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June 25, 2013

Getting Back to Normal?

Central to any discussion about monetary policy is the degree to which the economy is underperforming relative to its potential, or in
more ordinary language, how much slack exists. OK, so how much slack is there, and how long will it take to be absorbed? Well, if
you ask the Congressional Budget Office (and a lot of people do), they would have told you last February (their latest estimate) that
the economy was underperforming just a shade more than 4 percent relative to its potential last summer, and that slack was likely to
increase a little by this summer (to around 4.7 percent). Go to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and they tell a very similar
story in their April World Economic Outlook. The IMF estimates that the amount of slack in the U.S. economy was about 4.2 percent
last year, and they expected it would rise a little to about 4.4 percent this year.
As devotees of our Business Inflation Expectations survey know (and you know who you are), the Atlanta Fed has a quarterly,
subjective measure of economic slack in the economy as seen by business leaders. This month, businesses told us something
pretty interesting—the amount of slack they think they have narrowed pretty sharply between March and June.
Last March, the panel told us that their unit sales were 7.7 percent below "normal"—similar to their assessments in December and
September. This month, however, the group cut their estimate of slack to 4.3 percent below normal, on average (see the table).

What we find most encouraging about this assessment (well, besides the speed at which the slack was being taken up) is that the
improvement was most prominent among small and medium-sized firms. These are firms that, according to our survey and other
reports (like this one from the National Federation of Independent Business), have been lagging behind in the recovery. Indeed, in
June, mid-sized firms indicated that unit sales were only 1.5 percent below normal, a shade better than the big firms in our panel
(see the table).

A look at the industry composition of our survey reveals that the pickup of slack was relatively broadly based too. Only the firms in
the mining and utilities, and the professional and business services areas reported more slack relative to March (and the amounts
were pretty small at that). Elsewhere, the amount of slack appears to have narrowed quite a bit.
OK, so slack is shrinking, and according to these estimates, it shrank quite a bit between March and June. Does that mean we

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should be anticipating growing price pressure? Well, we can turn to our panelists again for an answer, and they say no. Projecting
over the year ahead, our panelists report little change in either their inflationary sentiment or their inflation uncertainty (see the table).

Last Wednesday, at the conclusion of its June meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee said that the recovery is proceeding
and the labor market is improving, but inflation expectations remain stable. Our June poll of business leaders appears to have also
endorsed this view of the economy.
By Mike Bryan, vice president and senior economist,
Brent Meyer, economist, and
Nicholas Parker, senior economic research analyst, all in the Atlanta Fed's research department

June 25, 2013 in Business Inflation Expectations, Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy, GDP, Inflation, Inflation
Expectations | Permalink