speeches · September 7, 2005
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Governor
THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
By Ben Bernanke, Ph.D.
Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers
at Macroeconomic Advisers Washington Policy Conference
September 8, 2005
Thank you for inviting me to speak with you today. My remarks will focus on the current state
of the economy, but of course such an overview would be incomplete without an eye to the tragic
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Katrina wreaked unprecedented losses on the people of the Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama
coasts. Untold lives have been lost, communities have been destroyed, and a vital portion of our
nation and our economy has been shaken. Federal, state, and local governments are doing
everything possible to assist the victims with water, food, shelter, and other basic necessities of
life. Last week I attended several meetings in which the President spoke in moving terms about
the challenges that people on the Gulf Coast are facing, and he has directed all agencies of the
federal government to devote their maximum effort to helping the victims of Katrina and
beginning the process of cleaning up and rebuilding the region.
One of the greatest assets we have in rebuilding after Katrina is the overall strength of the
national economy. The resiliency of the economy is allowing it to absorb the shocks to energy
and transportation from the hurricane, and the ability of our economy to grow and create jobs
will act as a lifeline to the regions that have been most affected. Thus the disaster makes it all
the more important that we keep the fundamentals of the national economy strong and that we
continue to promote economic policies that will encourage growth. Significant challenges will
have to be met in the months and years ahead, but I remain confident that the communities on the
Gulf Coast will be rebuilt, and that the Gulf economy and the U.S. economy as a whole will
emerge from this tragedy as strong as ever.
The Current State of the Economy
Turning to the topic of this meeting, I will review some recent developments, as well as the
prospects, for the U.S. economy. Those of us whose job it is to monitor the economy follow
literally hundreds of economic data series, but four are particularly crucial: (1) the gross
domestic product, the basic measure of aggregate economic activity; (2) the unemployment rate,
which (together with key employment statistics such as payroll employment) measures the
utilization of our labor resources; (3) productivity growth, a fundamental determinant of how fast
the economy and living standards can grow; and (4) inflation, a basic indicator of monetary and
financial stability. In brief, for the past several years each of these indicators has been signaling
a strong economy: GDP has grown at a healthy pace, labor market conditions have continued to
improve, productivity growth has been strong, and—with the important exception of energy
prices—inflation has been low. In my comments I’ll briefly touch on each of these indicators.
One of the most impressive aspects of America’s market economy is its resilience and
adaptability, which if anything have increased over time. Flexible labor markets, a culture of
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entrepreneurship, efficient and highly liquid financial markets, and intense market competition
all help to explain the ability of the economy to perform well even in difficult circumstances.
The economy’s resilience has been put to severe test during the past five years, even prior to
Katrina. A remarkable range of shocks hit the U.S. economy, beginning with the sharp decline
in stock prices in 2000 and the recession that followed in 2001. The economy was further
buffeted by the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and the subsequent geopolitical
uncertainty. In 2002 a series of corporate scandals further shook business and investor
confidence. By early 2003, uncertainty about economic prospects was pervasive and the
economy appeared to be sputtering.
Yet, in the face of all these shocks, together with new challenges such as the recent sharp rise in
energy prices, the American economy has rebounded strongly. Targeted policy actions taken by
the President and the Congress, together with supportive monetary policies, were important in
helping to get the economy back on track. Beginning with the President’s 2001 tax cuts,
multiple rounds of tax relief increased disposable income for all taxpayers, supporting consumer
confidence and spending while increasing incentives to work and save. Additional tax
legislation passed in 2002 and 2003 provided incentives for businesses to expand their capital
investments and reduced the cost of capital by lowering tax rates on dividends and capital gains.
Policies outside the tax arena were also helpful. The President and the Congress addressed the
aftermath of 9/11 and the associated geopolitical uncertainty by creating the Department of
Homeland Security, supplying reconstruction funds for cities hit by terrorism, providing
temporary relief for certain industries (such as airlines), and by passing the Terrorism Risk
Insurance Act, which helped make insurance against the risk of terrorism more broadly available
for commercial properties. Other legislation provided targeted relief for small businesses and
temporarily extended the period that workers could draw unemployment benefits. The Sarbanes-
Oxley Act of 2002 and other measures helped to strengthen corporate governance and restore
faith in the integrity of financial markets. Together with appropriate monetary policies, these
policy actions helped to stimulate economic growth. Today the U.S. economy is in the midst of
a strong and sustainable economic expansion. Over the past four quarters real GDP has grown at
a 3.6 percent rate, and over the past eight quarters real growth has been at a 4.1 percent annual
rate. Prior to Katrina, the near-term forecasts of both CEA and private-sector economists had
called for continued solid growth. Katrina’s effects may reduce growth somewhat this quarter
and next, but the longer-term growth trajectory remain in place. I’ll return to economic
prospects in a moment.
An important reason for the recovery has been improved business confidence. To an extent
unusual in the postwar period, the slowdown at the beginning of this decade was business-led
rather than consumer-led. Homebuilding and purchases of consumer durables did not decline as
they typically do in cyclical downturns; instead the primary source of weakness was the
reluctance of businesses to hire and to invest. Supported by appropriate fiscal and monetary
policies and by the economy’s innate strengths, business confidence has risen markedly in the
past few years. The effects are evident in the investment and employment data. From its trough
in the first quarter of 2003, business fixed investment has increased over 21 percent, with the
biggest gains coming in equipment and software. Since the labor market bottomed out in May
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2003, more than 4 million net new payroll jobs have been added. So far in 2005, payroll jobs
have been added at a pace of more than 190,000 per month. The unemployment rate—my
second key indicator, you will recall—has fallen to 4.9 percent, below its average level of the
1970s, 1980s, or 1990s. News from the jobs front has thus been quite encouraging.
Although growth in GDP and jobs capture the headlines, one of the biggest economic stories of
the past few years is what has been happening to productivity—the third key economic indicator.
Productivity growth is the fundamental source of improvements in living standards and the
primary determinant of the long-run growth potential of the economy. Over the past four years,
labor productivity in the nonfarm business sector has grown at a 3.4 percent annual rate, and
productivity in manufacturing has risen at a 5.7 percent annual rate. As someone who received
his economic education during the 1970s, a time during which productivity gains virtually
vanished, I find these numbers impressive indeed. Productivity growth has slowed recently as
businesses have absorbed millions of new workers—a normal development for this stage of an
economic expansion—but it remains (in the four quarters ending 2005:Q2) at the quite
respectable level of 2.2 percent (and 6.3 percent in the nonfinancial corporate sector). On each
of these key indicators of the real economy—GDP growth, job creation, and productivity
growth—the United States in recent years has the best record of any major industrial economy,
and by a fairly wide margin.
These favorable economic developments are already being translated into higher living
standards. Real disposable income per person has been rising at about a 1.6 percent pace since
2001, with tax relief responsible for half of those gains. Household wealth has recovered
substantially from the effects of the stock market collapse and is currently $49 trillion; this figure
is about 5.4 times disposable income, above the long-run average ratio of 4.8. Increases in
financial assets as well as increased home values have contributed to these gains in wealth.
Wages and salaries, however, have not performed as well; real wages of production workers, for
example, have been essentially flat in the past couple of years. Rapid increases in energy prices
are one reason for slow growth in real wages; another is the increasing cost of employer-
provided health insurance, which has reduced the share of total compensation taken in the form
of take-home pay. However, in the past, when real wage growth has lagged behind productivity
growth—as has been the case recently—real wages have tended to catch up over time. There is
consequently reason for optimism that real wages will grow more quickly as the labor market
continues to strengthen.
Finally, high energy prices notwithstanding, inflation remains well-controlled. Core inflation (as
measured by the consumer price index excluding volatile food and energy prices) has averaged
2.1 percent over the past twelve months, and recent readings continue low. The favorable
inflation environment is widely expected to persist. For example, expected inflation over the
next ten years as inferred from inflation-indexed Treasury bonds stands at about 2.4 percent per
year, down from earlier this year.
Looking forward, most private-sector economists expect healthy growth in the longer run. In the
shorter term, the devastation wrought by hurricane Katrina will have a palpable effect on the
national economy. In particular, the virtual shutting-down of the Gulf Coast economy will leave
its imprint on the national rates of job creation and output growth in the third and fourth quarters,
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while recovery and rebuilding should increase growth rates in the first half of next year. Of
course, the economic consequences of this devastation are secondary to the human impact, and
for now the top priority for all of us in government is to help those displaced by the disaster to
put their lives back together.
Katrina’s economic impact included damage to the country’s energy infrastructure, as you know,
and the shutdown of a substantial portion of U.S. refining and pipeline capacity in particular led
to a spike in gasoline prices. Substantial progress has been made in repairing damaged facilities
and restoring electric power, and the government has assisted, among other ways, by providing
oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and arranging for additional shipments of oil and
refined products from abroad to the United States. Consequently, near-horizon futures prices for
gasoline have already begun to moderate, and retail prices should follow them down very soon.
Although it looks as if the effects of Katrina on energy markets will be contained, it remains true
that the prices of oil and natural gas have risen sharply in the past two years, reflecting a tight
balance of global supply and demand. High energy prices are burdening household budgets and
raising production costs, and continued increases would at some point restrain economic growth.
Thus far at least, the growth effects of energy price increases appear relatively modest. The
economy is much more energy-efficient today than it was in the 1970s, when energy shocks
contributed to sharp slowdowns, and real energy prices remain below the peaks attained in the
1970s and early 1980s. Well-controlled inflation and inflation expectations have also moderated
the effects of energy price increases, since those increases no longer set off an inflation spiral
and the associated increases in interest rates, as they did three decades ago.
Some observers have also expressed concerns about housing prices, which have risen rapidly in
the past few years. In my view, although speculative forces may be at work in some local areas,
recent house price increases are attributable mainly to economic fundamentals, including
growing incomes and jobs, low mortgage rates, demographic factors, and limited supply in some
areas. Those fundamentals have helped lift the national homeownership rate to nearly 69 percent
in the second quarter of 2005, near the all-time high set last year. At the same time, it is unlikely
that house prices will continue to rise rapidly; instead, they are more likely to flatten out and may
even decline in some local markets. Slowing appreciation in house prices may lead to a more
moderate pace of housing starts than we have seen recently (though Katrina may change this
calculus as well, depending on the scale of the reconstruction effort). However, this potential
slowdown in the housing market is already built into most forecasts, such as the Blue Chip
forecast which (pre-Katrina) anticipated economic growth in 2006 slightly slower than this year
but still strong.
Conclusion
In sum, the American economy remains one of the most resilient in the world. It recovered
vigorously from the severe shocks it experienced between 2000 and 2003, and I believe that it
will sustain growth in the face of the new challenges brought by hurricane Katrina and recent
high energy prices. Much of the credit for this resilience goes to American workers, employers,
entrepreneurs, and investors, as well as to our market-based economic system itself. But
economic policies have an important role to play in creating an environment in which the
nation’s economic potential can be fully realized.
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In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, a critical objective for policy will be helping to restore the
communities and the economy of the Gulf Coast. We must also continue the types of economic
policies that have brought us through these shocks and that will ensure continued healthy growth.
These policies include making tax relief permanent, reducing the deficit, strengthening
retirement and health security, fostering a healthy and well-educated workforce, promoting fair
and open trade, and enhancing energy security. Getting the fundamentals right is the best thing
economic policy can do. The energies and creativity of the American people and the flexibility
of our market system will do the rest.
Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2005, September 7). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050908_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20050908_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2005},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050908_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}