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Speech
Governor Mark W. Olson

Update on the U.S. economy
At the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, Little Rock, Arkansas
April 13, 2006

Recent trends in the U.S. economy have been, on the whole, quite favorable. Real gross domestic
product (GDP) increased 3-1/4 percent during 2005, on the heels of two years during which it rose
at an annual rate of almost 4 percent. By the end of last year, businesses had added another 2 million
jobs to their payrolls, and the unemployment rate had dropped to its lowest level in five years.
Although top-line consumer price inflation was boosted by the run-up in energy prices, core
consumer price inflation remained relatively steady, at about 2 percent for the year.
One of the significant challenges for a policymaker is to be able to discern the underlying trends in
real activity and inflation in the midst of the inevitable noise and shocks that come along. The recent
period has presented a number of those types of unanticipated events: Most notably, the devastating
hurricanes that hit the Gulf Coast last fall destroyed residential and business capital and tragically
uprooted the lives of many people. The resulting disruptions to economic activity, particularly in the
energy and petrochemical sectors, held down the rise in real GDP in the fourth quarter. The
restarting and rebuilding that began late last year should be providing a boost to activity this year,
but the size of that effect and the extent to which it will be distributed in coming quarters remain
uncertain. Another special factor at work early this year was the atypically warm weather that very
likely advanced homebuilding and perhaps other spending that might otherwise have stretched into
the spring. As a result, most forecasters believe that the incoming information has been adding up to
a sizable, but quite likely temporary, acceleration in real GDP in the first quarter after the small
increase in the final quarter of 2005.
Another, more persistent economic challenge in recent years has been the climb in world oil prices.
As a result, last year marked a third consecutive year of rapidly rising--and sometimes volatile-domestic energy costs. To be sure, higher energy prices cut into households' purchasing power and
the profits of non-energy firms. While recognizing the difficulty of identifying the reactions of
consumers and businesses to higher energy prices, Chairman Bernanke has recently noted that the
surge in energy prices since late 2003 probably reduced the growth of real GDP between 1/2 percent
and 1 percent per year. One important change in the economic landscape that has limited the current
effect of an energy shock compared with the effects in our earlier experience is that energy costs
today are not nearly as important as they were during the 1970s, when the energy intensity of U.S.
production was significantly higher.
After taking into consideration the unusual factors that have been influencing the pattern of
economic activity of late, most forecasters are projecting that, after a sizable increase in the first
quarter, production and spending will return to a moderate and sustainable pace over the remainder
of the year. Several fundamental factors support that view. First, although longer-term yields have
begun to move up recently, they remain low by historical standards, and financial conditions remain
favorable. Second, business balance sheets are strong, and corporate earnings have been robust.
Third, household credit quality has shown few signs of stress. Finally, households' real income has
been receiving a boost from the recent strong gains in employment, and the ongoing increases in
house prices and gains in the stock market have kept the ratio of wealth to income at a high level.
All told, prospects for ongoing gains in consumer spending and business investment appear good,

and the recent indicators are positive. This morning's report on retail sales, together with the
information on motor vehicle sales released last week, points to a solid rise in real consumer
spending in March and a very strong reading for the first quarter as a whole. The outlook for
moderate increases in personal consumption expenditures in the near term is consistent with the
latest readings on consumer sentiment. In addition, the continued low level of new claims for
unemployment insurance bodes well for further net gains in employment and, thus, income. A
survey of businesses' capital spending plans conducted by the National Association of Business
Economists at the end of last year pointed to another solid year of spending on plant and equipment.
And, through February, backlogs of orders for nondefense capital goods were still moving up.
Another important factor in the outlook for the United States is the likelihood of a continued solid
expansion in economic activity abroad. Notably, the Japanese economy has strengthened, and
economic activity in emerging Asian economies has continued to rise at a brisk pace, while the
outlook in Canada calls for sustained moderate growth.
Domestic economic activity should also continue to receive a boost in coming quarters from
reconstruction in the Gulf region. In part, the reconstruction represents some temporary federal
fiscal stimulus from the hurricane relief that the Congress has provided. However, despite the
additional support to construction from hurricane-related repair and rebuilding, residential
construction overall appears likely to cool a bit this year. The most recent indicators suggest that
demand and home-price inflation have begun to moderate.
With respect to inflation, although forecasting energy prices is risky, I should note that the futures
market suggests that crude oil prices will move up a bit further in coming months before flattening
out at $70 per barrel. If so, the drag on real income and spending from rising energy costs should
diminish over time, as should the risk of additional energy cost pressure on underlying, or "core,"
inflation.
The general contour of economic activity that most forecasters are expecting, in which they see little
change in resource utilization over the year, should be consistent with relatively stable core
inflation. As I noted earlier, the unemployment rate is now at a five-year low of 4-3/4 percent. More
important, it and other indicators of resource utilization--such as the industrial capacity utilization
rate--are now at levels at which, in the past, little or no economic slack remained. At this point, we
have seen few signs of upward pressure on labor compensation or core inflation. Although we have
experienced run-ups in prices of commodities, such as building supplies, that are more sensitive to
changes in supply and demand conditions and in prices of energy-intensive commodities and
services, the pass-through to core inflation appears to have been limited. Important in that regard is
the fact that longer-run inflation expectations have been well anchored, as is apparent in the stability
of the five-to-ten-year inflation expectations of households in the Michigan SRC survey and in the
reading implicit in Treasury-inflation-protected securities.
The observations I've just shared illustrate the evolving economic forces that the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) will consider as it makes monetary policy decisions over the remainder
of the year. The FOMC has raised the target federal funds rate 25 basis points at each of the past
fifteen meetings over roughly two years. During much of that time, we described our actions as
"removing accommodation" at a "measured pace." At our March meeting, we indicated that some
additional tightening may be necessary to keep the risks to the attainment of both sustainable
economic growth and price stability roughly in balance. Thus, the future path for the target federal
funds rate will depend importantly on how incoming information on economic activity and inflation
affect our assessment of these risks.
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