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Cathy E. Minehan, President and Chief Executive Officer,
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Hartford, Connecticut
January 3, 2003
It's a pleasure to be with you this morning. I have
always enjoyed participating in this Conference with
its "first of the New Year" perspectives.
In that regard, I took out the speech I gave here
the last time I participated--that was in January 2000.
I read the speech with a sense of wonderment--am I living
in the same economy, no, on the same planet, as I was
when I gave that speech three years ago? That January,
one of my biggest concerns was the absence of problems.
Y2K? No big deal. In fact, many were questioning whether
those of us involved in planning and overseeing that
technical transformation hadn't hyped the seriousness
of the issue. The economy? Rates of growth, low inflation
and unemployment not to mention stock market multiples
all were remarkable, and with hindsight overdone, but
both the markets and the Federal Reserve had begun to
tighten credit conditions, so things seemed in hand
there as well.
But that was then, and this is now. Y2K was a problem,
but not in the sense we thought it might be. With the
benefit of hindsight, what Y2K really did was to help
spur technology spending in such a way as to make some
in the high-tech industries and elsewhere believe that
40 percent annual real rates of growth in equipment
and software were, if not absolutely normal, then certainly
more like normal than the rates of growth earlier in
the decade. And, as for an economy that needed restraint,
in January 2000 we were only a couple of months away
from the sharp recognition in the stock markets that
those 40 percent rates of real growth were not only
not normal, they were unwise and unsustainable.
And I would be totally remiss if I did not mention
developments which, at the time, were completely off
my radar screen--and most everyone else's I think. Most
significantly, the possibility of something unthinkable
like the tragedy of September 11, with its aftermath
of heightened geopolitical tensions and risks. And,
one cannot forget the impact of our more home-grown
financial and governance scandals, which can be summed
up simply by names such as Enron, Tyco, and World Com,
companies that were virtual icons in January 2000.
Yes, that was then and this is now. Today we face
an economy marked by uncertainty about matters large
and small. Which reports about holiday consumer spending
do we believe? When will companies resume capital spending
and hiring? After an unusual three years of losses,
will stock market gains help investors recoup some of
their lost wealth? And what impact would a war with
Iraq, if one should occur, have on our economy? I don’t
have many answers here, but I do want to provide some
perspectives on the issues involved.
In doing so, I want to touch on three aspects of the
current economic situation that I believe have some
importance as we assess future prospects. First, the
U.S. economy has proven remarkably resilient over the
last several years, and, in my view, is likely to stay
so. Second, as we consider the current slow pace of
recovery from the '01 recession, some amount of patience
and a bit of perspective really are virtues. And, finally,
I want to share some thoughts on current price trends--inflation,
disinflation, and the dreaded deflation. Let me elaborate.
We always knew the world was a dangerous place,
but collectively we had little real understanding of
how dangerous it could be here on our own soil until
September 11, 2001. This realization influenced international
politics and day-to-day security arrangements in this
country and threatened the economy as well. In the aftermath
of the tragedy, both consumers and businesses have displayed
remarkable willingness to continue life as normally
as possible in the face of a diminished sense of domestic
security. But the impact on our collective sense of
risk is real.
Heightened geopolitical uncertainty has no doubt been
partly responsible for an atmosphere of business caution
that, in turn, has restrained hiring and investment
activity. This uncertainty has been reflected in standard
measures of business and consumer confidence, and in
the elevated premia that financial markets initially
priced into all but the very highest-grade investments.
Recently, credit spreads have narrowed and confidence
has improved, but uncertainty lingers.
As we look forward, a key concern is that geopolitical
events, or even a heightened probability of such events,
might undermine consumer and investor confidence. In
this sense, FDR’s assertion that "the only thing
we have to fear is fear itself" may be as true
today as it was then. So it is important that now, more
than ever, we not lose sight of the ability of the U.S.
economy to weather disruptions and disturbances.
Just within the past five years, the economy has
exhibited this resilience by weathering several serious
economic "storms." At the time, the fear was
that each of these storms might precipitate a recession.
Both the economic typhoons in emerging market economies,
and the maelstrom of Long Term Capital Management in
the fall of 1998 had the potential to severely weaken
the U.S. economy. Despite these developments, however,
the U.S. economy held up very well. A decline in exports
related to these crises subtracted almost two percentage
points from real GDP growth but domestic spending was
unfazed by the turmoil abroad. Such spending grew strongly
enough to propel GDP growth in excess of 4 percent for
all of 1998 and 1999.
Since early 2000, the economy has survived a string
of upheavals—the collapse of the equity market bubble;
the attacks of September 11, and the recent scandals
in corporate governance. These upheavals set in motion
a broad retrenchment in business and consumer spending
and confidence. To be sure, this pushed the economy
into recession in 2001. But the depth of that recession,
viewed in the context of other post-war recessions,
was relatively mild. And even during the recession,
consumer spending on motor vehicles, other durable goods,
and housing remained remarkably well sustained.
But perhaps the best gauge of the economy’s resilience
and of its potential response to any future geopolitical
disruptions was the reaction to the 9/11 attacks. Just
before that date, the economy was tentatively regaining
its footing. Immediately following the attacks, most
all private forecasters foresaw a collapse in consumer
confidence that would significantly curtail spending.
A common forecast at that time for the last quarter
of 2001 envisioned a 2 percent contraction in real spending.
However, that contraction did not happen. Consumer
confidence did fall, but not nearly to the degree expected
by forecasters. Retail sales were interrupted, but only
temporarily. And in the last quarter of 2001, GDP grew
2.7 percent. But even that number understates the strength
of the economy at year-end 2001, as growth in final
sales was partly offset by a significant drop in the
pace of inventory accumulation—final sales surged at
better than 4 percent in the last quarter of that year.
Thus, I believe one key to assessing prospects for
the U.S. economy in 2003 is never to underestimate the
resilience of the U.S. economy: its dynamism; the flexibility
of its labor and product markets to respond quickly
to a variety of situations, and the basic optimism of
its consumers and businesses. This has been bolstered,
I think, by the almost uninterrupted 20-year period
of growth that preceded the 2001 recession. The combination
of strong growth, low unemployment, and stable prices
in the latter years of that period was about as good
as the U.S. economy gets. This record of success, and
all that was done in both the public and private sectors
to engender it, taught all of us more than a few lessons
about how the economy can function. The legacy of that
success is one reason I think we can continue to bet
on U.S. economic resilience.
Thus, as some of the uncertainty surrounding potential
geopolitical disruptions lifts, as I hope it will, I
expect businesses to resume a more normal pattern of
hiring and capital spending. Over time, that dynamic
should allow the economy to regain strength and, in
the process, provide for improvements in labor market
conditions.
Let me turn now to the need for patience and perspective.
As you no doubt know, the economy appears to have expanded
by something less than 3 percent over the four quarters
of 2002. This is a respectable rate of growth for a
mature industrial country, and in fact exceeds growth
over the same period for every other industrial country.
The problem is this rate of growth feels very slow to
all of us who lived through the nineties. And this modest
pace has gone hand-in-hand with zero net growth in employment
over the same period.
Modest output growth without job creation creates an
uneasy combination for the future. Certainly the so-called
"soft patch" we have been going through brings with
it concerns about how long and how soft that patch might
be. But the business decisions that lie behind this
combination bode well, not poorly, for the future, although
they do present near-term challenges.
It is clear that firms have been abnormally reluctant
to hire and to invest in more capital during this recovery.
In part this is because of the geopolitical uncertainties
I noted earlier. It also reflects the overhang of capacity
that is the legacy of the spending binge of the nineties.
But even more importantly, business hiring plans reflect
concerns about the modest pace of demand growth during
this recovery, and continuing domestic and global competitive
pressures. In response to these concerns, firms have
figured out how to meet slowly growing demand with a
stable stock of workers. What this means is that they
have found ways to become increasingly more productive,
either through improvements in process, or through improved
use of technology.
Firms’ ability to innovate in these ways has helped
them to contain costs and to move gradually toward better
profitability without raising prices. That gradual re-building
process has to play out and we need to be patient while
it does so. In the long run, this focus on efficiency
bodes well for sustained productivity growth, with all
that can mean for solid progress in real incomes and
firm profitability, as well as price stability. But
in the short run, this intense focus on costs and its
implications for employment can exert a drag on the
recovery, and create its own uncertainty for consumers.
Businesses also need to cope with the overhang of excess
capacity. Over-investment in capital goods, especially
telecommunications, aided and abetted by the bubble
atmosphere of the late '90s, spurred the capital investment
collapse that led the economy into recession. The financial
upheaval that followed affected the ability and the
desire of firms to invest. Recent data on investment,
however, are consistent with gradual improvement. Spending
on equipment and software grew in the second and third
quarters of last year and available data suggest that
the expansion continued in the fourth quarter. Data
on new orders for non-defense capital goods, while bouncy,
also suggest modest growth for the future. To be sure,
not all the news is good. New orders for semiconductors
have fallen recently, and the commercial real estate
sector remains moribund, with vacancy rates and excess
capacity high, and rents falling. But overall, it looks
to me as if business plans to gradually improve efficiency
and address excess capacity are proceeding apace and
should provide the foundation for continued growth in
investment in 2003.
Consumers have their own restructuring to do as
well. At the height of the boom, consumer savings rates
dropped to near zero, as the wealth gain in their stock
market holdings promised a bright future. Household
net worth doubled in the '90s encouraging a "spend now"
mentality. Now with the demise of equity markets, household
net worth has declined and consumer saving rates are
up. This is a positive trend, but it does suggest that
consumer income growth will be a larger factor in supporting
consumption than earlier.
So far in the recovery household spending has been
buoyed as well by increases in net holdings of housing
wealth. Of course, households borrowed extensively to
increase that wealth, but even when increased mortgage
obligations are taken into account, housing wealth grew
significantly. And in this environment of low interest
rates, mortgage refinancings and home equity loans have
both moderated the debt burden of consumers and added
significant amounts of cash to their pocketbooks. Clearly
this process cannot continue forever, and in the second
half of last year housing price increases moderated,
though the pipeline for mortgage refinancing remains
relatively full. Consumer income growth has been positive,
however, and available data for the fourth quarter suggest
that, so far, consumer spending is still hanging in
there.
To be sure, there has been some doom and gloom about
holiday spending, but not all the data are in yet and
some of this may simply reflect unrealistic expectations.
Swings in auto sales likely will make last year's Q4
consumption look slow, and whether or not consumer confidence
has declined depends on which release you look at. Overall,
however, I do not think the data suggest the year ended
on a spending downturn.
In my view, consumption should continue to be reasonably
solid. Equity markets have stabilized a bit in recent
months, and this should help to moderate the wealth
effect drag on consumer confidence and spending. The
level of housing wealth remains high, and with some
modest increase in business hiring, incomes should continue
to expand sufficiently to maintain both some spending
and an increased savings rate. These fundamentals suggest
a moderate expansion of consumption in 2003. Combined
with increased business investment over the year, GDP
is likely to be expanding by the end of the year at
a rate that approaches what economists call potential--between
3 and 3.5 percent by our calculations.
Thus, it looks to me as if the recovery is well
positioned to continue, moderately but steadily. We
just need to have some patience. Both businesses and
consumers need to restructure after the excesses of
the late '90s. Geopolitical risks and other uncertainties
exist but the added stimulus of the Federal Reserve's
recent easing, continued fiscal stimulus, and improved
capital markets are all working to support the economy.
Yes, the waxing and waning of this slow recovery has
produced a "soft patch." However, a bit of patience
and perspective about this can only help the process
of emerging from that patch.
This takes me to the final aspect of our current situation--the
very low rate of inflationary growth. Some believe this
could turn to negative price growth--not disinflation
but deflation. The prospect for significant movements
in prices, up or down, obviously brings with it concerns
for policymakers, but absent the short-term effects
of oil price changes, I, for one, do not believe significant
movements are likely in either direction. For right
now anyway, it seems to me that the fundamentals of
the economy work in the direction of more rather than
less stability in the inflation rate.
Why do I say that? First, I expect that growth over
the next couple of years or so will be such that we
will see a continued pattern of very low but positive
rates of inflation. As resources are more fully used
here and around the world with slowly expanding global
growth, the downward pressure on price levels that comes
from diminished demand should ease. Second, recent history
suggests that inflation may be less responsive to resource
utilization than it was a decade ago or more. Inflation
rose only slowly in the high flying days of the late
'90s, and it has fallen more slowly in the face of growing
resource underutilization than it might have a decade
ago or more. So, even in the short run while we work
off excess capacity, I do not expect to see a large
change in inflationary growth.
Third, some have interpreted a fall in the price of
manufactured goods as evidence of incipient deflation.
But deflation is a general decline in all prices, not
just goods. And while many goods prices have declined,
services prices have been rising by 3 percent or more
for years. In fact, rising prices for things like medical
services and insurance are worrisome as they could be
a drag on the current rate of economic growth.
More importantly, one key reason goods prices are declining
is that productivity in the goods-producing sector has
risen dramatically. Rising productivity is a good thing—it
raises real incomes over time, and provides goods more
cheaply to all consumers. It would be a far different
matter if all goods prices were falling, because overall
demand fell well short of our potential to produce.
It would be even worse if falling demand were accompanied
by a dysfunctional financial system that acts to frustrate
the growth process. Such was the problem in the thirties
in this country, and is some part of the situation in
Japan. This is not the case in the United States, and
both the health of our banking system and the resilience
of the economy I spoke of earlier suggest it will not
be the case. Central bank vigilance related to price
movements that can produce either inflation or deflation
is always important, but I do not believe such movements
are a major concern for the near term.
The fundamentals suggest the long run view of the economy
remains highly positive. Productivity growth has been
a pleasant surprise from the mid-1990s through today,
and its growth through this recession has been outstanding.
As I noted before, the recent increase is, in part,
due to the short-term uncertainty of firms about future
prospects, and given the likelihood of very slow Q4
GDP data for last year, our next productivity "surprise"
may well be the softness in that quarter's data. However,
as good annual numbers continue to pile up, estimates
of long-run growth in productivity are rising. With
that change comes the potential for larger increases
in standards of living for all of us.
Turning to developments in the region, the New England
economy has been moving more or less in parallel with
the national economy during the current slowdown. In
recent months, not unlike the nation, the region’s recovery
has paused – we seem to be "bouncing along the
bottom." Some indicators continue to deteriorate
and some are improving. The region’s payrolls have mostly
declined on a month-to-month basis this year, and none
of the region’s industries aside from government are
showing more than marginal job gains. Manufacturing
has shed jobs steadily since the recession began, while
sectors such as services, retail, finance, and construction
are alternating small job additions and cutbacks on
a month-to-month basis.
Despite this, the region’s unemployment rate remains
well below the national average, at 4.7 percent in November.
Like the nation as a whole, the regional jobless rate
has shown small increases and decreases month to month,
but the trend still seems to be slightly upward. Residential
real estate markets in New England have remained relatively
strong, but commercial real estate markets in the region
are flat at best, and metro-Boston’s office market is
quite weak and still retrenching. Incomes, especially
wages and salaries, have softened markedly in the region,
with negative effects on both government and household
budgets.
New England’s outlook remains uncertain. The region’s
recovery depends to a large degree on the timing and
pace of the national recovery. But because of the region’s
concentration in high technology investment goods and
related technology services, its prospects are contingent
on improvements in business spending nationally. And
the current nationwide weakness in telecom, computers,
and technology services suggests New England may lag
the nation’s recovery, though its leadership in biotech
and health care more generally is likely to act as a
buffer. Surveys by the Associated Industries of Massachusetts
and the University of Massachusetts leading economic
index are just starting to suggest that an expansion
may begin in the next six months. Nonetheless, unlike
the structural adjustments the region experienced in
the 1989-91 period, the current regional slowdown is
aligned with the nation’s cyclical downturn and can
be counted on to reverse as recovery takes hold in the
nation.
To sum up, on the national scene I believe the
combination of inherent economic resiliency, patience
and perspective on all our parts, and a tendency toward
more rather than less stable price movements will lead
to an improving economic picture for both New England
and the nation in 2003. This forecast, such as it is,
is not without its risks, the most important of which
are geopolitical rather than economic. It also may be
a bit longer before we in New England see the light
at the end of the tunnel. But I believe that light is
there.
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