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Testimony of Chairman Alan Greenspan
The Federal Reserve's semiannual monetary policy report
Before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate
July 21, 1998
Chairman Greenspan presented identical testimony before the Subcommittee on Domestic
and International Monetary Policy of the Committee on Banking and Financial Services,
U.S. House of Representatives, July 22, 1998
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I appreciate this opportunity to present the
Federal Reserve's midyear report on monetary policy.
Overall, the performance of the U.S. economy continues to be impressive. Over the first part
of the year, we experienced further gains in output and employment, subdued prices, and
moderate long-term interest rates. Important crosscurrents, however, have been impacting
the economy. With labor markets very tight and domestic final demand retaining
considerable momentum, the risks of a pickup in inflation remain significant. But inventory
investment, which was quite rapid late last year and early this year, appears to have slowed,
perhaps appreciably. Moreover, the economic and financial troubles in Asian economies are
now demonstrably restraining demands for U.S. goods and services--and those troubles
could intensify and spread further. Weighing these forces, the Federal Open Market
Committee chose to keep the stance of policy unchanged over the first half of 1998.
However, should pressures on labor resources begin to show through more impressively in
cost increases, policy action may need to counter any associated tendency for prices to
accelerate before it undermines this extraordinary expansion.
Recent Developments
When I appeared before your committee in February, I noted that a key question for
monetary policy was whether the consequences of the turmoil in Asia would be sufficient to
check inflationary tendencies that might otherwise result from the strength of domestic
spending and tightening labor markets. After the economy's surge in 1996 and, especially,
last year, resource utilization, particularly that of the labor force, had risen to a very high
level. Although some signs pointed to stepped-up increases in productivity, the speed at
which the demand for goods and services had been growing clearly exceeded the rate of
expansion of the economy's long-run potential to produce. Maintenance of such a pace
would put even greater pressures on the economy's resources, threatening the balance and
longevity of the expansion.
However, it appeared likely that the difficulties being encountered by Asian economies, by
cutting into U.S. exports, would be a potentially important factor slowing the growth of
aggregate demand in the United States. But uncertainties about the timing and dimensions of
that development were considerable given the difficulties in assessing the extent of the
problems in East Asia.

In the event, the contraction of output and incomes in a number of Asian economies has
turned out to be more substantial than most had anticipated. Moreover, financial markets in
Asia and in emerging market economies generally have remained unsettled, portending
further difficult adjustments. The contraction in Asian economies, along with the rise in the
foreign exchange value of the dollar over 1997, prompted a sharp deterioration in the U.S.
balance of trade in the first quarter. Nonetheless, the American economy proved to be
unexpectedly robust in that period. The growth of real GDP not only failed to slow, it
climbed further, to about a 5-1/2 percent annual rate in the first quarter, according to the
current national income accounts. Domestic private demand for goods and services-including personal consumption expenditures, business investment, and residential
expenditures--was exceptionally strong.
Evidently, optimism about jobs, incomes, and profits, high and rising wealth-to-income
ratios, low financing costs, and falling prices for high-tech goods fed the appetites of
households and businesses for consumer durables and capital equipment. In addition,
inventory investment contributed significantly to growth in the first quarter; indeed, the
growth of stocks of materials and goods outpaced that of overall output by a wide margin
during the first quarter, adding 1 percentage points to the annualized growth rate of GDP.
Although accumulation of some products likely was unintended, surveys indicate that much
of the stockbuilding probably reflected firms' confidence in the prospects for continued
growth.
As evidence piled up that the economy continued to run hot during the winter, the Federal
Reserve's concerns about inflationary pressures mounted. Domestic demand clearly had
more underlying momentum than we had anticipated, supported in part by financial
conditions that were quite accommodative. Credit remained extremely easy for most
borrowers to obtain; intermediate- and long-term interest rates were at relatively low levels;
equity prices soared higher, despite some disappointing earnings reports; and growth in the
monetary aggregates was rapid. Indeed, the crises in Asia, by lowering longer-term U.S.
interest rates--through stronger preferences for dollar investments and expectations of
slower growth ahead--and by reducing commodity prices, probably added to the positive
forces boosting domestic spending in the first half, especially in the interest-sensitive
housing sector. The robust expansion of demand tightened labor markets further, giving
additional impetus to the upward trend in labor costs. Inflation was low--though, given the
lags with which monetary policy affects the economy and prices, we had to be mainly
concerned not with conditions at the moment but with those likely to prevail many months
ahead. In these circumstances, the Federal Open Market Committee elected in March to
move to a state of heightened alert against inflation, but left the stance of policy unchanged.
Although national income and product data for the second quarter have not yet been
published, growth of U.S. output appears to have slowed sharply. The auto strike has
brought General Motor's production essentially to a halt, probably reducing real GDP in the
second quarter by about 1/2 percentage point at an annual rate. The limited available
information on inventory investment suggests that stockbuilding dropped markedly from its
unsustainable pace of the first quarter. In addition to the slower pace of inventory building,
Asian economies have continued to deteriorate, further retarding our exports in recent
months.
Indeed, readings on the elements that make up the real GDP have led many analysts to
anticipate a decline in that measure in the second quarter, after the first-quarter surge. Given

the upcoming revisions to the national income accounts, such assessments would have to be
regarded as conjectural. It is worth noting in any case that other indicators of output,
including worker hours and manufacturing production, show a somewhat steadier, though
slowing, path over the first half of the year. And underlying trends in domestic final demand
have remained strong, imparting impetus to the continuing economic expansion.
During the first half of the year, measures of resource utilization diverged. Pressures on
manufacturing facilities appeared to be easing. Plant capacity was growing rapidly as a
result of vigorous investment. And growth of industrial output was dropping off from its
brisk pace of 1997, importantly reflecting the deceleration in world demand for
manufactured goods that resulted from the Asian economic difficulties.
But labor markets, in contrast, became increasingly taut during the first half. Total payroll
jobs rose about one-and-one-half million over the first six months of the year. The civilian
unemployment rate dropped to a bit below 4-1/2 percent in the second quarter, its lowest
level in three decades. Firms resorted to a variety of tactics to attract and retain workers,
such as paying various types of monetary bonuses and raising basic wage rates. But, at least
through the first quarter, the effects of a rising wage bill on production costs were
moderated by strong gains in productivity.
Indeed, inflation stayed remarkably damped during the first quarter. The consumer price
index as well as broader measures of prices indicate that inflation moved down further, even
as the economy strengthened. Although declining oil prices contributed to this development,
pricing leverage in the goods-producing sector more generally was held in check by reduced
demand from Asia that, among other things, has led to a softening of commodity prices, a
strong dollar that has contributed to bargain prices on many imports, and rising industrial
capacity. Service price inflation, less influenced by international events, has remained
steady at about a 3 percent rate since before the beginning of the crisis.
Some elements in the goods price mix clearly were transitory. Indeed, the more recent price
data suggest that overall consumer price inflation moved up in the second quarter. But, even
so, the increase remained moderate.
In any event, it would be a mistake for monetary policy makers to focus on any single index
in gauging inflation pressures in the economy. Although much public attention is directed to
the CPI, the Federal Reserve monitors a wide variety of aggregate price measures. Each is
designed for a particular purpose and has its own strengths and weaknesses. Price pressures
appear especially absent in some of the measures in the national income accounts, which are
available through the first quarter. The chain-weight price index for personal consumption
expenditures excluding food and energy, for example, rose 1.5 percent over the year ending
in the first quarter, considerably less than the 2.3 percent rise in the core CPI over the same
period. An even broader price measure, that for overall GDP, rose 1.4 percent. These
indexes, while certainly subject to many of the measurement difficulties the Bureau of
Labor Statistics has been grappling with in the CPI, have the advantages that their chainweighting avoids some aspects of so-called substitution bias and that already published data
can be revised to incorporate new information and measurement techniques. Taken together,
while the various price indexes show some differences, the basic message is that inflation to
date has remained low.
Economic Fundamentals: The Virtuous Cycle

So far this year, our economy has continued to enjoy a virtuous cycle. Evidence of
accelerated productivity has been bolstering expectations of future corporate earnings,
thereby fueling still further increases in equity values, and the improvements in productivity
have been helping to reduce inflation. In the context of subdued price increases and
generally supportive credit conditions, rising equity values have provided impetus to
spending and, in turn, the expansion of output, employment, and productivity-enhancing
capital investment.
The essential precondition for the emergence, and persistence, of this virtuous cycle is
arguably the decline in the rate of inflation to near price stability. In recent years, continued
low product price inflation and expectations that it will persist have promoted stability in
financial markets and fostered perceptions that the degree of risk in the financial outlook has
been moving ever lower. These perceptions, in turn, have reduced the extra compensation
that investors require for making loans to, or taking ownership positions in, private firms.
With risks in the domestic economy judged to be low, credit and equity capital have been
readily available for many businesses, fostering strong investment. And low mortgage
interest rates have allowed many households to purchase homes and to refinance
outstanding debt. The reduction in debt servicing costs has contributed to an apparent
stabilization of the financial strains on the household sector that seemed to emerge a couple
of years ago and has buoyed consumer demand.
To a considerable extent, investors seem to be expecting that low inflation and stronger
productivity growth will allow the extraordinary growth of profits to be extended into the
distant future. Indeed, expectations of earnings growth over the longer term have been
undergoing continual upward revision by security analysts since early 1995. These rising
expectations have, in turn, driven stock prices sharply higher and credit spreads lower,
perhaps in both cases to levels that will be difficult to sustain unless the virtuous cycle
continues. In any event, primarily because of the rise in stock prices, about $12-1/2 trillion
has been added to the value of household assets since the end of 1994. Probably only a few
percent of these largely unrealized capital gains have been transformed into the purchase of
goods and services in consumer markets. But that increment to spending, combined with the
sharp increase in equipment investment, which has stemmed from the low cost of both
equity and debt relative to expected profits on capital, has been instrumental in propelling
the economy forward.
The consequences for the American worker have been dramatic and, for the most part,
highly favorable. A great many chronically underemployed people have been given the
opportunity to work, and many others have been able to upgrade their skills as a result of
work experience, extensive increases in on-the-job training, or increased enrollment in
technical programs in community colleges and elsewhere. In addition, former welfare
recipients appear to have been absorbed into the work force in significant numbers.
Government finances have been enhanced as well. Widespread improvement has been
evident in the financial positions of state and local governments. In the federal sector, the
taxes paid on huge realized capital gains and other incomes related to stock market
advances, coupled with taxes on markedly higher corporate profits, have joined with
restraint on spending to produce a unified budget surplus for the first time in nearly three
decades. The important steps taken by the Congress and the Administration to put federal
finances on a sounder footing have added to national saving, relieving pressures on credit
markets. The paydown of debt associated with the federal surplus has helped to hold down

longer-term interest rates, which in turn has encouraged capital formation and reduced debt
burdens. Maintaining this disciplined budget stance would be most helpful in supporting a
continuation of our current robust economic performance in the years ahead.
The fact that economic performance has strengthened as inflation subsided should not have
been surprising, given that risk premiums and economic disincentives to invest in productive
capital diminish as the economy approaches price stability. But the extent to which strong
growth and high labor force utilization have been joined with low inflation over an extended
period is, nevertheless, exceptional. So far, at least, the adverse wage-price interactions that
played so central a role in pressuring inflation higher in many past business expansions-eventually bringing those expansions to an end--have not played a significant role in the
current expansion.
For one thing, increases in hourly compensation have been slower to pick up than in most
other recent expansions, although, to be sure, wages have started to accelerate in the past
couple of years as the labor market has become progressively tighter. In the first few years
of the expansion, the subdued rate of rise in hourly compensation seemed to be, in part, a
reflection of greater concerns among workers about job security. We now seem to have
moved beyond that phase of especially acute concern, though the flux of technology may
still be leaving many workers with fears of job skill obsolescence and a willingness to trade
wage gains for job security. In the past couple of years, of course, workers have not had to
press especially hard for nominal pay gains to realize sizable increases in their real wages.
In contrast to the pattern that developed in several previous business expansions, when
workers required substantial increases in pay just to cover increases in the cost of living,
consumer prices have been generally well-behaved in the current expansion.
A couple of years ago--almost at the same time that increases in total hourly compensation
began trending up in nominal terms--evidence of a long-awaited pickup in the growth of
labor productivity began to show through more strongly in the data; and this accelerated
increase in output per hour has enabled firms to raise workers' real wages while holding the
line on price increases. Gains in productivity usually vary with the strength of the economy,
and the favorable results that we have observed during the past two years or so, when the
economy has been growing more rapidly, almost certainly overstate the degree of structural
improvement. But evidence continues to mount that the trend of productivity has
accelerated, even if the extent of that pickup is as yet unclear. Signs of major technological
improvements are all around us, and the benefits are evident not only in high-tech industries
but also in production processes that have long been part of our industrial economy.
Those technological innovations and the rapidly declining cost of capital equipment that
embodies them in turn seem to be a major factor behind the recent enlarged gains in
productivity. Evidently, plant managers who were involved in planning capital investments
anticipated that a significant increase in the real rates of return on facilities could be
achieved by exploiting emerging new technologies. If that had been a mistake on their part,
one would have expected capital investment to run up briefly and then start down again
when the lower-than-anticipated rates of return developed. But we have instead seen
sustained gains in investment, indicating that hoped-for rates of return apparently have been
realized.
Notwithstanding a reasonably optimistic interpretation of the recent productivity numbers, it
would not be prudent to assume that even strongly rising productivity, by itself, can ensure a

non-inflationary future. Certainly wage increases, per se, are not inflationary, unless they
exceed productivity growth, thereby creating pressure for inflationary price increases that
can eventually undermine economic growth and employment. Because the level of
productivity is tied to an important degree to the stock of capital, which turns over only
gradually, increases in the trend growth of productivity probably also occur rather gradually.
By contrast, the potential for abrupt acceleration of nominal hourly compensation is surely
greater.
As I have noted in previous appearances before Congress, economic growth at rates
experienced on average over the past several years would eventually run into constraints as
the reservoir of unemployed people available to work is drawn down. The annual increase in
the working-age population (from 16 to 64 years of age), including immigrants, has been
approximately 1 percent a year in recent years. Yet employment, measured by the count of
persons who are working rather than by the count of jobs, has been rising 2 percent a year
since 1995, despite the acceleration in the growth of output per hour. The gap between
employment growth and population growth, amounting to about 1.1 million persons a year
on average since the end of 1995, has been made up, in part, by a decline in the number of
individuals who are counted as unemployed--those persons who are actively seeking work-of approximately 650,000 a year, on average, over the past two and one-half years. The
remainder of the gap has reflected a rise in labor force participation that can be traced
largely to a decline of almost 300,000 a year in the number of individuals (aged 16 to 64)
wanting a job but not actively seeking one. Presumably, many of the persons who once were
in this group have more recently become active and successful job-seekers as the economy
has strengthened, thereby preventing a still sharper drop in the official unemployment rate.
In June, the number of persons aged 16 to 64 who wanted to work but who did not have jobs
was 10.6 million on a seasonally adjusted basis, roughly 6 percent of the working-age
population. Despite an uptick in joblessness in June, this percentage is only fractionally
above the record low reached in May for these data, which can be calculated back to 1970.
Nonetheless, a strong signal of inflation pressures building because of compensation
increases markedly in excess of productivity gains has not yet clearly emerged in this
expansion. Among nonfinancial corporations (our most recent source of data on
consolidated income statements), trends in costs seem to have accelerated from their lows,
but the rates of increase in both unit labor costs and total unit costs are still quite low.
Still, the gap between the growth in employment and that of the working-age population will
inevitably close. What is crucial to sustaining this unprecedented period of prosperity is that
it close reasonably promptly, given already stretched labor resources, and that labor markets
find a balance consistent with sustained growth marked by compensation gains in line with
productivity advances. Whether these adjustments will occur without monetary policy action
remains an open question.
Foreign Developments
While the United States has been benefiting from a virtuous economic cycle, a number of
other economies unfortunately have been spiraling in quite the opposite direction. The
United States, Canada, and Western Europe have been enjoying solid economic growth,
with relatively low inflation and declining unemployment, but the economic performance in
many developing and transition nations and Japan has been deteriorating. How quickly the
latter erosion is arrested and reversed will be a key factor in shaping U.S. economic and
financial trends in the period ahead. With all that is at stake, it would be difficult to overstate

how crucial it is that the authorities in the relevant economies promptly implement effective
policies to correct the structural problems underlying recent weaknesses and to promote
sustainable economic growth before patterns of reinforcing contraction become difficult to
contain.
Conditions in Asia are of particular concern. Aggregate output of the Asian developing
economies has plunged, with particularly steep declines in Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and
Indonesia. Even the economies of the stalwart tigers--Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan-have softened. Economic growth in China has also slowed, owing largely to the currency
depreciations among its neighbors and the sharp declines in their demand for imports.
Russia has also experienced some spillover from the Asian difficulties, but Russia's
problems are mostly homegrown. Large fiscal deficits stem from high effective marginal tax
rates that encourage avoidance and do not raise adequate revenue. This and the recent
declines in prices of oil and other commodities have rendered Russian financial markets and
the ruble vulnerable, particularly in an environment of heightened concern about all
emerging markets. The Russian government has recently promulgated a set of new policy
measures in connection with an expanded IMF support package in an effort to address these
problems.
In Latin America, conditions vary: Economies that are heavily dependent on exports of oil
and other commodities have suffered as prices of those items have fallen, and several
countries in that region have received more intensive scrutiny in international capital
markets, but, on the whole, Latin American economies continue to perform reasonably well.
Disappointingly, economic activity in Japan--a crucial engine of Asian economic growth-has turned down after a long period of subpar growth. Gross domestic product fell at a 5-1/4
percent annual rate in the first quarter. More recently, confidence of households and
businesses has continued to erode, the sharp contraction elsewhere in Asia has fed back onto
Japan, and the dwindling domestic demand for goods and services in that country has been
further constrained by a mounting credit crunch. Nonperforming loans have risen sharply as
real estate values fell following the bursting of the asset bubble in 1991. Problems in the
banking sector, exacerbated by the broader Asian financial crisis, have led to market
concerns about the adequacy of the capital of many Japanese banks and have engendered a
premium in the market for Japanese banks' borrowing. This resulting squeeze to profit
margins has led to a reluctance to lend in dollars or yen. In response to the weakening
economy and deteriorating banking situation, the Japanese yen has tended to weaken
significantly, in often-volatile markets, against the dollar and major European currencies.
As you know, we have sought to be helpful in the Japanese government's efforts to stabilize
their economy and financial system, reflecting our awareness of the important role that
Japanese financial and economic performance plays in the world economy, including that of
the United States. We have consulted with the relevant Japanese authorities on methods for
resolving difficulties in their banking system and have urged them to take effective
measures to stimulate their economy. I believe that the Japanese authorities recognize the
urgency of the situation.
That a number of foreign economies are currently experiencing difficulties is not surprising.
Although many had previously realized a substantial measure of success in developing their
economies, a number had leaned heavily on command-type systems rather than relying

primarily on market mechanisms. This characteristic has been evident not only in their
industrial sectors but in banking where government intervention is typically heavy, where
long-standing personal and corporate relationships are the predominant factor in financing
arrangements, and where market-based credit assessments are the exception rather than the
rule. Recent events confirm that these sorts of structures are ill-suited to today's dynamic
global economy, in which national economies must be capable of adapting flexibly and
rapidly to changing conditions.
Responses in countries currently experiencing difficulties have varied considerably. Some
have reacted quickly and, in general terms, appropriately. But in others, a variety of political
considerations appear to have militated against prompt and effective action.
As a consequence, the risks of further adverse developments in these economies remain
substantial. And given the pervasive interconnections of virtually all economies and
financial systems in the world today, the associated uncertainties for the United States and
other developed economies remain substantial as well.
In the current circumstances, we need to be aware that monetary policy tightening actions in
the United States could have outsized effects on very sensitive financial markets in Asia, a
development that could have substantial adverse repercussions on U.S. financial markets
and, over time, on our own economy. But while we must take account of such foreign
interactions, we must be careful that our responses ultimately are consistent with a monetary
policy aimed at optimal performance of the U.S. economy. Our objectives relate to domestic
economic performance, and price stability and maximum sustainable economic growth here
at home would best serve the long-run interests of troubled financial markets and economies
abroad.
The Economic Outlook
The Federal Open Market Committee believes that the conditions for continued growth with
low inflation are in place here in the United States. As I noted previously, an important issue
for policy is how the imbalance of recent years between the demand for labor and the
growth of the working-age population is resolved. In that regard, we see a slowing of the
growth in aggregate demand as a necessary element in the mix.
At this time, some of the key factors that have supported strong final demand by domestic
purchasers remain favorable. Although real short-term interest rates have risen as the federal
funds rate has been held unchanged while inflation expectations have declined, the financial
conditions that have fostered the strength in demand are still in place. With their incomes
and wealth having been on a strong upward track, American consumers remain quite upbeat.
For businesses, decreasing costs of and high rates of return on investment, as well as the
scarcity of labor, could keep capital spending elevated. These factors suggest some risk that
the labor market could get even tighter. And even if it does not, under prevailing tight labor
markets increasingly confident workers might place gradually escalating pressures on wages
and costs, which would eventually feed through to prices.
But a number of factors likely will serve to damp growth in aggregate demand, helping to
foster a reasonably smooth transition to a more sustainable rate of growth and reasonable
balance in labor markets. We have yet to see the full effects of the crisis in East Asia on
U.S. employment and income. Residential and business fixed investment already have
reached such high levels that further gains approaching those experienced recently would

imply very rapid growth of the stocks of housing and plant and equipment relative to income
trends. Moreover, business investment will be damped if recent indications of a narrowing
in domestic operating profit margins prompt a reassessment of the expected rates of return
on investment in plant and equipment. Reduced prospects for the return to capital would not
only affect investment directly but could also affect consumption if stock prices adjust to a
less optimistic view of earnings prospects.
Of course, the demand for labor that is consistent with a particular rate of output growth also
could be lowered if productivity growth were to increase more. And, on the supply side of
the labor market, faster growth of the labor force could emerge as the result of increased
immigration or delayed retirements. Nonetheless, it appears most probable that the
necessary slower absorption of labor into employment will reflect, in part, a deceleration of
output growth, as a consequence of evolving market forces. Failing that, firming actions on
the part of the Federal Reserve may be necessary to ensure a track of expansion that is
capable of being sustained.
Thus, members of the Board of Governors and presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks
anticipate a slowing in the rate of economic growth. The central tendency of their forecasts
is that real GDP will rise 3 to 3-1/4 percent over 1998 as a whole and 2 to 2-1/2 percent in
1999. With the rise in the demand for workers coming into line with that of the labor force,
the unemployment rate is expected to change little from its current level, finishing next year
in the neighborhood of 4-1/2 to 4-3/4 percent.
Inflation performance will be affected by developments abroad as well as those here at
home. The extent and pace of recovery of Asian economies currently experiencing a severe
downturn will have important implications for prices of energy and other commodities, the
strength of the dollar, and competitive conditions on world product markets. Should the
situation abroad remain unsettled, these factors would probably continue to contribute to
good price performance in the United States in the period ahead. But it is important to
recognize that the damping influence of these factors on inflation is mostly temporary. At
some point, the dollar will stop rising, foreign demand will begin to recover, and oil and
other commodity prices will stop falling and could even back up some. Indeed, a brisk snapback in foreign economic activity, should that occur, would add, at least temporarily, to
price pressures in the United States.
On a more fundamental level, it is the balance of supply and demand in labor and product
markets in the United States that will have the greatest effect on inflation rates here. As I
noted previously, wage and benefit costs have been remarkably subdued in the current
expansion. Nonetheless, an accelerating trend in wages has been apparent for some time.
In addition, a gradual upward tilt in benefit costs has become evident of late. A variety of
factors--including the strength of the economy and rising equity values, which have reduced
the need for payments into unemployment trust funds and pension plans, and the
restructuring of the health care sector--have been working to keep benefit costs in check in
this expansion. But, in the medical area at least, the most recent developments suggest that
the favorable trend may have run its course. The slowing of price increases for medical
services seems to have come to a halt, at least for a time, and, with the cost-saving shift to
managed care having been largely completed, the potential for businesses to achieve further
savings in that regard appears to be rather limited at this point. There have been a few
striking instances this past year of employers boosting outlays for health benefits by

substantial amounts.
Given that compensation costs are likely to accelerate at least a little further, productivity
trends and profit margins will be key to determining price performance in the period ahead.
Whether the recent strong performance of productivity can be extended remains to be seen.
It does seem likely that productivity calculated for the entire economy using GDP data
weakened in the second quarter. This development clearly owed, at least in some degree, to
the deceleration of output in that period. In manufacturing, where our data are better
measured, productivity appears still to have registered a solid increase. We will be closely
monitoring a variety of indicators to assess how productivity is performing in the months
ahead.
Monetary policymakers see the most likely outcome as modestly higher inflation rates in the
next one and one-half years. The central tendency of monetary policymakers' CPI inflation
forecasts is for an increase of 1-3/4 to 2 percent during 1998 and 2 to 2-1/2 percent next
year. As noted, the ebbing of the special factors reducing inflation over the past year or so,
such as the decline in oil prices, will account for some of this uptick. But the Federal Open
Market Committee will need to remain particularly alert to the possibility that more
fundamental imbalances are increasing inflationary pressures. The Committee would need to
resist vigorously any tendency for an upward trend, which could become embedded in the
inflationary process.
The Committee recognizes that significant risks attend the outlook: One is that the
impending constraint from domestic labor markets could bind more abruptly than it has to
date, intensifying inflation pressures. The other is the potential for further adverse
developments abroad, which could reduce the demand for U.S. goods and services more
sharply than anticipated and which would thereby ease pressures on labor markets. While
we expect that the situation will develop relatively smoothly, the Committee believes that,
given the current tightness in labor markets, the potential for accelerating inflation is
probably greater than the risk of protracted, excessive weakness in the economy. In any
case, it will need to continue to monitor evolving circumstances closely, and adjust the
stance of monetary policy as appropriate, in order to help establish conditions consistent
with progress towards the Federal Reserve's goals of price stability and maximum
sustainable economic growth.
Ranges for Money and Credit Growth
Indeed, recognition of the benefits of low inflation and our commitment to the Federal
Reserve's statutory objective of price stability were once again dominant in the Committee's
semiannual review of the ranges for the monetary and debt aggregates. The FOMC noted
that the behavior of the monetary aggregates had been somewhat more predictable over the
past few years than it had been earlier in the 1990s. The rapid growth of M2 and M3 over
the first half of the year, which lifted those measures above the upper ends of the target
ranges established in February, was consistent with the unexpectedly strong advance in
aggregate demand. However, movements in velocity remain difficult to predict.
The FOMC will continue to interpret the monetary ranges as benchmarks for the
achievement of price stability under conditions of historically normal velocity behavior.
Consistent with that interpretation, the Committee decided to retain the current ranges for
the monetary aggregates for 1998, as well as the range for debt, and to carry them over on a
provisional basis to next year. Although near-term prospects for velocity behavior are

uncertain, the Committee recognizes that monetary growth does appear to provide some
information about trends in the economy and inflation. Therefore, we will be carefully
evaluating the aggregates, relative both to forecasts and to their ranges, in the context of
other readings on other variables in our efforts to promote optimum macroeconomic
conditions.
Concluding Comments
As I have stated in previous testimony, the recent economic performance, with its
combination of strong growth and low inflation, is as impressive as any I have witnessed in
my near half-century of daily observation of the American economy. Although the reasons
for this development are complex, our success can be attributed in part to sound economic
policy. The Congress and the Administration have successfully balanced the budget and,
indeed, achieved a near-term surplus, a development that tends to boost national saving and
investment. The Federal Reserve has pursued monetary conditions consistent with
maximum sustainable long-run growth by seeking price stability. These policies have helped
bring about a healthy macroeconomic environment for productivity-boosting investment and
innovation, factors that have lifted living standards for most Americans. The task before us
is to maintain disciplined economic policies and thereby contribute to maintaining and
extending these gains in the years ahead.
July 1998 Humphrey-Hawkins report | 1998 Testimony
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