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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, November
16, 1999, at 9:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Greenspan, Chairman
Mr. McDonough, Vice Chairman
Mr. Boehne
Mr. Ferguson
Mr. Gramlich
Mr. Kelley
Mr. McTeer
Mr. Meyer
Mr. Moskow
Mr. Stern
Messrs. Broaddus, Guynn, Jordan, and Parry, Alternate Members of the Federal Open
Market Committee
Mr. Hoenig, Ms. Minehan, and Mr. Poole, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of
Kansas City, Boston, and St. Louis respectively
Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Ms. Fox, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Ms. Johnson, Economist
Mr. Prell, Economist
Ms. Cumming, Messrs. Howard, Hunter, Lang, Lindsey, Rolnick, Slifman, and
Stockton, Associate Economist
Mr. Fisher, Manager, System Open Market Account
Messrs. Ettin and Reinhart, Deputy Directors, Divisions of Research and Statistics
and International Finance respectively, Board of Governors
Messrs. Madigan and Simpson, Associate Directors, Divisions of Monetary Affairs
and Research and Statistics respectively, Board of Governors

Mr. Whitesell, Assistant Director, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Messrs. Stewart and Stone, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Banks of New York
and Philadelphia respectively
Messrs. Beebe, Eisenbeis, Lacker, Rasche, and Sniderman, Senior Vice Presidents,
Federal Reserve Banks of San Francisco, Atlanta, Richmond, St. Louis, and
Cleveland respectively
Messrs. Bentley, Fuhrer, and Kahn, Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of New
York, Boston, and Kansas City respectively
Mr. Wynne, Research Officer, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held
on October 5, 1999, were approved.
The Manager of the System Open Market Account reported on recent developments in
foreign exchange markets. There were no open market transactions in foreign currencies for
the System's account in the period since the previous meeting, 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 October 5, 1999, through November 15, 1999. By unanimous vote, the Committee
ratified these transactions.
The Committee then turned to a discussion of recent and prospective economic and financial
developments, and the implementation of monetary policy over the intermeeting period
ahead.
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that economic activity continued to
expand briskly. The limited data on aggregate demand that had become available since the
summer pointed to some moderation in the growth of consumer spending and of business
investment in capital equipment and software. Residential construction appeared to have
weakened somewhat. However, industrial production was trending up, job growth was still
solid, and the unemployment rate had edged down. Despite tight job markets, labor
compensation had been rising more slowly than last year. Inflation remained moderate,
though at a pace above that in 1998 because of a sharp rebound in energy prices.
A large increase in nonfarm payroll employment in October followed a small rise in
September; the average gain for the two months was appreciable but somewhat below the
pace of earlier in the year. Job growth rebounded strongly in most employment categories,
but further small losses were posted in manufacturing and retail trade. The robust expansion
in the demand for workers in October led to a small decline in the civilian unemployment
rate, to 4.1 percent, a new low for the year.

Industrial production recorded a strong gain in October after having fallen slightly in
September as a result of the adverse effects of Hurricane Floyd. Manufacturing and utilities
output advanced strongly in October, while mining activity edged up. The increases in
manufacturing were widely spread; however, production of transit equipment, particularly
aircraft and parts, and farm equipment continued to decline. The utilization of total industrial
capacity rebounded in October from the hurricane-related production losses of the previous
month but remained somewhat below its long-run average level.
Growth of consumer spending apparently had moderated somewhat further recently, but
surveys indicated that consumer confidence continued to be high and personal income rose
briskly in the third quarter. Total nominal retail sales changed little in September and
October, with purchases at auto dealerships falling in both months and sales at other stores
growing less rapidly on balance. Housing activity weakened somewhat over the summer but
was still at a high level. Some of the drop in housing starts in September probably was
attributable to unusually heavy rains in parts of the South and Northeast. In addition, sales of
both new and existing homes declined appreciably in September.
The expansion of business fixed investment picked up sharply in the third quarter, as a
marked acceleration in outlays for durable equipment and computer software more than
offset a further weakening of nonresidential construction activity. The strength in spending
for durable equipment was concentrated in computer hardware and transportation equipment;
the latter included medium and heavy trucks, fleet sales of light vehicles, and commercial
aircraft. Outlays for computer software and communications equipment also were up
appreciably. Trends in orders suggested that the buoyancy in business spending for capital
equipment had continued into the fourth quarter. Weakness in nonresidential building activity
in the third quarter was widespread, though office construction remained on a solid upward
trend.
Business inventory investment in book value terms picked up somewhat in the third quarter,
but with sales increasing rapidly, stock-sales ratios generally remained quite low.
Manufacturers added slightly to their stocks after two quarters of inventory liquidation.
However, the buildup of stocks in the third quarter did not keep pace with the rise in
shipments, and the sector's stock-shipments ratio was near the bottom of its range over the
preceding twelve months. Wholesalers also added to their inventories in the third quarter, and
with stockbuilding keeping pace with sales, the inventory-sales ratio for the sector remained
in the lower portion of its range over the past year. In the retail sector, the pace of inventory
accumulation slowed noticeably in the third quarter, reflecting a runoff of stocks at auto
dealerships. Excluding autos, the rate of retail inventory accumulation changed little from
that of the second quarter, and with sales rising rapidly the aggregate inventory-sales ratio
fell to its lowest quarterly level since 1980.
The deficit in U.S. trade in goods and services widened on balance over July and August
from its average for the second quarter. The value of exports picked up considerably over the
two months, with increases widely spread across major trade categories. The value of imports
surged, with large increases recorded in all the major trade categories except food. The
available information indicated that economic expansion in the foreign industrial countries
strengthened further in the third quarter. Economic recovery continued in Japan, though there
were signs that consumer demand was lagging somewhat. In the euro area, the United
Kingdom, and Canada, economic activity appeared to have accelerated in the third quarter.

Among the developing countries, economic activity continued to expand in emerging Asia
and parts of Latin America.
Consumer prices increased at a slightly faster rate in September, with a further large rise in
energy prices a contributing factor. Core consumer inflation also picked up in September, in
part because of a sharp jump in tobacco prices. Nonetheless, core consumer prices rose less
over the twelve months ended in September than over the preceding twelve-month period. At
the producer level, price inflation for finished goods other than food and energy items slowed
appreciably in October from the elevated September rate, which had been boosted by the
tobacco price increase. For the year ended in October, core producer prices rose appreciably
more than in the preceding year. Measured on a year-over-year basis, labor compensation
rose more slowly in the year ending in the third quarter than it had in the preceding year.
However, the increase in the third quarter was a little larger than the subdued average pace
for the first half of the year; the step-up was entirely attributable to larger increases in
benefits. Average hourly earnings edged up in October after a large rise in September. For the
twelve months ended in October, average hourly earnings decelerated slightly from the
previous twelve months.
At its meeting on October 5, the Committee adopted a directive that called for maintaining
conditions in reserve markets consistent with an unchanged federal funds rate of around
5-1/4 percent. The members noted that the behavior of prices had continued to be relatively
subdued and that the risk of a substantial worsening in inflation and inflation expectations
over coming months seemed to be small. Nonetheless, they saw some pickup in inflation as a
distinct possibility under anticipated economic conditions and concluded that the directive
should indicate that prospective developments were more likely to warrant an increase than a
decrease in the funds rate objective in the near term.
Open market operations throughout the intermeeting period were directed toward
maintaining the federal funds rate at around 5-1/4 percent, and the rate averaged close to the
Committee's target. On balance, most market interest rates posted small mixed changes over
the intermeeting interval. The Committee's announcement of a bias toward tightening
surprised many market participants, and interest rates rose somewhat after the meeting.
Yields climbed further in response to incoming data on producer prices and retail sales that
boosted market concerns about unsustainable growth, higher inflation, and further monetary
tightening. Over the second half of the intermeeting period, however, rates largely retraced
their increases in reaction to the release of data indicating low wage and consumer price
inflation. Most measures of share prices in equity markets registered sizable gains over the
intermeeting period, apparently reflecting stronger-than-expected earnings reports and greater
optimism about the prospects for continued robust output growth and low inflation.
In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar changed little over the
period in relation to the currencies of a broad group of important U.S. trading partners. A
small appreciation against the currencies of the major foreign industrial countries offset a
comparable depreciation in relation to the currencies of other important trading partners.
Among the major currencies, the dollar rose against the euro and the pound sterling despite a
tightening of European monetary policy in response to the implications for future inflation of
indications of a strong pickup in economic activity. The dollar fell further against the
Japanese yen, whose strength presumably reflected evidence of continued economic recovery
in Japan and the prospect of another substantial fiscal stimulus package. The dollar's drop in
terms of the currencies of other important trading partners reflected in part optimism about

continued recovery in Asian emerging economies as well as signs of renewed political
stability in some Latin American and Asian countries.
M2 continued to grow at a moderate rate in October. The recent performance of this
aggregate likely was associated, at least in part, with the rise in market interest rates earlier in
the year that boosted the opportunity cost of holding liquid balances. The expansion of M3
picked up over September and October, reflecting a strong acceleration in its non-M2
component that was associated with strong inflows to institutional money market funds and
stepped-up issuance of large time deposits to meet credit demands. For the year through
October, M2 and M3 were estimated to have increased at rates somewhat above their annual
ranges for 1999. Total domestic nonfinancial debt continued to expand at a pace somewhat
above the middle of its range.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that the expansion would moderate
gradually to a rate around, or perhaps a little below, the growth of the economy's estimated
potential. The expansion of domestic final demand increasingly would be held back by the
anticipated waning of positive wealth effects associated with earlier large gains in equity
prices; the slower growth of spending on consumer durables, houses, and business equipment
and software in the wake of the prolonged buildup in the stocks of these items; and the higher
intermediate- and longer-term interest rates that had evolved as markets came to expect that a
rise in short-term interest rates would be needed to achieve sustainable, noninflationary
growth. The lagged effects of the earlier rise in the foreign exchange value of the dollar were
expected to place continuing, though substantially diminishing, restraint on U.S. exports for
some period ahead. Core price inflation was projected to rise somewhat over the forecast
horizon, partly as a result of the passthrough of higher non-oil import prices and some
firming of gains in nominal labor compensation in persistently tight labor markets that would
not be fully offset by rising productivity growth.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic developments, members
commented that the statistical and anecdotal information that had become available since the
October meeting continued to point to robust growth in overall economic activity, despite
some indications of softening in interest-sensitive sectors of the economy. Although
productivity developments remained quite favorable, the faster rise in productivity itself
apparently had tended to bolster demand more than supply through its effects on equity
prices and consumption and on the demand for capital equipment. While real interest rates
had risen to some extent to restore balance between supply and demand, they evidently had
not risen enough or had not been high for long enough, and growth at an unsustainable pace
continued to ratchet up pressures in labor markets. Abstracting from possible temporary
fluctuations associated with the upcoming century date change, the members saw few signs
of significant slowing in aggregate demand over the next few months. Over a somewhat
longer horizon, however, they believed that growth in aggregate demand was likely to
moderate to a more sustainable pace that would bring it into closer balance with the
expansion in aggregate supply. Key factors cited by the members in support of their
expectations of slower growth in overall domestic spending were the lagged and to some
extent already evident effects of the rise that had occurred in long-term interest rates,
including mortgage rates, and the effects on business and consumer sentiment of a less
buoyant stock market, should the latter persist. However, the recent depreciation of the dollar
and the ongoing strengthening of many foreign economies would stimulate rising export
demand and perhaps substantially reduce the drag exerted on the economy by the foreign

trade sector. The members acknowledged that their forecasts were subject to a substantial
degree of uncertainty, but the risks on balance were seen as tilted toward growth strong
enough to put added pressures on already tight labor markets. Increasing pressures on labor
resources, should they materialize, would at some point foster larger increases in labor costs,
with potentially adverse implications for price inflation over time.
With regard to the prospective performance of key sectors of the economy, forecasts of
somewhat slower growth in consumer spending appeared to be supported by recent reports of
some moderation in sales of motor vehicles from extraordinarily high levels. Anecdotal
reports relating to recent retail sales around the country were mixed, but members indicated
that their contacts in the retail industry were uniformly optimistic about the outlook for sales
during the holiday season and recent surveys suggested a very high level of consumer
confidence. Retail sales might be also augmented during the closing weeks of the year by
precautionary purchases related to century date change concerns. Looking ahead, and
abstracting from the unwinding in the early part of 2000 of some transitory stockpiling of
consumer goods, growth in consumer spending seemed likely to moderate over time. In part,
forecasts of a less ebullient consumer sector reflected expectations of reduced demand for
household goods associated with a mild downturn in housing activity and the previous
slowdown in mortgage refinancings that had lowered household debt servicing burdens and
frequently had made accumulated housing equity available for consumer expenditures. A
potentially more important factor in the outlook for consumer spending, however, was the
prospect that the wealth effects from sharp earlier increases in the value of stock market
holdings would wane in the absence of a new upsurge in stock market prices.
Growth of business spending for equipment and software was expected to moderate in the
current quarter, largely in conjunction with what was seen as a temporary slowdown in
purchases of computers in the period before the century date change. However, the members
saw no significant evidence that the strong uptrend in spending on capital equipment might
otherwise be weakening. In contrast to the pattern for business fixed investment, nonfarm
inventory investment was projected to rise in the current quarter in connection with a
temporary bulge related to the century date change but also to bring lean inventories into
better alignment with anticipated sales. Once the perturbations related to the century date
change had run their course, inventory growth was expected to return to a more normal pace
during 2000.
In the housing market, rising mortgage rates had fostered some declines from recent peaks in
starts and sales, and persisting softness in housing activity was anticipated. This expectation
tended to be supported by anecdotal reports of moderating homebuilding activity in several
parts of the country. Nonetheless, the members cited a number of factors that should tend to
sustain overall housing activity at a fairly elevated level. These included continuing though
diminishing backlogs of unbuilt homes, rising incomes, and high levels of consumer
confidence. In any event, the outlook for housing was subject to considerable uncertainty as
reflected in recent surveys that had produced mixed results with regard to the near-term
prospects for housing activity.
Members anticipated that the dollar's recent depreciation and the strengthening of foreign
economies would foster a significant further pickup in exports. Indeed, available data and
anecdotal reports from around the country indicated that foreign demand already had
improved markedly for some U.S. products. In these circumstances, domestic demand would
need to decelerate considerably for growth to proceed at a sustainable pace.

Concerning the outlook for inflation, members noted that despite the long duration of very
tight labor markets across the nation, labor compensation had increased at a slightly lower
rate this year while consumer price inflation had remained moderate, albeit above year-earlier
levels owing to a sharp rise in energy prices. The deceleration in labor compensation may
have been induced in large measure by the low level of consumer price inflation in 1998. In
addition, a major factor underlying the persistence of generally subdued price inflation in a
period of robust economic expansion was the continued acceleration in productivity, which
clearly was holding down increases in unit production costs. The latter contributed to
ongoing competitive pressures that severely limited the ability of firms to raise prices,
helping to this point to keep inflation at a low level.
The members nonetheless remained concerned about the outlook for inflation. They
continued to focus especially on the possibility that the anticipated moderation in the growth
of aggregate demand, taking into account the outlook for rising foreign demand for U.S.
goods and services, might not be sufficient to avoid added pressures on labor and other
resources. To be sure, the economy's potential output appeared to be expanding briskly, with
much of the impetus provided by accelerating productivity. Even so, the pool of unemployed
workers willing to take a job had continued to be drawn down, and it seemed likely to many
members that prospective growth in aggregate demand might generate increasing pressures
on the economy's ability to produce goods and services and thus add to inflationary pressures
over time. This concern was heightened by the prospect that a number of developments that
had tended to contain inflation in the last few years were now reversing. Members mentioned
in particular the likelihood that increases in labor compensation might be headed higher in
lagged response to the pickup in consumer price inflation this year. Also likely adding to
labor cost pressures were relatively large advances in the cost of health care benefits and the
possibility of a higher minimum wage. Moreover, the turnaround in energy and import prices
could tend to feed through more directly into the prices of U.S.-produced goods by raising
costs and reducing competitive pressures to hold down prices. Strengthening demand around
the world already seemed to be contributing to higher prices of materials and other nonlabor
inputs in the production "pipeline." In general, however, the members anticipated that any
pickup in inflation was likely to be gradual, with cost pressures quite possibly continuing to
be held largely in check for some time by improving productivity trends. They recognized
that forecasts of rising inflation had failed to materialize in recent years, raising questions
about their understanding of the empirical specification of the relationships that currently
underlie the inflation process. On balance, though, the unsustainable pace of economic
expansion along with the reversal of factors that previously had held down overall price
increases suggested a significant risk that inflation would strengthen over time given
prevailing financial conditions.
Against this background, all the members supported raising the Committee's target for the
federal funds rate by 25 basis points at this meeting. Views differed to an extent on the
outlook for inflation and policy going forward. However, with tightening resource constraints
indicating unsustainable growth, only tentative signs that growth might be slowing, and
various factors that had been damping prices now turning around, all the members agreed on
the need for a slight tightening at this meeting to raise the odds on containing inflation and
forestalling the inflationary imbalances that would undercut the very favorable performance
of the economy. This view was reinforced by the prospect that the Committee might not find
it desirable to adjust policy at its December meeting when a tightening action could add to

the potential financial uncertainties and unsettlement surrounding the century date change.
Accordingly, any action might have to wait until the meeting in early February, and the
members agreed that the risks of waiting for such an extended period were unacceptably
high.
All the members accepted a proposal to adopt a symmetric directive. Such a directive was
viewed as consistent with the Committee's current expectation that no further policy move
was likely to be considered before the Committee's meeting in February. In the
circumstances, a Committee decision to retain the existing asymmetry toward tightening
could well send a misleading signal about the probability of near-term action and have an
unsettling effect on financial markets at a time when concerns relating to the century date
change might be adding to normal year-end pressures. As noted previously, however, views
differed to some degree regarding the subsequent outlook for policy. On the basis of currently
available information, a number of members indicated that they were quite uncertain about
the possible need for further tightening action over coming months to keep inflation within
acceptable limits. Continued favorable price and unit cost data, driven in part by improving
productivity, suggested that any further action should depend on incoming information about
economic activity, pressures on resources, and inflation. Other members, emphasizing the
persistently strong growth in economic activity and the unusually high level of labor resource
utilization, suggested that additional firming of the stance of policy probably would be
necessary to keep inflation in check and hence maintain the favorable backdrop for
maximum economic growth. However, in view of the questions surrounding the outlook, the
amount of firming already undertaken by the Committee this year including at this meeting
and its uncertain effects, and the special situation in financial markets over the year-end, they
supported the adoption of a symmetric directive.
At the conclusion of this discussion, the Committee voted to authorize and direct the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, until it was instructed otherwise, to execute transactions in the
System Account in accordance with the following domestic directive:
The information reviewed at this meeting suggests continued solid expansion of
economic activity. Nonfarm payroll employment increased appreciably on
average over September and October, and the civilian unemployment rate
dropped to 4.1 percent in October, its low for the year. Industrial production
recorded a strong gain in October after having been depressed in September by
the effects of hurricane Floyd. Total retail sales were flat in September and
October owing to a drop in sales at auto dealers; sales at other stores were fairly
robust. Housing activity softened somewhat over the summer but has remained
at a high level. Trends in orders suggest that business spending on capital
equipment has continued to increase. The July-August deficit in U.S. trade in
goods and services was higher than its average in the second quarter, as further
growth in imports exceeded the rise in exports. Inflation has continued at a
moderate pace, though above that in 1998 owing to a sharp rebound in energy
prices. Labor compensation rates have been rising more slowly than last year.
Most market interest rates have posted small mixed changes since the meeting
on October 5, 1999. However, measures of share prices in equity markets have
registered sizable increases over the intermeeting period. In foreign exchange
markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar has changed little over the period
in relation to the currencies of a broad group of important U.S. trading partners.

M2 continued to grow at a moderate pace in October while M3 accelerated. For
the year through October, M2 and M3 are estimated to have increased at rates
somewhat above the Committee's annual ranges for 1999. Total domestic
nonfinancial debt has continued to expand at a pace somewhat above the middle
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 reaffirmed at its meeting in June
the ranges it had established in February for growth of M2 and M3 of 1 to 5
percent and 2 to 6 percent respectively, measured from the fourth quarter of 1998
to the fourth quarter of 1999. The range for growth of total domestic
nonfinancial debt was maintained at 3 to 7 percent for the year. For 2000, the
Committee agreed on a tentative basis in June to retain the same ranges for
growth of the monetary aggregates and debt, measured from the fourth quarter of
1999 to the fourth quarter of 2000. 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.
To promote the Committee's long-run objectives of price stability and
sustainable economic growth, the Committee in the immediate future seeks
conditions in reserve markets consistent with increasing the federal funds rate to
an average of around 5-1/2 percent. In view of the evidence currently available,
the Committee believes that prospective developments are equally likely to
warrant an increase or a decrease in the federal funds rate operating objective
during the intermeeting period.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough. Boehne, Ferguson,
Gramlich, McTeer, Meyers, Moskow, Kelley, and Stern.
Votes against this action: None.
At this meeting, the working group chaired by Mr. Ferguson provided an interim report on its
work to date concerning the wording of the Committee's directives, the Committee's
announcements after each meeting, and related issues. The members expressed broad
agreement with the direction of the working group's tentative recommendations and provided
feedback on specific issues and wording. It was contemplated that the Committee would
consider the working group's final report at a meeting in the near future.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday, December
21, 1999.
The meeting adjourned at 1:40 p.m.
Donald L. Kohn
Secretary
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