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A meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee was held in the offices of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, December
17, 1996, at 9:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Greenspan, Chairman
Mr. McDonough, Vice Chairman
Mr. Boehne
Mr. Jordan
Mr. Kelley
Mr. Lindsey

Mr. McTeer
Mr. Meyer
Ms. Phillips
Ms. Rivlin
Mr. Stern
Ms. Yellen

Messrs. Broaddus, Guynn, Moskow, and Parry, Alternate Members of the Federal
Open Market Committee
Messrs. Hoenig, Melzer, and Ms. Minehan, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks
of Kansas City, St. Louis, and Boston respectively
Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Mr. Coyne, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Mr. Baxter, Deputy General Counsel
Mr. Prell, Economist
Mr. Truman, Economist
Messrs. Lang, Lindsey, Mishkin, Promisel, Rolnick, Rosenblum, Siegman, Simpson,
Sniderman, and Stockton, Associate Economists
Mr. Fisher, Manager, System Open Market Account
Mr. Ettin, Deputy Director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors
Mr. Slifman, Associate Director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of
Governors
Mr. Reinhart, Assistant Director, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors

Mr. Barron, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Messrs. Beebe, Davis, Eisenbeis, and Goodfriend, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal
Reserve Banks of San Francisco, Kansas City, Atlanta, and Richmond respectively
Messrs. Gavin, Kos, and Rosengren, Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of St.
Louis, New York, and Boston respectively
Mr. Evans, Assistant Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held
on November 13, 1996, were approved.
The Manager of the System Open Market Account reported on developments in foreign
exchange markets since the meeting on November 13, 1996. There were no transactions in
foreign currencies for System account during this period, and thus no vote was required of
the Committee.
The Manager also reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System
open market transactions in government securities and federal agency obligations during the
period from November 13, 1996, through December 16, 1996. By unanimous vote, the
Committee ratified these transactions.
The Committee members discussed certain changes in the procedures for conducting
domestic open market operations that the Manager of the System Open Market Account had
proposed for implementation at the beginning of 1997. The changes included advancing the
normal time for initiating daily operations by one hour to between 10:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Moving to the earlier time would place Desk operations closer to the period during the day
when the financing market was most active and thus in a position to accommodate a larger
volume of System transactions when necessary. As at present, the Manager might choose to
undertake Desk operations at other times during the day when special circumstances dictate.
The Manager also indicated that the normal time for domestic operations might be moved to
an even earlier hour after expedited procedures were developed for assembling the necessary
statistical information on a timely basis for such operations. In the interest of making
information about System operations available more promptly to market participants and the
broader public, the Desk also would begin at the start of 1997 to announce the par amount of
its market transactions shortly after the completion of the operations. With respect to
purchases of Treasury coupon securities for System account, the Desk had adopted about one
year ago the practice of making such purchases in separate maturity tranches but might at its
option in the future spread such purchases over a number of weeks rather than over the
course of several days. This more flexible timing would allow the Desk to inject reserves into
the banking system through outright operations as the need arose without waiting for that
need to accumulate to particularly high levels.
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All the members who commented endorsed the changes, with several noting that they were
appropriate responses to evolving market circumstances. Because the new procedures did not

involve any alterations in the Committee's current directives, authorizations, or rules, a
formal vote was not required.
The Committee then turned to a discussion of the economic and financial outlook and the
implementation of monetary policy over the intermeeting period ahead. A summary of the
economic and financial information available at the time of the meeting and of the
Committee's discussion is provided below, followed by the domestic policy directive that was
approved by the Committee and issued to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that economic activity had continued to
expand at a moderate pace in recent months. Consumer spending had rebounded from its
summer lull, but housing demand was somewhat weaker on balance and the growth of
business spending on durable equipment had slowed from a very rapid pace. Although
inventory investment had picked up, stocks in most sectors had remained well aligned with
sales. Both industrial production and employment had recorded sizable advances. Increases
in labor compensation had trended up this year, and consumer price inflation also had picked
up, but the faster rise in overall consumer prices owed entirely to larger increases in food and
energy prices.
Private-sector demand for labor remained solid in November. Private nonfarm payroll
employment increased appreciably further in November after an October surge, and the
average workweek of private production or nonsupervisory workers retraced more than half
of its October decline. Service industries recorded another large gain in employment despite
a sharp drop in payrolls at help-supply firms, and the number of jobs in retail trade expanded
further in November after a steep rise in October. In the goods-producing sector, employment
in construction and manufacturing rose moderately. The civilian unemployment rate
increased slightly, to 5.4 percent, in November.
Industrial production rose sharply in November after a small October decline. A rebound in
motor vehicle assemblies from the disruptive effects of work stoppages accounted for much
of the increase in production in November, but output from utilities also surged in response to
unusually cool weather. The production of nondurable consumer goods and business
equipment other than motor vehicles also was up significantly in November while the
manufacture of consumer durables and defense and space equipment decreased further.
Reflecting the strong advance in production, the utilization of total industrial capacity picked
up considerably in November.
Consumer spending increased appreciably on balance in recent months after a lackluster
performance in the summer. Total retail sales fell in November but nonetheless were
considerably above their average in the third quarter. The November decline reflected
weakness in auto sales; retail spending on other items, notably durable goods, rose
significantly further. Spending on services picked up in October (latest data) following a
relatively weak third quarter. Housing starts rebounded in November after declining in
September and October. Single-family starts in November were a little below the average
pace of previous months in the year while multifamily starts surged to a level not seen since
late 1990. By contrast, sales of both new and existing homes dropped again in October (latest
data).
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Growth of business fixed investment appeared to have slowed to a moderate pace in the
fourth quarter after a sharp rise in the previous quarter. Shipments of nondefense capital
goods fell in October, reversing a sizable September gain; however, recent data on orders
pointed to further increases in business spending for equipment, especially for
communications equipment where shipments already were at a high level. Business
investment in transportation equipment evidently weakened, as sales of heavy trucks
remained sluggish and production shortfalls held back fleet sales of light vehicles. By
contrast, nonresidential construction continued to expand at a solid rate in October, with
building activity particularly strong in the office, other commercial, institutional, and
industrial categories.
Business inventory investment picked up sharply in October from the slow September pace,
but total stocks remained at a low level in relation to sales. Most of the October increase
occurred at the wholesale level; inventories of farm products turned up sharply after months
of sizable drawdowns, and petroleum stocks were built up from unseasonably low levels.
Despite the October rise, the ratio of wholesale inventories to shipments remained at the
lower end of its range over recent years. In manufacturing, stocks increased at a pace in line
with shipments, and the aggregate inventory-shipments ratio stayed at a very low level.
Retail inventories were up moderately in October. The inventory-sales ratio for the sector
was unchanged and remained in the middle of its range over recent years.
The nominal deficit on U.S. trade in goods and services was somewhat larger in September
than in August; exports decreased slightly in September while imports were little changed.
For the third quarter, the deficit widened substantially from its rate in the second quarter as
exports fell and imports rose moderately. Nearly all of the decline in exports reflected lower
sales of aircraft and gold. Increases in imports were widespread but they were largely offset
by declines in imports of gold and semiconductors. Economic growth picked up in most of
the major foreign industrial countries in the third quarter, but available indicators generally
suggested some slowing of growth in the fourth quarter. In Japan, by contrast, economic
activity had been sluggish in the third quarter but appeared to have picked up more recently.
Consumer price inflation in October and November was lifted slightly by sizable advances in
energy prices and, to a lesser degree, increases in food prices; however, consumer prices for
items other than food and energy rose modestly during the two months. The rise in core
consumer prices over the twelve months ended in November was somewhat smaller than it
had been over the previous twelve months, although the total index registered a bigger
advance as a result of larger increases in food and energy prices. At the producer level, prices
of finished energy goods rose sharply in October and November while prices of finished
foods advanced less rapidly. Excluding food and energy, prices of finished goods edged
lower on balance over October and November, and in the twelve months ended in November,
these prices rose substantially less than in the previous twelve months. Average hourly
earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers were up considerably in November after
edging down in October. The twelve-month rise in this index was somewhat larger than the
advance over the previous twelve months.
At its meeting on November 13, 1996, the Committee adopted a directive that called for
maintaining the existing degree of pressure on reserve positions but that included a bias
toward the possible firming of reserve conditions during the intermeeting period. The
directive stated that in the context of the Committee's long-run objectives for price stability

and sustainable economic growth, and giving careful consideration to economic, financial,
and monetary developments, somewhat greater reserve restraint would be acceptable and
slightly lesser reserve restraint might be acceptable during the intermeeting period. The
reserve conditions associated with this directive were expected to be consistent with
moderate growth of M2 and relatively strong expansion of M3 over coming months.
Open market operations during the intermeeting period were directed toward maintaining the
existing degree of pressure on reserve positions. However, the federal funds rate tended to
average a little above the level expected with an unchanged policy stance in apparent
response to scattered operating problems and occasional unexpectedly large clearing needs at
banks. Other short-term interest rates registered small mixed changes since the November 13
meeting; Treasury bill rates drifted lower, partly because of heightened demands for safety
and liquidity as asset markets became more volatile during the period, while year-end
pressures boosted rates on private instruments with maturities in early 1997. At longer
maturities, yields drifted lower over most of the intermeeting period in response to incoming
data that suggested economic growth would remain moderate and inflation subdued, but they
rebounded late in the period in response to the release of firmer economic data and growing
concerns regarding the sustainability of current domestic asset prices. Despite these concerns,
most major indexes of equity prices advanced further on balance.
In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar in terms of the other
G-10 currencies rose slightly over the intermeeting period. The dollar rose even more against
the German mark and the French franc amid increased market apprehension that the
European Monetary Union's common currency, the euro, will not be as strong a currency as
the mark. The dollar also might have been boosted by statements by French and German
officials that suggested the dollar was undervalued against their currencies.
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Expansion of the broad monetary aggregates was relatively strong in November. Growth of
M2 picked up, reflecting a sharp increase in demand deposits and smaller runoffs in other
checkable deposits. Inflows to retail money market funds remained substantial. Expansion of
M3 moderated somewhat from its brisk pace in October as growth in business demands for
credit slowed and banks reduced their reliance on large time deposits and other managed
liability components. For the year through November, M2 was estimated to have grown at a
rate in the upper half of the Committee's annual range, and M3 at a rate a little above the top
of its range. Total domestic nonfinancial debt expanded moderately on balance over recent
months and remained in the middle portion of its range.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that the expansion would be sustained
at a pace close to the economy's estimated growth potential. Consumer spending was
projected to increase at a rate generally in line with the anticipated rise in disposable income;
the favorable effects on household wealth of the advance that had occurred in stock prices
and the ample availability of credit for most borrowers were expected to balance the damping
effects of continuing consumer concerns about the adequacy of their savings, the security of
their jobs, and the extent of their debt burdens. Homebuilding was forecast to decline
somewhat but to stabilize at a relatively high level in the context of continued income growth
and the generally favorable cash-flow affordability of home ownership. Business spending on

equipment and structures was projected to expand less rapidly in light of some anticipated
slowing in the growth of sales and profits. Fiscal policy and the external sector were expected
to continue to exert small restraining influences on economic activity over the projection
period. Consumer price inflation, excluding the relatively volatile food and energy
components of the price index, was forecast to rise slightly over 1997 and 1998 in the context
of anticipated high resource use and an accompanying appreciable pickup in the growth of
labor compensation that would be augmented by the legislated rise in the federal minimum
wage. Somewhat larger increases would have been projected in consumer price inflation in
the absence of anticipated technical measurement changes to the index.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective developments, members
commented that the information received during the relatively short interval since the
previous meeting had not materially altered either their assessment that the economy was
performing quite favorably or their forecasts of further growth at a pace averaging near the
economy's potential. The economy currently displayed fairly solid underpinnings, with few
imbalances of the kind that historically had tended to create problems. Against the
background of generally supportive financial conditions and a high degree of consumer and
business confidence, further economic growth was thought likely to be sustained by
appreciable increases in consumer spending and business investment. The overall pace of the
expansion was expected to be restrained to an extent, however, by declining federal
government outlays for goods and services and ongoing weakness in net exports.
Despite the prospects for moderate economic growth, members observed that the risks on
inflation still seemed to be tilted toward some rise over time. Measures of core inflation had
displayed little trend and even some decline over the past year. However, wage increases had
moved higher over that period, a development suggesting the possibility that labor markets
might be tighter than could be sustained over the long term. At some point accelerating labor
compensation costs, were they to continue, likely would spill over into higher inflation. Such
an outcome remained subject to a great deal of uncertainty, however, in light of the relatively
benign behavior in recent years of both wages and prices in comparison with historical
experience at prevailing levels of resource utilization.
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In the Committee's discussion of developments in major sectors of the economy bearing on
the outlook for business activity, members noted that consumer spending had picked up as
expected after a lull during the summer months. Survey data and anecdotal reports suggested
that consumer confidence was currently high, and there were widespread indications of
robust retail sales during the early weeks of the holiday season, though holiday sales were
always difficult to read at this stage. Thus far, however, sales of motor vehicles had not
strengthened to the extent that was anticipated after full production was restored following a
work stoppage at a major manufacturer. Members cited a number of factors--the rise in
consumer debt burdens, tightening consumer credit standards, continued worker concerns
about job security, and the satisfaction of earlier pent-up demands--that were tending to
inhibit the growth in consumer spending and perhaps helped to explain why the sharp
increases in stock market wealth had not been accompanied by stronger growth in such
spending. The behavior of the stock market injected an additional note of uncertainty into the
forecast for consumer spending and the economy more generally. The rise over recent years
had been extraordinary and had brought market valuations to fairly high levels relative to

earnings and dividends. In these circumstances, the members recognized the need to monitor
with special care price movements in the stock market and asset markets more generally for
their implications for consumer and other spending. On balance, favorable employment and
income conditions seemed likely to foster a level of consumer spending that would provide
key support for sustained economic expansion.
The members anticipated smaller though still sizable gains in business fixed investment over
the year ahead. Slowing growth in profit levels and cash flows was likely to retard spending
for many types of business equipment, but favorable prices, advancing technology, and
readily available financing probably would continue to foster rapid expansion in office,
computing, and communications equipment. The outlook for nonresidential construction
remained uneven across the country, but such construction seemed likely to edge higher on
balance over the next several quarters. Members noted in this regard that the construction of
office buildings had strengthened in a number of urban areas. Business inventories currently
seemed on the whole to be at desired and sustainable levels in relation to sales. In the
circumstances, inventory accumulation was projected to remain moderate and, barring
unexpected surges or declines in final sales, was not likely to be a significant factor affecting
the course of the economy.
The recent information on residential construction was mixed. Weakness in late summer and
early fall evidently reflected the effects of earlier increases in mortgage interest rates, but
some measures of housing activity in November indicated unexpected strength. In addition,
reports from around the country pointed to uneven conditions ranging from further strength
to some emerging weakness in regional housing markets. On balance, the statistical and
anecdotal information was interpreted, by some members at least, as consistent with a
tendency for housing activity to stabilize. In this view, a level of housing construction
somewhat below the peak reached earlier in 1996 was likely to be sustained, buoyed in part
by the recent decline in mortgage interest rates and the continuing rise in consumer incomes
and favorable consumer sentiment.
A modest degree of fiscal restraint seemed likely over the next two fiscal years. Some
members expressed optimism with regard to the prospects for an agreement between the
President and the Congress that would provide a basis for reaching a balanced budget by the
year 2002. Such an agreement would need to include controversial constraints on the growth
of entitlements, but its achievement would have favorable effects on financial markets and on
business and consumer sentiment more generally, thereby tending to offset at least in part any
direct effects of reduced federal spending on aggregate demand.
Members anticipated that the external sector of the economy would continue to exert some
restraint on domestic economic activity, though perhaps to a lesser extent than over the past
year. In particular, the growth of U.S. exports was expected to accelerate somewhat in
association with some strengthening on average in the economies of the nation's key trading
partners. The economic recovery in Mexico from its earlier financial crisis was already
providing a considerable boost to exports from some parts of the United States.
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Inflation had remained subdued, but the members continued to view the risks as tilted toward
increases in the future. Labor compensation costs clearly were rising at a faster pace in the

context of persistently tight labor markets, and an upturn in core price inflation seemed quite
possible at some point in the absence of some easing of pressures in labor markets. However,
the members recognized that the increase in wage inflation had been significantly less than
would have been anticipated on the basis of historical relationships with labor market
conditions, and price performance also had been more favorable than those relationships
would have suggested. In the circumstances, there was a good deal of uncertainty regarding
the outlook for inflation, including the potential degree of utilization in labor markets, the
associated pressures on labor costs, and the ability of firms to pass higher labor costs into
prices in markets that generally continued to be described as highly competitive. With the
economy operating in the neighborhood of its sustainable potential, relatively minor
differences in overall economic growth could have a significant effect over time on whether
inflation would tend to trend up or down.
In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period ahead, all the members
supported a proposal to maintain an unchanged policy stance while also retaining a bias
toward restraint in the directive. An unchanged policy was warranted by the quite satisfactory
performance of the economy and inflation and the uncertainties surrounding the outlook.
Thus, while the longer-term risks might point toward rising inflation, there were reasonable
prospects that inflation would remain contained, and any pickup in inflation, should it occur,
was likely to be limited at least for a time. In the circumstances, the members concluded that
watchful waiting remained the prudent course for policy as they continued to assess ongoing
developments. Because the risks of waiting did not appear to be substantial at this juncture,
anticipatory tightening was not yet called for.
In the Committee's discussion of possible adjustments to policy during the intermeeting
period, members agreed that the retention of an asymmetric directive toward tightening was
consistent with their view that the risks remained biased toward higher inflation.
Accordingly, while they were not suggesting that policy should be especially quick to react to
incoming information over the intermeeting period, they did view the next policy move as
more likely to be in the direction of some firming than toward easing. In this connection,
some members emphasized that it would be especially important for the Committee to act
promptly to counter any tendency for price inflation to rise and for higher inflation
expectations to become embedded in financial markets and economic decision-making more
generally.
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At the conclusion of the Committee's discussion, all the members indicated that they
supported a directive that called for maintaining the existing degree of pressure on reserve
positions and that retained a bias toward the possible firming of reserve conditions during the
intermeeting period. Accordingly, in the context of the Committee's long-run objectives for
price stability and sustainable economic growth, and giving careful consideration to
economic, financial, and monetary developments, the Committee decided that somewhat
greater reserve restraint would be acceptable and slightly lesser reserve restraint might be
acceptable during the intermeeting period. The reserve conditions contemplated at this
meeting were expected to be consistent with relatively strong expansion in M2 and M3 over
coming months.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York was authorized and directed, until instructed
otherwise by the Committee, to execute transactions in the System Account in accordance
with the following domestic policy directive:
The information reviewed at this meeting suggests that economic activity has
continued to expand at a moderate pace. Private nonfarm payroll employment
increased appreciably further in November, although the civilian unemployment
rate edged up to 5.4 percent. Industrial production rose sharply in November, in
part because of a rebound in motor vehicle assemblies that had been depressed
earlier by work stoppages. Consumer spending has posted appreciable gains over
recent months after a summer lull. Housing starts rebounded in November after
declining in September and October. Business fixed investment appears to be
growing moderately after a sharp rise in the third quarter. The nominal deficit on
U.S. trade in goods and services widened substantially in the third quarter from
its rate in the second quarter. Increases in labor compensation have trended up
this year, and consumer price inflation also has picked up owing to larger
increases in food and energy prices.
Short-term market interest rates have registered mixed changes since the
Committee meeting on November 13, 1996, while long-term yields have risen
slightly. In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar in
terms of the other G-10 currencies has risen slightly over the intermeeting
period.
Growth of M2 picked up in November, while expansion of M3 moderated
somewhat from its brisk pace in October. For the year through November, M2 is
estimated to have grown at a rate in the upper half of the Committee's annual
range, and M3 at a rate a little above the top of its range. Total domestic
nonfinancial debt has expanded moderately on balance over recent months and
has remained in the middle portion of its range.
The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions
that will foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. In
furtherance of these objectives, the Committee at its meeting in July reaffirmed
the ranges it had established in January for growth of M2 and M3 of 1 to 5
percent and 2 to 6 percent respectively, measured from the fourth quarter of 1995
to the fourth quarter of 1996. The monitoring range for growth of total domestic
nonfinancial debt was maintained at 3 to 7 percent for the year. For 1997, the
Committee agreed on a tentative basis to set the same ranges as in 1996 for
growth of the monetary aggregates and debt, measured from the fourth quarter of
1996 to the fourth quarter of 1997. The behavior of the monetary aggregates will
continue to be evaluated in the light of progress toward price level stability,
movements in their velocities, and developments in the economy and financial
markets.
In the implementation of policy for the immediate future, the Committee seeks
to maintain the existing degree of pressure on reserve positions. In the context of
the Committee's long-run objectives for price stability and sustainable economic
growth, and giving careful consideration to economic, financial, and monetary

developments, somewhat greater reserve restraint would or slightly lesser
reserve restraint might be acceptable in the intermeeting period. The
contemplated reserve conditions are expected to be consistent with relatively
strong expansion in M2 and M3 over coming months.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough, Boehne, Jordan, Kelley,
Lindsey, McTeer, Meyer, Mses. Phillips, Rivlin, Mr. Stern, and Ms. Yellen.
Votes against this action: None.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday-Wednesday,
February 4-5, 1997.
The meeting adjourned at 12:40 p.m.
Donald L. Kohn
Secretary
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