speeches · November 18, 1985
Speech
Thomas C. Melzer · Governor
THE SHIFTING FOCUS OF MONETARY POLICY
Remarks by Thomas C. Melzer
to the Harvard Business School Club of St. Louis
November 19, 1985
Good afternoon. I am delighted to be with you and appreciate the
opportunity to talk to you about monetary policy. As you heard from the
introductory remarks, I am a newcomer to the "art" of monetary
policymaking. It was not too long ago that I was an outside observer of
policy as head of Morgan Stanley's U.S. Government Securities
department. Given the recent debt impasse and the associated threatened
insolvency of the Federal government, I am just as happy to have that
career behind me. My experiences in the government securities market,
however, have provided me with some helpful insights into policymaking.
In particular, one thing I always found fascinating about the securities
market was how it would react quite differently, from one time to the
next, in response to what appeared to be virtually identical events or
information. I believe that the same thing can be said about monetary
policy actions and their impact on the economy. I would like to talk to
you today about the shifting focus of policy—particularly as it relates
to how the rate of growth in money is viewed, and should be viewed, by
policymakers and observers alike.
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Compared to past periods, money growth has been extremely rapid
this year. Ml, which consists of currency and checkable deposits, has
grown at an annual rate of nearly 13 percent since April; in the past
twelve months, it has grown in excess of 11 percent. To put this in some
slight historical perspective, Ml growth over the previous four years has
averaged about 7 percent per year; last year, money growth was only about
5 percent.
Accompanying this acceleration in money growth this year have been
other signs of an easing in monetary policy. The discount rate was cut
50 basis points, and the federal funds rate has declined by approximately
50 basis points over the year.
What factors might have justified the move toward easing of
monetary policy? First, real GNP growth was at an anemic 0.3 percent
annual rate in the first quarter, and continued to be weak in the second
quarter. Furthermore, there were strains in the financial system—for
example, the Ohio thrift crisis and the mounting numbers of bank
failures. Thus, concern about the continuation of the current economic
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expansion and some liquidity problems facing certain financial
institutions called for an easier policy stance.
Measured against the concerns of policymakers earlier this year,
easier monetary policy has yielded considerable gains. The economy has
strengthened over the year, with real output and employment rising, and
the unemployment rate falling. At the same time, inflation and interest
rates have remained relatively low. Finally, the dollar's value in
foreign-exchange markets has come down considerably in recent months; it
is currently about 22 percent below its February peak.
Perhaps because of the apparent success of the policy actions
pursued earlier this year, there are calls for further easing, for the
Federal Reserve to "do it again." After all, the economy is still
sluggish, the unemployment rate is still above 7 percent, and the
dollar's value is still too high to have produced a sizeable reduction in
our trade deficit. Those who call for renewed, or continued, easier
monetary policy actions point out that, despite the current rapid money
growth, inflation remains subdued. So what's to worry? In my opinion,
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there is a lot to worry about if rapid money growth should continue for
another year or so.
To see what the problem is, we must first ask what is the goal of
monetary policy? That is, what can it do and, therefore, what should we
try to do with it? The ultimate goal of monetary policy is to supply, at
some given rate of inflation and growth of real output, that amount of
money that people are willing to hold in the form of cash and checkable
deposits. Or, in the terms so dear to economists, to supply that amount
of money that people demand. If more money than that is provided, people
will attempt to get rid of their excess money balances by spending more
on goods, services, and securities; this produces a temporary increase in
economic activity and, ultimately, a permanent increase in the rate of
inflation and interest rates. If less money is supplied, the opposite
occurs; people try to conserve money balances by spending less, reducing
output temporarily, and, eventually, reducing inflation and interest
rates.
Of course, monetary authorities desire neither to accelerate
inflation nor to produce a recession. The obvious "best" policy is to
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provide precisely the "right" growth in the money supply; neither "too
much" nor "too little." It sounds simple; unfortunately, however, we
don't know, at any time, precisely how much money people want to hold.
Furthermore, monetary policy becomes even more complicated when the
public changes its demand for money. In particular, when money demand is
changing, policymakers must adjust the rate of money growth to "keep up"
with the new demand. Thus, what would clearly be excessive money growth
in a period when money demand was unchanged may turn out to be precisely
the right policy to follow when money demand is increasing.
There are several reasons to believe that the public's demand for
money may have increased in 1985, with the result that faster money
growth was required to sustain an acceptable level of economic activity.
Three major reasons have been put forth.
The first reason centers on the declining rate of inflation since
1980. When people observe lower rates of inflation, and expect inflation
to remain low, interest rates decline in line with the change in
inflation expectations. With lower and declining interest rates, it
becomes less costly to hold money balances; the return on alternative
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assets is smaller. Consequently, the amount of money that people will
hold rises.
The second reason focuses on the wealth effect of the rising
international value of the dollar. Although some industries and sectors
of the economy are hurt by the high value of the dollar, the general
effect is to raise the wealth of U.S. citizens as a whole; their
international purchasing power has increased. This increase in wealth
will result in an increase in their money holdings.
And, finally, the introduction of NOW and Super NOW accounts which
pay interest has possibly caused some savings deposits to be shifted into
what is now defined as Ml. With some monetary assets now including some
features of savings deposits, these assets would not necessarily be held
for spending purposes alone. Thus, increases in the measured money
supply may not be translated immediately into additional spending.
The bottom line of this analysis is that the rapid growth of the
money stock so far this year may not necessarily have had the same impact
on economic activity and the rate of inflation as it would have had in
the past. Typically, such rapid increases in the rate of growth of money
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have resulted in temporarily increased economic activity with a two- to
four-quarter lag and higher inflation with an 18-month lag. However, if
the demand for money has increased for the reasons given, the rapid money
growth was necessary just to "tread water." It need have no deleterious
impact on inflation at all.
However, it is questionable that such rapid growth can continue
without adverse side-effects, given changes that have occurred in the
past six months. Recently, we have begun to observe the following.
The inflation rate is no longer declining—it stabilized at around
4 percent in the past three years. While people's inflation expectations
may change with a lag, thus inducing larger money holdings for the past
three years, it is unlikely that they will continue to do so. Interest
rates also have leveled off, and it is doubtful if we will see further
significant declines. The international value of the dollar has declined
significantly from its recent high, contributing to reduced wealth if the
dollar continues to drop. Finally, barring some new innovations, it is
unlikely that there will be continuing sizeable growth of savings
components of Ml.
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Thus, given these recent events, it is unlikely that the public's
demand for money will continue to increase in the near future as it has
done in the recent past. Accordingly, much lower rates of money growth
may be sufficient to sustain economic growth. Continuation of current
double-digit rates of money growth would only contribute to an outburst
of inflation in the future.
Acceleration of U.S. inflation would produce further problems for
the economy. Our large current account deficits have been accompanied by
the resulting increase in foreign holdings of dollar-denominated assets.
We have become accustomed to using foreign capital flows to meet our
domestic financing requirements, including our large federal budget
deficits. The ability to attract these flows at current interest rate
levels is dependent on the inflationary outlook in the U.S. relative to
other countries. If people everywhere come to expect higher inflation in
the U.S. as a result of overly-stimulative monetary policy and excessive
rates of money growth, the dollar would decline precipitously; foreign
investors would sell their dollar assets to preserve their future
purchasing power. In addition, a lower value of the dollar would, by
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itself, increase the price level simply because imported goods would
become more expensive. Therefore, we must look beyond the low current
inflation to what is likely to happen in the future; long-run
inflationary expectations are heavily influenced by current and expected
monetary growth rates.
To sum up, then, I would argue that monetary policy has less
latitude in the direction of ease now than it did earlier in the year,
despite what appear to be many similarities between the two periods.
Economic activity has improved; the third quarter GNP is about 3.5
percent, about equal to the economy's long-run potential. As to the
dollar, while further gradual downward adjustment over time would be
desirable, we need to be concerned in the short-run about the
consequences of too rapid a decline. Consequently, while special factors
may have justified higher money growth for a time earlier this year, it
is questionable whether continued faster growth is desirable.
Of course, a sharp slowing in money growth would be ill-advised and
must be avoided. Sharp declines in money growth in the past have
produced recessions, virtually every time they occurred. The Fed's
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fundamental objective is to foster a financial environment conducive to
sustained growth of the economy consistent with progress over time toward
price stability. Sustained economic growth has been a high priority and
continues to be one. However, price stability and expectations as to
such stability in the future are also vitally important. Policymakers,
like the gambler in Kenny Roger's song, have "to know when to hold fem,
and know when to fold fem." It may now be time to "fold" the rapid
growth in money gradually to a lower level that will assure price
stability and continued economic growth.
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Cite this document
APA
Thomas C. Melzer (1985, November 18). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19851119_melzer
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19851119_melzer,
author = {Thomas C. Melzer},
title = {Speech},
year = {1985},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19851119_melzer},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}