speeches · March 24, 2004
Speech
Donald L. Kohn · Governor
For release on delivery
12:30 p.m. EST
March 25,2004
Monetary Policy in a Time of Macroeconomic Transition
Remarks by
Donald L. Kohn
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
to the
National Association for Business Economics
Twentieth Annual Washington Policy Conference
Washington, D.C.
March 25, 2004
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The current stance of monetary policy is highly accommodative. With the target level of
the nominal federal funds rate at a historically low 1 percent and inflation running at a similar
rate, the real funds rate is around zero. Low short-term interest rates, in turn, have held down
longer-term rates, raised asset prices, and fostered an improvement in financial conditions more
generally.
This policy stance was adopted, as you know, in response to a sharp retrenchment in
aggregate demand during the past few years. As a consequence of weak output, declining
employment, and a decrease in core inflation to a low level, the Federal Reserve eased policy
aggressively. The intended funds rate fell from 6-1/2 percent in late 2000 to less than 2 percent
in late 2001, and then to just 1 percent by the middle of 2003.
I anticipate that a principal challenge facing the Federal Reserve in coming years will be
to return monetary policy from its current, stimulative stance to a more neutral posture in a way
that will promote full employment while maintaining price stability. In doing so, we will need to
assess and respond to three interrelated transitions: the transition of aggregate demand from
weakness to solid growth; the transition of the growth of potential supply from extraordinary to
merely rapid; and the transition from disinflation to a more balanced price outlook. The nature of
these transitions and the risks around them are likely to define the future policy environment.
Today I plan to examine these transitions and then discuss some of their possible implications for
the strategy of monetary policy. I should emphasize that these are my own thoughts and views; I
am not speaking for my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
The Transition from Weakness to Solid Growth of Aggregate Demand
During the past several years, a confluence of forces restrained aggregate demand. After
the investment boom of the 1990s, firms reassessed their need for capital and sharply cut back
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investment spending. Reinforcing this tendency to curtail capital outlays was a deterioration in
the financial conditions of businesses: Profits sagged and decreasing equity prices and widening
risk spreads inhibited access to external funds. Heightened geopolitical risks after the terrorist
attacks of September 11 and in the run-up to the Iraq war added to businesses' caution.
In the last several quarters, these restraining forces have been abating. The excess
physical capital that had developed earlier appears to have been worked off in most sectors, and
the need to replace older equipment has become more pressing. At the same time, the financial
condition of businesses has improved considerably; their profitability and cash flow have surged,
and low interest rates have facilitated a restructuring of their balance sheets.
Equity valuations have also turned around. After dropping rougjily 50 percent between
early 2000 and late 2002, the Wilshire 5000 has now reversed nearly half of that decline.
Investor confidence seems to have recovered, at least somewhat, from the corporate governance
and accounting scandals revealed in 2002 and 2003. With house prices rising as well, household
wealth has been increasing again, and more rapidly than income. Clearly, geopolitical risks
persist, but not to the nearly paralyzing degree seen earlier.
As a consequence, aggregate demand has strengthened considerably, aided greatly by
stimulative fiscal and monetary policies. Reductions in personal taxes have supported disposable
income despite a lagging labor market. In addition, the partial-expensing provision for new
business equipment is lowering the cost of capital and thereby likely boosting investment
spending. The accommodative stance of monetary policy has raised the prices of assets on
household balance sheets and lowered the cost of acquiring houses and durable goods, while also
reducing the cost of capital for businesses and helping them to strengthen their financial
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positions.
Looking ahead, the prospects for growth in household and business spending seem bright.
Rising energy prices and a heightening of concerns about global terrorism appear to have eroded
some of the optimism of late last year without as yet undermining the forward thrust of the
economy. Consumer outlays held up well in late 2003 and have increased so far in 2004 despite
surprising and troubling weakness in labor markets. For reasons I will come back to later, I
anticipate that labor demand will begin to strengthen noticeably in coming quarters. The
accompanying lift to personal income should lend support to future household spending, even as
the impetus from the tax cuts to consumption growth diminishes. Business purchases of
equipment and software rose more than 15 percent at an annual rate in the second half of 2003,
and recent data on orders and shipments of capital goods point to another large gain in the first
quarter. Investment should continue to be spurred by several factors: the accelerator effects of
sales growth, favorable cash flow and financial conditions, ongoing opportunities to upgrade
capital stocks with new technologies, and for this year, partial expensing.
Meanwhile, the decline in the dollar over the past two years and faster growth among our
trading partners suggest that less of the strengthening of our domestic demand will be met by
higher imports than it would be otherwise, and that rising exports will help to stimulate
production in the United States. Indeed, the global nature of the pickup in economic activity
encourages me to think that we are seeing a fundamental turnaround in confidence and spending
propensities that is likely to be self-reinforcing.
All told, the U.S. economy has apparently made the transition from weakness to solid
growth. However, even if these positive signs are borne out, the path of economic expansion
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will undoubtedly be uneven, and significant risks remain. One downside risk lies in spending by
the household sector. Purchases of new houses and durable goods have boomed over the past
several years, raising the stocks of those capital goods in the hands of households. In addition,
the saving rate is very low by historical standards. I expect that the growth in household
investment will taper off, but a more pronounced pullback in spending cannot be ruled out,
especially once interest rates rise. Some observers have expressed concern that weakness in
hiring, should it persist, would hold down the growth of labor income and weigh on consumer
confidence, and thus could depress spending at some point. In recent quarters, however, slow
hiring has been accompanied by strong productivity growth. Over time, higher productivity will
show up in higher wages. But even in the short-run, these new efficiencies have boosted capital
income, and the resulting increases in dividend income and stock prices have, in the aggregate,
provided at least a partial offset to restrained growth of wages and salaries.
On the upside, business spending could turn out to be even more robust than I expect.
Businesses' caution about making commitments to meet future demand appears still to be
eroding only slowly. Should confidence return more quickly, we could see a more marked
strengthening in capital spending, inventory accumulation, and hiring.
The Transition from Extraordinary to Merely Rapid Growth of Potential Aggregate
Supply
The transition to more-rapid and self-sustaining increases in aggregate demand is critical
to the outlook, but it is only part of the story. The full tale also requires an assessment of the
economy's productive potential--both its level and its rate of growth. Unfortunately, potential
supply cannot be observed directly, and inferring its behavior from variables that can be observed
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is a daunting task. But the task is essential nonetheless: Changes in potential supply have been
among the most important influences on the behavior of the economy over the past ten years.
I should note that the course of aggregate demand is not independent of the course of
potential aggregate supply. Both economic theory and empirical evidence suggest that
households and businesses make decisions about spending with an eye to future incomes and
sales, so that a rosier long-term outlook tends to raise demand today. Thus, as the FOMC notes
frequently in its statements, robust underlying growth in productivity is providing ongoing
support to economic activity. Nevertheless, owing to the restraints that I spoke of earlier,
demand has fallen well short of potential supply during the past several years, as can be seen in
the elevated unemployment rate, the depressed rate of capacity utilization, and the decline in
inflation.
Certainly, potential supply appears to have increased at an extraordinary rate in recent
years, even compared with the accelerated pace of the late 1990s. Between 1973 and 1995, labor
productivity in the nonfarm business sector increased at an annual average rate of 1-1/2 percent;
between 1995 and 2000, productivity climbed 2-1/2 percent per year; and since 2000,
productivity has jumped more than 4 percent per year on average. Understanding the reasons for
this surge is critical to judging the likely path of productivity and potential supply going forward.
Some of the step-up in productivity growth since 2000 probably reflects cyclical
influences or factors that may offer only one-time improvements in the production process. For
example, businesses' ability to find efficiencies on such a large scale in recent years probably
stems in part from learning how to take better advantage of the large amount of capital
equipment and new technology that they acquired in the late 1990s. Moreover, in the past few
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years businesses have displayed unusual caution in their decisions not only about investment in
capital goods but also about hiring. As firms have focused on controlling costs in an uncertain
environment, they have naturally tried to avoid taking on new workers and have tried instead to
extract the greatest possible output from their existing workforces. To the extent that these
processes have revealed inefficiencies in production, they have raised the level of productivity on
a permanent basis; however, they are unlikely to be a source of continued productivity gains.
All that said, some of the recent step-up in productivity growth may well persist. Rapid
technological change and continued declines in the cost of high-tech equipment should enable
more substantial efficiency gains in a wide array of industries. Moreover, healthy profits and low
borrowing costs should encourage firms to acquire new capital assets, which will give workers
more and better equipment to use and thus make them more productive. Taken together, these
arguments suggest that productivity will continue to advance at a rapid rate, but not at the
extraordinary pace of recent years. This transition, combined with solid growth in aggregate
demand, should result in stronger hiring and a narrowing of the output gap.
As with the transition in demand, the transition to less-spectacular growth of potential
supply involves important risks. We have been persistently surprised by the extent of the pickup
in productivity and could be facing a higher level and growth rate of productivity than many
expect. If we are so fortunate as to be confronting these circumstances, policymakers will need
to be alert to the need for a faster expansion of aggregate demand to match the stepped-up pace
of supply. Conversely, perhaps the transitory factors boosting productivity will recede more
sharply than most observers anticipate, and the output gap will close more rapidly. It appears to
me that uncertainty in our current situation is at least as great for potential output as it is for
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demand.
The Transition from Disinflation to More Balanced Risks for Inflation
Let me turn now to the implications of these demand and supply transitions for inflation.
Over the past several years, slack in resource utilization and declining unit labor costs owing to
rapid productivity growth have reduced the inflation rate. The chain-weighted price index for
personal consumption expenditures increased more than 2 percent in the four quarters of 2000,
but it rose only 1-1/2 percent last year. PCE inflation excluding food and energy items has eased
a similar amount, with core prices rising 1-1/2 percent in 2000 but just 1 percent last year. The
CPI and core CPI show even steeper decelerations than do PCE prices.
Moreover, leaving aside the reduction in inflation, the level of core inflation is now quite
low—in the neighborhood of 1 percent when measured by either the CPI or the PCE price index.
Allowing for measurement biases in these series, the U.S. economy has entered a zone of price
stability. Indeed, last spring the FOMC noted the risk that, for the first time in forty years,
inflation in the United States might fall too low.
The incoming data contain some indications that underlying inflation is no longer
declining, but the evidence is inconclusive thus far. In particular, recent monthly changes in core
prices have been within the range of increases seen in 2003, but this flattening out of inflation
has not persisted long enough to be clearly distinguished from the normal volatility in these data.
Still, if aggregate demand and potential aggregate supply follow the paths that I outlined earlier,
the slack in resource utilization should diminish, unit labor costs should begin to move higher,
and the underlying rate of inflation should stabilize.
Sources of potential upward pressure on prices have become more prominent in recent
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months. Overall inflation has been boosted by a jump in energy prices. Such a jump could raise
core inflation temporarily if it is passed through to other prices or if it contributes to increasing
inflation expectations. Indeed, by several measures, near-term inflation expectations have risen
of late. However, futures market participants have priced in some decline in energy prices from
these elevated levels; and even if energy prices remain high, they would not be adding to
inflation over time.
Another factor some observers have cited as possibly boosting inflation is a tendency for
increases in resource utilization to generate bottlenecks that can push up some prices more
rapidly. Indeed, periods like the current one with rising global demand have often been
accompanied by marked accelerations in the prices of crude and, to a lesser extent, intermediate
materials, which seem to be most sensitive to changes in demand. But this variation in upstream
producer prices has left little imprint on consumer prices in the past-perhaps because these
inputs account for a small share of the final value of industrial output and even less of total
consumption. A related concern is the effect of a declining dollar on import prices and the prices
of competing domestic goods. Over time, however, foreign producers seem to be absorbing a
greater share of the impact of a falling dollar in their profit margins rather than passing it on fully
in their prices, and I expect the drop in the dollar to have only a modest effect on U.S. inflation.
At the same time, other forces are likely to be acting to restrain inflation. Importantly,
slack in resource utilization will probably be eliminated only gradually, so competition for jobs
and for market share should remain intense. In addition, because hourly compensation has
lagged productivity, unit labor costs have fallen markedly. The resulting markup of prices over
unit labor costs is quite elevated, further encouraging firms to reach for market share as well as
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providing scope for workers' real wages to rise without pushing up inflation.
Overall, the tenor of the inflation outlook has shifted over recent quarters. Solid growth
in economic activity, higher prices in some sectors, and hints of the stabilization of overall
inflation, along with perceptions by businesses that "pricing power" may be returning, are
marking a transition from asymmetric risks of additional disinflation to more nearly balanced
risks of rising and falling inflation. This transition is another key piece of the backdrop for
monetary policy.
Monetary Policy Strategy
As I noted at the outset of my talk, the federal funds rate is quite low: It is low relative to
interest rates associated in the past with sustained high employment and stable prices; and it is
low relative to recent rates of economic growth—a disparity that has attracted increasing attention
from some observers. In fact, the low funds rate has been necessary to promote growth that, to
date, has been just sufficient to begin reducing substantial margins of slack in resource
utilization. Still, as my analysis indicates, the unusual shocks that have impinged on demand and
bolstered potential supply over the past several years are abating, or should soon do so. As the
output gap closes, economic stability will require that interest rates eventually move up from
unusually low levels if we are to preserve price stability.
The FOMC stated again last week that it believes it can be patient in removing its policy
accommodation. One set of reasons for patience in my view can be found in the levels of
inflation and resource utilization likely to prevail for a while. As I have already noted, a
considerable gap exists today between actual and potential output, and consumer price inflation
is very low. In addition, the transitions I have discussed in aggregate demand, potential
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aggregate supply, and inflation are gradual processes. The move to solid growth of demand and
some easing in the growth of potential supply are unlikely to lead to a rapid closing of the gaps in
resource utilization or a marked rise in inflation.
The risks around the likely course of the economy, and the costs and benefits of erring to
one side or the other of the anticipated outcomes, also support a strategy of patience. Given our
uncertainty about the rate of growth of potential supply, actually observing a closing output gap
will be particularly important for policymakers. Given our uncertainty about the level of
potential supply and thus the level of the output gap, observing stable inflation will also be
particularly important. Moreover, the low current levels of inflation and resource utilization
imply, from my perspective, that the welfare costs of the economy running stronger than
expected for a while are considerably lower than the costs of its running weaker. In these
circumstances, I think policy action can await convincing evidence that labor market slack is on a
declining trend and that inflation is no longer decreasing.
I would note that patience in policy action can take several forms. One form would be to
wait before taking any action; another would be a damped trajectory for the funds rate once
tightening begins. A more gradual increase that begins sooner might enable the Federal Reserve
to better gauge the financial and economic response to its actions and reduce the odds that a
sharp tightening tack would be required at some point to prevent the economy's overshooting.
However, this approach might also run a larger risk of prematurely truncating the expansion-
especially if markets interpret the first tightening move as presaging a rapid return to a so-called
neutral policy. Undoubtedly, the FOMC will choose a strategy that does not fit neatly into any
box, but these considerations will likely play a role in our deliberations.
Some observers argue that the Federal Reserve has already been too patient. They are
concerned that continued policy accommodation is distorting interest rates and asset prices and
encouraging a build-up of debt, and thereby laying the groundwork for financial and economic
instability. Clearly, the low funds rate has held down long-term interest rates and boosted asset
prices. These movements are, in fact, some of the key channels through which monetary policy
has stimulated demand. Whether prices in some markets have gone beyond what one might have
expected from easier monetary policy is unclear. When interest rates increase, prices will
undoubtedly adjust to some extent—in some cases simply by rising less rapidly than they would
otherwise—and debt-service obligations will move up. Households, businesses, and financial
institutions need to be prepared for this adjustment. But I think the hurdle is high—and
appropriately so—for a cental bank to tighten policy, and in the process damp an expansion of
economic activity in the short run, on the suspicion that movements in asset prices and increases
in debt threaten economic stability over the longer run.
Conclusion
In sum, monetary policy will be facing some interesting challenges over the next several
years, even if the economy proceeds along the favorable path I have outlined today. And, as all
forecasters know, the odds are always high that events will deviate from our expectations,
requiring policy to adapt. Still, the challenges are likely to be more favorable than those
presented by the economic weakness of the past few years. The economy seems to be on a path
toward higher levels of output and stable prices. The Federal Reserve will be trying to do its part
to foster these welcome developments.
Cite this document
APA
Donald L. Kohn (2004, March 24). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20040325_kohn
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20040325_kohn,
author = {Donald L. Kohn},
title = {Speech},
year = {2004},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20040325_kohn},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}