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by
Cathy E. Minehan, President and Chief Executive Officer,
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
World Trade Center, Boston, Massachusetts
February 12, 2001
It is a pleasure to be with you
this morning to kick-off of your timely conference.
I'd like to thank Gian Camuzzi, treasurer of Gillette,
for asking me to speak to this international group.
As it turns out, you are a perfect audience to engage
in thinking about a topic of some interest to us in
the Federal Reserve -- what does the prospect, or at
least the possibility, of significant U.S. fiscal surpluses
in the next decade, and a related decrease in the value
of U.S. Treasury securities outstanding, mean for how
money markets here in the U.S. and worldwide deal with
issues of liquidity and risk. But before we get into
that, let me first give you my perspective on the prospects
for the U.S. economy.
It goes without saying that,
after four barn-burner years and a decade of rising
rates of expansion, the US economy slowed significantly
at the end of last year. In many ways, this slowdown
is not surprising--most forecasters had seen a less
severe version of it coming, albeit incorrectly, at
the beginning of each of the previous three years. And,
as each year, and especially 1999, proved better than
the last, an eventual slowing in growth seemed more
likely. In fact, some deceleration was necessary. From
the second half of 1999 through the first half of 2000,
U.S. GDP grew at better than a 6 percent pace. That
rate of expansion was rapidly straining capacity, as
evidenced by the decline in the unemployment rate over
this period. In fact, labor markets were getting so
tight that it was nearly impossible to find the workers
needed to sustain that rate of growth. It is in just
such an environment that inflation tends to rise.
I think most would agree that
this rapid expansion of demand was simply unsustainable.
One need look no further than motor vehicles to find
a market in which the growth in demand had outstripped
previous concepts of long-run sustainability. In the
first quarter of last year, motor vehicle sales hit
the unprecedented rate of over 18 million units a year-a
few million over the recent average. At that pace, I
wonder if the U.S. was about to run out of driveway
space. This largely reflected an adjustment to the increased
level of wealth and income of U.S. households at the
end of the millennium, the confidence they had as a
result of higher wealth and income, and their willingness
to save less out of disposable income than ever before.
Inevitably, these trends had to slow.
The investment boom of the
1990s was also unsustainable. Until the second half
of this year, business fixed investment had grown at
solid double digit rates for at least the previous 4
years, and spending on computer equipment and software
had grown at an amazing 45 percent. Although most expansions
have spurts in overall investment of a similar magnitude,
not since the 1960s have we had a burst that lasted
as long. Technological improvements in computing power,
software, and telecommunications increased firms' demand
for these goods. And, no doubt, continued technological
improvements will help propel such investment in the
future. But the rates of investment in the late '90s,
fed by ebullient consumer demand and accommodating financial
markets, could not continue when demand flattened, and
markets became more discriminating.
Residential investment also
outpaced its long-run fundamentals at the beginning
of last year. Starts and permits hit their cyclical
peaks at the beginning of 1999 - a level roughly equal
to past cyclical highs. At that pace, the stock of homes
was increasing significantly faster than households
were being formed. Again, a trend supported for a time
by rising consumer wealth and confidence, but not sustainable
over the longer run.
At the beginning of last year,
I believed that the question was not whether the economy
was going to slow down, but what the environment would
look like when it did. The slowdown could occur with
a glut of new homes, high office vacancy rates, and
significant over-investment in unused business equipment
and consumer durables, or it could occur when these
stocks were closer to their desired levels. Obviously
the latter case is preferred.
To help attain this better-balanced
environment, the Federal Reserve began tightening monetary
policy in the middle of 1999. By the beginning of 2000,
other sources of increasing restraint became evident
as well. Financial markets became far less expansionary.
Uncertainty about profit projections resulted in declines
in asset values, particularly in the high tech sector.
Credit markets, which had never returned to the headiness
of the 1997 global pre-crisis period, became even more
discriminating in early 2000. Yield spreads, particularly
for lower-rated securities, widened considerably in
the spring and again in the fall. Lending standards
at major commercial banks tightened as well. The increase
in the price of oil, which continued through much of
2000, and, more importantly, price increases in natural
gas, began to bite into the real incomes of consumers,
and the profits of businesses. These events both signaled
and helped cause the second half slowdown.
However, the suddenness and
intensity of the deceleration took almost everyone by
surprise. Growth averaged 1.7 percent in the second
half of last year, less than one-third the 6 percent
average in the 4 quarters prior to that. Some ask whether
or not the economy is or will be in recession, but in
many ways that is the wrong question. The economy may
well be growing, albeit quite slowly, but for those
hard hit by this sudden slowdown--the manufacturing
sector especially--this deceleration clearly is painful.
A number of explanations for
the intensity of this slowdown have been highlighted
in the press. Consumer demand slowed more sharply than
anyone expected, driven in part by the effect on confidence
of sharp drops in the NASDAQ. Moreover, since the consumption
of durable goods, especially motor vehicles, declined
most significantly, it may be that consumers finally
reached their "saturation" levels of these goods. Finally,
stormy weather throughout most of the country in December
and early January had an effect as well.
A similar story may apply to
the decline in firms' investment in plant and equipment.
In the wake of extraordinary spending growth on equipment,
and reflecting tighter credit and financial markets,
firms may have grown concerned about over-investment.
Reports of sharp curtailment in the motor vehicle industry
may have triggered the reassessment of consumer attitudes
in December. In turn, this may have spread the narrow
weakness in motor vehicles to broader spending categories.
Finally, the rapid change from very strong to slumping
sales growth likely led to an unexpected overstocking
of inventories.
This inventory overhang and
the related retrenchment in business and consumer attitudes
pose challenges for the U.S. economy in the short run.
But in many ways, the economy is better positioned to
weather these short-run adjustments than it was in previous
periods of weakness.
First, the major positive force
that has propelled this historic expansion is still
with us--the amazing acceleration in U.S. productivity.
The development of and investment in new technologies
to enhance business processes has provided a tremendous
spur to productivity growth. Even as such investment
slowed in late 2000, productivity remained surprisingly
strong. This gives further evidence to the assessment
that the underlying, or structural, growth rate of U.S.
productivity has stepped up significantly over its pace
of the '80s and early '90s. Reflecting this, the sheer
determination on the part of U.S. businesses to work
harder and smarter in the face of domestic and global
competition seems, if anything, stronger now.
Another imbalance that has
preceded almost all post-war recessions has been significantly
rising inflation. However, inflation has been well behaved
recently even in the face of continued, tight labor
markets. Labor costs have accelerated, but core inflation
has remained at a relatively low, stable level. Fluctuations
in oil and natural gas prices will have a transitory
effect on both the headline and core CPIs, but the potential
for broader price increases seems small at present.
Thus, containing inflation is not an immediate concern.
Third, although an inventory
overhang exists in some sectors, just-in-time inventory
processes and rapid production adjustments have probably
limited the buildup. These processes should help reverse
the overhang more quickly than is usual.
Long expansions often spawn
imbalances in real estate markets. Certainly, significant
overbuilding in commercial real estate was evident by
the end of the 1980s. Vacancy rates for commercial properties
were high and rising before the recession of the early
'90s. Currently, however, vacancy rates in many markets
are low and prices for commercial and residential buildings
are solid. These facts seem inconsistent with significant
overbuilding.
Assets in the banking sector
remain reasonably healthy, especially relative to capital,
despite problems in particular sectors like telecommunications.
Loan standards tightened in 2000, and credit markets
discriminated sharply between investment grade and other
credits, for the most part a desirable and prudent response
to heightened uncertainty about current and future loan
quality.
Unlike the late 1980s as well,
large government budget deficits are not crowding out
private investment, or creating the need for fiscal
austerity. On the contrary, government budgets at both
the national and local level remain supportive.
Finally, of course, the economy
now has 100 basis points of easing in the pipeline.
This may help shore up confidence, creating some rebound
in spending by both firms and consumers. Recent signs
are at least somewhat encouraging here. In these circumstances,
it goes without saying vigilance on the part of the
Federal Reserve is necessary.
Thus, in my view, the economy
is likely to continue feeling the effects this quarter
of a significant but relatively short-lived inventory
correction. The correction is the result of an unexpectedly
rapid adjustment toward more sustainable growth in demand.
The longer-run underpinnings-technology-driven productivity
growth, benign inflation, bank balance sheets, fiscal
balance sheets-appear sound. There are risks for sure,
the level of private savings and the softness in domestic
demand in many foreign economies, to name two. Nonetheless,
I expect activity to increase later in the year, and
growth for the year to average around 2 percent.
One of the major underpinnings
to the decade of expansion in the '90s was the gradual
decline, and eventual elimination, of the U.S. federal
deficit. I don't need to explain the benefits of reduced
government deficits to this audience. For one thing,
lower long term interest rates made possible by a declining
demand by the government for funding figured prominently
in the capital investment boom of the '90s. But it is
easy to forget how hard it was to get to this favorable
situation, and how hard we should work to ensure it
remains .
Not so long ago, the performance
of the U.S. economy was distinctly subpar, particularly
when compared with today. The late '60s to the early
'80s saw four recessions, slow productivity growth,
episodes of double-digit inflation and unemployment,
and a chronic federal deficit which hit a new place-time
high in 1983. After peaking at 6 percent of GDP, the
deficit remained high until 1994. By that year, U.S.
public debt had risen to 67 percent of GDP, also a peace-time
record high.
This build up of deficit and
debt produced a series of legislative efforts to discipline
the budget process. Of particular importance in this
effort was the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, passed
during the previous Bush Administration. This legislation
set caps on three categories of discretionary spending,
it established "pay-as-you-go" procedures requiring
that increases in direct spending or decreases in revenues
due to legislative action be either budget neutral or
reduce the deficit. It also provided some enforcement
mechanisms for both the discretionary caps and "pay-go"
provisions. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1993 extended these provisions through FY 1998.
The last six years of strong
growth, combined with this concerted attention to deficit
reduction by policymakers, changed the federal government's
fiscal balance dramatically. By 1998, the deficit had
vanished. Now the United States is running a surplus
that is nearly 2 percent of GDP, and the ratio of public
debt to GDP has fallen substantially.
Looking ahead, the Congressional
Budget Office projects the U.S. surplus to rise above
5 percent of GDP over the next 10 years. The Social
Security trust fund accounts for just under half of
the coming surpluses, and the on-budget programs account
for the remainder. These projections, by the way, do
not depend on the rate of U.S. economic growth remaining
at the record-breaking pace of the last two years. The
CBO assumes that U.S. growth will average about 3 percent,
inflation (measured by the CPI) will average just below
3 percent, and unemployment will rise to over 5 percent
over the 10-year interval.
If these projected surpluses
are realized, the ratio of public debt to GDP would
continue to fall rapidly. Over the next five years,
the debt could fall below 20 percent of GDP, setting
a new post war record low, and continue to set new records
after that.
As debt falls, so do the outstanding
amounts of marketable U.S. government securities. Indeed,
if the CBO projections are realized, outstanding marketable
Treasury securities could literally be at negligible
levels by 2010.
These projections assume that
the federal government changes neither its existing
spending programs nor tax laws. It may be more realistic
to assume that new fiscal initiatives authorize more
spending, or lower taxes and on-budget surpluses are
exhausted. Nonetheless, substantial Social Security
surpluses remain and the supply of marketable debt falls
substantially even by mid decade. This is, of course,
a near-term situation. As the full baby-boom generation
retires, Social Security and Medicare surpluses disappear
rapidly, but for the next ten or fifteen years, projections
of falling or disappearing levels of debt seem plausible.
Now I should sound a note of
caution here. Projections over periods as long as 10
to 15 years of necessity are surrounded by a wide band
of uncertainty. Many things have to fall just right
for them to be realized. Nonetheless, the possibility
of a shrinking supply of Treasuries must be taken seriously
by all market participants.
This possibility has important
implications for the Federal Reserve. U.S. monetary
policy is implemented largely by buying and selling
Treasury securities. Such securities, of course, pose
no credit risk. But, equally important, trades in these
securities, in the amounts necessary to effect short-term
interest rates, can be made without disrupting activity
or producing substantial increases in bid-asked spreads.
This is because open market desk trades are small relative
to a market that trades hundreds of billions of dollars
of securities each day. Moreover, SOMA holdings of Treasuries
are not large compared to the outstanding supply. Currently,
the System's portfolio of just under $600 billion represents
less than one-sixth of the outstanding supply of marketable
Treasury debt.
But growing surpluses may make
reconsideration of how monetary policy operations are
conducted necessary within the next few years. If the
CBO's projections are realized, in three years the System's
portfolio of Treasuries could absorb about 30 percent
of the marketable debt. Even if the surplus is only
half as big as the CBO projects, within five years the
Fed's holdings could amount to an uncomfortably large
share.
Current conditions in financial
markets already foreshadow the consequences of the shrinking
supply of Treasuries. The levels of U.S. government
debt recently raises issues about the adequacy of the
supply of collateral in markets for repurchase agreements.
These concerns have contributed to a sharp rise in the
prices of longer-term Treasuries and to the inversion
of the yield curve for Treasuries at a time when other
curves remained upward sloping. In so doing, the use
of the 30-year Treasury as a benchmark has been undermined.
These facts suggest that the
breadth, depth, and resiliency of the market for Treasuries
already are affected. In the next few years, the Treasury
market may become too shallow to handle the customary
needs of money managers, investors, and the Fed.
Obviously this is an issue
for the Federal Reserve, but the challenges facing U.S.
monetary authorities are only a small part of a larger
concern. U.S. Treasuries form the backbone not just
of domestic monetary policy, but of liquidity and value
in money markets worldwide. Foreign ownership of Treasury
securities reached 34 percent last year, and daily market
trading in U.S. government securities is a mainstay
of global money management. The System Open Market Account
is only a small player on a daily basis in these markets.
If SOMA needs to change, so will all the players in
these markets--so will all of you as you manage funds
for corporate treasuries. And as you change, so will
the markets themselves.
In that regard, let me pose
some of the same questions to you that the System has
begun to confront. How will you manage your need to
place funds easily and securely overnight? What new
instruments will be needed to serve the needs of risk-averse
customers and money managers? What security will be
used as a benchmark for building and pricing portfolios?
Will the emerging practice of using Government Agency
Securities and SWAP transactions as benchmarks be sufficient?
And what new, or modified clearing and settlement systems
will be needed to replicate the size, liquidity and
finality of the current Treasury market? As participants
in the markets, we will need to work together to answer
these questions. And we should not forget, demanding
as it might be, the need to address these questions
reflects good things--fiscal discipline, some success
in monetary policy, a measure of good fortune, and the
underlying strength of the U.S. economy in recent years.
In closing, let me reiterate
my belief in that strength and in the inherent resiliency
of the U.S. economy. The short run may challenge all
of us but with wise policy choices and considerable
vigilance these challenges can be met.
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