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For release on delivery
10 00 a m E S T
March 4, 1997

Statement by
Alan Greenspan
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on the Budget
U S

House of Representatives
March 4, 1997

Mr

Chairman and members of the Committee, I appreciate the

opportunity to appear before you today

As you know, my

colleagues and I who serve on the Federal Reserve Board just
recently submitted to Congress our semiannual report on monetary
policy and the economy

In brief, the performance of the U S

economy over the past year has been quite favorable, with few
signs of the imbalances that might typically have been expected
by the sixth year of a cyclical expansion

Indeed, we believe

that the most likely prospect is for continued sustainable
economic growth accompanied by low and stable inflation, and our
objective will be to foster the conditions most likely to produce
that outcome
In that regard, continued low levels of inflation and
inflation expectations have been a key support for the healthy
economic performance of the past year

They have helped to

create a financial and economic environment conducive to strong
capital spending and longer-range planning generally, and so to
sustained economic expansion

Consequently, it is crucial to

keep inflation contained in the near term and ultimately to move
toward price stability
If we are successful, a stable macroeconomic environment
will contribute to your efforts to place the fiscal health of the
nation on a firmer footing

But achieving your fiscal objectives

will require this Committee to confront additional issues of
extraordinary complexity and importance

I would like to devote

the remainder of my prepared remarks to one of these issues,
namely the bias in the consumer price index

-2I want to begin by commending this Committee for your
continuing interest in this subject

Indeed, our conversation

about potential bias in the CPI goes back some two years, when I
testified before a joint meeting of this Committee and your
counterparts from the Senate

The topic remains just as

important now as it was then
A useful starting point for discussion of this issue is to
be clear that any index that endeavors to measure the cost of
living should aim to be unbiased

That is, a serious examination

of all available evidence should yield the conclusion that there
is just as great a chance that the index understates the rate of
growth of the true cost of living as there is that it overstates
it

The present-day consumer price index does not meet this

standard

In fact, the best available evidence suggests that

there is almost a 100 percent probability that we are
overcompensating the average social security recipient for
increases in the cost of living, and almost a 100 percent
probability that we are causing the inflation-adjusted burden of
the income tax system to decline more rapidly than I presume the
Congress intends
A major reason for this is that consumers respond to changes

in relative prices by changing the composition of their
marketbasket

actual

At present, however, the marketbasket used in

constructing the CPI changes only once every decade or so
Moreover, new goods and services deliver value to consumers even
at the relatively elevated prices that often prevail early in

-3their life cycles, currently, that value is not reflected in the
CPI
For these and other reasons outlined in the Boskin
Commission report and other studies, we know with near certainty
that the current CPI is off

Although we do not know precisely

by how much, there is a very high probability that the upward
bias ranges between 1/2 percentage point per year and
1-1/2 percentage points per year
In thinking about how to remedy this situation, we must
recognize that there is no sharp dividing line between a pristine
estimate of a price and one that is not

Although the concept of

price is clear enough in theory, it is often extremely difficult
to implement in practice

In order to construct a fully

satisfactory measure of the price of a given item, one would
first have to specify all the characteristics of that item that
deliver value to consumers

Then one would have to reprice the

identical bundle of characteristics month in and month out

In

practice, both of these steps are difficult because we are often
not precisely certain about what consumers value, and because the
items that are available to consumers are constantly changing,
often in subtle ways

As a result, virtually all of the

components that make up the CPI are approximations, in some cases
very rough approximations

But the essential fact remains that

even combinations of very rough approximations can give us a far
better judgment of the overall cost of living than would holding
to a false precision of accuracy and thereby delimiting the range

-4of goods and services evaluated

We would be far better served

following the wise admonition of John Maynard Keynes that "it is
better to be roughly right than precisely wrong "
Estimates of the magnitude of the bias in our price measures
are available from a number of sources

Most have been developed

from detailed examinations of the microstatistical evidence
However, recent work by staff economists at the Federal Reserve
Board has added strong corroborating evidence of price
mismeasurement using a macroeconomic approach that is essentially
independent of the exercises performed by other researchers,
including those on the Boskin Commission

In particular,

employing the statistical system from which the Commerce
Department estimates the national income and product accounts,
this research finds that the measured growth of real output and
productivity in the service sector are implausibly weak, given
that the return to owners of businesses in that sector apparently
has been well-maintained

Taken at face value, the published

data indicate that the level of output per hour in a number of
service-producing industries has been falling for more than two
decades

In other words, the data imply that firms in these

industries have been becoming less and less efficient for more
than twenty years
These circumstances simply are not credible

On the

reasonable assumption that nominal output and hours worked and
paid of the various industries are accurately measured, faulty
price statistics are by far the most likely cause of the

-5implausible productivity trends

The source of a very large

segment of these prices is the CPI
Some observers who are skeptical that the bias in the CPI
could be very large have noted that the evidence on the magnitude
of unmeasured quality change and the importance of new items bias
is incomplete and inconclusive

Without a doubt, quality change

and new items are among the most difficult of the problems
currently confronting the BLS

But since I raised this issue two

years ago, the accumulating evidence continues to support the
view that the current treatment of quality change and new items
in the CPI results in an overstatement of the rate of growth of
the cost of living
An even more difficult quality-related issue is whether
changes in broad environmental and social conditions should be
reflected in price measures that are used for indexing various
components of federal outlays and receipts

That is, should the

CPI reflect the influence of factors such as the level of crime,
air and water quality, and the emergence of new diseases, which
are not specifically related to products that consumers purchase0
There is little in the record to suggest that, when it enacted
the indexation of social security benefits in 1972, the Congress
meant to insure the beneficiaries of that program against changes

in such environmental and social factors

Nor do these

appear to have been raised when Congress debated the indexation
of various tax parameters during the 1980s

Taking account of

such conditions, particularly those that lie outside of the

issues

markets for goods and services, would be an interesting exercise
in its own right, but would appear to extend well beyond the
original intent of the Congress
A considerable professional consensus already exists for at
least two actions that would almost surely bring the CPI into
closer alignment with a true cost-of-living index

First, we

should move away from the concept of a fixed marketbasket at the
upper level of aggregation, and move toward an aggregation
formula that takes into account the tendency of consumers to
alter the composition of their purchases in response to changes
in relative prices

Second, we should selectively move away from

the current aggregation formula at the lower level of
aggregation
Beyond these rather limited steps, most of the needed
developments will require time, effort, and quite possibly
additional resources

It is important that the Congress provide

the Bureau with sufficient resources to pursue the agenda
vigorously
Where will this longer-term effort be required9
key areas, by all accounts, is quality adjustment

One of the
As the Bureau

has rightly noted, they do indeed already employ a variety of
methods to control for quality change, but available evidence
suggests that these are not sufficient to the task
Unfortunately, making improvements on this front will be
difficult

Each item will have to be considered on its own, and

-7there may well be limited transfer of knowledge from one item to
the next
The longer-term agenda should also include concentrated
attention to the methods for introducing new items into the
index, the development of new sources of data such as the
information collected by bar-code scanners, and the analysis of
time use, the latter being important in understanding the value
of time-saving and convenience-enhancing innovations
Even if the BLS moves aggressively, some upward bias will
almost surely remain in the CPI, at least for the next several
years

Two years ago, I suggested that a workable structure for

dealing with this situation might involve a two-track approach
That suggestion still seems to me to make sense

The first track

would involve action by the BLS to address those aspects of the
bias that can be dealt with in relatively short order, say within
the next year

The second track would involve the establishment

of an independent national commission to set annual
cost-of-living adjustment factors for federal receipt and outlay
programs

The Commission would examine available evidence on a

periodic basis, and estimate the bias in the CPI taking into
account both the latest research on the sources and magnitudes of
the bias, and any corrective actions that had been taken by the
BLS

This type of approach would have the benefit of being

objective, nonpartisan, and sufficiently flexible to take full
account of the latest information

Moreover, there is no reason

why the two tracks could not proceed in parallel

Without the second track, we are implicitly assuming,
contrary to overwhelming evidence, that the most accurate
estimate of the bias due to quality adjustment problems and
introduction of new items is zero

There has been considerable

objection that such a second track procedure would be a political
fix

To the contrary, assuming zero for the remaining bias is

the political fix

On this issue, we should let evidence, not

politics, drive policy
We have an overarching national interest in building a
better measure of consumer prices and in implementing more
rational indexation procedures

These efforts are essential if

we are to ensure that the original intent of the relevant pieces
of legislation will be fulfilled in insulating taxpayers and
benefit recipients from the effects of ongoing changes in the
cost of living

At present this objective is not being met