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Interview of Raymond Lombra Conducted by Robert L. Hetzel May 8, 1995 Robert Hetzel: ...get this on tape. Would you mind telling me what your background was and how you came to work for the Fed and where you started? Raymond Lombra: Can you hear me okay? Robert Hetzel: Yeah, just fine. Raymond Lombra: All right. I got my Ph.D. in 1971. I think it was February/March. And I had written my thesis on the Federal Reserve. So it was natural to consider employment there. And I started at the Board in the spring of ’71 near as I can remember. Robert Hetzel: Okay. And where did you start? Raymond Lombra: I started in the government finance section, which was then headed by Helmut Wendel. They had major responsibility for—this is part of the old organizational structure then. But I think it was instructive about how the Fed felt about the markets. The Government Finance Section on the one hand watched, quote, unquote, “The Government Securities Market” and more generally the money in capital markets. And then on the other side was charged with coming up with estimates of the government’s cash balance and associated financing needs. This was viewed as a major factor influencing the dynamics of the market. Robert Hetzel: Let me just [tape skip] interact. Did you have a sense that Burns was as interested in watching financial markets as his predecessor Martin, that he tried to get a sense of market psychology? He was much less interested in financial markets and just more interested in watching the real numbers that came in, freight car loadings and purchasing managers’ reports and all the information that comes in. Did you ever have a sense in kind of how much Burns was interested in, your, kind of how much you followed the market? Raymond Lombra: Well, let me just say that Burns and I arrived around the same time. So I never saw Martin. Robert Hetzel: Right. Raymond Lombra: But other than what I read about Martin, and I did read a lot, that’s indirect. Burns, I think it’s fair to say that I think he started out thinking that the monetary side of things wasn’t all that complicated. And he clearly was an expert with all the business cycle indicator type data. But I’m thinking as you asked the question, I mean, how do you judge someone’s interest? I’d say he asked just as many questions at the weekly briefings and other meetings I was at of the financial people as the non-financial people. I think he spoke with—his questions of the non-financial people were awful—they’re sort of like the interviewing of the O. J. Simpson case. It was like you already knew the answers to those. I think his questions on the financial side were more genuinely trying to understand what was going on. But I just don’t recollect this notion that he was substantially more interested in the non-financial side. Robert Hetzel: What you say rings true that he did not have a background in central banking and in financial markets. It’s not where he [tape skip] research. He had a lot to learn. But also he attached a lot of importance to market psychology. Raymond Lombra: Absolutely. Robert Hetzel: Whether— Raymond Lombra: He wanted to know what the market—I mean, we used to sometimes try to tell him it was like looking in a mirror. But, I mean, he was very interested in knowing what the market thought the Fed was going to do and what the market thought the Fed was looking at. And so we had to stay in touch with I guess it was Alan Holmes and Peter Sternlight. Because I did the briefing in those years almost every week or every other week on the markets. There was four briefings as you probably know. One was on sort of interest rates, financial markets and the other was on the aggregates. We had to make sure we talked to Sternlight, Holmes or other people on the desk who sat in on the dealer meetings, for example, every morning, early in the morning. I assume they still do it. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: There was a meeting with the dealers. They wanted to know what those guys were thinking. And Burns wanted to know that. It was really important to him. Robert Hetzel: Did you ever become involved in the Greenbook and Bluebook preparation? Raymond Lombra: Yes. -2- Robert Hetzel: And how did that happen? What was your— [00:04:57] Raymond Lombra: Well, the Section’s job on the Greenbook, you started out with that because at least the Section’s major part of that was not really the confidential... Robert Hetzel: Right. Raymond Lombra: ... part. So it was where you sort of cut your teeth. So it’s what later became Part Two of the Greenbook. Robert Hetzel: Right. Raymond Lombra: At this point though, it was still sort of all one document as I recollect it. We wrote the part on what had happened since the last meeting to interest rates, that was one side, and why. And if there was something unexpected about the way rates moved given where the funds rate turned out to be, there was a need to analyze that, put it in historical perspective, etcetera. And then the other part was to talk about the evolving Treasury financing patterns, innovations if any, and debt management strategies and the likely upcoming Treasury cash needs. And this was all folded in around the updated estimates of the high employment budget and the unified budget. So that was the Greenbook part that the Section worked on in those days. And I wrote more of those than I care to remember. Robert Hetzel: Who had overall responsibility for the Greenbook? Raymond Lombra: Well, let’s see. It was the Director of Research and Statistics. Which I’m trying to think when Partee became head but that’s sort of my first recollection. Partee and then later Gramley... Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: ...had overall responsibility. Because it was mainly a nonfinancial document, the Greenbook. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: Now, you asked about the Bluebook. I went to the call every day almost from the first day I was there, you know, the famous call. Robert Hetzel: Sure. Raymond Lombra: And our Section was responsible for writing what was called the drafting for Axilrod. The, what was called, the “Bluebook Past,” quote unquote. That was the first three or four pages, which, again, summarized what had happened in the markets. But more focused now on how it all related to what the desk had done in the interim and how it had responded to incoming data whether on the aggregates or anything else. So it was very -3- much—I thought it was an executive summary for the FOMC of what had happened in financial markets vis-à-vis the implementation of policy. And my early years there, that’s Fred Strobel, early on when I was still kind of young and inexperienced, he did most of that for Helmut Wendel. And then when Helmut moved on, Fred became Section chief and I took major responsibility for that. [00:08:12] Robert Hetzel: In the process of writing this, did you have any sense of the extent to which the committee in the absence of Burns was moving toward reserve control? One of the views of this period, and it may be right or wrong, it’s always hard to disentangle the kind of reality, was that given the experience in the late ‘60s, ’69 especially, where there was general agreement that the Fed let money get out of hand, that there was a movement toward reserve control. The RPD experiment, the movement away from— Raymond Lombra: That's ’72, the RPD. So— Robert Hetzel: Yeah. And then, again, the kind of standard story is that all this was short-circuited especially in early ’72, when Burns imposed a very strict limit on the extent to which he was willing to raise the funds rate in order to— Raymond Lombra: Well, given the committee on interest and dividends and stuff, yeah. I mean, I think the RPD—I mean, this is my personal view now. And I think you have to use this kind of information carefully but I thought it was pretty much a sham, an illusion. I don't think there was really any discernible move inside the Board. I think it was some members of the FOMC who wanted to do this as-if experiment. What would have happened if we were on a reserve path? I think they were particularly interested in what would have happened to interest rates. Not what would have happened to the aggregates. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Yeah. Raymond Lombra: And kind of indication of my recollection is the first time the RPD path tables were done, they had Jim Pierce do it. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: Who was on completely the other side of the operation. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: And to me that said something about how serious they—not that Jim wasn’t a capable guy and well liked and all that. But it was— Robert Hetzel: Sure. -4- Raymond Lombra: It was like, oh, this was sort of academic interest as opposed to being of serious policy importance. And, I mean, my view at that time was that they felt they had to do it to mollify some members of the FOMC but that Sternlight and Holmes and Burns and therefore, Axilrod, who was the key actor here... [0:10:40] Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: ...were going to sort of do it, but, you know, give lip service to it every once and again say, Well, what would have been true if we were on that path; and that was it. I didn’t feel—and I was pretty eclectic at this moment. I didn't have any axe to grind either way. I was in ’72 still trying to figure out what was happening. I mean, I felt that it was not a serious move in that direction. Robert Hetzel: There was another, I don't know if reform movement is the right word, but a movement to rethink procedures, I’m not sure… [tape skip] on the directive or... Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: ...or subcommittee on the directive. It involved I know on the regional bank level it involved [tape skip] but at the Board level, it involved Tinsley and Kalchbrenner and... Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: ...I suppose Bob Holland. Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Robert Hetzel: Was there ever any serious move along those lines— Raymond Lombra: I don't think so. Holland, you know, wonderful guy, pleasant guy. But he was in Burns’ hip pocket... Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: ...in those days. I mean, whatever Burns wanted, Holland was going to say and do. And he was part of that group to make sure that these guys who were then over in Watergate didn’t run off in a crazy direction. And these are the days when Kalchbrenner and Pierce and Tinsley were working an optimal control theory. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: And I remember this meeting that they had with Burns. This came later. But Burns, you know, they had worked on this thing for a year and a half or something. Burns gave them about five minutes. -5- Robert Hetzel: This would have been March ’76? Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Burns gave them about five minutes and said, I don’t think we’re ready for this. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. That was the first meeting that the FOMC stopped taking minutes. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: But now that there are transcripts available, presumably they’ll work back to that... Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: ...area and we’ll— Raymond Lombra: I think these were all indicators of, you know, it was nice to have the Kalchbrenners and Tinsleys around but I think they were often used in ways that were not a part of the serious re-examination, or ongoing examination, of the wisdom of current procedures. I mean, I don’t want to say everyone had a closed mind in the key positions but I think the lead did come from the chair and the Chair – Burns – was not really very much interested in any of these changes. It kind of reminds me, I’m on the board of directors of an insurance company now. And I try to talk to them about derivatives and how they can help you manage risks. Well, they don’t want to talk about it at all. Robert Hetzel: Was there anybody on the FOMC or staff level for that matter who could, would challenge Burns or did Burns just tower over everyone? Raymond Lombra: Oh, I mean, I’m sure, you know. I mean, the St. Louis, for example, St. Louis Fed presidents once in a while— Robert Hetzel: But that really— Raymond Lombra: Once in a while, the Cleveland or Chicago. But I think he was such an imposing figure and had such command of the current data. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: It’s just like when he testified in front of Congress. I mean, if no one had ever seen him inside the FOMC, the scene in front of Congress was very similar in that he could say, Well, this reminds me of the Panic of 1907. We’ve got to be careful and everyone would sort of melt away. I mean, I think Brimmer, Sherman Maisel in the early days would try to ask analytical questions but they were not, I mean, in terms of the average economic literacy of the Board, they were above average at the time but if Burns didn't like the questions they were asking in terms of what implications about every policy, he just shut -6- them off. He’d just say, well, we’ve discussed that enough. Let’s move on. So you only have to get stepped on like that a few times I think before you sort of challenge him less when you think you might be on the other side. Robert Hetzel: I understand he was particularly curt with Al Hayes, the New York Fed — Raymond Lombra: I think that’s fair. [00:15:05] Robert Hetzel: [Unintelligible] asked us to think about why we use the Greenbook and whether it couldn’t be done in a more useful way. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: So I’ve got a couple general questions to what extent if any does economy theory impose coherence on Greenbook projections; and, how does the FOMC use the analytical capabilities of the staff apart from its information gathering capabilities if at all? So I’d like to ask you some general questions about how the Board put together the Greenbook in those days. The procedure has gotten somewhat more organized. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: I understand Jim Kichline imposed some more order on it. The way the procedure starts now is that the staff director makes an assumption about what the FOMC wants to do with inflation and unemployment. Now, that's kind of implicit and he never says where that comes from. Presumably that reflects the Chairman’s... Raymond Lombra: Right. Sure. Robert Hetzel: ...point of view. Did you have any sense of that at the time that when the individual groups doing the Greenbook were asked to make their projections? How did the staff director impose some... Raymond Lombra: Oh, yeah. There was— Robert Hetzel: ...discipline? Raymond Lombra: I used to see this with the Bluebook with Axilrod. It was more obvious there because the group was smaller and we were spending a lot of time with Axilrod. But in the Greenbook, it would be you’d sort of start off early with this omnibus meeting that had the appearance—it always had the appearance of, okay, we’re starting off just with the last forecast and let’s see what everyone thinks. But depending on who the staff director was at the time, and it changed over time, Partee, Gramley, Kichline. They had different styles. But there was never a doubt in my mind that they had talked with the Chairman... -7- Robert Hetzel: Okay. Raymond Lombra: ...about what direction the forecast, the baseline forecast, might be shaded in. I mean, because they I think, you know, they’re like a lot of people in positions like that. They’re risk-averse to some degree. So they don’t want to be too far away probably from—they certainly want to know what their principal—it’s a principal-agent problem. They certainly want to know if the principal thinks... Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: And they figure they can make the argument if they really feel strongly by shading relative to that prior and part of the principal. So anyway, they’d come together, the so-called, you know, say the Jared Enzlers of the world. He had the model. And then you had all the people doing the sectors, you know, consumption, investment. You know, somebody like Steve—Jesus, Steve Roach, for example, who’s the chief economist now at Morgan Stanley and who you might profitably talk to. And it would be, Well, what do you think relative to where we were last time? And then they’d ask the model runner to sort of put the model through a baseline forecast to see how much sense it all made sector by sector. Because these forecasts, as you know, they weren’t just GDP and prices. I mean, it was all the details of consumption investment, et cetera. But in the end, it was going to be the staff director who decided what the top line numbers were going to be. Robert Hetzel: So the model just imposed an accounting coherence— Raymond Lombra: Yeah. I mean, I—yeah. Things had to... Robert Hetzel: ...add up. Raymond Lombra: ...add up and it... Robert Hetzel: Reasonably. Raymond Lombra: ...that sort of consistency check and some sort of historical relationships between some of the key, you know, say an inventory sales ratios and the overall strength of aggregate demands. But I think Gramley and Partee especially stick out in my mind here because they had—they viewed themselves as pretty damn good GNP forecasters. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: And, now, I remember, I’m going to try to get the timing right here, but I think and this will illustrate the point I was trying to make, I’m pretty sure—geez, it’s ’72. I’m thinking the spring of ’72 but I could be off. The staff was of the view that the economy was in a strong upward move. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. That would have been spring ’72 or spring ’71, either one. -8- Raymond Lombra: But Burns was not. So now the question—and, you know, so here’s the staff trying to push him I think, to push up rates. And he’s on the other side. So the dynamics of the Bluebook and Greenbook in that period are particularly interesting with regard to the point you’re examining here because I’m sure that Gramley, Partee, Axilrod were trying to find ways to edge the funds rate up, quote unquote, more than Burns was ready to tolerate. [00:20:43] Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. He was talking about, oh, there’s so much pessimism on the part of the consumer and the businessmen is feeling [tape skip] this, you know, given the degree of [tape skip] what Burns was saying. What was -- Did you have a sense that assumptions were being made about Fed objectives? That is now if you look at a Greenbook, and if you take a forecast six quarters out and then they weren’t six quarters out, but now if you take one six quarters out, you can read off what the staff director thinks the Chairman’s objective for inflation is. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: Because he’s not going to give a six percent figure for inflation a year and a half from now or two years from now if the Chairman thinks we ought to keep inflation at three percent. Did you have any sense of that, being able to read objectives out of the Greenbook or was the whole emphasis kind of near a term where monetary policy wasn’t— Raymond Lombra: Well, it was near term. And interestingly enough, Axilrod fought the notion that a forecast was a target. In fact, I think you can actually find a discussion of this. You know, you’re sort of waking old dogs up here. I think the first—no, maybe it was the second Boston Fed conference, I think it had sort of a green, part green on the cover. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: The Dallenbach and Axilrod have a paper in that one. And somewhere in there, Axilrod talks about projections and targets. And now he’s talking about in terms of the aggregates but this was because we would always give him the standard reveal preference argument, right? I mean, if that's the forecast and then they don’t alter policy, they either don’t believe the forecast or that’s their objective for the near term. Well, you couldn’t get into a dialogue. I think he was worried about the politics of all this actually. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Well, let’s pursue that a little bit more. How the process works now is that, well, Prell has some idea of what the Chairman wants in the way of inflation rate in the next year out. And he’s got some idea of what’s acceptable in terms of the behavior of the unemployment rate. And then he’s got an interest rate path. And he takes the interest rate path from last meeting... Raymond Lombra: Right. -9- Robert Hetzel: ...and then he sees what’s happened in terms of incoming information and what the yield curve has done. And he’ll adjust that interest rate path. And then he gives everybody this interest rate path. People make their individual forecast. They put the forecast together for real economic activity. They use a Phillips curve to come up with a forecast for inflation. And then Prell looks at that and sees if it’s a lot different from what he thinks is acceptable. Then there’s this iterative process. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: He’ll throw out another interest rate path. And they’ll go through the process again until they come to some— Raymond Lombra: I mean, it, you know, in many ways, I would guess it would be your probably your maintained hypothesis. The words change, the documents look different. But a lot doesn’t change at all. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: I don’t think that sounds much different from the way I remember it. Robert Hetzel: Was there an explicit interest rate path— Raymond Lombra: Well, I would just— Robert Hetzel: —given to you then or— Raymond Lombra: There was two things that are relevant here. I mean, you got to distinguish between—and I don’t want to sound like a disgruntled staff member because I wasn’t. I mean, I enjoyed being there. You enjoyed trying to nudge them in a more analytical direction. I’m not complaining about Axilrod. He had a different job and he had to answer to his principals. But I think you have to distinguish between sort of the top line staff. Say, you know, what now is the staff director for monetary policy and the head of R and S and the staffs underneath them. Okay? Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: I mean, they may have somewhat different objectives. And I remember what I would call the second-line staff. More or less continually, whether we’re talking about the Bluebook or Greenbook, trying to get more economic analysis into every one of these documents. And the analysis might be a paragraph here, a sentence there. I’m going to come back and give you an example of a bulletin article in a couple minutes of this. But I remember a specific regard to this that we would try to get the path, the implied path, for short and long-term interest rates into the Bluebook even as an appendix. And we would try to get the implied path for velocity in the appendix. And as you go through the history of those documents, you’ll see that once in a while, that stuff appears for a while and then it - 10 - disappears. And I think the way Axilrod would put it is, Oh, well, no one’s looking at it. We don’t need it, we got to make the document shorter. Or he’d say, They’re subject to so much error we shouldn’t even put them in there. It erodes the staff’s credibility. All right? Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: But the second-line staff was trying to say, Look, if that implied movement of velocity makes sense vis-à-vis anything we look at, etcetera. The bigger example I was going to give you is I think there’s a Bulletin article in 1974 on inflation. It could be ’75 but it’s sort of the surge in prices. And if you read that article, I remember the poor guy that got stuck having to draft it. I mean, you hear about anchovies and you hear about commodity prices and you really don’t hear about monetary policy. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: And that was the subject of much discussion inside the Fed. If that article was symptomatic of what had been missing from the underlying work that the staff was doing for the FOMC in the preceding two years, remember we had come through a period where the staff thought things were going to be stronger and prices were going to be higher but that got squashed out more or less each month as the Greenbook and Bluebook unfolded. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. So the staff forecasts of inflation were often higher than what was— Raymond Lombra: That's what I’d say. Robert Hetzel: Did you have a sense that the person organizing the Greenbook exercise, Partee, was being explicit about monetary policy or was kind of ambivalent, like these are unconditional forecasts and they’re just out for a couple quarters, it doesn’t make any difference what monetary policy is. Or he was pretty explicit. He said either— Raymond Lombra: I think actually the view was, and it they might not have been wrong, that even if the funds rate was another 25 or 50 basis points higher, would not have made a hell of a lot of difference... Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: ...over the relevant policy horizons. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: And that's another issue. It seems to me the staff might have been unwittingly sort of a party to what was going on by sort of delivering forecasts. And I’ll come back to a point on this, that seemed to suggest that the relevant horizon for operating under these variables was a hell of a lot shorter than it was. And then I’ll give you an example of that. In the Bluebook, there’d be these three alternatives. - 11 - Robert Hetzel: Yeah, sure. Raymond Lombra: And you’d have to show, all right, so now, there’s going to be two months. You’d start at the beginning of one month and I’m thinking these days it was probably two months rate to growth. Robert Hetzel: That's right. Raymond Lombra: And, well, basically, you were talking about one month. By the time the FOMC met, you know, all this happened, well, I mean, the funds rate would move, I don't know the mid points, you can get them, but move up or down 50 basis points. And we would show a couple percentage points difference between A and C on the aggregates and accessories. Reserve demands would look different. Yet we had no statistical model that showed an interest elasticity anywhere near that large. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: But Axilrod would say, They just don’t believe it. They don’t believe that they can move the funds rate and nothing happens for a few months or a few quarters if we’re talking about GNP. They don’t believe it. But we have to show them some noticeable change. And this debate would be more or less continual. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. So— Raymond Lombra: And that’s what I mean about the top-line staff and the secondline staff. [0:29:58] Robert Hetzel: But the other side of that is if you really don’t think that expenditures or interest elastic in the near term or that money demands interest elastic in the near term, then you want to do long range forecast out to the point where you do have some effect as a way of— Raymond Lombra: Oh, I agree with that. Robert Hetzel: But if you do just primarily short-term forecasts, three or four quarters, then you’re not really offering advice to the FOMC on what the effect of its actions are going to be. Mostly what you’re doing is just organizing incoming data in a convenient way, in a way that's— Raymond Lombra: Sure. Yeah. It’s a dilemma. And that's why I mean that, you know, it’s partly a missionary educational process that the staff plays. But I think the more you feed it and now suppose you have a group of people there that thinks they can affect what inflation rate we’re actually going to have in August, you know. I mean, this is really - 12 - dangerous in many ways. In some sense, they think they can wait a while longer. In another sense, they have, you know, way too truncated a view I think of the way... Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: ...the economy probably operates for the most part. And so I think this was a dilemma. You know, are they going to listen to you? Are you going to be relevant? This also came into play, by the way, with revisions. In fact, I had one of my graduate students work on this for a thesis. When the staff’s view changed, the question was how far do you go in the direction of the change. If you’re making big changes every month, are they going to listen to you? So is there an incentive to smooth the revisions so that you’re moving in the right direction. You recognize there’s a certain degree of randomness here. You don’t undermine your credibility. If you spend a lot of time developing the long-range forecast and then three weeks later you have a view that's more sanguine, let’s say, well, maybe the next time they’re not going to listen to you. And I used to hear that from the topline guys also. Robert Hetzel: Well, there’s another sort of an analog to that, that as you can [tape skips] is to take the FOMC objectives and then come up with the optimal interest rate path that will give you those, achieve those objectives. And if you really believe in optimal forecast, where forecast revisions are white noise, you’re going to get white noise changes in the funds rate and you’re going to get pretty big jumps. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: If you make explicit these recommendations for the funds rate and the funds rate is jumping all over and up and down, that's probably the rational thing to do. But you’re going to be totally ignored because there’s no way the FOMC is going to accept anything other than persistent small changes in the funds rate. Raymond Lombra: I agree. [00:33:05] Robert Hetzel: This is kind of a big question but it’s kind of somewhat in the background of the things we’ve been saying. Ultimately, did you have a sense of what Burns thought the Feds’ responsibility for inflation was? Did you have the sense that he thought, you know, the way Greenspan would now or Volcker did, that, yes, the Fed is the agency that's responsible for inflation and that Burns simply miscalculated? He thought that what was important was the psychology of the consumer and the businessmen and their optimism or pessimism and how much they would spend, and he simply just grossly misjudged the effect the Fed would have on inflation. Or he really did believe the kinds of things he said that inflation came from labor unions and the Fed either accommodated or it didn’t, and it had this dilemma. Did you have a sense ultimately of— - 13 - Raymond Lombra: I think if we use the old Volcker term of “practical monetarism,” that one would judge Volcker and Greenspan both as being more practical monetarists than Burns. I mean, I remember I think it’s a testimony. It’s in the Havrilesky and Boorman first issue of their book, Current Issues—it was a group of readings, Current Issues in Monetary Theory and Policy. And in there somewhere they have I believe it’s testimony for Burns where he’s sort of responding to this notion that the inflation in ’73, ’74 was the Fed’s fault. And he said, No, that's nutty. And he had some numbers and he talks about Milton Friedman and says that's a relationship that is very loose. It might hold over, you know, decades. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: And I think he really believed that: that in the long run, you had to get control of the aggregates, sure, but in the short run, there was a host of other things. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. [00:35:09] Raymond Lombra: I think he actually believed that fiscal policy was a hell of a lot more important at the time than a lot of other people thought. And I guess a lot of Fed Chairmen have thought that. But he—I used to think about the Committee on Interest and Dividends. You know, why the hell would he agree? Well, I mean, one argument is that he thought the Fed would lose its independence I guess. But another one might be that he thought there was a vehicle that he might be able to use to kind of get fiscal policy to be a less destabilizing force that he had sort of this grand plan about how it could all work out. But I think he really believed that a depreciation was inflationary, that a rise in anchovy prices was—I think he really believed that and that the Fed’s role here was limited. I have a quote somewhere in one of my papers where he even says the Fed’s role in influencing the balance of payments is very limited. I mean, this is an astounding quotation I thought. Robert Hetzel: Well, he was very much into intervention and with swaps and, you know, would sterilize [tape skip] much importance to. But he really did attach importance to that kind of intervention. Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Robert Hetzel: My own feeling is that we find him hard to think about because our idea of what defines an economist is so standard and we think, Oh, yeah, monetarists are very different than Keynesians and very different than rational expectations and very different than a real business cycle. Yet all of these people, they’re basically neoclassical economists. They think in terms of highly aggregated, simple models that are characterized by structural relationships that are based on optimizing behavior, permanent income hypothesis, life cycle, behavior. But Burns came before that. He wasn’t a neoclassical economist in the sense that we think of him. He had this incredibly detailed knowledge of the cyclical behavior and interrelationship between series and he tied everything together by psychology, by ways of optimism and pessimism. He didn't tie things together with the kinds of optimizing - 14 - framework that economists use. And he could look at the world and see different things than Milton Friedman or James Tobin for that matter would see. Raymond Lombra: Yeah. I remember there actually was a great exchange here. And I don’t remember the time. But it’s got to be somewhere in ’74, ’75, I’d be guessing. In front of the Senate Banking Committee and he gives his opening—well, I guess Proxmire gives his opening statement saying things are going to hell in a handbasket. And he says, What do you think of that, Chairman Burns. And Burns pokes around his pipe for a while and says, I’d say you’re a pessimistic man, Mr. Chairman. And he goes on to talk about that he’s just more optimistic about the resilience of the American economy. And I think he believed it. It was not just rhetoric trying to cover the Fed’s ass because I saw him inside. And I think I know how he was moving his hand to influence the Greenbook and Bluebook numbers. And I think one would have to conclude that based on what you were seeing that he actually believed them. And I can’t believe he believed that moving the funds rate 25 basis points in those days made a difference. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Well, one gets the feeling somewhat that if that he was willing to trade with the administration the way Martin was in the last half of the... Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: ...’60s. That is, Martin attached enormous importance to fiscal policy. Couldn’t care less about the rate of growth of money. Burns cared a lot about microeconomic intervention. He really cared about Davis Bacon legislation, about depreciation schedules and the Council in the Nixon administration on the other hand really cared about those St. Louis equations. And they really believed that they could control aggregate demand with money growth. They just didn't have a good idea of the Phillips curve. And they thought -- they were naïve about the extent to which they could exploit it. So it’s kind of like if the two could get together, Burns would give the administration money growth because he didn't think it mattered that much in the... Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: ...short run. And then he got things that he wanted in terms of the size of the deficit suspension, the Davis Bacon various kinds of tinkering with the investment tax credit and so on. [00:40:00] Raymond Lombra: Yeah. You go back to economist retreat to reveal preference. And so I haven’t got the specific numbers at my fingertips but I think the quote unquote money target in ’71, mid ’71, was somewhere around three, four percent. And by late ’72 or early ’73, the explicit target they were voting on was six, seven percent, somewhere in that range. So things had gone up a lot. Now, if you ask Burns, Well, Jesus, isn’t that going to be more inflation, well, he’d give you the standard money demand story. Now, I thought, He can’t really believe this. He can’t believe that this has been a shift in money demand that - 15 - ought to be accommodated. I guess this is the sort of beginning of the missing money story. And isn’t it that he just wants to try to hold interest rates down for the Committee on Interest and Dividends, and he thinks they can take it all out later and that it probably won't matter that much anyway. Well, I suppose we’d have to go back and try to disentangle what exactly he was saying and doing. But there was this—I guess I took what happened to the money targets at least to some degree. They allowed those to continue going up even though money growth was accelerating and even though the staff, as best as I can recollect it, was telling them that there was way too much stimulus in the economy. Robert Hetzel: Well, I think that, this is just my surmise, but I really think Burns thought that the primary determinate of expenditure was velocity, not money. And that depended upon psychology, the psychology of consumers and investors and that he had this NBER framework where he could follow the leading indicators and he could read the tea leaves in the near term behavior of the economy and he could go period by period, and it didn't make a lot of difference what money was doing. He figured he could stand in control. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: He was wrong. But this gets us in to the issue [tape skip] everybody talks about. And people within the Fed had very different opinions about it, the extent to which Burns was sensitive to the desires of the administration. Because if you go back and you look at this period, you look at what happened when he came on as chairman in February ’70, you look at what happened in early ’71 when the administration first became seriously concerned it wasn’t going to get four percent employment by November ’72, you look at what happened in 1972. Raymond Lombra: Hm-hmm. Robert Hetzel: Particularly the first part of the year. I mean, monetary policy, whether you look at interest rates or money growth, I mean, it is moving around. It’s not unrelated to what the administration was concerned about. You think that Burns basically just was getting what he thought he needed to keep inflation down in the way of wage and price controls and was willing to kind of trade or— Raymond Lombra: I don't know what the story is on the famous Brimmer story. I really don’t. Robert Hetzel: What’s the Brimmer story? Raymond Lombra: Well, didn't Brimmer claim that Burns walked into some FOMC meeting with some note at some point that the President wants this or that? Robert Hetzel: No. That was an article in Fortune magazine by— Raymond Lombra: I know that but it was alleged Brimmer was the leak I think. - 16 - Robert Hetzel: No. Brimmer actually defended Burns [tape skip]. I don't think any allegations were ever made about who leaked the story. [tape skip] [Unintelligible] said that they thought Leonall Andersen from St. Louis— Raymond Lombra: Well anyway. Robert Hetzel: But... Raymond Lombra: I think the senior staff and Burns were mortified with the possibility that Nixon might lose. I mean, you could just tell by the kind of comments people make and what implications it has for the future of the nation, etcetera. So, you know, how does this subliminally, if not overtly, influence the way you respond today versus tomorrow to what you’re looking at in the data. You know, I guess we need a psychologist to help us. But I know I sure felt at the time that if there was a way to delay, they would try to find it. [00:45:00] Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Well, that's kind of what the— Raymond Lombra: There's a lot of political business psycho-literature, you know. I mean, I sure felt it being there then. No one ever says anything. I think we ought to not raise the funds rate because the election is coming. Robert Hetzel: Sure. Raymond Lombra: And if you want Nixon to win, I never heard anyone say that. But it seemed to me that was a factor. Now, different staff are going to have different views I suppose. But I was pretty close to what was happening. And, like I said, I’m just inferring, interpolating from the comments that I heard about what was going on in the campaign at the time. More generally, I mean Burns said—I mean, isn’t he given credit for founding the Council of Economic Advisors? Robert Hetzel: He’s given credit for resuscitating it after Keyserling made it very political in the Truman Administration. Raymond Lombra: Okay. So— Robert Hetzel: Wanted to use it as a vehicle for [unintelligible]. Raymond Lombra: So I think there’s sort of two things going on here. One is I think he valued his counsel being sought by the administration and him being in that circle. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: I think he did not want to have a Lyndon Johnson kind of experience if he could avoid it. - 17 - Robert Hetzel: What’s the reference to him? Raymond Lombra: Well, the stuff about Martin and the discount rate and Johnson and, you know, that old story— Robert Hetzel: Yeah. December ’65. Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Yeah. He wanted to be part of the inner circle I think. And I remember thinking at the time that I don’t care where you stand on independence of the Fed, formal and informal, but this is too cozy in some ways, especially given what was going on. Now, the other thing that’s relevant here is the whole Bretton Woods situation and Connally’s tenure at the Treasury. I don't think he thought very much of Connally. Robert Hetzel: I don’t see how he could have. Raymond Lombra: And I think that probably—now we’re doing real psychoanalysis. I know at the time I felt that he felt he owed the President more than he would normally get from the Chairman of the Fed because he was probably getting bad advice from Conaly. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: So there was this whole notion of how do you get from ’71 to ’73 here? That's another issue that's running around. I mean, besides wage and price controls and... [End of first recording at 00:47:33. Begin second recording at 00:47:37.] Raymond Lombra: ...another factor that was leading in to try to be, how should I put it, cordial to the White House rather than otherwise. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Yeah. On your first point, I’ll tell you something our director of research said. And this is the kind of thing you don’t remember if you didn’t live through the period. But Mr. Parthemos told me that, you know, at the time, which you know of course, since you lived through it, there was this enormous social divisiveness because of the war. Raymond Lombra: Right. Robert Hetzel: And the student protests. You had the campus protests, the Nixon people, that really disturbed them. You know, of course they thought it was being organized by communists, that kind of thing. But Burns really felt that American society was being challenged. And he would say things, oh, like this blessed civilization, this blessed America. And he thought it was under attack. And he thought it was under attack by the student radicals and especially by the labor unions. - 18 - Raymond Lombra: Yeah. I agree. Robert Hetzel: And he was willing to trade off [tape skip]. This wasn’t just his view. This was a common view among businessmen. Anyone who was a quote, political conservative, thought that the order of American society was being threatened by the power of labor unions and these other challenges to authority. And Burns thought that the government needed to exert authority. We needed these kinds of government controls and that he was willing to cooperate with the Nixon Administration to get those controls, the wage and price controls that he thought were essential to saving— [00:49:38] Raymond Lombra: Oh, absolutely. I think you make a good point. And I remember there was a briefing, ’74-ish, where-- I think it was sort of a pre-FOMC briefing because the FOMC wanted to know about this… What was the contribution of all these factors, the acceleration of inflation. And they came up with sort of an inflation accounting. And he heard the first half of the briefing and he decided the contribution of the so-called special factors was way too small and the contribution of policy was way too big and that they’d have to call off the briefing for the FOMC until the numbers could be reworked. (Laughs) Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Well, he remained even in ’74, he remained an advocate of wage and price controls. And Greenspan, one argument— Raymond Lombra: But my point—I guess my [unintelligible]. I agree with your assessment of what really we might call political economy I guess. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. Raymond Lombra: For the intersection between the long-run political ramifications versus the what he would judge to be the short-run economic ramifications of what they were up to. Robert Hetzel: Yeah. How long did you remain at the Fed? Raymond Lombra: I left in March of ’77. Robert Hetzel: Hm-hmm. So you left—so you were pretty much coterminous with Burns actually. Raymond Lombra: It’s all my fault, Bob. (Laughter) Robert Hetzel: Did you have the sense—’77 was a difficult year for us. I’d come here in fall of ’75. And I’d come as a monetarist and by then our bank had pretty much made the shift to quantity theory view of looking at things. We were enormously frustrated in ’77 - 19 - with Burns. Presumably the answer there is just relatively straightforward, that he was trying to get reappointed? Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Yeah. And I think he was not very tolerant by this point though. Not that he ever was. But he was more overtly intolerant of any challenge. You know, so these— Robert Hetzel: Yeah. Raymond Lombra: Again, the timing, my timing recollection may be wrong, but he was cutting off Reserve Bank access to the full model, to the Greenbook, the Bluebook in various ways. I mean, it was not a good period I think from that point of view and— Robert Hetzel: He was never very tolerant to begin with of the criticism— [00:52:28] Raymond Lombra: I mean, I think he viewed the Reserve Banks as an irritant. We didn't need them and they were a pain. I remember when John Paulus went out to be director of research at Minneapolis. And Mark Willis was the president. Willis used to keep asking him, Well, how can I be more effective. (laughs) Paulus just said, Become Chairman. You aren’t going to be effective from out here. Robert Hetzel: Yes. I’m afraid that's true. Raymond Lombra: I’m going to have to run, Bob, here in about two minutes. We can continue this at another time but I’m going to have to get to another meeting. Robert Hetzel: No. I think we’re winding up. You mentioned some names of people I haven’t talked to yet. All these people would be useful to talk to, Helmut Wendel, John Paulus, Steve Roach? Raymond Lombra: Yeah. Robert Hetzel: Okay. Raymond Lombra: I would say. Robert Hetzel: Would you have phone numbers for any of those individuals or just try to— Raymond Lombra: Well, let’s see here. Robert Hetzel: [Inaudible 0:05:52]. Raymond Lombra: See if I have Paulus. Yeah. Paulus is at home in Connecticut. [phone number redacted]. Now, you’ll get his answering machine because he doesn’t answer - 20 - the phone during the day but he’ll call you back if you just leave a short message. And use my name. Say I suggested it. Robert Hetzel: Okay. Raymond Lombra: And just a minute. I’ll get you... (END OF RECORDING) - 21 -