speeches · March 8, 1978
Speech
G. William Miller · Chair
Fpr release on delivery
Statement by
G. William Miller
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking Finance and Urban Affairs
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House of Representatives
March 9, 1978
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I am pleased to appear today, for the first time, to
present the Federal Reserve's report on the conduct of monetary
policy. This will also be our first report since passage of the
Federal Reserve Reform Act of 1977, which originated in this
Committee and which wrote into law the monetary oversight hearings
that had been held quarterly in recent years• These hearings
have provided a useful forum for discussion of economic and
financial conditions and monetary policy* I have no doubt that
they will continue to do so, and look forward to participation in
them.
During the past year, the Federal Reserve continued to
pursue the objective of fostering financial conditions consistent
with expansion of economic activity and moderation of inflationary
pressures. Gross national product — the broadest measure of economic
activity—rose 5\ per cent in real terms during 1977, about the
same rapid pace as we experienced on average in the earlier stages
of the current recovery. However, the rate of inflation remained
disturbingly high.
Very recently, sales and production have weakened, but this
seems to reflect mainly—if not entirely—the temporary effects of
the unusually severe winter weather and the coal strike. While
prolongation of the strike could lead to more extensive economic
disruption, basically our economy is strong, and the year 1978
should see continued expansion in economic activity at a moderate
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pace and a further reduction in the unemployment rate. At the
same time, recent trends provide little basis for optimism with
regard to an abatement of inflationary pressures.
The brisk increase in production last year made it possible
to reduce unemployment significantly despite further large growth
in the size of the nation's labor force. In the past twelve months,
the jobless rate has fallen more than a percentage point. Total
employment has risen by more than 4 million, and the proportion
of our population that is employed stands at the highest level
in the postwar period*
The advance, of production and employment during the past
year was broadly based, with most of the major sectors of aggregate
demand registering good gains. Consumer spending followed, an
uneven course during 1977, but for the year as a whole growth was
substantial by historical standards. Residential construction
continued to provide considerable impetus to expansion, with
single-family housing starts reaching an exceptionally high level
arid multi-family building also posting appreciable gains from
earlier depressed levels. Business fixed investment expanded some-
what more rapidly in 197;7 than in earlier years of the recovery,
although such investment continued to lag well behind its performance
in previous cyclical upswings. The pace of governmental spending—
at both the Federal and the State and local levels—also picked
up last year.
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As domestic activity expanded rapidly, our imports of
goods from abroad continued their steep climb, boosted by our
increasing appetite for imported oil. Meanwhile, the sluggish
performance of economic activity in other major industrial countries
limited the demand for our exports, As a result, our trade deficit
deepened from about $10 billion in 1976 to more than $30 billion in
1977.
The widening of the trade deficit contributed importantly
to the downward pressure on the exchange value of the dollar over
the past several months. The Federal Reserve, in cooperation with
the Treasury, has taken steps to counter disorder in foreign exchange
markets and to emphasize U.S. concern about the integrity of the
dollar. But the key to a sound dollar and a stable world financial
system lies ultimately in the resolution of some of our fundamental,
longer-range economic problems. In particular, we must establish an
energy policy that promises to reduce our reliance on foreign
sources of petroleum; we must create a better climate for business
investment, so as to enhance labor productivity and to increase our
international competitiveness; and most importantly, we must make
progress toward the restoration of domestic price stability.
One of the great disappointments of the past year has been
the lack of progress in reducing the pace of inflation. Wage
increases have continued to outstrip gains in output per hour worked;
unit labor costs in private industry have again risen substantially;
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and prices have been trending upward at about a 6 per cent annual
rate
o
Prudent monetary management is of course an essential
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ingredient in the control of inflation over the longer run. Too much
money growth would add to inflationary pressures and. would tend to
encourage still larger increases in wages, costs, and prices*
Confronted with very strong demands for money and credit
this past year, the Federal Reserve took actions to moderate monetary
growth and to help ensure that inflationary forces would not get out
of hand. Although interest rates have risen, domestic financial
markets have remained supportive of economic growth. Supplies of
credit have been ample, with the total volume of funds raised in the
nation1s money and capital markets approaching $400 billion in 1977--
a record both in dollar terms and as a percentage of GNP.
In the household sector, mortgage loans accounted for the
bulk of an unprecedented increase in indebtedness. Families sought
mortgage credit not only to finance the purchase of homes, but also
to fund other expenditures and to add to their holdings of financial
assets. Meanwhile, consumer instalment credit grew very rapidly,
especially during the first half of the year when sales of new cars
were strongest.
Borrowing by nonfinancial business firms also rose sharply
in 1977* The volume of new publicly offered bond issues fell off
somewhat from the preceding year, as many of the larger, higher-rated
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companies had completed the restructuring of their debt in 1975
and 1976. But lower-rated firms continued to place large quantities
of bonds privately with life insurance companies and other lenders.
And companies of all types tapped financial institutions for increased
amounts of mortgage and term loans, as well as for short-term credit.
Governmental demands for credit in 1977 remained
exceptionally large by historical standards. Borrowing by State
and local units surpassed previous levels by a wide margin. A
substantial portion of the increase in tax-exempt bond issuance was
for the advance refunding of debt obligations incurred in prior
years when interest rates were higher, but States and municipalities
also borrowed large amounts for current and future capital outlays.
At the Federal Level, the outstanding volume of Treasury debt rose
by the third largest amount in history, as a consequence of the
U.S. Government's large budget deficit. Financing of the
continued Federal deficit contributed to upward pressures on interest
rates last year--a year in which private credit demands were
especially strong.
In an environment of briskly expanding economic activity
and credit demands, the monetary aggregates also tended to grow
more rapidly last year. The publicfs demand for M-l--currency and
checking account balances--strengthened considerably, and growth
in this measure of money accelerated, Over the year as a whole,
M-l grew about 1\ per cent, well in excess of the range established
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by the Federal Reserve, The broader monetary aggregates—M-2 and
M-3--grew at rates near the upper end of the ranges that had been
adopted by the Federal Reserve in early 1977•
Knowing that a sustained, rapid monetary expansion would
threaten a build-up over time of inflationary pressures, the Federal
Reserve began in early spring to be less accommodative in its pro-
vision of reserves to the banking system. The adjustment of policy
was a cautious one, in view of the possibility that the burst of
monetary expansion that had developed might reflect simply a
transitory swing in the public's demand for cash balances* But as
relatively rapid monetary expansion continued, the Federal Reserve
gradually exerted increasing restraint in the provision of bank
reserves relative to the strong demands for them.
As a result, the Federal funds rate--the rate banks pay
to borrow reserves from one another on an overnight basis — rose
about 1% percentage points from April to October, reaching a level
of about 6% per cent. And the discount rate at Federal Reserve Banks
was raised in two steps to 6 per cent by late October. Subsequently,
in early January, the discount rate was increased to 6\ per cent and
the Fed funds rate was moved slightly higher to help stabilize
conditions in the market for dollars on international exchanges.
Over-all, since last April short-term market rates of
interest have risen about 2 percentage points. Intermediate- and
long-term yields have also risen,with increases largest in the market
for Treasury securities, where rates have adjusted upwards by \ to
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\\ percentage points over the past 10 months. These increases in
interest rates on longer-term securities may well have reflected
some increase in the inflation premium, as investors reacted to
the lack of progress in reducing inflation. Nevertheless, despite
the increases of the past year, most short-term rates are still less
than 1 percentage point above their levels at the beginning of the
present economic expansion in early 1975, and corporate and municipal
bond yields are significantly below their levels then.
Growth rates for all the monetary aggregates have slackened
appreciably, on average, in the last few months. Growth in M-2 and
M-3 has slowed in part because the rise in interest rates on
market instruments has made them more attractive to some savers than
interest-bearing deposits at banks and thrift institutions. At the
same time, however, demands for loans at depository institutions
have remained strong. Under the circumstances, these institutions have
had to supplement their deposit flows by borrowing and by reducing
their holdings of liquid assets,
Although these pressures may be causing depository
institutions to become a bit more cautious in their lending policies,
credit supplies still appear to be ample. Moreover, the financial
condition of the key nonfinanciai sectors remains generally strong,
It is true that household debt burdens, as measured, for example,
by the ratio of consumer and mortgage loan repayments to disposable
income, are historically high, and they deserve careful monitoring*,
But to date, there has been no rise in delinquency rates, so that
families appear thus far to be handling their increased indebtedness
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well. Businesses added further to their liquid assets last year, and
corporate balance sheets on the whole appear to be strong, although
there is considerable variation from firm to firm. And State and
local governments, with record operating surpluses in 1977, appear
in the aggregate to enjoy a healthy financial position.
Thus, financial conditions remain supportive of expansion
in economic activity• As 1977 drew to a close, aggregate demands
for goods and services were strong. As I noted earlier, severe
winter weather and the coal strike have caused some steep declines
in economic indicators recently. However--assuming a reasonably
prompt resumption of activity in the coal industry—we can expect
favorable underlying trends soon to reassert themselves. Growth of
employment and income has been substantial over recent quarters,
and consumer confidence has remained high. Consumer spending, there-
fore, should grow at a reasonably good pace, and would be
bolstered later this year by the proposed tax cuts. In the business
sector, new orders for nondefense capital goods have continued the
uptrend that began about three years ago, and presage further expansion
in business fixed investment. In addition, the rate of inventory
accumulation is likely to accelerate in coming months; inventory
investment had slowed in the fourth quarter, and stocks are lean in
many product lines. Moreover, with prospects for our exports
improved by the likelihood of stronger economic growth abroad this
year, it appears that our foreign trade deficit will not deteriorate
further.
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Over-all, it is the Federal Reserve's judgment that trends
in the national economy favor continued expansion at a moderate rate
in economic activity and a further reduction in the rate of
unemployment over the course, of 1978. There is, however, less
reason to be sanguine about progress in curbing the rate of inflation,
Food and material prices have risen substantially in recent months.
And labor costs continue to rise at a relatively rapid rate. The
decline in the value of the dollar on international exchanges
is another cause for concern. It not only contributes to upward
pressures on domestic prices but also threatens to erode business
confidence here and abroad.
The monetary growth ranges that were adopted by the
Federal Open Market Committee at its February meeting are expected
to prove consistent with continued expansion in economic activity,
as well as with a gradual winding down of inflation over the longer
run. For the year ending with the fourth quarter of 1978, the M-l
growth range was set at 4 to 6% per cent. A range of 6% to 9 per
cent was established for M-2, which includes, in addition to M-l,
time and savings deposits other than large CD's at commercial banks.
And a growth range of 1\ to 10 per cent was adopted for M-3—which
includes, besides M-2, deposits at nonbank thrift institutions.
The ranges for M-l and M-2 are identical to those that the
Committee previously had adopted for the year ending in the third
quarter of 1978. The range for M-3, however, has been adjusted
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downward by \ percentage point in light of the higher level of
market interest rates now prevailing and the apparent effect of
these rates in retarding growth in time and savings deposits at
thrift: institutions. All of the ranges adopted by the FOMG
anticipate a deceleration of monetary expansion from the growth
rates actually recorded in 1977. Progress over time in this
direction is necessary to ensure the ultimate achievement of
reasonable price stability.
Specification of growth rates for the aggregates is,
of course, subject to considerable uncertainty. The rate of growth
in money needed to support economic expansion depends in part on
changes in the velocity of money—that is, on the rate at which the
public uses the existing stock of money to finance transactions.
In recent years, regulatory changes and financial innovations have
encouraged increases in the velocity of M-l by enabling the public
to economize on demand deposits. However, the retarding effect
of such changes and innovations on the demand for M-l apparently
diminished in 1977, when M-l growth accelerated, Thus far in 1978,
growth in M-l has been quite moderate, but it is far too early to
say whether this marks a slower trend in growth or is simply a
transitory development in a highly volatile series.
The behavior of the broader aggregates--M-2 and M-3—will
be affected in the year ahead by the constraint placed on the ability
of depository institutions to attract funds under existing regulatory
ceilings on deposit rates. Banks have adjusted to the recent marked
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slowing of inflows of deposits subject to rate ceilings in part by
offering increased amounts of large-denomination time deposits, which
are not subject to ceilings. Some of these deposits, mainly large-
denomination deposits issued in non-negotiable form, are included in
M-2 and M-3; they have tended to sustain growth in these aggregates,
especially M-2, in recent months.
There are other factors that may work to sustain growth
in the broader aggregates in the year ahead* To some extent, the
recent slowdown in inflows of savings and also small-denomination
time deposits may represent a one-time shift of highly interest-
sensitive funds; if so, once the shift has been completed, deposit
growth should strengthen somewhat• Moreover, the fact that longer-
term time certificates, which are subject to heavy penalties for
early withdrawal, account today for a larger share of interest-
bearing deposits—especially at thrift institutions--suggests that
overall deposit growth should be less volatile than in the past.
Nonetheless, if heavy demands for money and credit should
place further upward pressure on market interest rates, deposits
subject to regulatory rate ceilings will be placed at a substantial
competitive disadvantage. In such a circumstance, growth in M-2
and M-3 could fall short of the ranges. Upward adjustments in
the ceiling rates on some or all categories of time deposits may
be required to avoid a potential distortion in the flow of credit
through our financial system, to promote equity for small savers,
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and to ensure the availability of loans to home buyers and others
who rely on institutional sources of credit.
We recognize, however, the considerable uncertainties
surrounding the shorter-run relationship between growth rates of
the monetary aggregates, on the one hand, and the behavior of output
and prices on the other. The Federal Reserve will continue, therefore,
to maintain a vigilant and flexible approach, putting the long run
performance of the economy above the pursuit of any fixed monetary
growth rates.
Economic and financial developments in the current year, it
should be noted, will depend to an appreciable extent on governmental
policies beyond the province of the Federal Reserve. The outcome
of legislative action on energy policy and on taxation will have a
considerable influence on the strength of business investment and on
international confidence in the dollar. So, too, will this nationfs
ability to find a way to reduce the upward wage-price pressures that
continue to plague our economy.
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Cite this document
APA
G. William Miller (1978, March 8). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19780309_miller
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19780309_miller,
author = {G. William Miller},
title = {Speech},
year = {1978},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19780309_miller},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}