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For release on delivery
12:30 p.m. EDT
May 16, 2013

Prospects for a Stronger Recovery

Remarks by
Sarah Bloom Raskin
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
The Society of Government Economists and the National Economists Club
Washington, D.C.

May 16, 2013

Thank you. I am very pleased to be here among an audience of professional
economists, which is certainly preferable to appearing before an audience of
unprofessional economists. I like your kind! Your talents are needed now more than
ever as we try to put the tools of the economic profession to work for the common good.
It’s easy to be an economist who looks back on crises and crashes and tries to explain
why they happened, but much harder to be an economist whose efforts manage to help
stop them from happening in the first place. Economic policymaking, at its best, reflects
a continuous struggle to make sure that data and explanations of such data are consistent
with real experience. If we’re to engage in this struggle honestly, it’s no easy task. It
involves understanding not just the reliability and signal in various data, but also
questioning whether the data accords with our understanding of actual experience. So, to
get this right requires many different perspectives, not just on the data but on the
underlying realities the data are trying to capture. Government economists understand
that non-economists bring something valuable to the table in policymaking--a grounded
perspective in what is happening in the economy.
With that said, what is really happening now in the American economy? What do
the economic data we see at the Federal Reserve currently show, and how do we think
these data line up with the economic realities of most American households and
businesses? In my remarks today I will offer my assessment of recent economic
developments and the economic outlook, and I will discuss the actions that the Federal
Reserve has been taking, in light of its view of developments and the outlook, to support
the economic recovery. Before I begin, I should note that the views that I will be

-2presenting are my own and not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) or the Board of Governors.
Recent Economic and Financial Developments
For the past three and a half years the U.S. economy has been in a recovery-albeit a very weak one--from a severe financial crisis and the deepest recession of the
post-World War II period. The unemployment rate, which reached a high of 10 percent
in the fall of 2009, has since come down 2-1/2 percentage points, to 7.5 percent in April.
The increase in economic activity and the decline in the unemployment rate are,
of course, welcome, but we still have a long way to go to reach what feels like a healthy
economy. In fact, the pace of recovery has been slower than most had expected. The gap
between actual output and the economy’s potential remains quite large, according to
estimates from the Congressional Budget Office, and the unemployment rate today
remains well above levels seen prior to the recession, and well above the level that the
Committee thinks can be sustained once a full recovery has been achieved. In addition,
the number of long-term unemployed--people who have been unemployed for 27 weeks
or more--remains historically high.
My interpretation of the economic data that we have received over the past few
quarters is that the recovery has continued to gain traction. The Bureau of Economic
Analysis reported last month that real gross domestic product (GDP) rose at an annual
rate of 2-1/2 percent in the first quarter of this year after barely expanding at all in the
fourth quarter of 2012. The step-up in growth in the first quarter partly reflected a
rebound from last year’s drought and Hurricane Sandy. Smoothing through these factors,

-3real GDP was about 1-3/4 percent above its year-earlier level in the first quarter, a modest
gain that is about in line with the pace of growth during much of the recovery.
The strength of the recovery among the components of GDP has been mixed
recently. In terms of the housing sector, there is no question that many communities and
neighborhoods were devastated by the effects of the financial crisis. Recently, we see
that overall demand has been strengthening, with both home sales and prices rising
markedly in many areas. Both new and existing home sales have moved up, on net, since
late 2011, and housing starts averaged an annual rate of nearly 1 million units in the first
quarter of this year, up considerably from the extremely low levels that prevailed through
2011. Inventories of new homes for sale have become quite lean in most markets over
the past year, a notable change from earlier in the recovery. The increase in activity in
the housing sector has been driven by historically low mortgage rates, growing optimism
about future house prices, continued gains in the job market, and sizable purchases of
homes by investors.
Elsewhere in the household sector, consumer spending--about two-thirds of
overall final demand--has continued growing at a moderate pace. On the whole, families
have benefited from the modest improvement in the labor market, and rising stock prices
and rebounding home values have helped some households recoup part of the wealth they
lost during the recession.
However, overall wage growth has been anemic, and many households have not
seen their circumstances improve materially. As I described in a speech last month,
globalization and technological change have continued to shift the occupations and
industrial distribution of new jobs available. These currents of globalization and

-4technological change continue on their path, making it more likely that workers who were
laid off during the recession would be unable to find reemployment that is of comparable
quality to their previous jobs.1 About two-thirds of all job losses in the recession were in
middle-wage occupations--such as manufacturing, skilled construction, and office
administration jobs--but these occupations have accounted for less than one-fourth of the
job growth during the recovery.2 By contrast, lower-wage occupations, such as retail
sales, food service, and other lower-paying service jobs, accounted for only one-fifth of
job losses during the recession but more than one-half of total job gains during the
recovery. As a result of these trends in job creation, which could well have been
exacerbated by the severe nature of the crisis, the earnings potential for many households
likely remains below what they had anticipated in the years before the recession.
Moreover, as you all know, the temporary payroll tax cut has now expired, and many
households have seen their disposable incomes reduced for this reason as well.
Spending in the business sector recently has increased only modestly, perhaps due
in part to the effect of these recent tax changes on consumers. Real spending on
equipment and software rose about 4 percent over the past 12 months, according to the
most recent GDP report, a modest gain for this category of spending. Indicators for
capital investment in the months ahead, including new orders for durable capital goods
and survey measures of business sentiment, suggest that growth in business spending on
new equipment and software is likely to remain modest in the coming quarters.
1

See Sarah Bloom Raskin (2013), “Aspects of Inequality in the Recent Business Cycle,” speech delivered
at “Building a Financial Structure for a More Stable and Equitable Economy,” the 22nd Annual Hyman P.
Minsky Conference on the State of the U.S. and World Economies, sponsored by the Levy Economics
Institute of Bard College, held in New York, April 17-19,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/raskin20130418a.htm.
2
See National Employment Law Project (2012), “The Low-Wage Recovery and Growing Inequality,”
Data Brief, report (New York: NELP, August), http://nelp.3cdn.net/8ee4a46a37c86939c0_qjm6bkhe0.pdf.

-5Turning to the government sector, the legislated reduction in spending by the
federal government is exerting a clear and continuing drag on economic activity. Even
prior to the bulk of the spending cuts associated with sequestration, real purchases by the
federal government were reported to have dropped at an annual rate of more than 8
percent in the first quarter of this year, following an even larger drop in the fourth quarter
of last year. These cuts in federal spending are likely to be an important influence on the
near-term prospects for economic growth, and I will say more about this issue in a
moment.
In contrast to the federal government, the budget outlook for state and local
government continues to improve, and the drag on economic activity from this sector’s
cutbacks in spending has diminished considerably.
Reflecting some of these mixed influences, as I already noted, real GDP has been
rising at a very modest rate, and the labor market has shown similarly modest gains over
the past year, with the unemployment rate coming down about 1/2 percentage point. To
more fully understand the experience of the 11.7 million Americans who can’t find work,
we look to broader measures of labor underutilization, which take into account job
seekers who have stopped looking for work because they have become discouraged, and
people working part time but who would prefer to work full time. Recently, these
numbers seem to be coming down. The gains in payroll employment over this period
have been about in line with the decline in the unemployment rate, although, as is typical,
the pace of job gains has been somewhat erratic in recent months. Since the beginning of
the year, the increases in payroll employment have averaged 196,000 per month, a little
above the 183,000 average monthly gains observed during 2012.

-6Other indicators from the labor market have also shown some improvement
recently. Initial claims for unemployment insurance have declined since last summer,
and the number of job openings appears to be increasing. I hope these indicators mean
we are turning the corner on some of the painful costs associated with being unemployed
or underemployed in America.
Turning to inflation, recent data show that price pressures have remained
subdued. Both total and core inflation were only about 1 percent over the 12 months
ending in March, below the FOMC’s long-run objective of 2 percent. Inflation is being
restrained by the continued slack in labor and product markets, while stable inflation
expectations have offset disinflationary pressures to some extent. Moreover, the increase
in gasoline prices that we saw earlier in the year appears to have fully reversed, and the
path of oil futures prices is downward-sloping, suggesting that energy prices are likely to
hold down headline inflation rates in the years ahead.
The Economic Outlook
Let me now turn to the outlook. As my Federal Reserve colleagues and I have
noted in the past, the pace of the economic recovery has been restrained by lingering
effects of the financial crisis. Assessing the current strength of the headwinds related to
these lingering effects is an important determinant of the economic outlook for the
coming years.
Unfortunately, current federal fiscal policy is one headwind to the recovery that
has intensified this year. In fact, federal fiscal policy has been tightening since 2011,
after having been quite expansionary during the recession and early in the recovery.

-7More recently, actions by the Administration and the Congress to reduce the budget
deficit have led to further tightening of federal fiscal policy.
As I already mentioned, both the tax legislation signed into law in January and the
sharp spending cuts associated with sequestration will likely significantly hinder GDP
growth this year. Indeed, the Congressional Budget Office has estimated that these
changes in fiscal policy would reduce GDP growth by 1-1/2 percentage points this year
relative to what we otherwise would have achieved.3 Looking further ahead, fiscal policy
seems likely to remain restrictive at the federal level.
The headwinds from the housing sector have eased, and housing market activity is
likely to continue to contribute to GDP growth over the next few years. These headwinds
had been substantial, as the aftermath of the financial crisis and housing bubble left many
homeowners underwater on their mortgages, a large overhang of vacant homes, and
mortgage credit very hard to obtain for anyone without an excellent credit record and a
sizable down payment. The rise in house prices over the past year or so has lifted
household net worth and pushed some homeowners above water on their mortgages.
These developments may help to ease credit for many households as well, although
mortgage credit remains very tight.
In a speech last month, I described how the net decline in housing wealth since
the recession has had particularly acute effects on the balance sheets of lower- and
middle-income households, which tend to hold a relatively high share of their total wealth
in their homes.4 Households at the bottom of the income distribution have also had a

3

See Congressional Budget Office (2013), The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2013 to 2023
(Washington: CBO, February), available at www.cbo.gov/publication/43907.
4

See Raskin, “Aspects of Inequality in the Recent Business Cycle,” in note 1.

-8harder time than others finding jobs during the recovery and their wages have continued
to stagnate. In my view, the large and increasing amount of inequality in income and
wealth, which has been an ongoing development for decades, may have exacerbated the
crisis and I think more research is required to determine whether it may also pose a
significant headwind to the recovery from the crisis for years to come. So, while I am
hopeful that pressures will ease further as home prices continue to rebound, I also believe
that some of the restraints on the recovery may be quite long-lasting.
The headwind from the financial sector also has diminished somewhat over the
past year and should present less of a restraint on economic growth than has been the case
in the recent past. U.S. equity prices are up more than 10 percent so far this year
following last year’s 13 percent increase. Risk spreads embedded in the interest rates
paid by many American businesses, although still above their pre-crisis levels, have also
moved down substantially over the past year to levels that are moderate, given the state of
the broader economy.
The situation in Europe, although still uncertain, appears to have improved since
last summer--aided importantly by the policies of the European Central Bank (ECB)--and
these developments have led to an improvement in financial conditions globally. Policy
actions and promises, including the ECB’s program to purchase the sovereign debt of
vulnerable euro-area countries and discussions about creating a banking union, appear to
have helped market participants negotiate past some recent hurdles, including the
challenges in forming a governing coalition in Italy and the severe banking difficulties in
Cyprus. If policymakers in Europe can follow through on their commitments to financial
integration and structural reforms, among other things, financial stress in Europe should

-9continue to lessen, and European economies should gradually recover from their current
slump. If the economy in Europe were to begin to grow again, it could support global
economic growth more broadly.
The financial condition of the U.S. banking sector has also continued to improve
from the perspective of regulatory capital. While much work remains for regulators and
banks implementing pending capital requirements, most large, medium-sized, and
community banks are in stronger capital positions today than they were prior to the
financial crisis.
Although not all, some consumers at least, are seeing the benefits of
improvements in financial markets. In combination with low interest rates, the easing of
financial stress has allowed some homeowners to refinance their mortgages to lower their
monthly payments, and some types of loans, such as those for purchasing a new or used
car, have become available to more people. That said, we clearly still have a long way to
go in assuring that Americans have access to affordable credit. As I noted, an especially
large number of people are unable to obtain mortgage credit, and credit card borrowing is
also tight.
Taken together, the incoming data and my own analysis of recent developments in
fiscal policy suggest that the recovery will continue at a moderate pace, and the
unemployment rate will fall gradually. According to the Summary of Economic
Projections that was released by Federal Reserve Board members and Reserve Bank
presidents after the March FOMC meeting, my colleagues and I expected real GDP
growth to step up moderately this year, rising roughly 2-1/2 percent after having risen
1-3/4 percent in 2012. In the projection, participants also expected the unemployment

- 10 rate to be in the range of 7.3 to 7.5 percent by the end of the year. Looking a bit further
ahead, FOMC participants largely expected the unemployment rate to continue receding,
but it was expected to remain above its long-run sustainable level for several years.
Meanwhile, inflation was expected to remain close to or a little below the Committee’s
objective of 2 percent, consistent with ongoing slack in the labor and product markets and
well-anchored inflation expectations.
Monetary Policy Developments
In light of this outlook and the risks around the outlook, it has been appropriate
for the Federal Reserve to continue to pursue a highly accommodative monetary policy.
As you all know, during the financial crisis and at the onset of the recession, the Federal
Reserve took strong easing measures, cutting the target for the federal funds rate--the
traditional tool of monetary policy--to nearly zero by the end of 2008. During the
recovery, we have provided additional accommodation through two nontraditional policy
tools aimed at putting downward pressure on longer-term interest rates even with shortterm rates stuck at zero: (1) purchases of Treasury securities and mortgage backed
securities and (2) communication about the future path of the federal funds rate.
Our most recent policy actions have sought to strengthen the recovery in the face
of only slow improvements in labor market conditions and subdued inflationary
pressures. After last September’s policy meeting, the FOMC announced that the Federal
Reserve would continue asset purchases until the outlook for the labor market has
improved substantially in the context of price stability.
Then, at the meeting in December, the FOMC voted to continue purchasing
longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion each month and agency

- 11 mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion each month, and we have maintained
that pace of asset purchases so far this year. In considering changes to the pace of asset
purchases in the future, we take into account judgments about both the efficacy and
potential costs of these purchases, including potential risks to inflation and financial
stability, as well as the extent of progress toward our economic objectives.
At its December meeting, the FOMC also recast its forward guidance to clarify
how the target for the federal funds rate is expected to depend on future economic
developments. Specifically, we said that we anticipate that an exceptionally low funds
rate is likely to be warranted at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above
6-1/2 percent, inflation over the period between one and two years ahead is projected to
be no more than 1/2 percentage point above 2 percent, and longer-term inflation
expectations remain well anchored. These thresholds are intended to make monetary
policy more transparent and predictable to the public by making more explicit our
intention to maintain policy accommodation as long as needed to promote a stronger
recovery in the context of price stability.
Although it is still too early to assess the full effects of the most recent policy
actions, available research suggests that our previous asset purchases have eased financial
conditions and provided meaningful support to the economic recovery.5
Given its statutory mandate, the FOMC’s policy actions and communications
have naturally sought to lower interest rates as a means of strengthening aggregate
demand, promoting the pace of recovery in the labor market, and keeping inflation from

5

For a discussion and list of references regarding the effects of recent monetary policy actions, see Ben S.
Bernanke (2012), “The Economic Recovery and Economic Policy,” speech delivered at the Economic Club
of New York, New York, November 20,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20121120a.htm.

- 12 falling further below the rate preferred by the Committee over the longer run. We will
continue to calibrate monetary policy--including both the ongoing pace of asset purchases
and communications about the likely path of the federal funds rate--in light of our
interpretations of the latest data and the implications of those interpretations for the
outlook for economic activity, labor market conditions, and inflation.
Conclusion
In summary, the U.S. economy has continued to recover from the effects of the
financial crisis and deep recession, though at a pace that has been disappointingly slow.
The recovery does appear to have picked up steam in some sectors, most notably in
housing, likely reflecting the easing of some of the headwinds that had been holding back
the pace of the recovery in earlier years. However, federal fiscal policy remains an
important source of restraint.
In light of these factors, most members of the FOMC project a modest
improvement in the pace of the recovery this year and next, and, accordingly, a modest
decline in the unemployment rate. The Federal Reserve will continue to conduct
monetary policy so as to promote a stronger economic recovery in the context of price
stability.