speeches · September 4, 1997
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
8:30 p m P.D.T. (11:30 pm E.D.T.
September 5, 1997
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
15th Anniversary Conference
of the
Center for Economic Policy Research at Stanford University
Stanford, California
September 5, 1997
It is a pleasure to be at this conference marking the
fifteenth anniversary of the Center for Economic Policy Research
The Center, by encouraging academic research into public policy
and bringing that research to the attention of policymakers, is
performing a most valuable role in our society
I am particularly pleased that Milton Friedman has taken
time to join us His views have had as much, if not more, impact
on the way we think about monetary policy and many other
important economic issues as those of any person in the last half
of the twentieth century
Federal Reserve policy, over the years, has been subject to
criticism, often with justification, from Professor Friedman and
others It has been argued, for example, that policy failed to
anticipate the emerging inflation of the 1970s, and by fostering
excessive monetary creation, contributed to the inflationary
upsurge Surely, it was maintained, some monetary policy rule,
however imperfect, would have delivered far superior performance
Even if true in this case, though, policy rules might not always
be preferable
Policy rules, at least in a general way, presume some
understanding of how economic forces work Moreover, in effect,
they anticipate that key causal connections observed in the past
will remain fixed over time, or evolve only very slowly Use of
a rule presupposes that action x will, with a reasonably high
probability, be followed over time by event y
Another premise behind many rule-based policy prescriptions,
however, is that our knowledge of the full workings of the system
2
is quite limited, so that attempts to improve on the results of
policy rules will, on average, only make matters worse In this
view, ad hoc or discretionary policy can cause uncertainty for
private decisionmakers and be wrong for extended periods if there
is no anchor to bring it back into line In addition,
discretionary policy is obviously vulnerable to political
pressures, if ad hoc judgments are to be made, why shouldn't
those of elected representatives supersede those of unelected
officials'?
The monetary policy of the Federal Reserve has involved
varying degrees of rule- and discretionary-based modes of
operation over time Recognizing the potential drawbacks of
purely discretionary policy, the Federal Reserve frequently has
sought to exploit past patterns and regularities to operate m a
systematic way But we have found that very often historical
regularities have been disrupted by unanticipated change,
especially in technologies The evolving patterns mean that the
performance of the economy under any rule, were it to be
rigorously followed, would deviate from expectations
Accordingly we are constantly evaluating how much we can infer
from the past and how relationships might have changed. In an
ever changing world, some element of discretion appears to be an
unavoidable aspect of policymakmg
Such changes mean that we can never construct a completely
general model of the economy, invariant through time, on which to
base our policy. Still, sensible policy does presuppose a
3
conceptual framework, or implicit model, however incompletely
specified, of how the economic system operates Of necessity, we
make judgments based importantly on historical regularities in
behavior inferred from data relationships. These perceived
regularities can be embodied in formal empirical models, often
covering only a portion of the economic system. Generally, the
regularities inform our interpretation of "experience" and tell
us what to look for to determine whether history is in the
process of repeating itself, and if not, why not. From such an
examination, along with an assessment of past policy actions, we
attempt to judge to what extent our current policies should
deviate from our past patterns of behavior
When this Center was founded 15 years ago, the rules versus
discretion debate focussed on the appropriate policy role of the
monetary aggregates, and this discussion was echoed in the
Federal Reserve's policy process
In the late 1970s, the Federal Reserve's actions to deal
with developing inflationary instabilities were shaped in part by
the reality portrayed by Milton Friedman's analysis that
ever-rising inflation rate peaks, as well as ever-rising
inflation rate troughs, followed on the heels of similar patterns
of average money growth. The Federal Reserve, in response to
such evaluations, acted aggressively under newly installed
Chairman Paul Volcker A considerable tightening of the average
4
stance of policy--based on intermediate Ml targets tied to
reserve operating objectives—eventually reversed the surge in
inflation.
The last fifteen years have been a period of consolidating
the gains of the early 1980s and extending them to their logical
end--the achievement of price stability We are not quite there
yet, but we trust it is on the horizon.
Although the ultimate goals of policy have remained the same
over these past fifteen years, the techniques used in formulating
and implementing policy have changed considerably as a
consequence of vast changes in technology and regulation
Focussing on Ml, and following operating procedures that imparted
a considerable degree of automaticity to short-term interest rate
movements, was extraordinarily useful in the early Volcker years
But after nationwide NOW accounts were introduced, the demand for
Ml in the judgment of the Federal Open Market Committee became
too interest sensitive for that aggregate to be useful in
implementing policy. Because the velocity of such an aggregate
varies substantially in response to small changes in interest
rates, target ranges for Ml growth in its judgment no longer were
reliable guides for outcomes in nominal spending and inflation
In response to an unanticipated movement in spending and hence
the quantity of money demanded, a small variation in interest
5
rates would be sufficient to bring money back to path but not to
correct the deviation in spending
As a consequence, by late 1982, Ml was de-emphasized and
policy decisions per force became more discretionary However,
in recognition of the longer-run relationship of prices and M2,
especially its stable long-term velocity, this broader aggregate
was accorded more weight, along with a variety of other
indicators, in setting our policy stance.
As an indicator, M2 served us well for a number of years.
But by the early 1990s, its usefulness was undercut by the
increased attractiveness and availability of alternative outlets
for saving, such as bond and stock mutual funds, and by mounting
financial difficulties for depositories and depositors that led
to a restructuring of business and household balance sheets. The
apparent result was a significant rise in the velocity of M2,
which was especially unusual given continuing declines in
short-term market interest rates By 1993, this extraordinary
velocity behavior had become so pronounced that the Federal
Reserve was forced to begin disregarding the signals M2 was
sending, at least for the time being.
Data since mid-1994 do seem to show the reemergence of a
relationship of M2 with nominal income and short-term interest
rates similar to that experienced during the three decades of the
1960s through the 1980s As I indicated to the Congress
6
recently, however, the period of predictable velocity is too
brief to justify restoring M2 to its role of earlier years,
though clearly persistent outsized changes would get our
attention.
Increasingly since 1982 we have been setting the funds rate
directly in response to a wide variety of factors and forecasts
We recognize that, in fixing the short-term rate, we lose much of
the information on the balance of money supply and demand that
changing market rates afford, but for the moment we see no
alternative. In the current state of our knowledge, money demand
has become too difficult to predict
Although our operating target is a nominal short-term rate,
we view its linkages to spending and prices as indirect and
complex For one, arguably, it is real, not nominal, rates that
are more relevant to spending. For another, spending, prices and
other economic variables respond to a whole host of financial
variables. Hence, in judging the stance of policy we routinely
look at the financial impulses coming from foreign exchange,
bond, and equity markets, along with supply conditions in credit
markets generally, including at financial intermediaries.
Nonetheless, we recognize that inflation is fundamentally a
monetary phenomenon, and ultimately determined by the growth of
the stock of money, not by nominal or real interest rates In
current circumstances, however, determining which financial data
should be aggregated to provide an appropriate empirical proxy
7
for the money stock that tracks income and spending represents a
severe challenge for monetary analysts
The absence of a monetary aggregate anchor, however, has not
left policy completely adrift From a longer-term perspective we
have been guided by a firm commitment to contain any forces that
would undermine economic expansion and efficiency by raising
inflation, and we have kept our focus firmly on the ultimate goal
of achieving price stability Within that framework we have
attempted not only to lean against the potential for an
overheating economy, but also to cushion shortfalls in economic
growth And, recognizing the lags in the effects of policy, we
have tried to move in anticipation of such disequilibria
developing
But this is a very general framework and does not present
clear guidance for day-to-day policy decisions
Thus, as the historic relationship between measured money supply
and spending deteriorated, policymaking, seeing no alternative,
turned more eclectic and discretionary
Nonetheless, we try to develop as best we can a stable
conceptual framework, so policy actions are as regular and
predictable as possible--that is, governed by systematic behavior
but open to evidence of structural macroeconomic changes that
require policy to adapt
The application of such an approach is illustrated by a
number of disparate events we have confronted since 1982 that
were in some important respects outside our previous experience
In the early and mid-1980s, the FOMC faced most notably the sharp
swings in fiscal policy, the unprecedented rise and fall of the
dollar, and the associated shifts in international trade and
capital flows But I will concentrate on several events of the
last decade where I personally participated in forming the
judgments used in policy implementation
One such event was the stock market crash of October 1987
shortly after I arrived. Unlike many uncertain situations that
have confronted monetary policy, there was little question that
the appropriate central bank action was to ease policy
significantly We knew we would soon have to sop up the excess
liquidity that we added to the system, but the timing and, I
believe, the magnitude of our actions were among our easier
decisions Our concerns at that time reflected questions about
how the financial markets and the economy would respond to the
shock of a decline of more than one-fifth in stock prices in one
day, and whether monetary policy alone could stabilize the
system By the early spring of 1988 it was evident that the
economy had stabilized and we needed to begin reversing the easy
stance of policy
Another development that confronted policy was the
commercial property price bust of the late 1980s and early 1990s
Since a large volume of bank and thrift loans was tied to the
real estate market and backed by real estate collateral, the fall
in property prices impaired the capital of a large number of
9
depositories These institutions reacted by curtailing new
lending--the unprecedented "credit crunch" of 1990 and 1991
Not unexpectedly, our policy response was to move toward
significant ease Our primary concern was the state of the
credit markets and the economy, but we could also see that these
broader issues were linked inextricably to the state of
depository institutions' balance sheets and profitability A
satisfactory recovery from the recession of that period, in our
judgment, required the active participation of a viable banking
system The extraordinary circumstances dictated a highly
unusual path for monetary policy The stance of policy eased
substantially even after the economy began to recover from the
1990-91 recession, and a stimulative policy was deliberately
maintained well into the early expansion period
By mid-1993, however, property prices stabilized and the
credit crunch gradually began to dissipate It was clear as the
year moved toward a close that monetary policy, characterized by
a real federal funds rate of virtually zero, was now far too easy
in light of the strengthening economy on the horizon Financial
and economic conditions were returning to more traditional
relationships, and policy had to shift from a situation-specific
formulation to one based more closely on previous historical
patterns Although it was difficult at that time to discern any
overt inflationary signals, the balance of risks, in our
judgment, clearly dictated preemptive action
10
The 1994 to 1995 period was most instructive It appears we
were successful in moving preemptively to throttle down an
impending unstable boom, which almost surely would have resulted
in the current expansion coming to an earlier halt Because this
was the first change in the stance of policy after a prolonged
period of unusual ease, we took special care to spell out our
analysis and expectations for policy in an unusually explicit way
to inform the markets well before we began to tighten In
addition, we began for the first time to issue explanatory
statements as changes in the stance of policy were implemented
Even so, the idea of tightening to head off inflation before it
was visible in the data was not universally applauded or perhaps
understood
Financial markets reacted unusually strongly to our 1994
policy actions, often ratcheting up their expectations for
further rate increases when we actually tightened, resulting in
very large increases in longer-term interest rates At the time,
these reactions seemed to reflect the extent to which investment
strategies had been counting on a persistence of low interest
rates This was a classic case in which we had to be careful not
to allow market expectations of Federal Reserve actions to be
major elements of policy determination We are always concerned
about assuming that short-term movements in market prices are
reflections of changes in underlying supply and demand conditions
when we may be observing nothing more than fluctuating
expectations about our own policy actions
11
Most recently, the economy has demonstrated a remarkable
confluence of robust growth, high resource utilization, and
damped inflation Once again we have been faced with analyzing
and reacting to a situation in which incoming data have not
readily conformed to historical experience
Specifically, the persistence of rising profit margins in
the face of stable or falling inflation raises the question of
what is happening to productivity If data on profits and prices
are even approximately accurate, total consolidated corporate
unit costs have, of necessity, been materially contained. With
labor costs constituting three-fourths of costs, unless growth in
compensation per hour is falling, which seems most unlikely from
other information, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that
output per hour has to be rising at a pace significantly in
excess of the officially published annual growth rate of nonfarm
productivity of one percent over recent quarters The degree to
which these data may be understated is underlined by backing out
from the total what appears to be a reasonably accurate, or at
least consistent, measure of productivity of corporate
businesses The level of nonfarm noncorporate productivity
implied by this exercise has been falling continuously since 1973
despite reasonable earnings margins for proprietorships and
partnerships. Presumably this reflects the significant upward
bias in our measurement of service prices, which dominate our
noncorporate sector
12
Nonetheless, the still open question is whether productivity
growth is in the process of picking up For it is the answer to
this question that is material to the current debate between
those who argue that the economy is entering a "new era" of
greatly enhanced sustainable growth and unusually high levels of
resource utilization, and those who do not.
A central bank, while needing to be open to evidence of
structural economic change, also needs to be cautious. Supplying
excess liquidity to support growth that turns out to have been
ephemeral would undermine the very good economic performance we
have enjoyed. We raised the federal funds rate in March to help
protect against this latter possibility, and with labor resources
currently stretched tight, we need to remain on alert.
Whatever its successes, the current monetary policy regime
is far from ideal. Each episode has had to be treated as unique
or nearly so It may have been the best we could do at the
moment. But we continuously examine alternatives that might
better anchor policy, so that it becomes less subject to the
abilities of the Federal Open Market Committee to analyze
developments and make predictions.
Gold was such an anchor or rule, prior to World War I, but
it was first compromised and eventually abandoned because it
restrained the type of discretionary monetary and fiscal policies
that modern democracies appear to value
13
A fixed, or even adaptive, rule on the expansion of the
monetary base would anchor the system, but it is hard to envision
acceptance for that approach because it also limits economic
policy discretion Moreover, flows of U.S. currency abroad,
which are variable and difficult to estimate, and bank reserves
avoidance are subverting any relationship that might have existed
between growth in the monetary base and U.S. economic
performance
Another type of rule using readings on output and prices to
help guide monetary policy, such as John Taylor's, has attracted
widening interest in recent years in the financial markets, the
academic community, and at central banks
Taylor-type rules or reaction functions have a number of
attractive features They assume that central banks can
appropriately pay attention simultaneously to developments in
both output and inflation, provided their reactions occur in the
context of a longer-run goal of price stability and that they
recognize that activity is limited by the economy's sustainable
potential
As Taylor himself has pointed out, these types of
formulations are at best "guideposts" to help central banks, not
inflexible rules that eliminate discretion One reason is that
their formulation depends on the values of certain key
variables--most crucially the equilibrium real federal funds rate
14
and the production potential of the economy In practice these
have been obtained by observation of past macroeconomic
behavior--either through informal inspection of the data, or more
formally as embedded in models. In that sense, like all rules,
as I noted earlier, they embody a forecast that the future will
be like the past. Unfortunately, however, history is not an
infallible guide to the future, and the levels of these two
variables are currently under active debate.
The mechanics of monetary policy that I have been addressing
are merely means to an end What are we endeavoring to achieve,
and why9 The goal of macroeconomic policy should be maximum
sustainable growth over the long term, and evidence has continued
to accumulate around the world that price stability is a
necessary condition for the achievement of that goal
Beyond this very general statement, however, lie difficult
issues of concept and measurement for policymakers and
academicians to keep us occupied for the next fifteen years and
more
Inflation impairs economic efficiency in part because people
have difficulty separating movements in relative prices from
movements in the general price level But what prices matter9
Certainly prices of goods and services now being produced--our
basic measure of inflation--matter But what about prices of
claims on future goods and services, like equities, real estate
or other earning assets7 Is stability in the average level of
15
these prices essential to the stability of the economy7 Recent
Japanese economic history only underlines the difficulty and
importance of this question The prices of final goods and
services were stable in Japan in the mid-to-late 1980s, but
soaring asset prices distorted resource allocation and ultimately
undermined the performance of the macroeconomy
In the United States, evaluating the effects on the economy
of shifts in balance sheets and variations IN asset prices have
been an integral part of the development of monetary policy In
recent years, for example, we have expended considerable effort
to understand the implications of changes in household balance
sheets in the form of high and rising consumer debt burdens and
increases in market wealth from the run-up in the stock market
And the equity market itself has been the subject of analysis as
we attempt to assess the implications for financial and economic
stability of the extraordinary rise in equity prices--a rise
based apparently on continuing upward revisions in estimates of
our corporations' already robust long-term earning prospects
But, unless they are moving together, prices of assets and of
goods and services cannot both be an objective of a particular
monetary policy, which, after all, has one effective
instrument--the short-term interest rate We have chosen product
prices as our primary focus on the grounds that stability in the
average level of these prices is likely to be consistent with
financial stability as well as maximum sustainable growth
History, however, is somewhat ambiguous on the issue of whether
16
central banks can safely ignore asset markets, except as they
affect product prices
Over the coming decades, moreover, what constitutes product
price and, hence, price stability will itself become harder to
measure
When industrial product was the centerpiece of the economy
during the first two-thirds of this century, our overall price
indexes served us well Pricing a pound of electrolytic copper
presented few definitional problems The price of a ton of cold
rolled steel sheet, or a linear yard of cotton broad woven
fabrics, could be reasonably compared over a period of years
I have already noted the problems in defining price and
output and, hence, in measuring productivity over the past twenty
years The simple notion of price has turned decidedly complex
What is the price of a unit of software or of a medical
procedure9 How does one evaluate the price change of a cataract
operation over a ten-year period when the nature of the procedure
and its impact on the patient has been altered so radically7 The
pace of change and the shifting to harder-to-measure types of
output are more likely to quicken than to slow down Indeed, how
will we measure inflation in the future when our data--using
current techniques--could become increasingly less adequate to
trace price trends over time9
However, so long as individuals make contractual
arrangements for future payments valued in dollars and other
currencies, there must be a presumption on the part of those
17
involved in the transaction about the future purchasing power of
money No matter how complex individual products become, there
will always be some general sense of the purchasing power of
money both across time and across goods and services Hence, we
must assume that embodied in all products is some unit of output,
and hence of price, that is recognizable to producers and
consumers and upon which they will base their decisions
The emergence of inflation-indexed bonds does not solve the
problem of pinning down an economically meaningful measure of the
general price level While there is, of course, an inflation
expectation premium embodied in all nominal interest rates, it is
fundamentally unobservable Returns on indexed bonds are tied to
forecasts of specific published price indexes, which may or may
not reflect the market's judgment of the future purchasing power
of money To the extent they do not, of course, the implicit
real interest rate is biased in the opposite direction
Doubtless, we will develop new techniques of measurement to
unearth those true prices as the years go on It is crucial that
we do, for inflation can destabilize an economy even if faulty
price indexes fail to reveal it
It should be evident from my remarks that ample challenges
will continue to face monetary policy I have concentrated on
how we have tried to identify and analyze new developments, and
endeavored to use that analysis to fashion and balance policy
responses I have also tried to highlight the questions about
how to specify and measure the ultimate goals of policy
18
Nonetheless, all of us could easily add to the list In dealing
with these issues, policy can only benefit from focussed and
relevant academic research. I look forward to learning about and
utilizing the contributions made under the sponsorship of the
Center for Economic Policy Research over the years to come
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1997, September 4). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19970905_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19970905_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1997},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19970905_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}