speeches · January 19, 1999
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
10:00 A.M. EST
January 20, 1999
Statement by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Ways and Means
U.S. House of Representatives
January 20, 1999
The American economy through year-end continued to perform in
an outstanding manner. Economic growth remained solid, and financial markets, after
freezing up temporarily following the Russian default, are again channeling an ample
flow of capital to businesses and households. Labor markets have remained quite tight,
but, to date, this has failed to ignite the inflationary pressures that many had feared.
To be sure, there is decided softness in a number of manufacturing industries as
weakness in many foreign economies has reduced demand for U.S. exports and
intensified competition from imports. Moreover, underutilized production capacity and
pressure on domestic profit margins, especially among manufacturers, are likely to rein in
the rapid growth of new capital investment. With corporations already relying
increasingly on borrowing to finance capital investment, any evidence of a marked
slowing in corporate cash flow is likely to induce a relatively prompt review of capital
budgets.
The situation in Brazil and its potential for spilling over to reduce demand in other
emerging market economies also constitute a possible source of downside risk for
demand in the United States. So far, markets seem to have reacted reasonably well to the
decisions by the Brazilian authorities to float their currency and redouble efforts at fiscal
discipline. But follow through in reducing budget imbalances and in containing the
effects on inflation of the drop in value of the currency will be needed to bolster
confidence and to limit the potential for contagion to the financial markets and economies
of Brazil's important trading partners, including the United States.
While there are risks going forward, to date domestic demand and hence
employment and output in the United States certainly has remained vigorous. Though the
pace of economic expansion is widely expected to moderate as 1999 unfolds, signs of an
appreciable slowdown as yet remain scant.
But to assess the economic outlook properly, we need to reach beyond the mere
description of America's sparkling economic performance of eight years of record
peacetime expansion to seek a deeper understanding of the forces that have produced it. I
want to take a few moments this morning to discuss one key element behind our current
prosperity-the rise in the value markets place on the capital assets of U.S. businesses.
Lower inflation, greater competitiveness, and the flexibility and adaptability of our
businesses have enabled them to take advantage of a rapid pace of technological change
to make our capital stock more productive and profitable. I will argue that the process of
recognizing this greater value has produced capital gains in equity markets that have
lowered the cost of investment in new plant and equipment and spurred consumption.
But, while asset values are very important to the economy and so must be carefully
monitored and assessed by the Federal Reserve, they are not themselves a target of
monetary policy. We need to react to changes in financial markets, as we did this fall, but
our objective is the maximum sustainable growth of the U.S. economy, not particular
levels of asset prices.
As I have testified before the Congress many times, I believe, at root, the
remarkable generation of capital gains of recent years has resulted from the dramatic fall
in inflation expectations and associated risk premiums, and broad advances in a wide
variety of technologies that produced critical synergies in the 1990s.
Capital investment, especially in high-tech equipment, has accelerated
dramatically since 1993, presumably reflecting a perception on the part of businesses that
the application of these emerging technological synergies would engender a significant
increase in rates of return on new investment.
Indeed, some calculations support that perception. They suggest that the rate of
return on capital facilities put in place during recent years has, in fact, moved up
markedly. In part this may result from improved capital productivity-that is, the
efficiency of the capital stock. In addition, we may be witnessing some payoffs from
improved organizational and managerial efficiencies of U.S. businesses and from the
greater education-in school and on the job-that U.S. workers have acquired to keep pace
with the new technology. All these factors have been reflected in an acceleration of labor
productivity growth.
Parenthetically, improved productivity probably explains why the American
economy has done so well despite our oft-cited subnormal national saving rate. The
profitability of investment here has attracted saving from abroad, an attraction that has
enabled us to finance a current account deficit while maintaining a strong dollar. Clearly,
we use both domestic saving and imported financial capital in a highly efficient manner,
apparently more efficiently than many, if not most, other major industrial countries.
While discussions of consumer spending often continue to emphasize current
income from labor and capital as the prime sources of funds, during the 1990s, capital
gains, which reflect the valuation of expected future incomes, have taken on a more
prominent role in driving our economy.
The steep uptrend in asset values of recent years has had important effects on
virtually all areas of our economy, but perhaps most significantly on household behavior.
It can be seen most
clearly in the measured personal saving rate, which has declined from almost six percent
in 1992 to effectively zero today.
Arguably, the average household does not perceive that its saving has fallen off
since 1992. In fact, the net worth of the average household has increased by nearly 50
percent since the end of 1992, well in excess of the gains of the previous six years.
Households have been accumulating resources for retirement or for a rainy day, despite
very low measured saving rates.
The resolution of this seeming dilemma illustrates the growing role of rising asset
values in supporting personal consumption expenditures in recent years. It also illustrates
the importance when interpreting our official statistics of taking account of how they deal
with changes in asset values.
With regard first to the statistical issues, capital gains themselves are not counted
as income, but some transactions resulting from capital gains reduce disposable
household income as we measure it, while having no effect on consumption. As a
consequence, as capital gains and these associated transactions mount, published saving
rates are decreased. For example, reported personal income is reduced when corporations
cut back payments into defined-benefit pension plans owing to higher equity prices;
however, such reductions do not diminish anticipated retirement income and thus should
not lower consumption. And reported disposable income is decreased when households
pay taxes on capital gains realizations that would not have been so large in less ebullient
markets. However, capital gains tax payments also are highly unlikely to be associated
with lower spending because the cash realized from the sale of the asset exceeds the tax,
and in most cases the typical household presumably does not perceive of this transaction
as reducing available income or financial resources. Together these two effects probably
account for an appreciable portion of the reduction in the reported saving rate.
But beyond these statistical issues, there is little doubt that capital gains have
increased consumption relative to income from current production over recent years.
Economists have long recognized a "wealth effect"-a tendency for consumption to rise
by a fraction of the capital gains on existing assets owned by households-though the
magnitude of this effect remains difficult to estimate accurately. We have some evidence
from recent years that all or most of the decline in the saving rate is accounted for by the
upper income quintile where the capital gains have disproportionately accrued, which
suggests that the wealth effect has been real and significant. Thus, all else equal, a
flattening of stock prices would likely slow the growth of spending, and a decline in
equity values, especially a severe one, could lead to a considerable weakening of
consumer demand.
Some moderation in economic growth, however, might be required to sustain the
expansion. Through the end of 1998, the economy continued to grow more rapidly than
can be currently accommodated on an ongoing basis, even with higher, technology-driven
productivity growth. Growth has continued to shrink the pool of workers willing to work
but without jobs. While higher productivity has helped to keep labor cost increases in
check, it cannot be expected to do so indefinitely in ever tighter labor markets.
Despite brisk demand and improved productivity growth, corporate profits have
sagged over recent quarters. This is attributable in part to some acceleration in labor
compensation, but other factors have also been pressing, especially intensified
competition and lower prices facing our exporters and those industries competing with
imports. In these circumstances, businesses will feel under considerable pressure to
preserve profit margins should labor costs accelerate further, or should the falling prices
of commodity inputs, like oil, turn around. But, to date, businesses' evident pricing
power has been scant. Either that would change and inflation could begin to mount or, if
costs could not be recouped, capital outlays might well be cut back.
The recent behavior of profits also underlines the unusual nature of the rebound in
equity prices and the possibility that the recent performance of the equity markets will
have difficulty in being sustained. The level of equity prices would appear to envision
substantially greater growth of profits than has been experienced of late.
Moreover, the impressive capital gains of recent years would seem also to rest on
a perception of relatively low risk in corporate ownership. Risk aversion and uncertainty
rose sharply over the late summer and fall of 1998 following the Russian default in
mid-August, as evidenced by widening spreads among yields on debt of differing credit
qualities and liquidity.
The rise in uncertainty increased the discounting of claims on future incomes, and that
reduced stock market prices even as the long-term earnings growth expectations of
security analysts continued to rise. As risk aversion subsided after mid-October, stock
prices returned to record levels.
Markets have doubtless stabilized significantly after the turbulence of last fall but
they remain fragile, as the repercussions of the recent Brazilian devaluation attest.
Moreover, our chronic current account deficit has widened significantly, in part reflecting
the strength of domestic demand that has accompanied the further accumulation of capital
gains. The continued
increase in our net external debt and its growing servicing costs clearly are not sustainable
indefinitely.
In light of the importance of financial markets in the economy, and of the
volatility and vulnerability in financial asset prices more generally, policymakers must
continue to pay particular attention to these markets. The Federal Reserve's easing last
fall responded to an abrupt stringency in financial markets and the effects that the
consequent increased risk aversion was likely to have on economic activity going
forward. We were particularly concerned about higher costs and disrupted financing in
debt markets, where much of consumption and investment is funded. We were not
attempting to prop up equity prices, nor did we plan to continue to ease rates until equity
prices recovered, as some have erroneously inferred.
This has not been, and is not now, our policy or intent. As I have discussed
earlier, movements in equity prices can play an important role in the economy, which the
central bank must take into account. And, we may question from time to time whether
asset prices may not embody a more optimistic outlook than seems reasonable, or what
the consequences might be of a further rise in those prices followed by a steep decline.
But many other forces also drive our economy, and it is the performance of the entire
economy that forms our objectives and shapes our actions.
Nonetheless, in the current state of financial markets, policymakers are going to
have to be particularly wary of actions that unnecessarily sow uncertainties, undermine
confidence, and interfere with the efficient allocation of capital on which our economic
prosperity and asset values rest. It is important not to undermine the highly sensitive
ongoing process of reallocation of capital from less to more productive uses. For
productivity and standards of living to grow, not only must capital raised in markets be
allocated efficiently, but internal cash flow, including the depreciation charges from the
existing capital stock, must be continuously directed to their most profitable uses. It is
this continuous churning, this so-called creative destruction, that has become so essential
to the effective deployment of advanced technologies by this country over recent decades.
In this regard, drift toward protectionist trade policies, which are always so difficult to
reverse, is a much greater threat than is generally understood.
It is well known that erecting barriers to the free flow of goods and services across
national borders undermines the division of labor and standards of living by impeding the
adjustment of the capital stock to its most productive uses. Not so well understood, in my
judgment, is the impact that fear of growing protectionism would have on profit
expectations, and hence on the current values of capital assets. Protectionism was a threat
to standards of living when capital asset values were low relative to income. It becomes
particularly pernicious in a environment, such as today's, when that is no longer the case.
In sum, it has been the ability of our flexible and innovative businesses and work
force that has enabled the United States to take full advantage of emerging technologies
to produce greater growth and higher asset values. Policy has facilitated this process by
containing inflation and by promoting competitiveness through deregulation and an open
global trading system. Our task going forward—at the Federal Reserve as well as in the
Congress and Administration—is to sustain and strengthen these policies, which in turn
have sustained and strengthened our now record peacetime economic expansion.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1999, January 19). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19990120_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19990120_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1999},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19990120_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}