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For release on delivery
10 00 A M E D T
July 19, 1995

Testimony by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy
Committee on Banking and Financial Services
House of Representatives
July 19. 1995

Mr

Chairman and members of the Subcommittee, I am

pleased to appear today to present the Federal Reserve's
semi-annual report on monetary policy

In February, when I

was last here for this purpose, I reported that the U S
economy had turned in a remarkable performance in 1994
Growth had been quite rapid, reaching a torrid pace by the
final quarter of the year, when real GDP rose at a 5 percent
annual rate and final sales increased at a 5-3/4 percent
rate

Inflation had remained subdued through year-end,

although productive resources were stretched

The

unemployment rate had fallen to its lowest level in years,
while manufacturing capacity utilization had been pushed up
to a historically high level
As I indicated in February, a slowing of economic
growth to a more sustainable pace, with resource use
settling in around its long-run potential, was required to
avoid inflationary instabilities and the adverse consequences for economic activity that would invariably follow
After posting three straight years of consumer price
increases of less than 3 percent for the first time in
decades, inflation seemed poised to move upward

Reflecting

market pressures, prices of raw materials and intermediate
goods had already risen considerably, and a surge in the
prices of a variety of imported goods could be expected to
follow the weakening in the dollar through early 1995

-2Monetary policy tightenings over the previous year
had been designed to foster the type of moderation in final
demand that would help damp inflation pressures going forward and sustain the economic expansion

When we began the

policy tightening process, we knew the previous drags on the
economy stemming from balance-sheet stresses and restraints
on lending were largely behind us

But that still did not

make it a simple matter to gauge just what degree of firming

in
financial environment consistent with sustainable economic
growth

In the event, the federal funds rate was raised to

6 percent, as the surprising strength in the economy and
associated pressures on resources required a degree of
monetary policy restraint to ensure that inflation would be
contained
Fortunately, we started the tightening process
early enough and advanced it far enough that monetary
restraint began to bite before some potential problems could
assume major proportions

With inadequate monetary

restraint, aggregate demand could have significantly
overshot the economy's long-run supply potential and created
serious inflationary instabilities

Moreover, the perceived

capacity constraints and lengthening delivery times that
come with an overheated economy could have fostered the
development of more serious inventory over-accumulation
In such circumstances, the longer the moderation in output

-3growth is delayed, the larger will be the inventory
overhang, and the more severe will be the subsequent
production correction

As hoped, final sales slowed

appreciably in the first quarter of this year, but inventory
investment didn't match that slowing, and overall inventorysales ratios increased slightly

Although the aggregate

level of inventories remained modest, a few major
industries, such as motor vehicles and home goods, found
themselves with substantial excesses

Attempts to control

inventory levels triggered cutbacks in orders and output
that inevitably put a damper on employment and income
How the ongoing pattern of inventory investment
unfolds is a crucial element in the near-term outlook for
the economy

Production adjustments could fairly quickly

shut off unintended inventory accumulation without a
prolonged period of slack output--one that could adversely
affect personal incomes and business profitability, which in
turn could undermine confidence and depress spending plans
Under these conditions, final sales should continue to
grow through and beyond the inventory correction, leading to
sustained moderate economic expansion
scenario certainly cannot be ruled out

But a less favorable
The inventory

adjustment could be extended and severe enough to drive down
incomes, disrupt final demand, and set in motion a period of
weak growth, or even a recession

-4Useful insights into how an inventory correction is
proceeding often can be gained by evaluating developments in
industries that supply producers of final durable products
with key primary inputs--such as steel, aluminum, and
capital equipment components and parts

This is because

inventory adjustments often are larger in durable goods and
they become magnified at progressively earlier stages in the
production process

Typically, when purchasing managers for

durable - goods producing firms find their inventories
at excessive levels, they reduce orders for materials and
also for components of capital goods, and as a consequence
suppliers shorten promised delivery times and cut back on
production

In the current instance, domestic orders for

steel and aluminum and for some capital equipment components
have weakened, but not enough to have had more than modest
effects on production

Prices of key inputs also suggest

that demand so far is holding up and the inventory correction is contained

The price of steel scrap, for example,

has not fallen, and spot prices of nonferrous metals on
average have stabilized recently after considerable weakness
in the first part of the year

Though still lethargic, the

behavior of durable goods materials and supplies markets
scarcely evidences the type of broader inventory liquidation
that usually has been at the forefront of the major
inventory recessions of the past

-5At the finished goods level, we experienced significant inventory liquidation in both cars and trucks in

May and June

We do not have comprehensive, up-to-date

inventory evaluations for recent months as yet, but inferring what we can from scattered and partial data, the prospects seem reasonably good for a reduction in inventory
investment that moves us a considerable way toward eliminating unwanted stocks
That process and the longer run outlook for the
economy depend ultimately on the behavior of final sales
In that regard, the slowing of the growth of final sales
that began in the first quarter seems to have continued a
little further in the second quarter

Combining final sales

and the likely reduced second-quarter pace of inventory
investment, the level of overall domestic production of
final goods and services, or real GDP, evidently changed
little last quarter
Going forward, of the several credible outlooks,
the most probable is for an upturn in the growth rate of
final sales and real GDP over the rest of this year and a
moderate pace of expansion next year with the economy operating in the neighborhood of its potential

One area of

improvement should be our external sector

A significant

downside risk when I testified in February related to the
situation in Mexico

The economic contraction in that

country and the depreciation of the peso did act to depress

-6our net exports in the first half of the year

But with the

external adjustment of the Mexican economy apparently near
completion, this drag should be largely behind us

More-

over, our trade with the rest of the world should begin to
impart a positive impetus to our economic activity, partly
because of the strong competitive position of U S

goods in

world markets
Regarding domestic final demand, financial developments so far this year should provide important support
over coming quarters

Interest rates, especially on inter-

mediate- and long-term instruments, have fallen a great deal
since last fall, in reaction to the improved fiscal outlook,
the effects on inflation expectations of our earlier monetary tightening, and, of course, recently, the slowed
economy

Lower interest rates have helped to buoy stock

prices, which have soared ever higher

The positive

implications of the rally in financial markets for household
debt-service burdens and wealth and for the cost of capital
to businesses augur well for spending on consumer durables,
on housing, and on plant and equipment

These influences

should be reinforced by the generally strong financial
condition and the willingness to lend of depository
institutions, as well as the receptiveness of capital
markets to offerings of debt and equity
Early signs of a little firming in consumer durables spending are already visible in the stabilization of

-7the motor vehicles sector

Residential construction also

has started to revive, judging by the recent data on home
sales and mortgage applications

Unfilled orders are siza-

ble in the capital goods area, suggesting business investment in equipment will continue growing, albeit perhaps more
slowly than in the recent past

Finally, rising permits

suggest expansion in nonresidential construction
An outlook embodying a resumption of moderate
economic growth is conveyed by the central tendencies of the
expectations of the Federal Reserve Governors and Reserve
Bank Presidents for real GDP

After the second-quarter

pause, a projected pickup in activity in the second half
would put output growth over the four quarters of the year

in
projections of real GDP growth center on 2-1/2 percent
The inflation picture is less worrisome than when
I testified six months ago
tightening

just after our last policy

Demands on productive resources should press

less heavily on available capacity in the future than we
envisioned in February

This prospect is evident in the

central tendency of the expectations of the Governors and
Presidents for the unemployment rate in the fourth quarter
of this year, which has been revised up from about 5-1/2
percent in February to 5-3/4 to 6-1/8 percent

This outlook

for unemployment has been extended through next year as
well

Increases in employment costs to date have been

modest, and labor compensation evinces few signs of exacerbating inflation pressures, although the recent unusuallyfavorable behavior of benefit costs is unlikely to continue
Declines in industrial output over recent months have already eased factory utilization rates closer to their longterm averages

Reflecting a slowing in foreign industrial

economies as well as in the United States, the earlier surge

in prices of materials and supplies has tapered

off

Moreover, the stability of the exchange value of the dollar

in recent months bodes well for an abatement of the

recent

faster increase in import prices
Against this background, most Governors and Presidents see lower inflation over coming quarters than experienced in earlier months of 1995

The central tendency

for this year's four-quarter rise in the CPI is 3-1/8 to
3-3/8 percent

And for next year, the central tendency

suggests that CPI inflation will be shaved to 2-7/8 to 3-1/4
percent
The success of our previous policy tightenings in
damping prospective inflation pressures set the stage for
our recent modest policy easing

Because the risks of

inflation apparently have receded, the previous degree of
restriction in policy no longer seemed needed, and we were
able at the last meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to reduce the federal funds rate by 1/4 percentage point to around 5-3/4 percent

-9Indeed, inflation pressures were damped somewhat
more quickly than we might have expected

This experience

underlines the uncertainties and risks in any forecasting
exercise

The projections of the Governors and Presidents

are for a rather benign outlook, as are the views of many
private sector forecasters

But these expectations can't

convey the risks and subtleties in the developing economic
situation
A month or so ago. I noted publicly that a moderation in growth was both inevitable and desirable, but that
the process could not reasonably be expected to be entirely
smooth, and that accordingly the risks of a near term inventory-led recession, though small, had increased

More

recent evidence suggests that we may have passed the point
of maximum risk

But we have certainly not yet reached the

point at which no risk of undue economic weakness remains
We do not as yet fully understand all the reasons for the
degree of slowing in economic activity in the first half of
the year, so we need to be somewhat tentative in our projections of a rebound

Imbalances seem to be limited, finan-

cial conditions should be supportive of spending, and businesses and consumers are largely optimistic about the
future

Nonetheless, questions remain about the strength of

demand for goods and services, not only in the United States
but abroad as well

-10Upside risks to the forecast also can be readily
identified, particularly if the inventory correction is
masking a much stronger underlying economy than appears from
other evidence to be the case

If so, spending could

strengthen appreciably, especially in light of the very
substantial increases in financial market values so far this
year
In a transition period to sustainable growth such
as this, reactions to unexpected events may be especially
pronounced

This is not a time for the Federal Reserve to

relax its surveillance of, and efforts to analyze, the
evolving situation

The Federal Reserve must do its best to

understand developing economic trends

While we cannot

expect to eliminate cyclical booms and busts--human nature
being what it is--we should nonetheless try where possible
to reduce their amplitude
Some observers have viewed prospective year-by-year
budget-deficit reduction as constituting an important downside risk to the economy

I do not share this concern

In

response to fiscal consolidation, financial markets provide
an important shock absorber for the economy

Declines in

long-term rates help stimulate private, interest-sensitive
spending when government spending and transfers are reduced
Clearly, the Federal Reserve will have to watch this process
carefully, and take the likely effects of fiscal policy into
account in considering the appropriate stance in monetary

-11policy

But there is no doubt, in my judgment, that the net

result of moving to budget balance will be a more efficient,
more productive U S

economy

With regard to the money and debt ranges chosen by
the FOMC for this year, the specifications for M2 and domestic nonfinancial debt were left unchanged, at 1 to 5 percent
and 3 to 7 percent, respectively

The FOMC also made a

purely technical upward revision to the M3 range

Last

February's Humphrey-Hawkins testimony and report had noted
the potential need for such a revision to this year's M3
range

Starting in 1989, the restructuring of thrift

institutions and the difficulties facing commercial banks
depressed their lending and their need for managed liabilities

The FOMC responded by reducing the upper and lower

bounds of the range for M3 to below those of the M2 range
This year, M3 growth has begun to outpace that of M2, as it
did for several decades prior to 1989

Overall credit flows

have picked up some, and a higher proportion has gone
through depositories

As a consequence, while M2 and debt

remain within their respective annual ranges, M3 has
appreciably overshot the upper end of its range

The 2

percentage point increase in the upper and lower bounds of
the M3 range to 2 to 6 percent was made in recognition of
the evident return this year to a more normal pattern of M3
growth

The ranges specified for M2, M3, and debt this year

also were provisionally carried over to 1996

The Committee

-12stressed that uncertainties about evolving relationships of
these variables to income continued to impair their usefulness in policy
In summary, the economic outlook, on balance, is
encouraging, despite the inevitable risks

The American

economy rests on a solid foundation of entrepreneurial
initiative and competitive markets

With the cyclical

expansion more than likely to persist in the period ahead,
the circumstances are particularly opportune for pressing
forward with plans to institute further significant deficit
reduction

For such actions, by raising the share of

national saving available to the private sector, should
foster declines in real interest rates and spur capital
accumulation

Higher levels of capital investment in turn

will raise the growth in productivity and living standards
well into the next century
The Federal Reserve believes that the main contribution it can make to enhancing the long-run health
of the American economy is to promote price stability over
time

Our short-run policy adjustments, while necessarily

undertaken against the background of the current condition
of the U S

economy, must be consistent with moving toward

the long-run goal of price stability

Our recent policy

action to reduce the federal funds rate 25 basis points was
made in this context

As I noted in my February testimony,

easing would be appropriate if underlying forces were

-13clearly pointing toward reduced inflation pressures in the
future

Considerable progress toward price stability has

occurred across successive business cycles in the last 15
years

We at the Federal Reserve are committed to further

progress in this direction