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President's Speech
Speech to the Joint Rotary
Clubs of Reno and the East Bay (SF Bay Area)
Reno, Nevada
By Janet L. Yellen, President and CEO, Federal Reserve
Bank of
San Francisco
For delivery January 22, 2007, 12:20 PM Pacific time,
3:20 PM Eastern
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PDF Version (37KB)
The U.S. Economy in 2007: Prospects and Puzzles
Good afternoon, everyone. I was very pleased to receive
your invitation to speak to the Rotary Club of Reno, because
it gives me a chance to visit an important part of our District
and to meet with area businesspeople. The Federal Reserve
places a high priority on communication, and I definitely
see that as a two-way street. Although I anticipate holding
the floor for a full half hour, I am also very interested
in hearing your observations on economic conditions, both
nationally and locally.
My remarks today will center on recent developments affecting
employment, output, and inflation in the U.S. economy and
what they may portend for the future and
especially for the conduct of monetary policy. In doing so, I will spend some
time focusing on an emerging puzzle in the data: why is the labor market apparently
going gangbusters, while growth in real GDP has turned in only a middling performance
on average in recent quarters?
Before I begin, let me note that my comments represent
my own views and not necessarily those of my colleagues in
the Federal Reserve System.
In describing the economy’s recent growth performance as “middling,” as
I just did, I was not making a pejorative judgment. On the contrary, this relatively
modest pace of growth is roughly what I would have expected, given the course
of monetary policy. As you no doubt remember, the Federal Open Market Committee
began to remove monetary stimulus in mid-2004, after a long stretch of keeping
the federal funds rate—our main policy tool—at a very low level.
Altogether, there were 17 quarter-point increases in the funds rate over about
two years. During much of that time, the economy averaged solid growth, and the
labor market tightened, with unemployment declining about a full percentage point
to 4.5 percent, an exceptionally low level by historical standards. The object
of the policy tightening was to slow the economy’s growth to a more sustainable
pace and to foster a gradual decline in inflation, promoting price stability.
In August of last year, the Committee voted to “pause,” that is,
not to raise the funds rate another quarter point, but to leave it at 5¼ percent.
By then, some of the effects of the earlier increases were being felt, as the
economy showed signs of slowing, and this gave some sense of reassurance that
inflation was likely to moderate from an elevated level. The aim of these policy
moves, to my mind, at least, was thus to set the economy on a glide path for
the proverbial “soft landing”—an orderly slowing of growth
that avoids the risk of a severe downturn while producing enough slack in labor
and goods markets to relieve inflationary pressures and, indeed, to bring inflation
down gradually to a more acceptable level than it has registered over the prior
year or so.
In large measure, the economy has moved within range of
this outcome. Since the stepwise increases in the funds rate
began, short- and intermediate-term interest
rates have risen substantially. For example, Treasury bill rates are up by
more than 3½ percentage points from mid-2004. It’s true that long-term
rates, including conventional mortgages, are actually down a bit over this period.
However, variable mortgage rates have risen along with short-term rates.
The overall effect of such rate changes has been to reduce
demand. For example, although long-term fixed mortgage rates
have not changed much, the rise in variable
mortgage rates probably has contributed to the housing downturn, which has
been a drag on the economy. I should note, however, that
interest rates are not the
only culprit. It’s likely that the recent cooling also is a necessary correction
after years of rapid run-ups in house prices that ultimately proved to be unsustainable.
Nationally, housing permits are down by about 25 percent from a year ago, and
inventories of unsold houses are up significantly. The national data on residential
investment reflect these developments and enter directly into the calculation
of real GDP growth. After adjusting for inflation, (real) residential investment
registered its fourth straight decline in the third quarter, which held overall
real GDP growth down by a substantial 1¼ percentage points. The partial
data we have on the fourth quarter suggests that there was a similar effect then.
While the decline in housing activity has been significant
and will probably continue for a while longer, I think the
concerns we used to hear about the possibility
of a devastating collapse—one that might be big enough to cause a recession
in the U.S. economy—have been largely allayed. As I mentioned, long-term
rates have remained low, and that has helped to cushion the downturn in housing
activity. Likewise, the fears about plummeting house prices have not materialized
at the national level, though some pockets of the country have seen house prices
actually decline. The Reno area provides a striking example of how the market
has turned around: after rising about 20 to 30 percent annually in 2004 and
2005, prices on existing homes began to fall in the second quarter of 2006.
The decline
appears to be modest so far. But for the country as a whole, house prices
have continued to appreciate, though obviously at a much more moderate rate
than they
did earlier. The concern here was that a significant fall in the prices of
houses, which make up such a significant part of so many people’s wealth,
could lead to a weakening in consumer spending. Since consumption expenditures
represent
two-thirds of real GDP, even relatively modest effects of declining housing
wealth could put a noticeable dent in overall economic activity. While slower
house
price appreciation is undoubtedly imparting less impetus to consumer spending
now than during the years of rapid run-ups, consumer spending remains solid
overall, outpacing real GDP growth in the second half of last year. We have
seen few signs
of substantial negative spillovers from weakness in housing markets to consumer
spending.
Looking at other sectors of the economy, we see a pretty
robust picture, for the most part. Business demand has been
solid, fueled by high profits and relatively
favorable financing conditions, leading to healthy growth in spending on business
investment in equipment and software, especially in the high-tech industries.
Moreover, spending for the construction of nonresidential structures advanced
smartly last year, and promises to remain robust for a while longer. For example,
outlays on drilling and mining structures have continued to increase in response
to oil prices that are still high by historical standards, though the pace
of investment is moderating. Furthermore, fundamentals in
commercial real estate
markets improved last year, increasing demand for commercial space from office
parks to warehouses. Going forward, even at a more moderate pace of economic
expansion, private forecasters expect the positive trends in commercial real
estate to continue but to moderate over the year as capacity comes online.
In addition to housing, auto production has been a drag
on the economy during the past few quarters. The auto industry
has felt the effects of high oil prices and people’s
growing preferences for more fuel-efficient vehicles. That
has been good news for some of the foreign automakers, but
not such good news for some U.S. automakers, for whom SUVs
and trucks have been a key source of strength. As the demand
for these vehicles dropped, producers found themselves holding
unsustainably high inventories. So it's little wonder that
they moved to ramp down production. These production cuts
slowed overall real GDP growth in the U.S. in 2006. However,
once the adjustment to a lower level of inventories is reached,
probably in the not too distant future, this factor will
cease to hold down growth in the U.S. economy.
In fact, energy prices themselves could be a source of
support for growth this year. Over the past couple of years,
the surge in the price of oil took a bite
out of consumer spending, even though other factors, like growth of jobs, wages,
and wealth, kept consumption moving up overall. Needless to say, it has been
a relief to see that oil prices have not just stabilized but actually receded
quite a bit since their peak in the middle of last year. At this point, futures
markets expect them to stabilize around the current lower levels, and if they
do, not only should the restraint we felt last year evaporate this year; the
decline in oil prices would actually contribute to a pickup in growth. Of course,
given the well-known volatility of energy markets, that's a very big "if," so
they remain a wild card in the outlook as usual.
So, to sum up the story on output, real GDP advanced at
moderate rates of only 2½ and 2 percent in the second and third quarters of last year. Recent
monthly data have boosted estimates of growth in the fourth quarter, but such
high frequency data can be volatile, and very recent developments don’t
change my overall assessment that economic activity is proceeding at a moderate
underlying pace. In other words, it looks as if the economy is pretty close to
the “glide path” I mentioned before—growth has slowed to a
bit below most estimates of the economy’s long-run potential, while the
risk of an outright downturn has receded.
That would all be very comforting, except for the puzzle
I mentioned at the beginning, which could have serious implications
for inflation and, therefore, for the “soft
landing” I’m hoping for. Just to restate the puzzle: if the economy
is growing a bit below its long-run trend, why is the labor market going gangbusters?
It is as if the Bureau of Economic Analysis, which produces the GDP data, hasn’t
delivered its message to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The latest labor-market
data show payroll employment growing steadily and at a rather robust pace. Moreover,
the unemployment rate has declined by ½ percentage point over the past
year and now stands at 4½ percent; that rate suggests a degree of tightness
in the labor market, because it is somewhat below common estimates of the rate
that can be sustained in the long run without generating rising inflation. Using
a standard rule of thumb, the unemployment rate should have been essentially
unchanged, given the 3 percent growth rate the economy has averaged over the
past four quarters.
The ramifications of this puzzle are significant. If labor
markets are as tight as the unemployment rate suggests, then
there may be reason for concern about
building inflationary pressures. If, on the other hand, they are not, then
it is more likely that we are headed for a “soft landing.”
Let me start with the worrisome possibilities, in which
the puzzle could indicate building inflationary pressures.
One such possibility is that the apparent disconnect
between labor markets and output reflects a misreading of how close output
is to its long-run capacity. This could happen because the
economy’s long-run
capacity may actually be lower than many estimates. It also could happen if output
is actually growing faster than the data show. In fact, there are indications
to that effect, namely, that actual output growth may have been faster than the
pace reflected in measured GDP.
Aggregate statistics on the U.S. economy are calculated
in two ways—we
have measurements of total output and separate measurements of total income.
In principle, these must be the same—every dollar of output generates a
dollar of income for some economic entity, be it an individual or a firm. However,
in practice, the statistical sources for output and income are different, so
that the two measurements need not come out to the same aggregate number. This
difference is known as the “statistical discrepancy,” a topic that
tends to put even economists to sleep. However, I raise this obscure issue because
it could have important implications.
Growth in gross domestic income has outpaced growth in
gross domestic product by a whopping three-quarters of a
percentage point over the past year. If the
income measure ends up being more accurate than the output measure, then the
decline in the unemployment rate this year would not be surprising at all.
Indeed, this would mean that both labor and product markets
have been tight, which would
add to our estimate of inflation pressures.
Now let me turn to the more benign possibilities, that
is, where labor markets may not be signaling growing inflationary
pressures. One possibility is that
the disconnect between the unemployment rate and output growth will be resolved
by a little more patience. Labor markets adjust to output growth with a lag,
and that lag is not always consistent over time. So we may just need a little
more time for the standard relationship to reassert itself, with increases
in unemployment that reestablish the normal relationship
with the slower rate of
growth we’ve seen.
Another possibility is that even after the lags have worked
themselves out, the unemployment rate may be overstating
the tightness of labor markets. One form
of evidence for this is that certain other labor market indicators suggest
a bit of softening. In particular, the Conference Board index
of job market perceptions,
which is based on a survey of households, declined in both October and November.
This index is historically very highly correlated with the unemployment rate,
but now it is sending a different signal, suggesting that labor markets are
roughly in balance, not tight. Similarly, in November, fewer
firms reported openings
that are hard to fill.
Another form of evidence bearing on this benign interpretation
relates to labor compensation. If labor markets are tight,
one would expect that labor compensation—including
both wages and benefits—would be rising rapidly. However, the available
information on this provides a mixed, and, I must admit, a somewhat confusing
picture. We have two broad measures of labor compensation. One, the employment
cost index, is showing remarkably restrained increases of only 3 percent over
the past year, about the same as in the prior year, and this development would
seem to belie tight labor markets. The other measure, compensation per hour,
gives a higher reading of more than 4¼ percent. However, this measure includes
compensation methods like stock options that are more akin to profits than
wages. So part of the strength in this measure may not actually indicate a
tight labor
market. Taken together, these two indicators provide at best a mixed picture
of tightness.
My own sense of how the labor market situation will affect
inflation inclines me more toward the benign view than the
worrisome view—and I say this with
the appropriate caveats, of course: There are indeed large uncertainties—and
in particular, upside risks—to the outlook for inflation.
To begin with, over the past year, our main measure of
consumer inflation—the
price index for personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy,
or the core PCE price index—has increased by 2.2 percent, which is higher
than I would like to see. On a more positive note, inflation has come down in
recent months, with this index up by a more acceptable 1.8 percent over the past
three months.
One reason why inflationary pressure may be easing is due
to the impact of stabilizing, and now falling, oil prices.
As I mentioned, core inflation, by definition, excludes
energy prices, but energy prices still may affect core inflation to the extent
that they affect the prices of other goods and services. For example, transport
companies might raise their prices to pass along the higher costs of filling
their trucks' gas tanks. This is known as "pass-through," and it is
likely that it has played at least some role in recent movements in core inflation.
Now that energy prices have fallen a fair bit from recent highs and are expected
by futures markets to remain at those lower levels, this upward pressure on core
inflation is likely to dissipate and may even be turning into modest downward
pressure.
However, it’s important to recognize that the effects of energy price changes
on inflation are inherently temporary. Once they have fully worked through the
system, we will be left with the more fundamental and enduring influences of
factors such as the extent of labor and product market tightness. This is why
I spent so much time going into the puzzle about why labor and product markets
are currently sending mixed signals about inflationary pressures. How this puzzle
is resolved is a key issue for future inflation and therefore for monetary policy.
A second reason to be optimistic about future inflation
is that inflation expectations appear to have been well anchored
over the past ten years or so as the Fed has
established its credibility with the public about both its commitment to and
its competence in keeping inflation at low and stable rates. For example, in
the face of the large oil price increases we've seen in recent years, this
credibility shows up in the stability of survey and market
measures of inflation expectations
looking ten years ahead.
Statistical analysis of the behavior of core inflation
over time also lends some support to the view that inflation
expectations are well anchored. In such statistical
analyses, the inflation data historically have exhibited “persistence.” This
basically means that, when you're forecasting inflation, it works pretty well
to assume that the rate in the future will be the same as it is today. The implication
of persistence is frankly worrisome: Since inflation is too high today, persistence
implies it could stay too high for an extended period.
However, research suggests that if a central bank's commitment
to price stability has gained credibility with the public,
then the persistence observed in the
inflation data will tend to be dampened. And as it turns out, recent research
at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco finds less evidence of persistence
during the past ten years. That is, rather than sticking at a certain rate,
core inflation has tended to revert to its long-run average,
which, over that period,
is between 1-3/4 and 2 percent. Admittedly, the past ten years constitute a
relatively small sample from which to draw definitive conclusions.
Nonetheless, this evidence
is important because, if it holds up, it implies that inflation may move down
from its elevated level faster than many forecasters expect.
To sum up my inflation forecast, then, I find recent inflation
readings encouraging, but I also am keenly aware that this
pattern has yet to show up in the data on
any sort of a sustained basis. The inflation situation remains uncertain and,
in particular, there are upside risks to my outlook, especially having to do
with the situation in labor markets.
These considerations play a key role in my views on monetary
policy. I have supported the decision to hold policy steady
at the current rate. That may seem a little
surprising, given that inflation remains higher than I would like it to be
and that there are some upside risks to my inflation outlook.
Let me be clear that
I do want inflation to move down, but I believe policy may now be well-positioned
to foster exactly such an outcome while also giving due consideration to the
risks to economic activity.
I came to this conclusion by considering a variety of metrics
that help assess the stance of policy. These measures include
the forecast I have outlined today,
as well as the recommendations from commonly used Taylor rules for monetary
policy, named after John Taylor, a professor at Stanford
who first suggested them. They
give an estimate of an appropriate setting of the funds rate given where inflation
is relative to an assumed target and a measure of tightness in goods or labor
markets.
Taken as a whole, a variety of these rules indicate that
the funds rate is currently within the moderately restrictive
range that appears appropriate. Current conditions
in goods markets generally suggest that the current policy stance is sufficient
to bring inflation down to more acceptable levels. In view of what I’ve
said today, it will come as no surprise that consideration of the situation in
labor markets provides less room for optimism on inflation. And while I am inclined
to see labor market tightness as transitory, I do take it as a serious risk.
Even if policy is now well positioned, as I think is likely
to be the case, it will still take some additional time for
inflation to unwind due to lags between
policy actions and their impacts on economic activity and inflation. These
lags can be anywhere from several months to a couple of years.
This means that we
have yet to see the full effects of the series of 17 funds rate increases—some
are probably still in the pipeline.
You will note that I am casting my statements about the
stance of policy and the outlook in very conditional terms.
I do this because of the great uncertainty
that surrounds economic forecasts and any simple measure of the tightness of
monetary policy. Frankly, all approaches to assessing the stance of policy
are inherently imprecise. Just as imprecise is our understanding
of how long the
lags will be between our policy actions and their impacts on the economy and
inflation. This uncertainty argues, then, for policy to be responsive to the
data as it emerges, especially since we are within range of the desired policy
setting. The decision to keep policy on hold allows us more time to observe
the data so that appropriate adjustments can be made over
time.
1. Based on OHFEO repeat-sales
index, prices on existing homes sold in the Reno area rose
30.4% in 2004 and 22.5% in 2005, while NAR median price data
show an increase of 25.5% in 2004 (2005 data are not available).
By contrast, in 2006, the value of the OFHEO index fell at
about a 3% annual pace in the second and third quarters,
leaving prices approximately flat on net for the first three
quarters; the NAR median price series shows larger declines
(4.0% pace in Q2, 13.3% in Q3). Data recently reported in
local newspapers indicate that the median sales price fell
further in October.
2. Corrected January 26, 2007.
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