speeches · April 1, 1980
Speech
Paul A. Volcker · Chair
For Release on Delivery
Expected at 9:00 AM (E.S.T.)
Statement by
Paul A. Volcker
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Subcommittee on Taxation and Debt Management
of the Committee on Finance
United States Senate
April 2, 1980
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to appear before this Subcommittee
to discuss the proposed increase in the limit on the public debt.
I should like to focus my opening remarks on the broader issues
of federal finance highlighted by the need to raise the debt
ceiling. It is important that we understand the implications
of deficit finance in the current economic environment. It is
also important that we recognize that the conventional measures
of the budget and the national debt significantly understate the
scope of the government's presence in the credit markets. I want
to emphasize the need for effective control of federal financing
activities as we attempt to solve the nation's serious economic
problems.
Fighting inflation stands clearly as the most urgent task
of economic policy today. The ominous acceleration of price
increases over the past year has given rise to a sense of real
crisis. There is now, I believe, the resolve to resist the
inflationary momentum that has been building for so long. The
Federal Reserve, for its part, has moved decisively to reduce
progressively the growth of money and credit. That effort seems
to me an essential component of any effort to restore price
stability. To that end, we have taken a series of actions to
improve our control over the growth of the monetary and credit
aggregates.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
-2-
Last October 6, in addition to raising reserve requirements
and the discount rate, we made a change in our operating pro-
cedures. We believe that these measures contributed impoitantly
to our success in bringing about a moderation of monetary expansion
in subsequent months, A second major set of actions was announced
March 14. I refer to the program of special credit restraints
that was established in conjunction with the Administration's anti-
inflation effort. While it is too early to evaluate the effects
of our latest actions — which are supplementary to our basic
effort and temporary — I fully expect that they will reinforce
the measures taken last October, while tempering the degree of
pressure that might otherwise be placed on some sectors of the
economy dependent on bank credit.
Monetary policy cannot — without peril -- be relied on
alone to halt inflation. The other major tools of public policy
must also be brought to bear on the problem, with fiscal policy
playing a central role. Thus, I am greatly encouraged by the
efforts of the Administration and the Congress to achieve a
balanced budget in the 1981 fiscal year. I frankly would urge
an even earlier start — doing what we can right now -— and I
would personally encourage the Congress to work with the
Administration to implement even deeper cuts in spending than
are currently in prospect. But what is essential is that there
be a clear commitment to the consistent application of budgetary
discipline in the years to come, and a reduced rate of expenditure
increase should be the centerpiece of that discipline. Such a
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
-3-
policy, complementing consistent control of the money supply,
would provide a credible basis for anticipating sustained
progress against inflation*
That we are faced again with an imminent need to raise the
debt ceiling is a sobering reminder of how difficult it has been
in practice to achieve a reasonable balance between federal out-
lays and receipts. It would be unreasonable and unwise to insist
that the government budget be in balance or surplus every year
in all economic circumstances. But deviations should be the
exception; and it would be naive to ignore the obvious bias
toward deficit that has been apparent in the conduct of fiscal
policy. The record speaks for itself: the federal budget has
been in deficit in every one of the past 10 years, and has been
in surplus only once during the past 20 years. Most recently*
the Federal Government has continued to run huge deficits even
in the late stages of one of the longest expansions in the post-
war era.
In retrospect, it is apparent that there has been a tendency
in the development of fiscal policy to focus more on the possibility
of weakness in economic activity than on the danger of greater
inflation. In my judgment, the resulting pattern of budgetary
decisions has played a major role in both accommodating and
intensifying inflationary pressures. It also should serve as a
warning in the present circumstances. The current resolve to
cut expenditures and balance the budget in the next fiscal year
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
is to be applauded. But history strongly suggests that it
will be difficult to sustain budgetary discipline. This lesson
must be kept firmly in mind if the sacrifices made in the short
run are to produce lasting benefits.
The financial counterpart of persistent budget deficits
has been, of course, a mushrooming of the federal debt. The
federal debt subject to statutory limits reached $845 billion
at the end of February, almost three times its level in 1960.
This enormous expansion of debt has serious consequences for
economic performance. Federal borrowing absorbs scarce private
savings and intensifies pressures in financial markets. When
productive resources are being pressed by strong demands for
goods and services and overall credit supplies are tight, the
government pre-empts the loanable funds that would otherwise be
available to finance private capital formation.
The adverse consequences of reduced private capital formation
are difficult to exaggerate, given the fundamental importance of
investment in determining the pace of productivity growth. While
the economic profession has yet to arrive at a fully satisfactory
explanation of the substantial slowing in productivity growth in
the 1970s, there is no doubt that one important element was the
falloff in the expansion of capital stock at a time when labor
force growth was accelerating. Increases in output per hour
worked are the basis of a rising standard of living. When
productivity lags and the economy grows more slowly,
aspirations for higher living standards are frustrated.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
-5-
Competition for shares of real income and inflationary pressures
are aggravated. In short, persistent deficits and increases in
government debt tend to inhibit capital formation and productivity
growth, further contributing to the wage-price spiral.
The potential for federal financial activity to displace
other borrowers extends well beyond the growth of debt associated
with persistent budget deficits. Outlays of off-budget agencies
have grown to be very sizable in recent years. Such outlays were
just under $12-1/2 billion in 1979 and are expected to be $15
billion in 1980. Off-budget outlays largely take the form of
direct government loans and are financed by the Federal Financing
Bank (FFB). Ultimately, however, the FFB obtains its funds from
the Treasury, and thus the deficits incurred by off-budget agencies
directly increase federal borrowing needs, In addition to its
direct loan programs, the Federal Government also provides
financing assistance through loan guarantee programs. Outstanding
loans guaranteed by the Federal Government totaled $228 billion
at the end of last year.
As intended, the direct government loans and loan guarantee
programs allow certain targeted activities to be financed under
more favorable terms than would otherwise be possible. The
provision of such credit assistance to achieve particular social
and economic objectives certainly is a legitimate activity of the
Federal Government. It must be kept in mind, however, that the
supply of credit is limited, and that government assistance to
particular sectors may make it more difficult for other groups to
obtain credit to finance worthwhile and productive investment.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
I am increasingly concerned that such government financing
activity is not under effective control* Over the past 10 years,
federally guaranteed loans have somewhat more than doubled. Yet,
at present, there is no comprehensive framework for evaluating
these activities,. Only a small portion of this credit activity
is ever considered in the Congressional deliberations on the
budget.. Loan guarantees do not involve the expenditure of funds,
and consequently are not reflected in the unified budget, except
to the extent that appropriations are required to cover the cost;
of defaulted loans.
In sum, there are serious shortcomings in the current
process of reviewing federal financing activity. I would wish,
therefore, to reiterate the position of the Board, expressed
in recent testimony by my colleague, Governor Teeters, that a
federal credit control budget should be established along the
lines suggested by the Administration, or preferably, more
comprehensively
e
It also seems to me that the issue of the debt ceiling
should be more closely linked to the budgetary review process*
The statutory limit on federal debt is not reasonably a separate
device for controlling the budget. The determination of the
budget and the debt ceiling are more logically a simultaneous
process. The present system carries with it the potential for
contradictory actions on the part of the Congress. Indeed,
twice in the last two years, the authority of the government
to borrow expired briefly, causing the postponement of Treasury
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
security auctions, delays in the mailing of federal checks,
a.nd the threat of default on federal checks already in the
mail* Lengthier delays in extending the debt limit could
have produced much more serious consequences,, including ultimately
a default on maturing government securities.
To minimize the possibility of such problems^ I strongly
recommend that the Congress consider setting the debt ceiling
in the process of approving the budget* At present the Congress
already must pass resolutions setting recommended levels for the
debt when it votes on the budget. Essentially, I am seconding
the Treasury's recommendation that such resolutions be given
the force of law.
I am, indeed, somewhat encouraged by the strides that have
already been made in gaining better control over the budgetary
process. There seems to be a genuine opportunity to balance
the budget in the coming fiscal year. We can do better» For
one thing, we should bring federal financing activities under
better control. More generally, we must demonstrate a commitment
to reduce inflation by consistently striving for budgetary
discipline in the years ahead.
* * * * *
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
Paul A. Volcker (1980, April 1). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19800402_volcker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19800402_volcker,
author = {Paul A. Volcker},
title = {Speech},
year = {1980},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19800402_volcker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}