speeches · March 22, 1976
Speech
Arthur F. Burns · Chair
For release on delivery
Statement by
Arthur F. Burns
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee to Investigate a Balanced Federal Budget
of the
Democratic Research Organization
House of Representatives
March 23, 1976
I am pleased to appear before the . Committee
to Investigate a Balanced Federal Budget of the Democratic
Research Organization,
Our country is now confronted with a serious dilemma.
Over 7 million peopl'e are still unemployed, and many of them
have been seeking work for an extended period. More jobs are
clearly needed -- not only for workers who are now unemployed,
but also for those who will soon be entering the labor force.
In the current inflationary environment, however, expan-
sionist policies of the traditional type cannot be count.ed on to
restore full employment. Recent experience in both our own
and other industrial countries suggests that once inflation has
become ingrained in the thinking of a nation's businessmen and
consumers, highly expansionist monetary and fiscal policies do
not have their intended effect. In particular, instead of fostering
larger consumer spending, they may intensify inflationary ex-
pectations and lead to larger precautionary savings and sluggish
consumer buying. The only sound course for fiscal and monetary
policy today is one of prudence and moderation.
One of the urgent tasks facing our Nation is to end the
Federal deficits that have been a major and persistent source
of our inflation. Since I960, the Federal budget has been in
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deficit every year but one. The cumulative deficit in the unified
budget over the past ten years, including the official estimate
for the current fiscal year, comes to $217 billion. If the
spending of off-budget agencies and government-sponsored
enterprises is taken irto account, the aggregate deficit for the
ten years amounts to almost $300 billion.
This sorry record of deficit financing means, of course,
that we as a people have been unwilling to tax ourselves sufficiently
to finance the recent sharp increases of governmental spending.
In this bicentennial anniversary of our Nation's independence,
we would do well to reflect on the fact that it took all of 186
years for the annual total of Federal expenditures to reach the
$100 billion mark. This occurred in fiscal year 1962. Only
nine years later, in fiscal 1971, expenditures already exceeded
$200 billion. Four years from that date, in fiscal 1975, the
$300 billion mark was passed. And unless expenditures are
held under a very tight rein, Federal spending will easily exceed
the $400 billion level in fiscal 1977.
One aspect of the sharply rising curve of expenditures
is that government has been assuming an ever larger role in
the economic life of our people. In 1929, Federal expenditures
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amounted to less than 3 per cent of the dollar value of our
total national output, and expenditures at all levels of govern-
ment -- Federal, state, and local -- amounted to about 10 per
cent of the national product. Last year, Federal expenditures
alone were about 25 per cent of the dollar value of our national
output, and the combined expenditures of all governmental units
reached almost 40 per cent.
Much of this increase in the role of government in our
economy was made necessary by the rapid growth of population
in recent decades, the increasing complexity of modern urban
life, the explosion of military technology, and the enlarged
responsibilities of the United States in world affairs. However,
the trend of Federal spending has also been significantly influenced
by strong intellectual currents, both in our country and elsewhere,
that keep nourishing the belief that practically all economic and
social problems can be solved through the expenditure of public
funds.
Where the line can best be drawn between governmental
and private use of resources is, in the final analysis, a matter
of social or philosophic values and of political judgment. But
regardless of how this question is resolved, it should be clear
to everyone that Federal spending, whatever its level, must be
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soundly financed. The large budgetary deficits that have persisted
since the mid-sixties -- and in good years as well as bad years --
added little to our capacity to produce, but they added substantially
to aggregate monetary demand for goods and services. They were
thus largely responsible for the ten-year stretch of accelerating
inflation that culminated in the deep recession from which we
are now emerging.
The President's budgetary program for the coming
fiscal year, taken on an overall basis, would go far toward
breaking the spiral of Federal spending and bringing order to
our fiscal affairs. The proposed budget would limit the rise
of spending in fiscal 1977 to 5-1/2 per cent, compared with
an average yearly increase of 12 per cent over the previous
five years. The Federal deficit is projected to decline from
$76 billion in the current fiscal year to $43 billion in the next,
with a balanced budget finally in view by fiscal 1979.
Some well-meaning citizens are now urging the Congress
to provide added fiscal stimulus in the interest of speeding the
return to full employment. I would warn this group that still
larger Federal expenditures and a bigger deficit may fail of
their purpose. A deeper deficit would require the Treasury
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to rely more heavily on credit markets, thus drawing on funds
badly needed for homebuilding and for business capital formation.
Worse still, a significantly larger deficit would revive fears of
accelerating inflation, and weaken the confidence of businessmen
and consumers that is essential to the return of general prosperity.
Moderation in monetary policy is also needed to bolster
confidence in the economic future. That is why the Federal
Reserve has been so diligently seeking to foster a financial
climate conducive to a satisfactory recovery, but at the same
time to minimize the chances of rekindling inflationary fires.
Since last spring, growth rates of the major monetary aggregates --
while varying widely from month to month -- have generally been
within the ranges specified by the Federal Reserve in its periodic
reports to the Banking Committees of the Congress.
The recent moderate increases in the monetary aggregates
have been accompanied, as we expected, by a sharp rise in the
turnover of money balances. The rising velocity of money has
not, however, been associated with higher rates of interest or
developing shortages of credit --as some critics of Federal
Reserve policy had predicted. On the contrary, conditions in
financial markets have eased materially. They are more com-
fortable now than at any time in the past two years, and thus
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remain favorable to continued economic expansion.
Before closing, I feel bound to say that fiscal and
monetary policies alone cannot be expected to achieve our
economic goals in the current economic and financial environ-
ment. It is not enough to ask what further fiscal stimulation,
if any, or what further monetary stimulation, our economy
requires. Nor is this even the basic question. We should
rather be asking what governmental policies, covering as
they might an enormous range of actions and even inactions,
are most likely to strengthen the hope and confidence *of our
people. Let me briefly comment on some policies outside the
monetary and fiscal area that, in my judgment, can make a
significant contribution to the restoration of full employment
and also to correcting the long-run inflationary bias in our
economy.
First, governmental efforts are long overdue to encourage
improvements in productivity through larger investment in modern
plant and equipment.
Second, we should face up to the fact that environmental
and safety regulations have in recent years run up costs and
prices and have held up industrial construction across our land.
Third, a vigorous search should be made for ways to
enhance price competition among our business enterprises.
Fourth, governmental policies that affect labor markets
cry out for review.
Finally, we ne< d to think through the appropriate role
of a limited incomes policy in the present environment.
Under current conditions, the return to full employment
will have to depend rather heavily on structural policies that
serve to reinvigorate :ompetition and release the great energies
of our people. Such policies are not, however, a substitute for
responsible fiscal and monetary actions. In order to strengthen
the confidence of people in their own future and the future of our
country, we in government will need to work constructively on
all three policy fronts -- fiscal, monetary, and structural.
Cite this document
APA
Arthur F. Burns (1976, March 22). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19760323_burns
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19760323_burns,
author = {Arthur F. Burns},
title = {Speech},
year = {1976},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19760323_burns},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}