speeches · August 25, 2005
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
8:00 a.m. MDT (10:00 a.m. EDT)
August 26, 2005
Opening Remarks
by
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 26, 2005
In the spirit of this conference, I asked myself what developments in the past eighteen
years — both in the economy and in the economics profession—were most important in changing
the way we at the Federal Reserve have approached and implemented monetary policy.
The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913 to counter the recurrent credit
stringencies that had so frequently been experienced in earlier decades. As lender of last resort,
we had a mandate that, at least viewed from today's perspective, was limited. We did not engage
in Systemwide open market operations until the 1920s. And as recently as the 1950s, the
framework within which those open market operations were formulated was still being
developed. Credit was eased when the economy weakened and tightened when inflation
threatened, but largely in an ad hoc manner. As a consequence, the Federal Reserve was
perceived by some as often accentuating, rather than damping, cycles in prices and activity.
Importantly, however, the surge in prices that followed the removal of wage and price controls
after World War II and again after the Korean War kept monetary policymakers wary of the
threat of inflation.
But concern that the monetary restraint of the 1950s had led to unnecessarily high
unemployment persuaded the Federal Open Market Committee to adopt a more stimulative
policy stance in the mid-1960s. Those actions appear to have been predicated, in part, on an
acceptance of the then-prevalent view that a long-term tradeoff existed between inflation and
unemployment.1
See Romer, Christina D. and David H. Romer, The Evolution of Economic Understanding and Postwar
Stabilization Policy, NBER Working Paper No. 9274 (October 2002), p. 39.
-2-
Subsequently, however, the experience of stagflation in the 1970s and intellectual
advances in understanding the importance of expectations—which built on the earlier work of
Friedman and Phelps—undermined the notion of a long-run tradeoff.2 Inflation again became
widely viewed as being detrimental to financial stability and macroeconomic performance. And
as the decade progressed, a keener appreciation for the monetary roots of inflation emerged both
in the profession at large and at central banks. Indeed, the insights from the work of Friedman
and Schwartz a decade earlier gained greater prominence in the realm of practical policy.3
These events, both economic and intellectual, significantly influenced the tool kits
employed by macroeconomists inside and outside policymaking institutions. The large-scale
macromodels that had been the focus of so much work in the 1960s came under attack on two
fronts.
Most prominently, greater recognition of the importance of expectations suggested that
those models, which for the most part incorporated autoregressive expectations, were excessively
reduced-form and backward-looking in nature and thus insensitive to changes in economic
structure and the policy process. In addition, some researchers observed that simple time-series
models often produced better forecasts than the large macromodels of that period.4
2Friedman, Milton. The Role of Monetary Policy, American Economic Review, vol. 58, No. 1
(March 1968) pp. 1-17. Phelps, Edmunds. The New Microeconomics in Inflation and Unemployment Theory,
American Economic Review (May 1969) pp. 147-160.
3Friedman, Milton and Anna Jacobsen Schwartz. A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960.
Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1963.
4Sims, Christopher A. Macroeconomics and Reality. Econometrics, vol. 48, No. 1 (January 1980).
pp. 1-48.
-3-
One prescription was to focus on uncovering, at a more fundamental level, the structural
parameters of the economy. Needless to say, this task has proven to be a very tall order that has
yet to be filled. Partly in response to these difficulties, a substantial body of research focused on
improvements in empirical modeling, such as vector autoregressions for forecasting, and in some
cases, for policy analysis.
Each one of these approaches has proven useful, and their descendants are currently
employed in various forms in central banks throughout the world. But as yet, none of these
approaches is capable of addressing the full range of policymakers' needs.
At various points in time, some analysts have held out hope that a single indicator
variable-such as commodity prices, the yield curve, nominal income, and of course, the
monetary aggregates—could be used to reliably guide the conduct of monetary policy. If it were
the case that an indicator variable or a relatively simple equation could extract the essence of key
economic relationships from an exceedingly complex and dynamic real world, then broader
issues of economic causality could be set aside, and the tools of policy could be directed at
fostering a path for this variable consistent with the attainment of the ultimate policy objective.
Ml was the focus of policy for a brief period in the late 1970s and early 1980s. That
episode proved key to breaking the inflation spiral that had developed over the 1970s, but
policymakers soon came to question the viability over the longer haul of targeting the monetary
aggregates. The relationships of the monetary aggregates to income and prices were eroded
significantly over the course of the 1980s and into the early 1990s by financial deregulation,
innovation, and globalization. For example, the previously stable relationship of M2 to nominal
gross domestic product and the opportunity cost of holding M2 deposits underwent a major
-4-
structural shift in the early 1990s because of the increasing prevalence of competing forms of
intermediation and financial instruments.
In the absence of a single variable, or at most a few, that can serve as a reliable guide,
policymakers have been forced to fall back on an approach that entails the interpretation of the
full range of economic and financial data. Policy is implemented through nominal and,
implicitly, real short-term interest rates. However, reflecting the progress in economic
understanding, our actions are now better informed about the pitfalls associated with relying on
nominal interest rates to set policy and the important role played by inflation expectations in
gauging the stance of monetary policy.
Our appreciation of the importance of expectations has also shaped our increasing
transparency about policy actions and their rationale. We have moved toward greater
transparency at a "measured pace" in part because we were concerned about potential feedback
on the policy process and about being misinterpreted—as indeed we were from time to time.
I do not intend this brief and necessarily incomplete review of events to illustrate how far
we have come or to despair of how far we have to go. Rather, I believe it demonstrates the
inevitable and ongoing uncertainty faced by policymakers.
Despite extensive efforts to capture and quantify what we perceive as the key
macroeconomic relationships, our knowledge about many critical linkages is far from complete
and, in all likelihood, will remain so. Every model, no matter how detailed or how well
conceived, designed, and implemented, is a vastly simplified representation of the world, with all
of the intricacies we experience on a day-to-day basis.
-5-
Formal models are a necessary, but not sufficient, system of analysis. To be sure, models
discipline forecasts by requiring, among many restraints, that identities are indeed equal,
inventories non-negative, and marginal propensities to consume positive. But we all temper the
outputs of our models and test their results against the ongoing evaluations of a whole array of
observations that we do not capture in either the data input or the structure of our models. We
are particularly sensitive to observations that appear inconsistent with the causal relationships of
our formal models. Tentative revisions of that structure are reflected in our add factors.
Given our inevitably incomplete knowledge about key structural aspects of an
ever-changing economy and the sometimes asymmetric costs or benefits of particular outcomes,
the paradigm on which we have settled has come to involve, at its core, crucial elements of risk
management. In this approach, a central bank needs to consider not only the most likely future
path for the economy but also the distribution of possible outcomes about that path. The
decisionmakers then need to reach a judgment about the probabilities, costs, and benefits of
various possible outcomes under alternative choices for policy.
The risk-management approach has gained greater traction as a consequence of the
step-up in globalization and the technological changes of the 1990s, which found us adjusting to
events without the comfort of relevant history to guide us. Forecasts of change in the global
economic structure—for that is what we are now required to construct—can usefully be described
only in probabalistic terms. In other words, point forecasts need to be supplemented by a clear
understanding of the nature and magnitude of the risks that surround them.
In effect, we strive to construct a spectrum of forecasts from which, at least conceptually,
specific policy action is determined through the tradeoffs implied by a loss-function. In the
-6-
summer of 2003, for example, the Federal Open Market Committee viewed as very small the
probability that the then-gradual decline in inflation would accelerate into a more consequential
deflation. But because the implications for the economy were so dire should that scenario play
out, we chose to counter it with unusually low interest rates.
The product of a low-probability event and a potentially severe outcome was judged a
more serious threat to economic performance than the higher inflation that might ensue in the
more probable scenario. Moreover, the risk of a sizable jump in inflation seemed limited at the
time, largely because increased productivity growth was resulting in only modest advances in
unit labor costs and because heightened competition, driven by globalization, was limiting
employers' ability to pass through those cost increases into prices. Given the potentially severe
consequences of deflation, the expected benefits of the unusual policy action were judged to
outweigh its expected costs.
* * *
The structure of our economy will doubtless change in the years ahead. In particular, our
analysis of economic developments almost surely will need to deal in greater detail with balance
sheet considerations than was the case in the earlier decades of the postwar period. The
determination of global economic activity in recent years has been influenced importantly by
capital gains on various types of assets, and the liabilities that finance them. Our forecasts and
hence policy are becoming increasingly driven by asset price changes.
The steep rise in the ratio of household net worth to disposable income in the mid-1990s,
after a half-century of stability, is a case in point. Although the ratio fell with the collapse of
-7-
equity prices in 2000, it has rebounded noticeably over the past couple of years, reflecting the rise
in the prices of equities and houses.
Whether the currently elevated level of the wealth-to-income ratio will be sustained in the
longer run remains to be seen. But arguably, the growing stability of the world economy over the
past decade may have encouraged investors to accept increasingly lower levels of compensation
for risk. They are exhibiting a seeming willingness to project stability and commit over an ever
more extended time horizon.
The lowered risk premiums—the apparent consequence of a long period of economic
stability—coupled with greater productivity growth have propelled asset prices higher.5 The rising
prices of stocks, bonds and, more recently, of homes, have engendered a large increase in the
market value of claims which, when converted to cash, are a source of purchasing power.
Financial intermediaries, of course, routinely convert capital gains in stocks, bonds, and homes
into cash for businesses and households to facilitate purchase transactions.6 The conversions have
been markedly facilitated by the financial innovation that has greatly reduced the cost of such
transactions.
Thus, this vast increase in the market value of asset claims is in part the indirect result of
investors accepting lower compensation for risk. Such an increase in market value is too often
viewed by market participants as structural and permanent. To some extent, those higher values
5Despite the two-year bear market following the stock market collapse of 2000, equity prices have risen at
an annual rate of 10 percent since 1995.
6Capital gains do not add to GDP. The higher prices of plant and equipment and homes are reflected in an
economy's cost structure, which directly or indirectly increases prices of goods and services, leaving real output
largely unaffected. Capital gains, of course, cannot supply any of the saving required to finance gross domestic
investment.
-8-
may be reflecting the increased flexibility and resilience of our economy. But what they perceive
as newly abundant liquidity can readily disappear. Any onset of increased investor caution
elevates risk premiums and, as a consequence, lowers asset values and promotes the liquidation of
the debt that supported higher prices. This is the reason that history has not dealt kindly with the
aftermath of protracted periods of low risk premiums.
* * *
Broad economic forces are continuously at work, shaping the environment in which the
Federal Reserve makes monetary policy. In recent years, the U.S. economy has prospered notably
from the increase in productivity growth that began in the mid-1990s and the enhanced
competition engendered by globalization. Innovation, spurred by competition, has nurtured the
continual scrapping of old technologies to make way for the new. Standards of living have risen
because depreciation and other cash flows generated by industries employing older, increasingly
obsolescent technologies have been reinvested to finance newly produced capital assets that
embody cutting-edge technologies.
But there is also no doubt that this transition to the new high-tech economy, of which
expanding global trade is a part, is proving difficult for a segment of our workforce that interfaces
day by day with our rapidly changing capital stock. This difficulty is most evident in the
increased fear of job-skill obsolescence that has induced significant numbers of our population to
resist the competitive pressures inherent in globalization from workers in the major newly
emerging market economies. It is important that these understandable fears be addressed through
education and training and not by restraining the competitive forces that are so essential to overall
rising standards of living of the great majority of our population. A fear of the changes necessary
-9-
for economic progress is all too evident in the current stymieing of international trade
negotiations. Fear of change is also reflected in a hesitancy to face up to the difficult choices that
will be required to resolve our looming fiscal problems.
The developing protectionism regarding trade and our reluctance to place fiscal policy on a
more sustainable path are threatening what may well be our most valued policy asset: the
increased flexibility of our economy, which has fostered our extraordinary resilience to shocks. If
we can maintain an adequate degree of flexibility, some of America's economic imbalances, most
notably the large current account deficit and the housing boom, can be rectified by adjustments in
prices, interest rates, and exchange rates rather than through more-wrenching changes in output,
incomes, and employment.
The more flexible an economy, the greater its ability to self-correct in response to
inevitable, often unanticipated, disturbances. That process of correction limits the size and the
consequences of cyclical imbalances. Enhanced flexibility provides the advantage of allowing the
economy to adjust automatically, reducing the reliance on the actions of monetary and other
policymakers, which have often come too late or been misguided.
In fact, the performance of the U.S. economy in recent years, despite shocks that in the
past would have surely produced marked economic contraction, offers the clearest evidence that
we have benefited from an enhanced resilience and flexibility.
We weathered a decline on October 19, 1987 of a fifth of the market value of U.S. equities
with little evidence of subsequent macroeconomic stress—an episode that provided an early hint
that adjustment dynamics might be changing. The credit crunch of the early 1990s and the
bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000 were absorbed with the shallowest recessions in the
-10-
post-World War II period. And the economic fallout from the tragic events of
September 11, 2001, was limited by market forces, with severe economic weakness evident for
only a few weeks. Most recently, the flexibility of our market-driven economy has allowed us,
thus far, to weather reasonably well the steep rise in spot and futures prices for crude oil and
natural gas that we have experienced over the past two years.
* * *
This morning I have tried to outline my perceptions of the key developments that have
influenced the conduct of monetary policy over the past eighteen years. I acknowledge that
monetary policy itself has been an important contributor to the decline in inflation and inflation
expectations over the past quarter-century. Indeed, the Federal Reserve under Paul Volcker's
leadership starting in 1979 did the very heavy lifting against inflation. The major contribution of
the Federal Reserve to fashioning the events of the past decade or so, I believe, was to recognize
that the U.S. and global economies were evolving in profound ways and to calibrate
inflation-containing policies to gain most effectively from those changes.
For reasons that may not be too obscure, I will pay close attention to, and hope to learn
from, the deliberations of the next couple of days. I have been asked to make a few closing
remarks tomorrow about some of the unresolved challenges facing policymakers in the year ahead
and about my experiences living inside the Federal Reserve for nearly two decades, after so many
years of observing our institution from afar.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2005, August 25). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050826_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20050826_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2005},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050826_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}