speeches · December 6, 1994
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
10 00 a m , E S T
December 7, 1994
Testimony by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Joint Economic Committee
United States Congress
December 7, 1994
I appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today to
discuss current economic conditions and monetary policy developments
The impressive performance of the American economy continues
Real gross domestic product has grown more than 4 percent over the
past year, and although price increases have picked up at earlier
stages of processing, inflation at the consumer level remained below
3 percent over the twelve months through October
In the early stages of the economic recovery, employment
growth lagged behind the upturn in activity, raising concerns about
the job-creating potential of our economy But these concerns have
been assuaged by the performance of our labor markets over the past
two years During this period, several million jobs have been added
to nonfarm payrolls, and the unemployment rate has dropped sharply, to
its lowest level since the summer of 1990
A driving force in the greater-than-expected economic
strength in recent quarters has been inventory investment The growth
in inventory levels has appreciably lagged the growth in sales in
recent years, as just-in-time inventory programs have progressively
lowered the levels of stocks required to insure coordinated production
schedules Moreover, improvements m transportation scheduling and
telecommunications have allowed both foreign and domestic suppliers to
fill orders from U S firms more quickly
But there is obviously a limit to how tight goods-flow
schedules can be pressed and how slim inventory-sales ratios can
become, without jeopardizing required production levels to meet
customer orders Judging from evidence of lagging product deliveries,
that limit appears to have been reached last spring, at least for this
business cycle
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So long as sales growth was holding up, which it has done,
this meant that with inventory-sales ratios no longer falling the
growth in inventory levels had to accelerate from its path of recent
years Implied, of course, has been a sharp pickup in inventory
investment. and a corresponding boost to overall output and incomes
This process in turn has added to the strong growth in consumer
expenditures and the consequent pickup in business cash flow, which
has been a potent force in the expansion of plant and equipment
outlays
Had the inventory accumulations of recent quarters been the
result of unexpected weakness in sales, and hence unintentional, we
would have expected a widespread falloff in new industrial orders As
yet there is no evidence to suggest that Moreover, while inventory
investment has been substantial since the spring, a greater-than-usual
proportion reflects the value added of goods that have moved further
down the distribution chain Thus, while large increases in the
constant dollar value of inventory investment have added to GDP, the
buildup in physical units, or the factory value of inventories, is
still modest relative to sales It is excessive units of physical
inventories that depress production irrespective of where in the
distribution pipeline they reside Of course, a sudden weakening in
final demand could make existing levels of inventories, wherever they
are, look excessive fairly quickly, so we cannot be complacent that
the current economic expansion is without risk
But we should also keep in mind that to the extent that
retail and wholesale trade inventories are dominant elements in the
overall inventory expansion, changes in inventory investment will not
fall solely on domestic production and employment This is because,
as America's appetite for foreign products rises a commensurately
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larger proportion of inventories is imported Rough estimates suggest
that, currently, perhaps a quarter of all wholesale and retail stocks
are imported, whereas as recently as the late 1970s the share was
substantially less As a result, swings in final demands and
accompanying changes in desired inventories now fall to a larger
extent than in the past on foreign producers
When all is said and done, stocks appear lean relative to
final demand right now, despite several quarters of significant
accumulation Nonetheless, intended inventory investment cannot be
expected to rise appreciably from current levels, and eventually will
have to fall to a level more consistent with sustainable growth in
final demand Thus, the degree of strength in final sales will be
central to the support of future gains In output
Over the past two years, business fixed investment,
particularly in producers' durable equipment, has made an important
contribution to the growth in final sales The growth rate of
spending on computers has fallen off this year from last year's
phenomenal pace, but outlays have, nonetheless, continued to advance
at a double-digit rate in real terms as the computerization of the
American economy proceeds apace Business spending on motor vehicles,
particularly heavy trucks, has been strong this year, while spending
on other equipment, especially in the communications area, has
accelerated from last year's already quite rapid growth rate Recent
data on orders for capital goods suggest that above average growth in
equipment spending will likely continue
In the nonresidential structures area, construction has begun
to increase again after several years of decline Even in the office
building sector, where construction fell by about one-half between
1989 and 1993, activity has begun to recover Construction would have
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been even weaker in the early 1990s had it not been for the completion
of a large backlog of unfinished projects that had built up during the
1980s The backlog of projects in the office sector fell steadily
from 1989 to 1993 but recently has stabilized, so that the pickup In
construction this year as been fueled by a recovery in starts of new
projects Recent nonresldential construction contracts and permits
suggest further gains in outlays
Support for capital outlays during the past year has come
from the extraordinary rise in corporate profits During the first
three quarters of 1994 profits were 14 percent higher than in the
first three quarters of 1993 Moreover, profits continue to come in
ahead of expectations, a factor that has been spurring business
confidence and capital commitments
Turning to the residential sector, housing starts remained
robust in the third quarter, but edged off a bit in October
Construction of single-family homes has held at a fairly high level,
and multifamily activity, although still at a low level, has begun to
recover Solid income growth, the improved labor market, and buoyant
consumer confidence have been important factors boosting demand for
houses this year In addition, residential construction has also
likely been supported by some easing in the standards that mortgage
lenders use in qualifying prospective homebuyers In particular,
lenders have been increasingly willing to accept mortgages with low
down payments In fact, according to a survey by the Federal Housing
Finance Board, one-third of loans recently have had down payments of
less than 10 percent Also, some of the damping effect of higher
rates on fixed-rate mortgages has been attenuated by a sharp rise in
the market share of adjustable-rate mortgages Lenders have been
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making these adjustable-rate loans more attractive by keeping first-
year loan rates low relative to market interest rates and by extending
the period before annual adjustments occur, often for as long as five
or ten years
The healthy growth of real income that I noted earlier has
also been an important factor behind the strength in consumer
spending Outlays for consumer durable goods have been quite robust
this year, and spending on nondurables and services has picked up from
last year Much of the growth in consumer durables this year has been
spending on computers and other electronic goods, which has been
especially strong Purchases of motor vehicles have remained buoyant
after climbing in 1993 to the highest level in four years
Exports of goods and services have also been an important
source of economic growth this year, with real gains over the past
four quarters averaging more than 10 percent at an annual rate U S
exporters have benefited from an increase in demand associated with
the pickup in economic activity abroad The economic recoveries that
began in 1992 in Canada and the United Kingdom gained momentum in the
past year and the more tentative recoveries in the continental
European countries and Japan appear to be gaining a firmer footing
Much the same can be said for Mexico Meanwhile, rapid growth in
other developing countries that are major U S trading partners has
continued These developments should help undergird growth in exports
from the United States in the near term Nevertheless, imports
recently have been growing even faster than exports Consequently,
the external sector has made a negative contribution to GDP growth,
though less than in 1993
One sector in which spending has been on a downtrend in
recent years is the federal government, especially in the defense
area The decline in defense spending was interrupted in the third
quarter, however, by the first increase in real defense purchases in
two years This uptick was partially attributable to outlays for the
invasion of Haiti and the detention of Cuban refugees Defense
purchases of durables were strong as well, stemming in part from the
delivery of two B2 "stealth" bombers in August However, these short-
term developments will not alter the longer-term declines in defense
spending embodied in current budgetary plans
Adding all sectors together, growth in gross domestic product
this year is running somewhat stronger than we had anticipated earlier
in the year Spending in 1994 has been encouraged by the greater
willingness of banks and other lenders to extend credit following a
protracted period of bank lending restraint that was characterized as
the "credit crunch " I have already noted the possibility that more
generous and flexible loan terms have supported the housing market
But easier loan terms and conditions are more widespread In effect,
not all of the rise in short- and intermediate-term market interest
rates is being passed through to bank borrowers Spreads of bank loan
rates over market rates have narrowed for many business and household
borrowers, other fees have been cut, and standards for approving loans
have been eased This is a trend we are monitoring carefully, not
only in our role as monetary policymakers, but also as bank
supervisors with responsibility for the safety and soundness of the
banking system
As the repressive pall of the balance sheet strain of the
early 1990s dissipated, and employment and production picked up,
households and businesses have gained greater confidence This
increased optimism has manifested itself in a number of reinforcing
ways It has motivated households to increase their borrowing and
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spending, which has inspired businesses to invest more and to hire
workers in anticipation of future sales growth Of course, increased
hiring in turn helps assuage the concerns of households about
employment prospects, contributing to gains in household confidence
Indeed, as measured by one survey, consumer confidence moved up to a
new high for this expansion in November
Despite strong output and employment growth this year,
consumer price inflation--at a 2 6 percent annual rate so far this
year through October--has been running at about the same pace as
through all of 1993 Excluding the food and energy components, which
are volatile, consumer prices have increased 2 8 percent through
October, somewhat less than in 1993 as a whole
Although inflation at the consumer level has been flat or
down somewhat compared with last year, prices of intermediate supplies
have accelerated This pickup in turn reflects pressures from prices
of raw commodities, which have been rising rapidly for nearly two
years, as well as high and rising levels of capacity utilization So
far, increases in manufacturers' prices at the finished goods level
have remained contained To date, modest increases in labor
compensation coupled with rapid growth in labor productivity have
suppressed increases in unit labor costs and helped alleviate the
pressures of higher input costs on final prices However, with demand
for their output strong, finished goods producers may soon attempt to
pass on their higher costs
Some have argued that businesses will not be successful in
raising prices--that the competitive environment has changed in such a
way that the economy can grow on a sustained basis much faster and
operate at substantially higher levels of resource utilization than in
the past These analysts often cite the improving productivity of
U S businesses and the more intense pressure from actual or potential
foreign sources of goods and services They also note that the
pressures of changing technology and corporate downsizing may be
increasing labor insecurity and damping wage demands
There is a significant element of truth in these arguments
But these developments are evolutionary, working slowly and
incrementally over time The pickup in trend productivity growth is
probably no more than a few tenths of a percentage point annually
Unemployment rates have fallen and the slowing of product delivery
schedules underscores that capacity utilization rates have risen
substantially, if the productivity trend had moved sharply higher, we
could have achieved higher output growth without these developments
Moreover, the increase in international trade is a gradual process
that has been going on for several decades And the weakness of the
dollar on foreign-exchange markets on average this year has tended to
undercut any cost-containment pressures from this source in the near
term
We recognize that estimates of the economy's potential are
just that--estimates, subject to the considerable uncertainties
attached to all economic estimates In setting monetary policy, the
Federal Reserve is looking to encourage the highest level of activity
that the economy can sustain, not to hold it back We would welcome
the possibility that our economic performance can be in excess of
historical relationships
But if we ignore experience, we would be taking unacceptable
risks of higher inflation, economic and financial instability, and
ultimately subpar economic performance over time We must remain
alert to signs of inflationary pressures on resources If we allow
these to develop, resources will begin to be used less efficiently.
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productivity improvements will be harder to find, and firms will be
more disposed to raise prices
If price increases are accommodated, they can become readily
embedded in higher inflation expectations It is these expectations
that make an inflationary process, once begun, difficult and expensive
to reverse As people begin to expect higher inflation, their actions
to protect the purchasing power of their wages and profits add to the
impetus toward accelerating prices Experience suggests that these
expectations can be turned around only slowly and with some cost to
the economy's performance
We have been especially concerned about the possibility that
in the current circumstances, inflation expectations could be
particularly prone to adjust upward if actual inflation were to pick
up As best we can infer from surveys and financial markets,
inflation is expected to be higher in the future than it has been in
the recent past This suggests some nervousness about the resolve of
anti-inflation policies Indeed, with inflation at the lower end of
its range over the past thirty years, it would be natural for many, if
not most, workers, businesses, and financial people to be quick to see
reasons for inflation to return to the higher levels that dominate
their experience An inclination toward higher expected inflation
would be reinforced by the tendency in the past for actual inflation
to pick up at some point in a business expansion
The potential for higher inflation has had an important
influence on the behavior of financial markets this year Prices in
those markets seem to incorporate significant further increases in
real short-term interest rates but, nonetheless, also appear to
suggest that inflation will move higher
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While there is doubtless a good deal of uninformed opinion
driving market prices up and down in the short run, we cannot ignore
broad movements in these markets, for they may be telling us something
about deep-seated changes in expectations The prices set in
financial markets represent the views of a large and diverse group of
participants worldwide The trading professionals in bond, equity,
and foreign exchange markets can move prices around for a brief time
But, since their securities holdings are a small share of overall
markets, after a period of a few days or weeks, the actions of other
major participants become dominant These include corporate and state
and local government treasurers deciding on the best time to raise
funds, and, on the other side of the market, experienced managers both
here and abroad of the large sums of dollar-denominated securities in
pension funds, insurance companies, and university endowments
Moreover, millions of Americans have taken a more direct role in
financial markets through their purchases of mutual funds Indeed,
more than half of the net capital market securities issued in the U S
since the end of 1992 were absorbed by mutual funds Transactions in
these funds are driven by sales to Main Street America
To forestall a new round of higher inflation and inflation
expectations, the Federal Reserve began to adjust policy earlier this
year in advance of an actual acceleration in broad measures of prices
Monetary policy works with considerable lags and waiting until
inflation picks up risks a boom-and-bust economic cycle inimical to
business and household planning, to saving and investment, and to the
longer-term growth of the U S economy As I indicated to the
Congress in testimony earlier this year, the hallmark of a successful
monetary policy will be an inflation rate that does not rise
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Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1994, December 6). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19941207_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19941207_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1994},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19941207_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}