speeches · January 6, 2004
Speech
Donald L. Kohn · Governor
For release on delivery
8:00 p.m. EST
January 7,2004
The United States in the World Economy
Donald L. Kohn
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Public Policy Dinner
Atlanta, Georgia
January 7,2004
No public policy issues facing the United States today in the economic realm are more important or
prominent than those that touch on our place in the world economy. The greater attention to global economic issues
is partly just a natural byproduct of the increasing interdependencies of all national economies. But this focus has
been accentuated of late by the potential effects of two trends that have intensified in recent years. One is the
emergence of several developing countries—most prominently China and India—as global economic forces and the
consequent reorganization of production processes and change in the nature and location of jobs here and abroad.
The second is our burgeoning trade and current account deficits and the possibility that they cannot be sustained at
these levels. Like most interesting policy issues, these are difficult and complex, and they therefore carry a
considerable risk that policy prescriptions will be ineffective or even counterproductive.
Thetwo developments are related, but only to a limited and indirect extent. Importantly, they arise from
very different underlying sources. Job reorganization results from the integration of China and other developing
countries into the world economy. The increase in our current account deficit has numerous roots,including, most
prominently, stronger growth here than in our tradingpartners. Buttrade and exchange rate relationships with
emerging-market economies are a small part of the story. The deficit does mean that the United States has been
spending more than we produce, and the rest of the world has done the opposite.
Because they have different causes, these developments have different public policy implications. Their
implications for Federal Reserve policy are indirect. We cannot affect the pace of job restructuringnor correct the
current account deficit, and that limitation is important to understand. Nonetheless, how these phenomenaevolve
and how they are addressed are critical background factors for us as we conduct monetary policy. They can
influence the balance of aggregate supply and demand and the functioning of the economy—its flexibility and
resiliency and its capacity to advance standards of living.
Let's look at these developments separately.
Job Restructuring
I think it is useful to look at job restructuring as the adaptation to a much larger development-a huge
increase in global productive capacity.
The major increase in global productivity has two main causes. The first is the spreading recognition in
recent decades, reinforced by the collapse of the Soviet Union, that market economies work best—that responses to
market signals by private parties trying to make profits and raise standards of living are far more effective and
efficient than government-directed allocation of resources. Hence not only countries in Eastern Europe, where
governments were overturned, but also China and India, where political stability has been maintained, have been
shifting toward economic systems that place greater reliance on market transactions among private parties. This
trend is unleashing huge productive potential.
The shift to market-based systems has been interacting with a second force-a heightened pace of
technological change, especially the declining cost of generating and transmitting information. We can see the
effects of technological change here at home, where it has considerably boosted the growth rate of productivity
since the mid-1990s. Globally, cheaper access to more information has eased the integration and coordination
ofgeographically diverse production processes. This development has opened up opportunities to transfer production
to locations in which the work can be accomplished less expensively, and the trend toward market-based economies
has multiplied the number of feasible locations.
This type of shifting has been occurring in manufacturing for a long time in response to technical
innovation and economic development. But what seems to be different is that, because of the newapplications of
information technology and telecommunications,an increasing variety of services that used to be attached to a
particular business location can be carried out anywhere in the world. For example, call centers have moved to
India and elsewhere. Routine back office accounting work such as handling accounts receivableis also
shiftingoverseas and becoming centralized for global corporations. Many types of routine programming can be
carried out around the clock, handed off from time zone to time zone by e-mail.
The interaction of these forces has led to a major restructuring of production processes-at home and
abroad—and a redistribution of these processes and associated jobs geographically around the globe. It is abeneficial
development that will raise standards of living everywhere. In the newly emerging economies, of course, hundreds
of millions of people now have a chance to escape grinding poverty. But the benefits will be felt in the industrial
world as well.
Workers in the United States and other advanced economies will need to shift toward industries
specializing in the types of goods and services we produce relatively more efficiently. Typically, production of these
goods and services involve more complex processes, often those that are more rooted in the higher knowledge and
skills of our workers. As workers shift to higher value-added employment, real wages will rise commensurately.
In addition,U.S.residents are getting access to less costly goods produced abroad. As a consequence, more
toys appeared under the Christmas tree, and we have a greater choice of inexpensive clothes. I would guess that the
less well-off among us probably benefit disproportionately from the availability of many of the types of
less-expensive goods coming in from abroad. They are better able to clothe and feed their families and have more
income available for other necessities, such as housing and medical care.
International trade is not a zero sum game in which one country's gains are another country's loss. By
specializing in what they do best, workers in all countries can be winners. Even if one country can be more efficient
at producing all goods and services than another, each will gain by specializing in what it does relatively better.
This is the result of what economists call comparative advantage. Increased trade should redistribute jobs, but it
should not create or destroy jobs in the aggregate over the long run. Long-run levels of employment are determined
by the available supply of labor and the flexibility of the labor market. Keeping employment reasonably close to its
long-term, sustainable level is the job of macroeconomic policy—especially monetary policy.
To be sure, individuals do get hurt in the transition,but within a country gains should exceed losses over the
longer run. Unfortunately, from a political perspective, the gains are often widely disbursed, accrue over time, and
are hard to measure whereas the losses are concentrated and palpable. Those whose jobs are restructured face a
difficult adjustment. Even if it is possible, climbing the value-added chain may not be easy, andthe dislocations are
costly for those involved. People often are unemployed for a considerable time, and a significant portion end up
settling for jobs that pay less than the one they left. Trying to protect those particular jobs through tariffs or quotas
on imported goods may help those workers who face loss, but that protection will likely prove temporary and will
reduce the standard of living for the country as a whole.
When considering public policy responses to job restructuring, we must keep the pace of change in
perspective and remember the flexibility and resiliency of our labor and product markets. Indeed, economists
cannot even agree on whether job restructuring has accelerated.One study finds that, since the early 1980s, job loss
has had a much larger structural component; another study fails to find any such trend.Manufacturing employment
has been in a long-term downtrend for decades, likely because of the substantial advances in productivity as well as
the rising preference for services in an increasingly wealthy country. We should also recall that the shifting of some
jobs to Japan in the 1980s and to East Asia and Mexico in the 1990s aroused considerable concern. These
developments did not preventa drop in the unemployment rate to a thirty-year low in the late 1990s. Moreover, the
new jobs have not been lower paying. Higher productivity growth has meant that,on average,real wages and
compensation rose substantially in the second half of the 1990sand have continued to increase in the past few years,
albeit more slowly, despite the recent recession and jobless recovery.
One difficulty of assessing trends in job restructuring in recent years has been the weak cyclical position of
the economy. We must not confuse nor conflate cyclical and structural issues, especially when thinking about
policy implications. A lot of today=s pain in manufacturing and in the overall economy is cyclical-a consequence
of inadequate demand, not of a shift of jobs to other countries. Because this business cycle was led by capital goods
both in its boom and bust stages, manufacturing has been especially hard hit over the last few years. In fact, until
the economy comes much closer to full employment, we will not be able to isolate the structural issues with any
confidence.
Authorities here and abroad have the tools to get economies back to high levels of employment and
production, even as we adjust to higher productivity growth and shifting production processes. Getting economies
on track seems to be requiring unusually accommodative fiscal and monetary policies-but these policies finally
appear to be bearing fruit.
Indeed, over time, high productivity growth here and rising productive capacity abroad can increase
demand for goods and services even more than they increase supply. We saw considerable strength in demand in
the United States in the 1990s, when productivity accelerated, and we are beginning to see it in China, where rising
demand for imports is eroding the country's large trade surplus and boosting the economies of some of its trading
partners. People experiencing much brighter economic prospects will want much more in the way of consumer
goods. Businesses here and in China will need capital equipment to expand, and no country does a better job of
producing sophisticated capital equipment than does the United States.
The key to easing adjustment for the individuals affected is training and education. We must do a better
job of giving our current workers and the next generations the skills needed to grab the highly productive,
knowledge-based jobs to which demand will continue to shift. I cannot tell you exactly in what sectors or industries
these jobs will be; government is not good at picking winners and losers. The market system will sort that out and,
in the process, will signal our workers as to which skills are becoming more highly valued. Government needs to
make sure that the opportunities and resources are available for obtaining those skills.
I recognize that, unfortunately, not every country always plays by the rules. Some job restructuring occurs
not because of relative efficiencies but because of subsidies of certain industries or discrimination against foreign
goods. We need to work together with all countriesto eliminate impediments,wherever they might be,to realizing
the benefits of the global increase in productive capacity.
It would be counterproductive to increase protectionist measures, which in effect would reduce the
flexibility of our economy, lock people into inferior jobs, and end up raising costs for consumers-especially those
among us who can least afford to pay more.
The Trade and Current Account Deficits
Our current account deficit has been growing both in dollar terms and relative to the size of our economy,
reaching 5 percent of GDP last year. This is a record for us;when the deficit approached this magnitude in the past,
markets hadgenerally already begun to adjust to reduce it.
The deficit reflects the fact that spending in the United States exceeds what we produce. We meet the extra
demand by importing more than we export. We pay for the added imports by using the savings of people in other
countries-that is, they lend us money to buy their goods and services.
Using more goods and services than one produces is not a bad deal. We could do so indefinitely, provided
that foreigners were willing to continue increasing their loansand investments in the United States. Even then, of
course, we would have ever-rising debts to service, and foreigners would own a growing proportion of our capital
stock.We have indeed become a large net debtor in global capital markets, but so far, the net servicing of the debt
has been very small.
For quite a while,global investors seemed willing to increase the proportion of the total assets they holdas
claims on the United States,denominated in dollars. Through the 1990s and into the early 2000sforeigners expected
returns here to be so high that they willingly sent us larger and larger amounts of savings—in effect, financing a
goodly part of our investment boom. The strong demand for dollar assets was evidenced by a rising exchange rate,
which in turn fed the increase in the current account and trade deficits.
This point is important to keep in mind. We did not seek to run a current account deficit, nor did we make
policy mistakes that brought it on. The current account and trade deficitsbecame so large mostly because we had a
more-dynamic, faster-growing economy than everyone else had—one with a higher expected return on investment,
which induced a rising demand for dollar claims on our increasingly productive capital stock.
But although the U.S. economy continues to be far more vigorous than most others, foreign investors may
be becoming less willing to finance the gap between what we spend and what we produce. With the current account
deficit climbing,that gap is growing fast—evidently faster than the appetite for U.S. assets. Private capital flows into
the United States have ceased expanding rapidly. Govemments-especially those of Japan and China-have taken up
the slack by purchasing U.S. assets, but the shortfall in thedesire to supply savings to fund our deficit has been
reflected in a significant drop in the dollar on foreign exchange markets since early 2002.
It is to be expected, at least for economies with exchange rates that truly float, that a shortfallof demand for
a country's assets will be reflected at first primarily in the exchange rate. The lower exchange rate in turn stimulates
exports and damps imports, and so the current account deficit and the associated need for foreign capital are also
reduced, matching the lower appetite of foreign investors.
To date, this adjustment process has not been a problem for the United States. Because we are operating
with spare capacity in our factories and labor markets, higher exports and lower imports are fine. They help boost
U.S. production to more fully utilize labor and capital and should not add tosustained inflation pressures, even with
import prices moving a little higher and competitive pressure on import-competing industries easing a bit.
Some have feared thatlagging demand for our assets would show up in lower prices for the assets
themselves—that is, in increases in bond yields and declines in equity prices—as well as in lower exchange rates.
However,for the most part, these assets are traded in highly liquid markets, where even large decreases in demand
can be accommodated with very small changes in prices. In such markets, interest rates and equity prices tend to
reflect investors= perceptions offundamentals such as expected inflation, profits,risk, and real growth. In fact, over
recent months,as the dollar has continued to drop,equity prices haverisen, and yields on corporate bonds are
unchanged to a little lower. To be sure, foreign authorities have acquired a large quantity of dollar assets, but their
purchases tend to be concentrated in Treasury and agency securities, not in privately issued equity or debt.
The global economy does face a potential longer-term structural issue. If investorsare reaching a point at
which assets denominated in U.S. dollars are becoming as large a share of their portfolios as they see appropriate,
our trade deficit will need toshrink. We will not be able to call so much on an increasing share of world saving to
finance our spending, and that spending will need to match our production much more closely. At the Federal
Reserve we will continue to work to foster a full employment level of production, one as high as the economy can
generate on a sustainable, noninflationary basis. Relative to that level of production, demand or spending in the
United States will need to be considerably more restrained on both domestic and foreign goods, and more U.S.
production will need to be exported abroad. This fact-this implication of the simple arithmetic of smaller trade and
current account deficits—raises importantpolicy questions for both the United States and the rest of the world.
In the United States the tough questions are just what kind of spending will feel the brunt of the restraint
and to what extent will production have to shift to accommodate a new mix of spending. In particular, without
added doses of foreign saving, we are going to need to generate more of our own if we wish to fund high levels of
business investment in capital goods and household purchases ofnew houses and durable goods. If we do
notincrease our saving, investment will have to be cut back. We can get that savings from the private sector by
decreasing consumption relative to income or from the public sector by decreasing spending relative to taxes.
In that context, the prospect of large federal government deficits stretching out into the future looks
worrisome. In the second half of the 1990s, we had both foreign and government savings to finance investment; a
few years from now we may have less of the former and none of the latter—indeed, the government sector is
projected to be a net user of savings not a net supplier. The fiscal stimulus of the past few years has been quite
helpful in promoting recovery, but we do need to consider the longer-term implications of the policies put in place.
If the fiscal path does not change, unless private savings rise considerably to compensate, interest rates will
be higher than they otherwise would be to ration the scarcer savings, and we will have slower growth in the capital
stock and in the number of houses and autos. Slower growth in the capital stock means slower growth in
productivity and in our economic potential. Constraints on trend growth would be a concern at any time, but they
are especially so over the coming years. We are on the cusp of a wave of retirements, which will leave a smaller
workforce to generate the goods and services those of us looking forward to retirement will consume even as we
contribute less and less to their production. We need to be saving and investing to build our economic potential and
to alleviate the burden on our children and grandchildren.
This is not a task for monetary policy. In the long run, monetary policy cannot do anything about the
current account deficit or about the lack of savings from government policy or private choices. Our manipulation of
the overnight interest rate helps to keep the overall economy in balance-promoting price stability and production at
the economy's potential. But on the Federal Open Market Committee Jack and I can do nothing to promote savings
other than to provide a stable backdrop for private decisions. Promoting savings is a job for fiscal and tax policy.
If our trade and current account deficits move toward balance, foreign economies will face the questions of
how to replace the demand that will no longer be coming from the United States and to reallocate production to a
new mix of spending. The U. S. current account will not correct in isolation. The United States has been, in effect,
exporting its demand overseas, supporting economic activity in foreign economies by importing more goods and
services than we export. If our imports fall and exports rise, just the opposite will occur in the rest of the world. As
our domestic demand isrestrained relative to production, demand elsewhere will have to increase to foster global
high employment.
How that is to be achieved is an open question: Structural reforms that improve the flexibility of the labor
force and production and that foster growth abroad are a desirable way to contribute to better global balance, but
macroeconomic policy adjustments to promote more domestic demand may also be required. It is simply not
possible for all countries to enjoy stimulus from net exports; some countries will need to be net importers, especially
if the United States no longer fills that role. And so my two issues become related. The development strategies of
countries such as China and other Asian nations, to be successful, must be compatible with the pattern of adjustment
in global demand that is required by the consumption, saving, and investment decisions made by market participants
everywhere.
Conclusion
The global economy seems to be feeing major adjustments in several dimensions simultaneously.
Successful adaptation to changing circumstances will require flexibility on several fronts. No one can anticipate
how events will unfold-the evolving geography and technology of the production of goods and services, the shifting
balances between spending and producing as current accounts change. My fear is that poorly formed diagnoses and
incorrect policy prescriptions will have unintended adverse consequences for our economy. Any elements of
rigidity-in exchange rates, in labor and product markets, in quotas and tariffs on international trade—limit the
channels through which the adjustment process can work. Rigidity concentrates stresses, increases the risk of
market disruptions, impedes economic resiliency, and limits the world's ability to realize the full potential of the rise
in global productivity to lift standards of living.
Cite this document
APA
Donald L. Kohn (2004, January 6). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20040107_kohn
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20040107_kohn,
author = {Donald L. Kohn},
title = {Speech},
year = {2004},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20040107_kohn},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}