speeches · November 21, 2002
Speech
Donald L. Kohn · Governor
' For release on delivery
8:30 a.m. EST (2:30 p.m. Frankfurt time)
November 22, 2002
The U.S. Current Account Deficit
Remarks by
Donald L. Kohn
Member, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
12(h Frankfurt European Banking Congress
at the Alte Oper Frankfurt
Frankfurt Germany
November 22, 2002
As a representative of the country that issues the "Old Choice" in reserve currencies, I
thought that I might use my time to address the source of the growing amount of assets
denominated in that currency and held outside the United States—that is, the U.S. current account
deficit. As a basis for discussion, I will put some hypotheses on the table about the origin of the
deficit, its course over time, and its implications for macroeconomic policy. Before I get started,
I should remind you that the views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily represent
the views of other members of the Board or its staff.*
For the most part, the existing distribution of current account surpluses and deficits
among the countries of the world reflects market decisions regarding the global allocation of
capital. Evidently, savers around the world have anticipated greater risk-adjusted returns on their
investments in the United States than in surplus countries. The upward trend in the foreign
exchange value of the dollar since the mid-1990s as the deficit was climbing indicates that the
rising demand for dollars from capital inflows, and not the rising supply of dollars from the trade
deficit, was the dominating force in international transactions between the United States and the
rest of the world.
To be sure, developments of the past few years suggest that expectations for returns on
investment were not fully realized. Still, the remarkably similar asset price movements around
the globe in the past two years and the relatively modest correction of the dollar imply that
investors are not having major second thoughts about the relative distribution of their savings.
Moreover, judging from the fact that productivity in the United States did accelerate in the latter
half of the 1990s and continues to grow rapidly, the spending financed through the deficit
apparently did add to real GDP growth, even though the financial returns to capital proved
"Michael Leahy, of the Board's staff, contributed to the preparation of these remarks.
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disappointing.
In addition, the developing configuration of current account balances has played an
important role in stabilizing economies over recent years. The U.S. deficit has boosted aggregate
demand outside the United States, which was especially beneficial in the mid- to late-1990s,
when disruptions to capital flows and financial markets in many other countries were damping
economic activity. In the United States, the availability of foreign savings and foreign goods and
services served as safety valves, diverting U.S. aggregate demand during the late 1990s, when it
might have otherwise created inflationary pressures.
It is crucial in thinking about this deficit to keep in mind that, to the extent that it reflects
an imbalance, the imbalance is shared around the world. The U.S. current account deficit is two-
sided: Low saving relative to investment demand in the United States necessarily implies the
reverse-a shortfall of domestic demand relative to production in the rest of the world. Therefore,
any adjustment that proves necessary will also be shared around the world and will not fall solely
on the United States.
It is hard to imagine that present trends in this global imbalance can continue indefinitely.
U.S. assets are occupying a growing share of global portfolios. At some point, reflecting both the
decline of marginal returns as resources shift toward stocks of U.S. capital and other durable
assets and the inevitable flagging in the willingness of investors to place an ever-increasing share
of their portfolios in dollar-denominated assets, the net flow of saving to the United States will
taper off. As that happens, the level of U.S. spending on foreign goods and services will have to
begin to match more closely the level of foreign spending on U.S. goods and services. U.S. and
foreign asset prices, including the real exchange rate, will have to adjust to close the trade gap or,
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from another perspective, to bring domestic demand in the United States and elsewhere into
closer alignment with domestic production.
We all need to be humble about our ability to predict when this adjustment might begin or
what economic conditions might accompany it. I am sure you need no reminding of the many
events in the U.S. economy and financial markets that people thought would trigger a dollar
decline and current account correction, but did not. Obviously, expected returns from
investments in the United States have been marked down substantially—but so, apparently, have
expected returns abroad, and on a relative basis, savers seem reasonably content to continue to
shift their portfolios toward U.S. investments. The rising level of foreign net investment in the
United States has elevated the concern that a sudden shift in preferences away from dollar assets
could be disruptive. Such a shift could be associated with large, sharp movements in exchange
rates and other asset prices that might expose weaknesses in the balance sheets of some entities.
Even abstracting from financial vulnerabilities, such developments in financial markets might
prompt dislocations in resource usage and temporary reductions in incomes because resources are
slower to adjust than asset prices.
To be sure, a disruptive correction in current accounts is a distinct risk. However, that the
recent recession in the United States and the accompanying sharp drops in profits and equity
valuations have not caused such a re-evaluation of relative returns is encouraging. Moreover,
although resource reallocations are never frictionless, major dislocations need not result from
rapid movements in asset prices. In 1985-86 the foreign exchange value of the dollar declined
substantially, but the decline was not disorderly, and severe dislocations did not occur in the
United States, importantly because of the mobility of labor and capital. Indeed, the currently low
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level of capacity utilization in our manufacturing sector means that considerable resources are
available to meet increased foreign demand without putting pressure on prices.
However, even relatively smooth adjustments will present challenges to macroeconomic
policies, as they did in the late 1980s. The shifting balance of domestic demand and potential
supply in each country means that policies affecting domestic demand will need to be re-
calibrated to preserve price stability and keep economies operating at high levels of reserve
utilization. The deficit country—the United States—will need to generate more net domestic
savings, perhaps through tighter government budgets, as it absorbs a greater share of global
demand if it is to avoid inflation pressures and much higher real interest rates that damp
investment and growth. And, as demand is trimmed in the United States, surplus countries will
have to boost domestic demand to forestall a slowing in global economic growth. If the asset-
and product-market adjustments are smooth or incremental, the required modifications to policy
can be made gradually once adjustment seems to be under way and potential macroeconomic
effects begin to be identified.
Are there steps policymakers can take even earlier—to reduce the possibility, however
remote, that the adjustment will involve dislocations? Over the long-run, using fiscal policy to
boost domestic saving in the deficit country might help, but such an adjustment would be
counterproductive now, when the U.S. economy is operating well below its potential.
Conversely, fiscal policy expansion in the surplus countries could be used to augment domestic
demand, but any such adjustments would need to take account of medium-term goals for fiscal
consolidation. Furthermore, fiscal policy adjustment cannot guarantee current account
adjustment. For example, in the! late 1990s, the fiscal stance of the United States switched from
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deficits to surplus, and the switch was only partly offset by declines in private savings, leaving
national savings higher. Nonetheless, the current account deficit continued to grow as a result of
the surge in U.S. investment and productivity and the associated capital inflows seeking the
higher U.S. rates of return.
Monetary policy has an ambiguous effect on trade imbalances. Although exchange rates
are notoriously difficult to predict, over time easier monetary policy relative to that abroad should
prompt currency depreciation, which in turn would tend to reduce the current account deficit.
However, easier monetary policy also stimulates domestic incomes, which would tend to increase
the current account deficit. Simply put, monetary policy is not the appropriate tool for improving
the current account. Rather, central banks have learned over the years that their policies should
be devoted to fostering macroeconomic balance and price stability.
In addition, as with equity market bubbles, one is hard put to know beforehand whether
large current account deficits are out of line with fundamentals, especially when those outcomes
could be a result of strong productivity and high rates of return rather than of excessive spending.
All told, actions to preempt a possible disruptive adjustment in asset markets and the economy
are problematic in many respects.
As I have emphasized, the major reason for the growing deficit has been that the United
States has been an attractive place to invest, and such investment has helped foster higher
productivity and economic potential at home and a more efficient use of foreign savings. No
policymaker would deliberately try to make his or her economy less attractive to reduce the
discrepancies in relative returns. Monetary and fiscal policy in the United States will continue to
be aimed at fostering high employment and price stability and a favorable environment for
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growth in productivity and incomes. Surely the best way to make perceived returns more equal
around the globe would be for authorities in other countries to take whatever steps might boost
expected rates of return in their domestic economies. Required actions might involve policies to
improve expected cyclical performance over the next few years as well as structural reforms—to
increase the flexibility, transparency, and receptiveness to risk-taking and innovation that
enhance productivity and growth.
Cite this document
APA
Donald L. Kohn (2002, November 21). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20021122_kohn
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20021122_kohn,
author = {Donald L. Kohn},
title = {Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20021122_kohn},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}