speeches · February 8, 2011
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Chair
Testimony
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
The Economic Outlook and Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Before the Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C.
February 9, 2011
Chairman Ryan, Ranking Member Van Hollen, and other members of the Committee, I am pleased
to have this opportunity to offer my views on the economic outlook, monetary policy, and issues
pertaining to the federal budget.
The Economic Outlook
The economic recovery that began in the middle of 2009 appears to have strengthened in the past
few months, although the unemployment rate remains high. The initial phase of the recovery, which
occurred in the second half of 2009 and in early 2010, was in large part attributable to the
stabilization of the financial system, the effects of expansionary monetary and fiscal policies, and
the strong boost to production from businesses rebuilding their depleted inventories. But economic
growth slowed significantly last spring and concerns about the durability of the recovery intensified
as the impetus from inventory building and fiscal stimulus diminished and as Europe's fiscal and
banking problems roiled global financial markets.
More recently, however, we have seen increased evidence that a self-sustaining recovery in
consumer and business spending may be taking hold. Notably, real consumer spending rose at an
annual rate of more than 4 percent in the fourth quarter. Although strong sales of motor vehicles
accounted for a significant portion of this pickup, the recent gains in consumer spending appear
reasonably broad based. Business investment in new equipment and software increased robustly
throughout much of last year, as firms replaced aging equipment and as the demand for their
products and services expanded. Construction remains weak, though, reflecting an overhang of
vacant and foreclosed homes and continued poor fundamentals for most types of commercial real
estate. Overall, improving household and business confidence, accommodative monetary policy,
and more-supportive financial conditions, including an apparently increasing willingness of banks to
lend, seem likely to result in a more rapid pace of economic recovery in 2011 than we saw last year.
While indicators of spending and production have been encouraging on balance, the job market has
improved only slowly. Following the loss of about 8-3/4 million jobs from 2008 through 2009,
private-sector employment expanded by a little more than 1 million in 2010. However, this gain was
barely sufficient to accommodate the inflow of recent graduates and other new entrants to the labor
force and, therefore, not enough to significantly erode the wide margin of slack that remains in our
labor market. Notable declines in the unemployment rate in December and January, together with
improvement in indicators of job openings and firms' hiring plans, do provide some grounds for
optimism on the employment front. Even so, with output growth likely to be moderate for a while
and with employers reportedly still reluctant to add to their payrolls, it will be several years before
the unemployment rate has returned to a more normal level. Until we see a sustained period of
stronger job creation, we cannot consider the recovery to be truly established.
On the inflation front, we have recently seen increases in some highly visible prices, notably for
gasoline. Indeed, prices of many industrial and agricultural commodities have risen lately, largely as
a result of the very strong demand from fast-growing emerging market economies, coupled, in some
cases, with constraints on supply. Nonetheless, overall inflation is still quite low and longer-term
inflation expectations have remained stable. Over the 12 months ending in December, prices for all
the goods and services consumed by households (as measured by the price index for personal
consumption expenditures) increased by only 1.2 percent, down from 2.4 percent over the prior 12
months. To assess underlying trends in inflation, economists also follow several alternative
measures of inflation; one such measure is so-called core inflation, which excludes the more volatile
food and energy components and therefore can be a better predictor of where overall inflation is
headed. Core inflation was only 0.7 percent in 2010, compared with around 2-1/2 percent in 2007,
the year before the recession began. Wage growth has slowed as well, with average hourly earnings
increasing only 1.7 percent last year. These downward trends in wage and price inflation are not
surprising, given the substantial slack in the economy.
Monetary Policy
Although the growth rate of economic activity appears likely to pick up this year, the unemployment
rate probably will remain elevated for some time. In addition, inflation is expected to persist below
the levels that Federal Reserve policymakers have judged to be consistent over the longer term with
our statutory mandate to foster maximum employment and price stability. Under such conditions,
the Federal Reserve would typically ease monetary policy by reducing its target for the federal funds
rate. However, the target range for the federal funds rate has been near zero since December 2008,
leaving essentially no room for further reductions. As a consequence, since then we have been using
alternative tools to provide additional monetary accommodation. In particular, over the past two
years the Federal Reserve has further eased monetary conditions by purchasing longer-term
securities--specifically, Treasury, agency, and agency mortgage-backed securities--on the open
market. These purchases are settled through the banking system, with the result that depository
institutions now hold a very high level of reserve balances with the Federal Reserve.
Although large-scale purchases of longer-term securities are a different monetary policy tool than
the more familiar approach of targeting the federal funds rate, the two types of policies affect the
economy in similar ways. Conventional monetary policy easing works by lowering market
expectations for the future path of short-term interest rates, which, in turn, reduces the current level
of longer-term interest rates and contributes to an easing in broader financial conditions. These
changes, by reducing borrowing costs and raising asset prices, bolster household and business
spending and thus increase economic activity. By comparison, the Federal Reserve's purchases of
longer-term securities do not affect very short-term interest rates, which remain close to zero, but
instead put downward pressure directly on longer-term interest rates. By easing conditions in credit
and financial markets, these actions encourage spending by households and businesses through
essentially the same channels as conventional monetary policy, thereby strengthening the economic
recovery. Indeed, a wide range of market indicators suggest that the Federal Reserve's securities
purchases have been effective at easing financial conditions, lending credence to the view that these
actions are providing significant support to job creation and economic growth.1
My colleagues and I have said that we will review the asset purchase program regularly in light of
incoming information and will adjust it as needed to promote maximum employment and stable
prices. In particular, we remain unwaveringly committed to price stability, and we are confident that
we have the tools to be able to smoothly and effectively exit from the current highly accommodative
policy stance at the appropriate time. Our ability to pay interest on reserve balances held at the
Federal Reserve Banks will allow us to put upward pressure on short-term market interest rates and
thus to tighten monetary policy when needed, even if bank reserves remain high. Moreover, we have
developed additional tools that will allow us to drain or immobilize bank reserves as needed to
facilitate the smooth withdrawal of policy accommodation when conditions warrant. If necessary,
we could also tighten policy by redeeming or selling securities.
As I am appearing before the Budget Committee, it is worth emphasizing that the Fed's purchases of
longer-term securities are not comparable to ordinary government spending. In executing these
transactions, the Federal Reserve acquires financial assets, not goods and services; thus, these
purchases do not add to the government's deficit or debt. Ultimately, at the appropriate time, the
Federal Reserve will normalize its balance sheet by selling these assets back into the market or by
allowing them to run off. In the interim, the interest that the Federal Reserve earns from its
securities holdings adds to the Fed's remittances to the Treasury; in 2009 and 2010, those
remittances totaled about $125 billion.
Fiscal Policy
Fiscal policymakers also face significant challenges. Our nation's fiscal position has deteriorated
appreciably since the onset of the financial crisis and the recession. To a significant extent, this
deterioration is the result of the effects of the weak economy on revenues and outlays, along with
the actions that the Administration and the Congress took to ease the recession and steady financial
markets. However, even after economic and financial conditions return to normal, the federal budget
will remain on an unsustainable path, with the budget gap becoming increasingly large over time,
unless the Congress enacts significant changes in fiscal programs.
For example, under plausible assumptions about how fiscal policies might evolve in the absence of
major legislative changes, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects the deficit to fall from
its current level of about 9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) to 5 percent of GDP by 2015,
but then to rise to about 6-1/2 percent of GDP by the end of the decade.2In subsequent years, the
budget situation is projected to deteriorate even more rapidly, with federal debt held by the public
reaching almost 90 percent of GDP by 2020 and 150 percent by 2030, up from about 60 percent at
the end of fiscal year 2010.
The long-term fiscal challenges confronting the nation are especially daunting because they are
mostly the product of powerful underlying trends, not short-term or temporary factors. The two
most important driving forces behind the budget deficit are the aging of the population and rapidly
rising health-care costs. Indeed, the CBO projects that federal spending for health-care programs
will roughly double as a percentage of GDP over the next 25 years.3The ability to control health-
care spending, while still providing high-quality care to those who need it, will be critical for
bringing the federal budget onto a sustainable path.
The CBO's long-term budget projections, by design, do not account for the likely adverse economic
effects of such high debt and deficits. But if government debt and deficits were actually to grow at
the pace envisioned, the economic and financial effects would be severe. Sustained high rates of
government borrowing would both drain funds away from private investment and increase our debt
to foreigners, with adverse long-run effects on U.S. output, incomes, and standards of living.
Moreover, diminishing investor confidence that deficits will be brought under control would
ultimately lead to sharply rising interest rates on government debt and, potentially, to broader
financial turmoil. In a vicious circle, high and rising interest rates would cause debt-service
payments on the federal debt to grow even faster, resulting in further increases in the debt-to-GDP
ratio and making fiscal adjustment all the more difficult.
In thinking about achieving fiscal sustainability, it is useful to apply the concept of the primary
budget deficit, which is the government budget deficit excluding interest payments on the national
debt. To stabilize the ratio of federal debt to the GDP--a useful benchmark for assessing fiscal
sustainability--the primary budget deficit must be reduced to zero.4Under the CBO projection that I
noted earlier, the primary budget deficit is expected to be 2 percent of GDP in 2015 and then rise to
almost 3 percent of GDP in 2020 and 6 percent of GDP in 2030. These projections provide a gauge
of the adjustments that will be necessary to attain fiscal sustainability. To put the budget on a
sustainable trajectory, policy actions--either reductions in spending, increases in revenues, or some
combination of the two--will have to be taken to eventually close these primary budget gaps.
By definition, the unsustainable trajectories of deficits and debt that the CBO outlines cannot
actually happen, because creditors would never be willing to lend to a government with debt,
relative to national income, that is rising without limit. One way or the other, fiscal adjustments
sufficient to stabilize the federal budget must occur at some point. The question is whether these
adjustments will take place through a careful and deliberative process that weighs priorities and
gives people adequate time to adjust to changes in government programs or tax policies, or whether
the needed fiscal adjustments will come as a rapid and painful response to a looming or actual fiscal
crisis. Acting now to develop a credible program to reduce future deficits would not only enhance
economic growth and stability in the long run, but could also yield substantial near-term benefits in
terms of lower long-term interest rates and increased consumer and business confidence. Plans
recently put forward by the President's National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform
and other prominent groups provide useful starting points for a much-needed national conversation.
Although these proposals differ on many details, they demonstrate that realistic solutions to our
fiscal problems do exist.
Of course, economic growth is affected not only by the levels of taxes and spending, but also by
their composition and structure. I hope that, in addressing our long-term fiscal challenges, the
Congress and the Administration will undertake reforms to the government's tax policies and
spending priorities that serve not only to reduce the deficit, but also to enhance the long-term growth
potential of our economy--for example, by reducing disincentives to work and to save, by
encouraging investment in the skills of our workforce as well as new machinery and equipment, by
promoting research and development, and by providing necessary public infrastructure. Our nation
cannot reasonably expect to grow its way out of our fiscal imbalances, but a more productive
economy will ease the tradeoffs that we face.
Thank you. I would be pleased to take your questions.
1. For example, in August 2010 we announced our policy of reinvesting principal payments on
agency debt and agency-guaranteed mortgage-backed securities in longer-term Treasury securities
and signaled that we were considering additional purchases of longer-term Treasury securities.
Since then, equity prices have risen significantly, volatility in the equity market has fallen, corporate
bond spreads have narrowed, and inflation compensation as measured in the market for inflation-
indexed securities has risen from low to more normal levels. Yields on 5- to 10-year Treasury
securities initially declined markedly as markets priced in prospective Fed purchases; these yields
subsequently rose, however, as investors became more optimistic about economic growth and as
traders scaled back their expectations of future securities purchases. All of these developments are
what one would expect to see when monetary policy becomes more accommodative, whether
through conventional or less conventional means. Interestingly, these developments are also
remarkably similar to those that occurred during the earlier episode of policy easing, notably in the
months following our March 2009 announcement of a significant expansion in securities purchases.
Return to text
2. This alternative fiscal policy scenario, which assumes, among other things, that most of the tax
cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 are made permanent and that discretionary fiscal outlays rise at the
same rate as gross domestic product, is presented in Congressional Budget Office (2010), The Long-
Term Budget Outlook (Washington: CBO, June (revised August)). Return to text
3. See the two long-term scenarios for mandatory federal spending on health care shown in figure 2-
3, p. 39, in CBO, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, in note 2. Return to text
4. This result requires that the nominal rate of interest paid on government debt equals the rate of
growth of nominal GDP, a condition that might plausibly be expected to hold over time. If the
interest rate on government debt is higher than the growth rate of nominal GDP, as might happen if
creditors become wary of lending, then a primary budget surplus rather than primary balance would
be needed to stabilize the ratio of debt to GDP. Return to text
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Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2011, February 8). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20110209_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20110209_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20110209_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}