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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EST
November 3, 2005

Statement of
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Joint Economic Committee
November 3, 2005

Mr. Chairman, when I last appeared before the Joint Economic Committee in early June,
economic activity appeared to be reaccelerating after a slowdown in the spring. The economy
had weathered a further run-up in energy prices over the winter, and aggregate demand was again
strengthening. Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth averaged 3-1/2 percent at an annual
rate over the first half of the year, and subsequent readings on activity over the summer were
positive. By early August, the economy appeared to have considerable momentum, despite a
further ratcheting up of crude oil prices; pressures on inflation remained elevated.
As you know, the economy suffered significant shocks in late summer and early autumn.
Crude oil prices moved sharply higher in August, bid up by growth in world demand that
continued to outpace the growth of supply. Then Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast at the end
of August, causing widespread disruptions to oil and natural gas production and driving the price
of West Texas Intermediate crude oil above $70 per barrel. Because of a lack of ready access to
foreign supplies, natural gas prices rose even more sharply. At the end of September, with the
recovery from the first storm barely under way, Hurricane Rita hit, causing additional damage
and destruction—especially to the energy production and distribution systems in the Gulf. Most
recently, Hurricane Wilma caused widespread power outages and property damage across the
state of Florida. These events are likely to exert a drag on employment and production in the
near term and to add to the upward pressures on the general price level. But the economic
fundamentals remain firm, and the U.S. economy appears to retain important forward
momentum.
Of course, the higher energy prices caused by the hurricanes are being felt well beyond
the Gulf Coast region. Those higher prices resulted from the substantial damage that occurred to
our nation's energy production and distribution systems. Of the more than 3,000 oil and gas

-2production platforms in the paths of Katrina and Rita, more than 100 were destroyed, and an
additional 50 suffered extensive damage. Of the 134 manned drilling rigs operating in the Gulf,
8 were lost, and an additional 38 were either set adrift by the storms or were badly damaged. At
present, both oil and natural gas production in the Gulf are operating at less than 50 percent of
pre-Katrina levels. Since the first evacuations of oil and gas facilities were ordered before
Katrina, cumulative shortfalls represented almost 4 percent of the nation's annual production of
crude oil and 2 percent of our output of natural gas.
The combination of flooding, wind damage, and a lack of electric power also forced many
crude oil refineries and natural gas processing plants to shut down. The restoration of production
at the affected natural gas processing facilities has proceeded particularly slowly, in part because
of the lack of natural gas feedstocks and infrastructure problems. Most refineries, however, will
be back on line within the next month or so, though a few may take longer.
In the interim, a greater output of refined petroleum products in other areas of the country
and much higher imports, especially of gasoline, are making up for the production shortfalls in
Gulf refining. The temporary lifting of some environmental regulations and the suspension of
the Jones Act facilitated those adjustments. In addition, refiners have shifted the mix of
production toward more gasoline and less heating oil and jet fuel. That shift has had benefits in
the short run, though the longer it continues, the greater the possibility of upward pressure on
distillate fuel oil prices during the winter heating season.
Releases from the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve relieved much of the upward
pressure on crude oil prices, and imports of refined products responded rapidly to ease the price
pressures stemming from the loss of refinery production in the Gulf. As a consequence, the

-3nationwide retail price of gasoline for all grades has declined 60 cents per gallon from its peak of
$3.12 per gallon in the week of September 5. Motorists appear to have economized on their
driving, and gasoline demand appears to be off a bit. However, it will take time and an
appreciable increase in the fuel economy of our stock of motor vehicles to fundamentally change
the amount of motor fuel used on our nation's highways.
The far more severe reaction of natural gas prices to the production setbacks that have
occurred in the Gulf highlights again the need to expand our nation's ability to import natural
gas. In contrast to the fall in crude oil prices and the sharp narrowing of refinery margins during
the past two months, natural gas prices have remained high. Moreover, judging from elevated
distant futures prices, traders expect natural gas prices to edge lower but to stay high for the
foreseeable future. This expectation largely reflects a natural gas industry in North America that
is already operating at close to capacity and our inability to import large quantities of far cheaper,
liquefied natural gas (LNG) from other parts of the world. At present, natural gas supplies
appear to be sufficient to meet the near-term demands—even with some ongoing shortfall in Gulf
production. However, a colder-than-average winter would stress this market, and prices will
likely remain vulnerable to spikes until the spring.
U.S. imports of LNG have been constrained by inadequate global capacity for
liquefaction, as well as by environmental and safety concerns that have restricted the construction
of new LNG import terminals in the United States. In 2002, such imports accounted for only
1 percent of U.S. gas consumption. Despite the major effort to expand imports, the
Department of Energy forecasts LNG imports this year at only 3 percent of gas consumption.
Canada, which has recently supplied one-sixth of our consumption, cannot expand its pipeline

-4exports significantly in the near term, in part because of the role that Canadian natural gas plays
in supporting increasing oil production from tar sands.
The disruptions to energy production have noticeably affected economic activity. We
estimate that the storms held down the increase in industrial production 0.4 percentage point in
August and an additional 1.7 percentage point in September.
Except for the hurricane effects, readings on the economy indicate a continued solid
expansion of aggregate demand and production. If allowance is taken for the effects of Katrina
and Rita and for the now-settled machinist strike at Boeing, industrial production rose at an
annual rate of 5-1/4 percent in the third quarter. That's up from an annual pace of 1-1/4 percent
in the second quarter, when a marked slowing of inventory accumulation was a restraining
influence on growth.
The September employment report showed a loss of 35,000 jobs. However, an upward
revision to payroll gains over the summer indicated a stronger underlying pace of hiring before
the storms than had been previously estimated. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that
employment growth in areas not affected by the storms was in line with the average pace over the
twelve months ending in August.
Retail spending eased off in September, likely reflecting the effects of the hurricanes and
higher gasoline prices. Major chain stores report a gradual recovery over October in the pace of
spending, though light motor vehicle sales declined sharply last month, when some major
incentives to purchase expired.
The longer-term prospects for the U.S. economy remain favorable. Structural
productivity continues to grow at a firm pace, and rebuilding activity following the hurricanes

-5should boost real GDP growth for a while. More uncertainty, however, surrounds the outlook for
inflation.
The past decade of low inflation and solid economic growth in the United States and in
many other countries around the world has been without precedent in recent decades. Much of
that favorable performance is attributable to the remarkable confluence of innovations that
spawned new computer, telecommunication, and networking technologies, which, especially in
the United States, have elevated the growth of productivity, suppressed unit labor costs, and
helped to contain inflationary pressures. The result has been a virtuous cycle of low prices and
solid growth.
Contributing to the disinflationary pressures that have been evident in the global economy
over the past decade or more has been the integration of in excess of 100 million educated
workers from the former Soviet bloc into the world's open trading system. More recently, and of
even greater significance, has been the freeing from central planning of large segments of
China's 750 million workforce. The gradual addition of these workers plus workers from
India—a country which is also currently undergoing a notable increase in its participation in the
world trading system—would approximately double the overall supply of labor once all these
workers become fully engaged in competitive world markets. Of course, at current rates of
productivity, the half of the world's labor force that has been newly added to the world
competitive marketplace is producing no more than one quarter of world output. With increased
education and increased absorption of significant cutting-edge technologies, that share will surely
rise.

-6Over the past decade or more, the gradual assimilation of these new entrants into the
world's free-market trading system has restrained the rise of unit labor costs in much of the world
and hence has helped to contain inflation.
As this process has unfolded, inflation expectations have decreased, and accordingly, the
inflation premiums embodied in long-term interest rates around the world have come down. The
effective augmentation of world supply and the accompanying disinflationary pressures have
made it easier for the Federal Reserve and other central banks to achieve price stability in an
environment of generally solid economic growth.
But this seminal shift in the world's workforce is producing, in effect, a level adjustment
in unit labor costs. To be sure, economic systems evolve from centrally planned to market-based
only gradually and, at times, in fits and starts. Thus, this level adjustment is being spread over an
extended period. Nevertheless, the suppression of cost growth and world inflation, at some
point, will begin to abate and, with the completion of this level adjustment, gradually end.
These global forces pressing inflation and interest rates lower may well persist for some
time. Nonetheless, it is the rate at which countries are integrated into the global economic
system, not the extent of their integration, that governs the degree to which the rise in world unit
labor costs will continue to be subdued. Where the global economy is currently in this dynamic
process remains open to question. But going forward, these trends will need to be monitored
carefully by the world's central banks.
**
I want to conclude with a few remarks about the federal budget situation,which—
until Hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck the Gulf Coast—was showing signs of modest

at

least

-7improvement. Indeed, tax receipts have exhibited considerable strength of late, posting an
increase of nearly 15 percent in fiscal 2005 as a result of sizable gains in individual and, even
more, corporate income taxes. Thus, although spending continued to rise rapidly last year, the
deficit in the unified budget dropped to $319 billion, nearly $100 billion less than the figure for
fiscal year 2004 and a much smaller figure than many had anticipated earlier in the year.
Lowering the deficit further in the near term, however, will be difficult in light of the need to pay
for post-hurricane reconstruction and relief.
But even apart from the hurricanes, our budget position is unlikely to improve
substantially further until we restore constraints similar to the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990,
which were allowed to lapse in 2002. Even so, the restoration of paygo and discretionary caps
will not address the far more difficult choices that confront the Congress as the baby-boom
generation edges toward retirement. As I have testified on numerous occasions, current
entitlement law may have already promised to this next generation of retirees more in real
resources than our economy, with its predictably slowing rate of labor force growth, will be able
to supply.
So long as health-care costs continue to grow faster than the economy as a whole, as
seems likely, federal spending on health and retirement programs would rise at a rate that risks
placing the budget on an unsustainable trajectory. Specifically, large deficits will result in rising
interest rates and an ever-growing ratio of debt service to GDP. Unless the situation is reversed,
at some point these budget trends will cause serious economic disruptions.
We owe it to those who will retire over the next couple of decades to promise only what
the government can deliver. The present policy path makes current promises, at least in real

terms, highly conjectural. If fewer resources will be available per retiree than promised under
current law, those in their later working years need sufficient time to adjust their work and
retirement decisions.
Crafting a budget strategy that meets the nation's longer-run needs will become ever more
difficult and costly the more we delay. The one certainty is that the resolution of the nation's
demographic challenge will require hard choices and that the future performance of the economy
will depend on those choices. No changes will be easy, as they all will involve setting priorities
and making tradeoffs among valued alternatives. The Congress must determine how best to
address the competing claims on our limited resources. In doing so, you will need to consider not
only the distributional effects of policy changes but also the broader economic effects on labor
supply, retirement behavior, and private saving. The benefits of taking sound, timely action could
extend many decades into the future.