months
past the spring banking turmoil, the impact of that episode on credit markets is s�ll being felt; this is not
new to many of you.
Our contacts throughout the banking sector con�nue to report �ghter credit condi�ons, which
essen�ally have the impact of higher rates without requiring them to be so.
As I have spoken with contacts throughout the Third District this summer, I have heard from across
industry sectors of the challenges presented by both rates and current condi�ons in access to capital —
from banking, to retail, to agriculture and manufacturing, and everyone in between.
I know the impact the current climate is also having in the residen�al real estate sector, as higher
mortgage rates have constricted inventory, which has, in turn, led to increasing prices and a shallowing
of the pool of prospec�ve buyers, not just in Delaware but throughout the region and na�on.
In consumer finance, which I know is a par�cularly important sector for Delaware, there is data we
follow closely. So, we do take note that while the number of open bankcard accounts is up nearly 6
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percent, year over year, the rate of growth in origina�ons is down during that same �me span through
June, according to the latest available data.
And we do pay aten�on to the fact that outstanding balances are up more than 15 percent year over
year as of August, while more consumers are pushing their payments forward, as evidenced by both the
nearly 6 percent increase in the number of outstanding accounts and the increase in delinquency rates.
And in Delaware, the 30-day delinquency rate in mortgages has been trending upward and now exceeds
prepandemic levels — 2.4 percent of ac�ve loans today versus 2.2 percent in February 2020.
Addi�onally, the current turmoil in labor markets is likely to similarly exert downward pressure on
ac�vity. I would say this is perhaps most notable among the auto worker strike, given the enormous
impact of that industry on our overall economy. It’s an industry that isn’t composed of just the direct
manufacturing of cars and trucks but also the business lines of countless downstream component
manufacturers and suppliers.
There is also the immediate impact of the strike on consumer spending and economic ac�vity, as striking
workers are forgoing their usual wages.
It is obviously too soon to tell the overall impact of this strike, as well as the ongoing labor ac�on in the
entertainment industry and elsewhere, on GDP or infla�on, but I suspect it will become obvious in the
coming months’ worth of data.
And while an agreement was reached to temporarily keep the federal government open and running, we
don’t know what will happen four weeks from now when this agreement expires.
Finally, I also believe this month’s restart of student loan payments will have a further dampening effect
on consumer spending. How much so, however, remains to be seen.
Turning to the jobs picture, I do an�cipate na�onal unemployment to end the year at about 4 percent —
just slightly above where we are now — and to increase slowly over the next year to peak around 4.5
percent before heading back toward 4 percent in 2025. That is a rate in line with what economists call
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the natural rate of unemployment, or the theore�cal level where labor market condi�ons support stable
infla�on of 2 percent.
Now, before you all post “Pat says unemployment is going up” on your social media feeds, let me be
clear about one thing: This does not mean that I expect mass layoffs.
There are many factors that play into the calcula�on of the unemployment rate itself. For instance, we’ve
had recent months where, even as the economy added more jobs, the unemployment rate increased
because more workers moved off the sidelines and back into the labor force.
And, beyond the hard data, I also have to balance the so� data. For example, employers throughout the
Third District have told me that given how hard it has been to find the workers they currently have, they
are doing all they can to keep them.
For Delaware, the jobs picture remains consistent: Three straight months of labor force and household
job gains have brought the state’s unemployment rate closer to that of the na�on than at any point in
the prior two years. Jobs numbers in major sectors, including construc�on, finance, and professional
services, are all above where they were in February 2020.
I would also specifically note the nearly 9 percent year-over-year increase in jobs in the leisure and
hospitality sector is back to around prepandemic levels.
Surely, the pandemic was such a large health and economic crisis that it marks a “before” and “a�er” in
our minds and lives, not the least of which was the tremendous loss of life that touched so many of us
very closely. It was a shock, in every sense of the word. To so many, the new normal s�ll does not feel
normal. Again, the pandemic is likely to be a defining event for the genera�ons that experienced it. This
is true for families and businesses.
But, having said that, allow me to pose the following final thought: What has fundamentally changed in
the economy from, say, 2018 or 2019? In 2018, infla�on averaged 2 percent almost to the decimal point
and was actually below target in 2019. Unemployment averaged below 4 percent for both years and was
as low as 3.5 percent na�onwide and in Delaware, while policy rates peaked below 2.5 percent. From the
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cold lens of economics, I do not see the fundamental changes that would call for large changes in natural
rates.
But I could also be wrong, and, trust me, that would not be the first �me this economy has made me
rethink some of the classic models. We just won’t know for sure un�l we have more data to look at over
�me.
So, it is against this broad backdrop that I believe the prudent posi�on is one in which the policy rate can
remain steady. Alas, you may have no�ced that I didn’t tell you how long rates will need to stay high.
And, my apologies, I simply cannot tell you at this moment. My forecasts are based on what we know as
of late 2023. As �me goes by, as adjustments are completed, and as we have more data and insights on
the underlying trends, I may need to adjust my forecasts, and with them my �me frames.
I can tell you three things on my views on future policy. First, I do subscribe to the new moniker, “higher
for longer.” I didn’t coin it, but my expecta�on is that rates will need to stay high for a while.
Second, the data and what I hear from contacts and outreach, will signal to me when the �me comes to
adjust policy either way. I really do not expect it, but if infla�on were to rebound, I know I would have
no hesitancy to support further rate increases as our objec�ve to return infla�on to target is, simply,
not nego�able.
Third, I believe that a resolute, but pa�ent, stance of monetary policy will allow us to achieve the so
landing that we all wish for our economy.
And I think that is a good place for me to land my remarks, so we can get to have a conversa�on.
Mike, thanks for allowing me the �me, and let’s start our Q&A.
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Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2023, October 12). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20231013_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20231013_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2023},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20231013_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}