speeches · July 19, 1993
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For use at 9 45 a m EDT
Tuesday
July 20. 1993
Testimony by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Subcommittee on Economic Growth and Credit Formation
of the
Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs
U S House of Representatives
July 20. 1993
Thank you for this opportunity to discuss the Federal
Reserve's semiannual monetary policy report to the Congress My
remarks this morning will cover the current monetary policy and
economic settings, as well as the Federal Reserve's longer-term
strategy for contributing, to the best of our abilities, to the
nation's economic well-being
As the economic expansion has progressed somewhat fitfully,
our earlier characterization of the economy as facing stiff head winds
has appeared increasingly appropriate Doubtless the major head wind
in this regard has been the combined efforts of households,
businesses, and financial institutions to repair and to rebuild their
balance sheets following the damage inflicted in recent years as
weakening asset values exposed excessive debt burdens
But there have been other head winds as well The build-down
of national defense has cast a shadow over particular industries and
regions of the country Spending on nonresidential real estate
dropped dramatically in the face of overbuilding and high vacancy
rates and has remained in the doldrums At the same time,
corporations across a wide range of industries have been making
efforts to pare employment and expenses in order to improve
productivity and their competitive positions These efforts have been
prompted in part by innovative technologies, which have been applied
to almost every area of economic endeavor, and have boosted
investment However, their effect on jobs and wages through much of
the expansion also has made households more cautious spenders
In the past several years, as these influences have
restrained the economy, they have been balanced in part by the
accommodative stance of monetary policy and, more recently, by
declines in longer-term interest rates as the prospects for credible
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federal deficit cuts improved From the time monetary policy began to
move toward ease in 1989 to now, short-term interest rates have
dropped by more than two-thirds and long-term rates have declined
substantially, too All along the maturity spectrum, interest rates
have come down to their lowest levels in twenty or thirty years,
aiding the repair of balance sheets, bolstering the cash flow of
borrowers, and providing support for interest-sensitive spending
The process of easing monetary policy, however, had to be
closely controlled and generally gradual, because of the constraint
imposed by the marketplace's acute sensitivity to inflation As I
pointed out in my February testimony to the Congress, this is a
constraint that did not exist in an earlier time Before the late
1970s, financial market participants and others apparently believed
that, while inflationary pressures might surface from time to time,
the institutional structure of the U S economy simply would not
permit sustained inflation But as inflation and, consequently, long-
term interest rates soared into the double digits at the end of the
1970s, investors became painfully aware that they had underestimated
the economy's potential for inflation. As a result, monetary policy
in recent years has had to remain alert to the possibility that an
ill-timed easing could be undone by a flare-up of inflation
expectations, pushing long-term interest rates higher, and short-
circuiting essential balance sheet repair
The cumulative monetary easing over the last four years has
been very substantial Since last September, however, no further
steps have been taken, as the stance of policy has appeared broadly
appropriate to the evolving economic circumstances
That stance has been quite accommodative, especially judging
by the level of real short-term interest rates in the context of, on
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average, moderate economic growth Short-term real interest rates
have been in the neighborhood of zero over the last three quarters
In maintaining this accommodative stance, we have been persuaded by
the evidence of persistent slack in labor and product markets,
increasing international competitiveness, and the decided absence of
excessive credit and money expansion The forces that engendered past
inflationary episodes appear to have been lacking to date
Yet some of the readings on inflation earlier this year were
disturbing It appeared that prices might be accelerating despite
product market slack and an unemployment rate noticeably above
estimates of the so-called "natural" rate of unemployment--that is,
the rate at which price pressures remain roughly constant In the
past. the existing degree of slack in the economy had been consistent
with continuing disinflation
However, the inflation outcome, history tells us, depends not
only on the amount of slack remaining in labor and product markets,
but on other factors as well, including the rate at which that slack
is changing If the economy is growing rapidly, inflation pressures
can arise, even in the face of excess capacity, as temporary
bottlenecks emerge and as workers and producers raise wages and prices
in anticipation of continued strengthening in demand Near the end
of last year, about the time many firms probably were finalizing their
plans for 1993, sales and capacity utilization were moving up markedly
and there was a surge of optimism about future economic activity
This may well have set in motion a wave of price increases, which
showed through to broad measures of prices earlier this year
Moreover, inflation expectations, at least by some measures,
appear to have tilted upward this year, possibly contributing to price
pressures The University of Michigan survey of consumer attitudes.
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for example, reported an increase in the inflation rate expected to
prevail over the next 12 months from about 3-3/4 percent in the fourth
quarter of last year to nearly 4-1/2 percent in the latest quarter
Preliminary data imply some easing of such expectations earlier this
month, but the sample from which those data are derived is too small
to be persuasive Moreover, the price of gold, which can be broadly
reflective of inflationary expectations, has risen sharply in recent
months And at times this spring, bond yields spiked higher when
incoming news about inflation was most discouraging
The role of expectations in the inflation process is crucial
Even expectations not validated by economic fundamentals can
themselves add appreciably to wage and price pressures for a
considerable period, potentially derailing the economy from its growth
track
Why, for example, despite an above-normal rate of
unemployment and permanent layoffs, have uncertainties about job
security not led to further moderation in wage increases? The answer
appears to lie at least in part in the deep-seated anticipations
understandably harbored by workers that inflation is likely to
reaccelerate in the near term and undercut their real wages
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) became concerned
that inflation expectations and price pressures, unless contained,
could raise long-term interest rates and stall economic expansion
Consequently, at its meeting in May, while affirming the more
accommodative policy stance in place since last September, the FOMC
also deemed it appropriate to initiate a so-called asymmetric
directive Such a directive, with its bias in the direction of a
possible firming of policy over the intermeeting period, does not
prejudge that action will be taken--and indeed none occurred But it
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did indicate that further signs of a potential deterioration of the
inflation outlook would merit serious consideration of whether short-
term rates needed to be raised slightly from their relatively low
levels to ensure that financial conditions remained conducive to
sustained growth
Certainly the May and June price figures have helped assuage
concerns that new inflationary pressures had taken hold Nonetheless,
on balance, the news on inflation this year must be characterized as
disappointing Despite disinflationary forces and continued slack,
the rate of inflation has at best stabilized, rather than easing
further as past relationships would have suggested
In assessing the stance of monetary policy and the likelihood
of persistent inflationary pressures, the FOMC took account of the
downshift in the pace of economic expansion earlier this year This
downshift left considerable remaining slack in the economy and
promised that the adverse price movements prompted by the acceleration
in growth late last year likely would diminish
While a slowdown from the unsustamably rapid growth in the
latter part of last year had been anticipated, the deceleration was
greater than expected A surprisingly precipitous drop in defense
spending, a sharp deterioration in net exports, a major blizzard, and
some inevitable retrenchment by consumers converged to yield only
meager gains in output in the first quarter But growth apparently
picked up in the second quarter, and nearly one million net new jobs
were created over the first half Smoothing through the quarterly
pattern, the economy appears to have accelerated gradually over the
past two years, to maintain a pace of growth that should yield further
reductions in the unemployment rate Consequently, the evidence
remains consistent with our diagnosis that the underlying forces at
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work are keeping the economy generally on a moderate upward track
However, as I have often emphasized, not all the old economic and
financial verities have held in the current expansion, and changes in
fiscal policy will have uncertain effects going forward Thus,
caution in assessing the path for the economy remains appropriate
Financial conditions have improved considerably, lessening
the need for balance sheet restructuring that has been damping
economic activity for several years now By no means is the process
over, but good progress has been made Debt service burdens, eased by
lower interest rates and lower debt-equity ratios, have fallen
substantially in both the business and household sectors On the
other hand, the economies of a number of our major trading partners
have been quite weak, constraining the growth of demand for our
exports
Although expectations of a significant, credible decline in
the budget deficit have induced lower long-term interest rates and
favorably affected the economy, the positive influence thus far is
apparently being at least partly offset by some business spending
reductions as a consequence of concerns about the effects of pending
tax increases
It seems that the prospective cuts in the deficit are having
a variety of substantial economic effects, well in advance of any
actual change in taxes or in projected outlays Moreover, uncertainty
about the final shape of the package may itself be injecting a note of
caution into private spending plans In addition, uncertainty about
the outlook for health care reform may be affecting spending at least
by that industry
To be sure, the conventional wisdom is that budget deficit
reduction restrains economic growth for a time, and I suspect that
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probably is correct However, over the long run, such wisdom points
in the opposite direction In fact, one can infer that recent
declines in long-term interest rates are bringing forward some of
these anticipated long-term gains As a consequence, the timing and
magnitude of any net restraint from deficit reduction is uncertain
Patently, the overall economic effect of fiscal policy, especially
when combined with the uncertainties of the forthcoming health reform
package, has imparted a number of unconventional unknowns to the
economic outlook
Assuming, however, we constructively resolve over time the
major questions about federal budget and health care policies, with
the further waning of earlier restraints on growth, the U S economy
should eventually emerge healthier and more vibrant than in decades
The balance sheet restructuring of both financial and nonfinancial
establishments in recent years should leave the various sectors of the
economy in much better shape and better able to weather untoward
developments Similarly, the ongoing efforts by corporations to pare
expenses are putting our firms and our industries in a better position
to compete both within the U S market and globally And after a
period of some dislocation, the contraction in the defense sector
ultimately will mean a freeing up of resources for more productive
uses Finally, a credible and effective fiscal package would promise
an improved outlook for sustained lower long-term interest rates and a
better environment for private sector investment All told, the
productive capacity of the economy will doubtless be higher, and its
resilience greater
Over the last two years, the forces of restraint on the
economy have changed, but real growth has continued, with one sector
of the economy after another taking the lead Against this
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background, Federal Reserve Board governors and Reserve Bank
presidents project that the U S economy will remain on the moderate
growth path it has been following as the expansion has progressed
Their forecasts for real GDP average around 2-1/2 percent from the
fourth quarter of 1992 to the fourth quarter of 1993, and cluster
around 2-1/2 to 3-1/4 percent over the four quarters of 1994
Reflecting this moderate rise and the outlook for labor productivity,
unemployment is generally expected to edge lower, to around 6-3/4
percent by the end of this year, and to perhaps a shade lower by the
end of next year For this year as a whole, FOMC participants see
inflation at or just above 3 percent, and most of them have about the
same forecast for next year
In addition to focusing on the outlook for the economy at its
July meeting, the FOMC, as required by the Humphrey-Hawkins Act, set
ranges for the growth of money and debt for this year and, on a
preliminary basis, for 1994 One premise of the discussion of the
ranges was that the uncharacteristically slow growth of the broad
monetary aggregates in the last couple of years--and the atypical
increases in their velocities --would persist for a while longer M2
has been far weaker than income and interest rates would predict
Indeed, if the historical relationships between M2 and nominal income
had remained intact, the behavior of M2 in recent years would have
been consistent with an economy in severe contraction To an
important degree, the behavior of M2 has reflected structural changes
in the financial sector The thrift industry has downsized by
necessity, and commercial banks have pulled back as well, largely
reflecting the burgeoning loan losses that followed the lax lending of
earlier years With depository credit weak, there has been little
bidding for deposits, and depositors in any case have been drawn to
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the higher returns on capital market instruments Inflows to bond and
stock mutual funds have reached record levels, and, to the extent that
these inflows have come at the expense of growth in deposits or money
market mutual funds, the broad monetary aggregates have been
depressed
In this context, the FOMC lowered the 1993 ranges for M2 and
M3--to 1 to 5 percent and 0 to 4 percent, respectively This
represents a reduction of 1 percentage point in the M2 range and 1/2
percentage point for M3 Even with these reductions, we would not be
surprised to see the monetary aggregates finish the year near the
lower ends of their ranges
As I emphasized in a similar context in February, the
lowering of the ranges is purely a technical matter, it does not
indicate, nor should it be perceived as, a shift of monetary policy in
the direction of restraint It is indicative merely of the state of
our knowledge about the factors depressing the growth of the
aggregates relative to spending, of the course of the aggregates to
date, and of the likelihood of various outcomes through the end of the
year While the lowering of the range reflects our judgment that
shifts out of M2 will persist, the upper end of the revised range
allows for a resumption of more normal behavior or even some unwinding
of M2 shortfalls The FOMC also lowered the 1993 range for debt of
the domestic nonfinancial sectors, by 1/2 percentage point, to 4 to 8
percent The debt aggregate is likely to come in comfortably within
its new range, as it continues growing about in line with nominal GDP
The new ranges for growth of money and debt in 1993 were carried over
on a preliminary basis into 1994
In reading the longer-run intentions of the FOMC, the
specific ranges need to be interpreted cautiously The historical
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relationshlps between money and income, and between money and the
price level have largely broken down, depriving the aggregates of much
of their usefulness as guides to policy At least for the time being,
M2 has been downgraded as a reliable indicator of financial conditions
in the economy, and no single variable has yet been identified to take
its place
At one time, M2 was useful both to guide Federal Reserve
policy and to communicate the thrust of monetary policy to others
Even then, however, a wide range of data was routinely evaluated to
assure ourselves that M2 was capturing the important elements in the
financial system that would affect the economy The FOMC never
single-mindedly adhered to a narrow path for M2, but persistent and
sizable deviations of that aggregate from expectations were a warning
sign that policy and the economy might not be interacting in a way
that would produce the desired results The so-called "P-star" model,
developed in the late 1980s, embodied a long-run relationship between
M2 and prices that could anchor policy over extended periods of time
But that long-run relationship also seems to have broken down with the
persistent rise an M2 velocity
M2 and P-star may reemerge as reliable indicators of income
and prices once the yield curve has returned to a more normal
configuration, borrowers' balance sheets have been restored and
traditional credit demands resume, savers have adjusted to the
enhanced availability of alternative investments, and depositories
finally reach a comfortable size relative to their capital and
earnings In the meantime, the process of probing a variety of data
to ascertain underlying economic and financial conditions has become
even more essential to formulating sound monetary policy This
general approach obviously has its weaknesses When examining many
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indicators, some can always be found that counsel against actions that
later appear to have been necessary
In these circumstances, it is especially prudent to focus on
longer-term policy guides One important guxdepost is real interest
rates, which have a key bearing on longer-run spending decisions and
inflation prospects
In assessing real rates, the central issue is their
relationship to an equilibrium interest rate, specifically the real
rate level that, if maintained, would keep the economy at its
production potential over time Rates persisting above that level,
history tells us, tend to be associated with slack, disinflation, and
economic stagnation--below that level with eventual resource
bottlenecks and rising inflation, which ultimately engenders economic
contraction Maintaining the real rate around its equilibrium level
should have a stabilizing effect on the economy, directing production
toward its long-term potential
The level of the equilibrium real rate--or more appropriately
the equilibrium term structure of real rates --cannot be estimated with
a great deal of confidence, though with enough to be useful for
monetary policy Real rates, of course, are not directly observable,
but must be inferred from nominal interest rates and estimates of
inflation expectations The most important real rates for private
spending decisions almost surely are the longer maturities. Moreover,
the equilibrium rate structure responds to the ebb and flow of
underlying forces affecting spending So, for example, in recent
years the appropriate real rate structure doubtless has been depressed
by the head winds of balance sheet restructuring and fiscal
retrenchment Despite the uncertainties about the levels of
equilibrium and actual real interest rates, rough judgments about
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these variables can be made and used in conjunction with other
indicators in the monetary policy process Currently, short-term real
rates, most directly affected by the Federal Reserve, are not far from
zero, long-term rates, set primarily by the market, are appreciably
higher, judging from the steep slope of the yield curve and reasonable
suppositions about inflation expectations This configuration
indicates that market participants anticipate that short-term real
rates will have to rise as the head winds diminish, if substantial
inflationary imbalances are to be avoided
While the guides we have for policy may have changed
recently, our goals have not As I have indicated many times to this
Committee, the Federal Reserve seeks to foster maximum sustainable
economic growth and rising standards of living And in that endeavor,
the most productive function the central bank can perform is to
achieve and maintain price stability
Inflation is counterproductive in many ways Of particular
importance, increased inflation has been found to be associated with
reduced growth of productivity, apparently in part because it
confounds relative price movements and obscures price signals
Compounding this negative effect, under the current tax code,
inflation raises the effective taxation of savings and investment,
discouraging the process of capital formation Since productivity
growth is the only source of lasting increases in real incomes and
because even small changes in growth rates of productivity can
accumulate over time to large differences in living standards, its
association with inflation is of key importance to policymakers
The link between the control of inflation and the growth of
productivity underscores the importance of providing a stable backdrop
for the economy Such an environment is especially important for an
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increasingly dynamic market economy, such as ours, where technology
and telecommunications are making rapid advances New firms, new
products, new jobs, new industries, and new markets are continually
being created, and they are unceremoniously displacing the old ones
The U S economy is a dynamic system, always renewing itself It is
extraordinary that the system overall is as stable as it is,
considering the persistent process of change in the structure of our
economy For example, a frequently cited figure is the two million
new jobs that have been created since the end of 1991 This is a net
change, however, which masks the many millions who found, lost, and
changed jobs over the same period Currently, people are being hired
at a pace of approximately 400,000 per week, with job losses running
modestly below that figure Such vast churning in the nation's labor
markets is a normal and ultimately a productive process
Central planning of the type that prevailed in post-war
Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union represented one attempt to fashion
an economic system that eliminated this competitive churning and its
presumed wastefulness But when that system eliminated the risk of
failure, it also stifled the incentive to innovate and to prosper
Central planning fostered stasis In many respects, the eastern-bloc
economies marched in place for more than four decades
Risk-taking is crucial in the process that leads to a vital
and progressive economy Indeed, it is a necessary condition for
wealth creation In a market economy, competition and innovation
interact, those firms that are slow to innovate or to anticipate the
demands of the consumer are soon left behind The pace of churning
differs by industry, but it is present in all At one extreme, firms
in the most high-tech areas must remain constantly on the cutting
edge, as products and knowledge become rapidly obsolete Many
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products that were at technology's leading edge, say five years ago,
are virtually unsalable in today's markets In high-tech fields,
leadership can shift rapidly In some markets where American firms
were losing share just a few years ago, we have regained considerable
dominance In one case, U S firms have seized a commanding lead in
just two years in the new laptop computer market, and now account for
more than 60 percent of U S sales last year, triple the figure for
Japanese firms
More generally, it appears that the pace of dynamism has been
accelerating. As one indication, the average economic life expectancy
of new capital equipment has been falling The average life of
equipment purchased in 1982, for example, was 16-1/2 years By 1992
that figure had declined to 14-1/2 years, a drop more than twice as
large as that over the preceding decade. In addition,
telecommunications technology is obviously quickening the decision-
making process in both financial and product markets
In such a rapidly changing marketplace, the agile survive by
being flexible One aspect of this flexibility has been the spread of
"just-in-time" inventory controls at manufacturing firms Partly as a
result of innovations in inventory control techniques, the variability
of inventories relative to total output appears to be on a downtrend
The possibility of failure has productive side effects,
encouraging economic agents to do their best to succeed But there
are nonproductive and unnecessary risks as well There is no way to
avoid risk altogether, given the inherently uncertain outcomes of all
business and household decisions But many uncertainties and risks do
not foster economic progress, and where feasible should be suppressed
A crucial risk in this category is that induced by inflation To
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allow a market economy to attain its potential, the unnecessary
instability engendered by inflation must be quieted
A monetary policy that aims at price stability permits low
long-term interest rates and helps provide a stable setting to foster
the investment and innovation by the private sector that are key to
long-run economic growth In pursuing our objectives, we must remain
acutely aware that the structure of the economy has been changing and
growing ever more complex The relationships between the key
variables in the economy are always shifting to a degree, and this
evolution presents an ongoing challenge to the business leader, to the
econometric modeler, and to those responsible for the conduct of
economic policy
Clearly, the behavior of many of the forces acting on the
economy over the course of the last business cycle have been different
from what had gone before The sensitivity of inflation expectations
has been heightened, and, as recent evidence suggests, businesses and
households may be becoming more forward-looking with respect to fiscal
policies as well
I believe we are on our way toward reestablishing the trust
in the purchasing power of the dollar that is crucial to maximizing
and fulfilling the productive capacity of this nation The public,
however, clearly remains to be convinced Survey responses and
financial market prices embody expectations that the current lower
level of inflation not only will not be bettered, it will not even
persist But there are glimmers of hope that trust is reemerging
For example, issuers have found receptive markets in recent months for
fifty-year bonds This had not happened in decades The reopening of
that market may be read as one indication that some investors once
again believe that inflationary pressures will remain subdued
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It is my firm belief that, with fiscal consolidation and with
the monetary policy path that we have charted, the United States is
well-positioned to remain at the forefront of the world economy well
into the next century
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1993, July 19). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19930720_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19930720_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1993},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19930720_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}