speeches · August 30, 2001
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
8:00 a.m. MDT (10:00 a.m. EDT)
August 31, 2001
Opening Remarks of
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
a symposium sponsored by the
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Jackson Hole,Wyoming
August 31, 2001
The rapid technological innovation that spurred the advancement of the "information
economy" has resulted in some dramatic capital gains and losses in equity markets in recent
years. These remarkable developments have attracted considerable attention from economists
and from macroeconomic policymakers. At the same time, movements in the prices of some
other assets in the economy—changes in house prices, for example—have been steadier, less
dramatic, but perhaps no less significant.
There can be little doubt that sizable swings in the market values of business and
household assets have created important challenges for policymakers. After having been
relatively stable for a number of decades, the aggregate ratio of household net worth to income
rose steeply over the second half of the 1990s and reached an unprecedented level by early last
year. That ratio has subsequently retraced some of its earlier gains.
But we must ask whether the aggregate ratio of net worth to income is a sufficient
statistic for summarizing the effect of capital gains on economic behavior or, alternatively,
whether the distribution of capital gains across assets and the manner in which those gains are
realized also are significant determinants of spending. To answer these questions, we need far
more information than we currently possess about the nature and the sources of capital gains and
the interaction of these gains with credit markets and consumer behavior.
Analysts have long factored changing asset values into models that seek to explain
consumption and investment. Indeed, in recent years, household wealth variables have become
increasingly important quantitatively in endeavors to track consumer spending. The importance
of household balance sheet variables for explaining consumption and the possibility that not all
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these variables influence spending identically suggest the need for greater disaggregation than is
typically employed in most models.
Observing that, over the past half century, consumer spending has amounted to about
90 percent of income, it might appear that income is largely sufficient to explain consumption.
However, econometric evidence suggests that such numbers may be deceptive. Wealth by itself
now appears to explain about one-fifth of the total level of consumer outlays, according to the
Board's large-scale econometric model, leaving disposable income and other factors to explain
only four-fifths of consumption. Indeed, if capital gains have any effect on consumption, the
propensity of households to spend out of income must be less, possibly much less, than
90 percent.
If income and wealth moved tightly together over time, the distinction between them
might not be meaningful for predicting the future path of consumption. And, over very long
periods of time, capital gains on physical assets are not independent of the trends in disposable
income. But the relationship of wealth to income is demonstrably not stable over time spans
relevant for the conduct of policy. As a consequence, a statistical system that augments income
as a determinant of consumer spending with information about wealth can significantly assist our
understanding of this key economic relationship.
Conventional regression analysis suggests that a permanent one-dollar increase in the
level of household wealth raises the annual level of personal consumption expenditures
approximately 3 to 5 cents after due consideration of lags. Arguably, it would not be important
to draw distinctions among various types of wealth if all assets were engendering similar rates of
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capital gains. Owing to collinearity in such instances, all wealth proxies would produce similar
estimates of overall wealth effects on consumer spending.
At times, however, the rates of change in key asset prices have diverged. For example,
over the past year and a half, home values have appreciated, whereas equity values have
contracted significantly. In such circumstances, differences in the propensities to consume out of
the capital gains and losses on different types of assets could have significant implications for
aggregate demand.
Assuming that the underlying propensities are, in fact, stable and given enough
time-series data with sufficient variation, standard regression procedures should be able to extract
reasonably robust estimates of any differential in spending propensities—for example, out of
stock market wealth and home wealth. But, in practice, these circumstances do not prevail. As a
consequence, we at the Federal Reserve Board are in the process of developing balance-sheet
disaggregations that should help us infer the propensities to spend out of capital gains across
different classes of assets.
In carrying out this analysis, we have been especially mindful of the possibility that the
amount by which a capital gain affects spending may well be a function of whether or not the
gain has been realized. On the buyer's side, when an asset is transferred, the acquisition cost is
its new book value and, by definition, its market value. On the seller's side, the proceeds from
the sale are available for asset accumulation, debt repayment, and consumption. In this way, a
capital gain is realized and made liquid, with the potential to affect spending, assets, or debt. The
capital gain in the process disappears as an element in the householder's balance sheet.
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Unrealized gains, to be sure, can be borrowed against, and the proceeds of the loan can be
spent or used for repayment of other debt. Alternatively, the unrealized gain could induce
households to finance additional outlays by selling other assets or by reducing their saving out of
current income. But unless, or until, this gain is realized or is extinguished by a fall in market
price, it will remain on the asset side of the householder's balance sheet, exposed to price change
and uncertainty.
Equity extraction through realized gains creates liquid funds with certain value. Indeed, a
significant proportion of sellers do not purchase another home. In contrast, extraction of
unrealized gains does not reduce the householders' uncertainty about their net worth or their
exposure to market price changes. This suggests that the propensity to spend out of realized
gains is likely to be greater than the propensity to spend out of unrealized gains.
Although our asset-class analysis of detailed disaggregated data is still at an early stage,
preliminary examination finds that the data are consistent with the hypothesis of differential
spending propensities by asset type and by whether or not capital gains have been realized. For
example, purchasers of existing homes, on average, appear to take out mortgages about twice the
size of the unamortized mortgage that the typical seller cancels on sale. After accounting for
closing expenses, the remaining unencumbered cash is available for debt repayment, acquisition
of financial and nonfinancial assets, and spending.
We have no direct evidence, of which I am aware, on the way that such funds are used.
However, we can make use of several surveys that have explored how cash-outs associated with
mortgage refinancing and home equity loans are expended. Typically, these surveys indicate that
households allocate so-called cash-outs—that is, the amount by which a refinanced mortgage
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exceeds the pre-refinanced outstanding debt—to repayment of nonmortgage debt, acquisition of
financial assets, outlays for home improvement, and personal consumption expenditures in
roughly equal proportions.
Our interest, of course, is primarily on spending; extracting home equity to repay debt or to
purchase financial assets merely reshuffles balance sheets and, at least immediately, does little to
affect economic activity. If these survey results are taken at face value and are applied to the case in
which the home changes hands—as distinct from, say, a refinancing— the amount of personal
consumption expenditures generated from realized capital gains on the sale of homes, financed
through the mortgage market, represents approximately 10 to 15 cents on the dollar.1
Of course, in addition to realized capital gains from the turnover of existing homes, there is a
considerable amount of cash that is extracted from home equity without a home sale, principally
from refinancing cash-outs and from home equity loans. Both types of equity extraction have risen
considerably in recent years, in line with the marked rise in unrealized capital gains on homes.
Some preliminary calculations suggest that the total of equity extractions from unrealized capital
gains on homes that is spent on consumer goods and services per dollar of capital gains is a fraction
lrThe realized capital gain on a home sale in recent years has engendered a net increase in the
mortgage debt (that is, net equity extraction) on that home averaging nine-tenths of the capital gain.
Of the net equity extraction, almost half has been expended on closing and related expenses. The
remainder, we assume, is distributed as indicated by the consumer surveys.
of the spending engendered by the gains realized through the sale of a home.2 3 This difference
occurs, to a large extent, because the net extraction of equity is much higher among homes that have
turned over than among those that have not.
While data on home mortgage debt and house turnover can be used to analyze the particular
channels through which capital gains on homes spur consumer outlays, the financing linkages
between stock market capital gains and consumer spending are less clear. Homeowners typically
own one home, which they hold, on average, for nearly a decade. Financing is almost exclusively
through the mortgage market, and equity extractions for spending, accordingly, are readily
identified. Stocks, in contrast, tend to be held in portfolios that have far greater rates of turnover
than homes, and financing sources are much more diverse and changeable. Moreover, although
gains in defined contribution plans, IRAs, and other tax-deferred accounts almost surely affect
2However, the consumption financed through mortgage debt extension somewhat
overestimates the net influence of housing capital gains on consumption. Debt must be repaid, and
presumably, consumption is reduced as a consequence of the repayment. In the absence of capital
gains, borrowing merely moves up a purchase rather than augmenting total purchases through time.
However, in the presence of increased capital gains, unrealized but still perceived as
permanent, debt capacity and Levels are likely to rise. The consequently lowered debt repayment
relative to debt extensions suggests that the rate of offset to the initial consumption expenditures at
the time of repayment is also likely to be a good deal less. Our preliminary estimates, in fact,
suggest that such subtractions from the gross effects on spending are modest.
3The time sequence of the emergence of capital gains and their effect on consumer spending
is a function of the channel through which equity is extracted from homes. For sales of existing
homes, equity extraction is generally concurrent with a realization of a capital gain. Presumably,
however, the cash extracted influences consumer spending only over time. Unrealized gains can
build up over time without any obvious effect on spending. But a cash-out refinancing or a home
equity loan is presumably initiated for a specific current purpose. Thus, the lags between the
emergence of a capital gain and spending may be a function of the degree of gains realization and
the particular mortgage vehicle employed for equity extraction. Another means of equity extraction
of unrealized gains for which data are scarce outside of decennial censuses are long-term first lien
mortgages on residences previously free of debt.
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consumer spending, the complicated tax treatment and restrictions on the use of those funds make
the connections between capital gains in these accounts and spending quite indirect.
Nonetheless, even setting aside all pension-type assets, household capital gains on directly
held equities and mutual funds in recent years have been two to four times the size of overall gains
on homes. The sheer size of such gains suggests that capital gains on equities have been a more
potent factor in determining spending than gains on homes. In fact, if we accept a total net wealth
effect on consumption of 3 to 5 cents on the dollar, and if further analysis supports the larger net
spending propensities from capital gains on homes suggested by mortgage and survey data, then the
propensity to spend out of each dollar of stock market gains would be less than the propensity to
spend out of a dollar from gains on homes, but still larger in overall dollar magnitude.
Of course, these quantitative magnitudes are tentative, and a great deal of additional work
will be necessary to better understand and to confirm the nature and magnitudes of the relationships
between capital gains on houses and stocks—realized and unrealized—and consumer spending.
No matter how one differentiates the effects on consumer spending of capital gains on
stock market and housing wealth, it is clear that the massive increase in capital values over the
past five years had a profound impact on output and income. The influence of capital gains on
economic behavior also is likely to be of substantial consequence for the prospective
performance of the economy.
That influence also can be seen in our national income and product accounts (NIPA). By
design, these accounts measure the market value of the output of goods and services and its
distribution to the factors of production. As such, they exclude capital gains and losses. This
exclusion is especially relevant for personal saving, where our accounting conventions result in
capital gains having a large effect on the published figures. In part, the reason is that the NIPA
deduct taxes paid on realized capital gains from personal income and treat them, in effect, as a
transfer to the government sector, even though the capital gains that generated those taxes are
excluded from income.4 This issue is not trivial. As best we can determine, of the
4.6 percentage point decline in the personal saving rate between 1995 and 2000, a full percentage
point is attributable to the increase in federal and state capital gains taxes paid over that period.
Capital gains have also significantly influenced the measured personal saving rate as a
result of the NIPA treatment of the pension fund sector. In particular, because defined-benefit
pensions are considered part of the "personal sector," employer contributions to such plans are
included in disposable income, as are the interest, dividend, and rental incomes received by these
plans. In contrast, benefit payments to individuals are not part of personal income because they
are considered intrasectoral transfers.
Neither households nor corporations, however, are likely to view their own financial
activities in that manner. Surely, for defined-benefit pensions, it is the benefit payments to
retirees rather than the employer inflows into the pension sector that individuals perceive as
personal income. For their part, businesses have often viewed defined-benefit pension plans, in
effect, as business-sector profit centers because capital gains affect corporate defined-benefit
pension contributions and, hence, earnings.
4Capital gains, however, have not been fully stripped from personal income. The capital
gains embedded in exercised stock options, for example, are included in compensation of
employees (and as a charge against profits) in the NIPA. These gains are taxed as regular
income.
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This consideration is relevant in the measurement and interpretation of the personal
saving rate. In recent years, contributions to private defined-benefit plans have declined
significantly as an increasing part of these plans' accrued benefit liabilities have been met
through a rise in the market value of their equity holdings. Offsetting this decline, to some
extent, has been an increase in dividend and other capital income.
If private and state and local defined-benefit pension plans had been separated from the
personal sector, the personal saving rate would have fallen about 3/4 percentage point less from
1995 to 2000, all else being equal.
All told, if households viewed taxes on capital gains as a subtraction from those gains and
not from income and, further, if households viewed benefit payments received from defined-
benefit plans as income rather than their employers' contributions (as well as the investment
income of the plans), perceived disposable income in 2000 would have been higher as would the
personal saving rate.
In short, roughly two-fifths of the measured decline in the personal saving rate since 1995
reflects the foregoing NIPA income-accounting conventions.
I should emphasize that any accounting adjustments made to personal saving because of
changes in the definition of disposable income are exactly offset in business and government
saving so that national saving is unaffected. The increment to personal saving associated with a
treatment of the private defined-benefit pension sector as a business profit center would be offset
by a decline in corporate profits and business saving. In addition, a designation of taxes on
capital gains as capital transfers (in a manner similar to estate and gift taxes) would raise
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measured personal saving and lower overall tax receipts and, hence, government saving.5 Thus,
while total national saving would be unaffected by these specific accounting adjustments for
capital gains, the distribution of NIPA saving among households, businesses, and governments
would be significantly influenced.
One must recognize that no single way to array information on income, production, and
capital gains is best. The particular array employed depends on the specific purposes to which
the data set is to be applied. The treatment of capital gains in the NIPA, for example, is intended
to allow the accounts to most accurately attribute national saving to the various sectors in the
accounts. Indeed, when that is the objective, the removal of capital gains is essential. For
analysis of issues related to consumer spending, though, the NIPA personal saving rate presents
an incomplete picture of the financial state of the household sector in the aggregate, and an
adjustment along the lines previously suggested may be informative.
In addition to the effect of income-accounting conventions, of course, we must consider
the real economy influence of capital gains on the level of consumption. The estimates of the
effect of household capital gains on consumer spending of 3 to 5 cents on the dollar suggest that,
directly and indirectly, capital gains easily account for the remainder of the measured five-year
decline in the saving rate.
Obviously, this is not to say that had asset prices been flat for an extended period the
personal saving rate would have been unchanged, on net, over the past five years. If asset prices
had not risen, real incomes would surely have been altered, and the vast array of secondary and
5This is not done in the NIPA owing, in part, to a desire by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) to conform with international standards for national accounts.
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tertiary effects of asset-price changes would have been different. Nonetheless, this exercise
fosters additional important insights into the dynamics of household behavior and the
relationships among asset prices, income, and consumption.
The complexity of these relationships underscores the potential usefulness of developing
separate sets of accounts to track capital gains. These accounts could supplement the income and
product accounts, the flow of funds accounts, and the balance of payments accounts. The last
two currently exhibit, in part, the effect of capital gains and can be separated into special
accounts. A supplementary set of detailed tables on capital gains exclusions from the national
income and product accounts also would be a useful addition to our overall system of economic
accounts.
This morning I have not endeavored to discuss the effects of capital gains, other than
peripherally, on investment in plant and equipment, home improvement, tax revenues, and
government surpluses, and their obvious significance in tracking international economic flows.
Clearly, these also are relevant to any evaluation of macroeconomic events and warrant further
study.
In closing, accounting systems are not ends in themselves. We construct them because
they have a function in aiding our understanding of some particular aspect of a business
operation at a company level or for an economy as a whole. As we endeavor to better understand
how changes in the level and composition of wealth affect economic behavior, new accounting
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systems may be required to supplement those that have long served us so well. Technology has
facilitated the production of information at a far faster rate than at any time in the past. But in the
information economy, it remains up to us to organize and use that information in ways that
improve the quality of decision making.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2001, August 30). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20010831_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20010831_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2001},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20010831_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}