speeches · March 20, 1955
Speech
Delos C. Johns · Governor
CREDIT FOR CONSUMERS
Address
by
Delos C. Johns
President! Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Before the
National Instalment Credit Conference
Sponsored by the American Bankers Association
Jeffer son Hotel, St. Louis, Missouri
Monday morning, March 21, 1955.
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CREDIT FOR CONSUMBRS
Many of us gathered here today find it difficult to reflect on the early
1920fs without a momentary pang of nostalgia. Yet I think we would not wish
to turn the calendar back if we could, for an undeniable fact of life in the early
twenties was this: the members of the family worked much harder at entertaining
themselves and at keeping the household going than they do in 1955. Though
people of some means then commonly passed housework on to full-time domestic
servants, much drudgery remained nevertheless, and escape from the boredom
of repetitive chores was a challenge to the ingenuity of many.
But new, durable goods were already beginning to change living patterns.
By 1921 the first two great labor-saving household appliances, washing machines
and electric refrigerators, were gaining rapid acceptance. A 1921 washing
machine was an ugly contraption, requiring almost as great expenditure of human
energy as the tub and washboard. An electric refrigerator of the early twenties,
with its compressor installed in the basement, made a great noise, setting up
sympathetic vibrations in various parts of the house as it grumbled on and off.
On balance, however, both appliances reduced household toil, as did the electric
and gas ranges which by 1925 were quickly replacing kerosene cook stoves and
wood-and-coal-burning kitchen ranges. Though pianos had long been installed
to further the family's cultural progress, they unfortunately required individual
playing skill. Thus the player-piano and phonograph, when they were introduced,
vied for popular favor as providers of ready-made music. The phonograph
was winning out until the realization at last came that radio had become
commercially feasible. Radios, most of them still tuned with three dials, were
by 1925 fast becoming the center of the family's evening interest, but were not
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yet always dependable sources of entertainment.
Households had always used durable goods, of coursej the 1920.8 simply
witnessed a change in their kind. As the automobile revolutionized American
life and mechanization spread to the home, the share of furniture and furnishings
in consumer durables production fell off rapidly. Automobiles and electrical
appliances not only replaced older durable goods, such as horse-drawn carriages
and iceboxes, but also brought about an increase in the share of consumers1
expenditures going to durables. By 1929 almost 12 per cent of personal consumption
expenditures were for durables. Moreover, by that year the composition of
expenditures for different categories of durables was pretty well set. For example,
in 1929 about one-fifth of outlays for durables went for the purchase of appliances,
a proportion which has remained quite stable into the present. In spite of the
continual introduction of new and acceptable electrical devices, the share of these
goods in the total dollar expenditures of consumers has remained almost constant.
Typically, if an appliance gains consumer acceptance, sales will increase at a
rapid rate for several years and then level off or actually decline. Thus the
fabulous successes of mechanical refrigerators in the 1930's and home freezers,
automatic washers, television sets, and room air-conditioners in the post-
World War 11 period just about offset the leveling off or decline in demand for
previously established items such as radios and wringer-type washing machines.
How shall we evaluate the importance of durables in shaping the pattern of
consumer expenditures since 1929? Inspection of available data leads to two
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observations. First, consumer durables sales are extremely sensitive to both
war and depression. The purchase of durables is postponable, and during periods
of falling incomes the percentage drop in demand for consumer durables has been
about the same as the drop in demand for producer durables. Wars, of course,
demand the same raw materials that go into consumer durables and thus cut into
their output. Second, in every year beginning with 1947 consumer purchases of
durables have exceeded the 12 per cent level of total consumption expenditures
reached previously only in 1929. During the 1940. s, despite wartime restrictions
and rapid growth in the population, per capita ownership of durables increased
at an annual rate greater than that of the twenties. Today the average per capita
value of consumer durables in use (in 1929 dollars) is at least half again as great
as it was in 1929.
We may conclude then that the trend since 1920 has been for households
to consume a higher proportion of their income in the form of durables, and it is
quite possible that this tendency has increased since the end of World War 11.
(That trend, of course, has been obscured at times by depression and war.) How
shall we account for this apparent shift in attitudes? A number of studies have
demonstrated what we have long known intuitively - that expenditures on durables
are closely correlated with income change. As people become richer, they spend
a greater portion of their incomes on goods yielding services that will relieve
work or monotony and increase personal and family prestige.
But we must look a little further. The purchase of a durable good requires
a relatively large outlay at one time for a flow of services over a period of future
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time. There is nothing to prevent families with sufficient incomes from saving
up to make the outlay, and some do. But experience has shown that many, perhaps
a majority, of American consumers find it irksome to save the full purchase
price of major durables before buying. Consumer credit is a device, though
not necessarily the only one which could be used, that puts the desire of households
for capital equipment on a competitive basis with the desire for nondurables and
services. As distinguished from convenience (charge account) credit, consumer
credit enables the consumer, at any moment of time, to increase his purchases
over and above what they would be if he depended upon his existing cash resources.
Human character being what it is, families must enforce saving on themselves
after committing themselves to a purchase contract.
Instalment credit is not new; a century ago sewing machines, pianos,
some furniture, and books were sold Mon time11. During the first two decades of
the twentieth century, instalment credit gradually became more respectable, and
by 1920 even the most conservative merchants were offering easy payment plans.
It is estimated that by 1926 nearly two-thirds of the new cars and three-fourths
of the furniture were sold on a time-payment basis. By 1929 instalment credit
was an accepted American institution.
During the 1930fs the proportion of instalment sales to total sales ranged
between 50 and 60 per cent at furniture and household appliance stores. About
60 per cent of all automobile sales were made on time during most of that decade,
and this ratio came to be accepted as normal. Post-World War 11 experience
seems to bear out this estimate of normalcy. After household units spent the cash
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saved during the war for the specific purpose of buying durable goods when they should
become available, the percentages which obtained in the 1930's were approximately
equaled.
Consumer credit is obviously important to sellers of durables. Indeed, it
is important to us all. At the end of 1954 total consumer credit outstanding stood
at more than $30 billion and instalment credit at more than $22 1/2 billion, both
just under the all-time highs of a year previous. Instalment debt amounted to
about 8 1/2 per cent of disposable income, again not far from a peak reached in
1953. By themselves these figures are no cause for concern. The income left
to most household units today after meeting the basic expenses of food, clothing,
and shelter is much larger than before World War 11, and from this ''discretionary11
income people may safely commit a larger portion for consumer durables. Moreover,
the bulk of consumer debt is owed by people with generally good economic prospects, -
about two-thirds of it by middle-income families and by young married couples with
children.
Bankers and economists have nonetheless frequently expressed alarm over
swings in instalment credit, which is so closely related to the purchase of consumer
durables. For the past twenty-five years expenditures on consumer durables have
been of the same order of magnitude as gross business expenditures for durables,
and the latter are notorious for their unstabilizing effects on the economy. This
leads to the frequent asking of these questions: does not the institution of instalment
credit make possible greater expenditures on consumer durables in the expansion
phase of the cycle, and do not net repayments on instalment accounts have a
deflationary impact when incomes are falling?
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There if no denying the fact that Instalment credit tends to concentrate
effective demand for durables in times of expanding business activity. Nor can
it be denied that instalment credit introduces additional rigidity into consumer
budgets. If on the upward phase of a cycle there is unemployment of resources,
injections of purchasing power via the instalment credit route stimulate activity
in the durable goods industry at a propitious time. If on the other hand full
employment conditions prevail and consumers already have incomes sufficient
to enable them to take from the market what is produced, further injections of
purchasing power generate inflationary pressures. During times of falling business
activity and declining incomes rigidities introduced by instalment credit into
consumer budgets have a pronounced deflationary impact. Like mortgage payments,
property-tax payments, and insurance payments, payments on a car or furniture
constitute for a time at least an unavoidable charge on income. Insofar as re
payments on instalment accounts exceed new credit extensions the effect on the
economy is depressing.
But such considerations need to be put in better perspective. Relative to
total consumer outlays, expenditures on consumer durables are not large. Wide
swings in consumer durables purchases may accent the business cycle but are
relatively unimportant when viewed against the stability of expenditures for
nondurables and services, which presently constitute about 88 per cent of total
consumption expenditure. Indeed, as one durable good after another becomes
generally accepted by consumers, resources are more and more drawn into the
service trades. We have garages and filling stations because there are automobiles
and television service establishments because there are television sets. The
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experience of the groat depression teaches us that the demand for such services
holds up very well during a deflationary period, especially as people make their
durables do for longer-than-normal periods. In this we find some contracyclical
effect.
Nor does a comparison of consumer credit with other credit put the
former in a bad light so far as stability is concerned. During the deflation
years of 1930-1933, consumer credit moved downward at about the same rate as
did loans of all commercial banks and non-real estate farm credit, but at a
faster rate than did urban real-estate credit. On the other hand, beginning in
mid-1933, consumer credit began a sharp upturn, well ahead of the other Beries.
During the relatively depressed 1930's consumer credit on balance appears to have
exercised a buoyant influence. An exception was the relatively sharp but brief fall
in consumer credit in 1938. In the postwar years the upward thrusts of the consumer
credit and instalment credit curves are not out of line with other series. It is
not unreasonable to argue that in 1949 the upward change in both instalment and
urban mortgage credit, so far from being a source of instability, actually helped
to carry the economy over the threat of more severe depression. Again, in the
recession of 1953-1954, although instalment repayments slightly exceeded extensions
In some months, instalment credit seems to have operated as a sustaining force
in the economy.
We may, I think, evaluate the significance of instalment credit to economic
stability as follows. The rate of capital formation plays a large part in total
cyclical fluctuations in output, employment, and prices. The share of consumer
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durables in the rate of capital formation is comparable in character and size to
that of producer durables. Insofar as the institution of consumer credit increases
fluctuations in the rate of consumer capital formation, it adds to the factors making
for instability. But these factors, including the very fact that there are such
things as durable goods, outweigh the unstabilizing effect of the institution of
consumer credit itself.
The old notion that changes in consumer credit are important enough to
induce either an upswing or downswing in economic activity no longer has widespread
acceptance. Nearly everyone would agree that changes in outstandings reinforce
economic fluctuations; but there would likewise be agreement that consumer credit
is only one of several variables which help to determine the national income,
whereas fluctuations in the national income appear to be the dominant factor affecting
the volume of consumer credit outstanding. In sum, many economists are taking a
progressively more moderate view of the proposition that consumer credit is a
major factor in causing instability.
I do not want to leave you this morning without reflecting on the implications
of these conclusions for credit policy. It has been argued that the general credit
instruments cannot be depended upon when it appears that instalment credit
outstandings are increasing too rapidly. This proposition rested largely on the
assumption that lenders to consumers do not respond very rapidly or very strongly
either to credit stringency or to changes in the interest rate. For this reason
it was assumed that consumer credit outstandings are not responsive to the
general instruments. It was then but a step to the conclusion that selective control
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of credit is a legitimates complement to the general instruments, that it can be
used to reinforce, to compensate, or at certain times to serve as a partial
substitute for the general instruments.
Several recent studies raise some doubt as to the validity of the argument
that there is only a tenuous relationship between consumer credit outstanding
and the supply of credit in general. Consumer credit may be more responsive to
the general instruments than we had thought. Thus it seems now that the following
propositions hold true:
(1) Interest costs definitely enter into the considerations of
both bank and nonbank lenders to consumers.
(2) Lenders to consumers do react to the rising costs and
reduced availability of credit in general.
(3) Nonbank lenders pass along the effects of rising costs and
reduced availability of credit by applying stricter credit
standards, by cutting lines to dealers, and by raiding rates.
(4) Banks do appear to lfrationM their resources with respect to
consumer credit departments.
(5) Even though consumer borrowers may not be especially
affected by changes in interest costs, they are responsive
to changes in credit standards, including terms.
In making a judgment regarding the sensitivity of consumer credit to
general controls, one further point should be borne in mind. The best estimate of
the percentage of consumer credit outstanding financed by banks both directly and
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indirectly indicates a proportion of roughly three-fifths. This suggests that
pressure on banks via general credit controls can scarcely avoid the effect of
restricting consumer credit. Credit lines to dealers and lenders are not only
likely to be tightened, but a tighter money policy also changes the economic climate
in which consumers make their decisions. If it is successful, a tight money policy
inhibits economic activity. As this happens, the rate at which the national income
increases will slacken, or the national income may actually begin to decrease. We
have already remarked the correlation between changes in the level of the national
income and the level of consumer credit outstanding; it follows that actions which
reduce the rate of increase of the national income are likely to reduce the rate of
increase of instalment credit outstanding. Events of the past two years seem to
substantiate this proposition.
The foregoing analysis suggests that when general credit policy can be free
and its implementation flexible there is little, if any, need for selective regulation
of consumer credit. But note that the conclusion is qualified by the statement that
general credit policy be free and flexible, free to be easy or to be restrictive,
flexible as to application within that range. And one further point needs mention here.
A theoretical case can be made for the usefulness of a selective consumer credit
control in special circumstances, say in a period of rapid defense build-up
unaccompanied by materials allocation and price controls. Such circumstances, in
my opinion, should not really be permitted to occur and hence the need for the
selective control should not occur. However, none of us is always wise and sometimes
all of us are unwise, and so it is possible to be faced with such a set of circumstances.
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We have come a long way in a short while. Let mo bring this discussion
to a c:to»e.
There seems little question that the institution of instalment credit has
done much to make possible large-scale output of consumer durables. By
increasing the rate of consumer capital formation, instalment credit has contributed
to a rise in the American level of living and has stimulated the growth of the
national income. But consumer credit is a two-edged sword. It can cut both
for you and against you. In times when inflationary pressures are great or when
deflation is sharp and protracted, instalment credit may be just one more force
making for instability in the economy. But we should not be surprised to find that
this is so, for the very nature of capitalism implies certain inherent sources of
instability. In other words, instability is a part of the price we pay for the
enjoyment of goods which yield their services over time.
The case for and the case against selective regulation of consumer credit
is becoming better understood. The arguments for it no longer rest on an assumption
that without selective controls the monetary authority is substantially unable to
influence the rate of expansion of consumer credit. It is now recognized that other
considerations are also involved, including profound concepts of non-discriminatory
monetary management in a free capitalistic economy. There is much to be said
for the view that instead of intervening in particular markets it is the primary
business of the monetary authority to do what it can to create a salubrious monetary
and financial climate in which business decision makers like yourselves can compete
freely and vigorously.
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Cite this document
APA
Delos C. Johns (1955, March 20). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19550321_johns
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19550321_johns,
author = {Delos C. Johns},
title = {Speech},
year = {1955},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19550321_johns},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}