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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m., E.S T.
October 29, 1997

Testimony by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Joint Economic Committee
United States Congress
October 29, 1997

We meet against the background of considerable turbulence in
world financial markets, and I shall address the bulk of my
remarks to those circumstances.
We need to assess these developments against the backdrop of
a continuing impressive performance of the American economy in
recent months

Growth appears to have remained robust and

inflation low, and even falling, despite an ever tightening labor
market

Our economy has enjoyed a lengthy period of good

economic growth, linked, not coincidentally, to damped inflation
The Federal Reserve is dedicated to contributing as best it can
to prolonging this performance, and we will be watching economic
and financial market developments closely and evaluating their
implications.
Even after the sharp rebound around the world in the past
twenty-four hours, declines in stock markets in the United States
and elsewhere have left investors less wealthy than they were a
week ago and businesses facing higher equity cost of capital
Yet, provided the decline in financial markets does not cumulate,
it is quite conceivable that a few years hence we will look back
at this episode, as we now look back at the 1987 crash, as a
salutary event in terms of its implications for the macroeconomy.
The 1987 crash occurred at a time when the American economy
was operating with a significant degree of inflationary excess
that the fall in market values arguably neutralized

Today's

-2economy, as I have been suggesting of late, has been drawing down
unused labor resources at an unsustainable pace, spurred, in
part, by a substantial wealth effect on demand.

The market's net

retrenchment of recent days will tend to damp that impetus, a
development that should help to prolong our six-and-a-half-year
business expansion.
As I have testified previously, much of the stock price gain
since early 1995 seems to have reflected upward revisions of
long-term earnings expectations, which were implying a continuing
indefinite rise in profit margins from already high levels

I

suspect we are experiencing some scaling back of the projected
gains in foreign affiliate earnings, and investors probably also
are revisiting expectations of domestic earnings growth

Still,

the foundation for good business performance remains solid.
Indeed, data on our national economy in recent months are
beginning to support the notion that productivity growth, the
basis for increases in earnings, is beginning to pick up.
I also suspect earnings expectations and equity prices in
the United States were primed to adjust

The currency crises in

Southeast Asia and the declines in equity prices there and
elsewhere do have some direct effects on U S

corporate earnings,

but not enough to explain the recent behavior of our financial
markets

If it was not developments in Southeast Asia, something

else would have been the proximate cause for a re-evaluation

-3While productivity growth does appear to have picked up in
the last six months, as I have pointed out in the past, it likely
is overly optimistic to assume that the dimension of any
acceleration in productivity will be great enough and persistent
enough to close, by itselfr the gap between an excess of
long-term demand for labor and its supply

It will take some

time to judge the extent of a lasting improvement
Regrettably, over the last year the argument for the
so-called new paradigm has slowly shifted from the not
unreasonable notion that productivity is in the process of
accelerating, to a less than credible view, often implied rather
than stated, that we need no longer be concerned about the risk
that inflation can rise again.

The Federal Reserve cannot afford

to take such a complacent view of our price prospects.

There is

much that is encouraging in the recent performance of the
American economy, but, as I have often mentioned before,
fundamental change comes slowly and we need to evaluate the
prospective balance of supply and demand for various productive
resources in deciding policy.
Recent developments in equity markets have highlighted
growing interactions among national financial markets.

The

underlying technology-based structure of the international
financial system has enabled us to improve materially the
efficiency of the flows of capital and payment systems

That

-4improvement, however, has also enhanced the ability of the
financial system to transmit problems in one part of the globe to
another quite rapidly

The recent turmoil is a case in point

I

believe there is much to be learned from the recent experience in
Asia that can be applied to better the workings of the
international financial system and its support of international
trade that has done so much to enhance living standards
worldwide.
While each of the Asian economies differs in many important
respects, the sources of their spectacular growth in recent
years, in some cases decades, and the problems that have recently
emerged are relevant to a greater or lesser extent to nearly all
of them.
Following the early post World War II period, policies
generally fostering low levels of inflation and openness of their
economies coupled with high savings and investment rates
contributed to a sustained period of rapid growth, in some cases
starting in 1960s and 1970s

By the 1980s most economies in the

region were expanding vigorously.

Foreign net capital inflows

grew, but until recent years were relatively modest

The World

Bank estimates that net inflows of long-term debt, foreign direct
investment, and equity purchases to the Asia Pacific region were
only about $25 billion in 1990, but exploded to more than $110
billion by 1996.

-5A major impetus behind this rapid expansion was the global
stock market boom of the 1990s.

As that boom progressed,

investors in many industrial countries found themselves more
heavily concentrated in the recently higher valued securities of
companies in the developed world, whose rates of return, in many
instances, had

fallen to levels perceived as uncompetitive with

the earnings potential in emerging economies, especially in Asia
The resultant diversification induced a sharp increase in capital
flows into those economies.

To a large extent, they came from

investors in the United States and Western Europe.

A substantial

amount came from Japan, as well, owing more to a search for
higher yields than to rising stock prices and capital gains in
that country

The rising yen through mid-1995 also encouraged a

substantial increase in direct investment inflows from Japan

In

retrospect, it is clear that more investment monies flowed into
these economies than could be profitably employed at modest risk
I suspect that it was inevitable in those conditions of low
inflation, rapid growth and ample liquidity that much investment
moved into the real estate sector, with an emphasis by both the
public and private sectors on conspicuous construction projects.
This is an experience, of course, not unknown in the United
States on occasion

These real estate assets, in turn, ended up

as collateral for a significant proportion of the assets of
domestic financial systems.

In many instances, those financial

-6systems were less than robust, beset with problems of lax lending
standards, weak supervisory regimes, and inadequate capital.
Moreover, in most cases, the currencies of these economies
were closely tied to the U S. dollar, and the dollar's
substantial recovery since mid-1995, especially relative to the
yen, made their exports less competitive.

In addition, in some

cases, the glut of semiconductors in 1996 suppressed export
growth, exerting further pressures on highly leveraged
businesses.
However, overall GDP growth rates generally edged off only
slightly, and imports, fostered by rising real exchange rates,
continued to expand, contributing to what became unsustainable
current account deficits in a number of these economies.
Moreover, with exchange rates seeming to be solidly tied to the
dollar, and with dollar and yen interest rates lower than
domestic currency rates, a significant part of the enlarged
capital inflows, into these economies, in particular short-term
flows, was denominated by the ultimate borrowers in foreign
currencies.

This put additional pressure on companies to earn

foreign exchange through exports.
The pressures on fixed exchange rate regimes mounted as
foreign investors slowed the pace of new capital inflows, and
domestic businesses sought increasingly to convert domestic
currencies into foreign currencies, or, equivalently, slowed the

-7conversion of export earnings into domestic currencies

The

shifts in perceived future investment risks led to sharp declines
in stock markets across Asia, often on top of earlier declines or
lackluster performances.
To date, the direct impact of these developments on the
American economy has been modest, but it can be expected not to
be negligible.

U S. exports to Thailand, the Philippines,

Indonesia, and Malaysia (the four countries initially affected)
were about four percent of total U S. exports in 1996.

However,

an additional 12 percent went to Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and
Taiwan (economies that have been affected more recently)

Thus,

depending on the extent of the inevitable slowdown in growth in
this area of the world, the growth of our exports will tend to be
muted

Our direct foreign investment in, and foreign affiliate

earnings reported from, the economies in this region as a whole
have been a smaller share of the respective totals than their
share of our exports

The share is, nonetheless, large enough to

expect some drop-off in those earnings in the period ahead.

In

addition, there may be indirect effects on the U S. real economy
from countries such as Japan that compete even more extensively
with the economies in the Asian region
Particularly troublesome over the past several months has
been the so-called contagion effect of weakness in one economy
spreading to others as investors perceive, rightly or wrongly,

similar vulnerabilities

Even economies, such as Hong Kong, with

formidable stocks of international reserves, balanced external
accounts and relatively robust financial systems, have
experienced severe pressures in recent days

One can debate

whether the recent turbulence in Latin American asset values
reflect contagion effects from Asia, the influence of
developments in U S

financial markets, or home-grown causes.

Whatever the answer, and the answer may be all of the above, this
phenomenon illustrates the interdependences in today's world
economy and financial system
Perhaps it was inevitable that the impressive and rapid
growth experienced by the economies in the Asian region would run
into a temporary slowdown or pause

But there is no reason that

above-average growth in countries that are still in a position to
gain from catching up with the prevailing technology cannot
persist for a very long time.

Nevertheless, rapidly developing,

free-market economies periodically can be expected to run into
difficulties because investment mistakes are inevitable in any
dynamic economy.
adverse.

Private capital flows may temporarily turn

In these circumstances, companies should be allowed to

default, private investors should take their losses, and
government policies should be directed toward laying the
macroeconomic and structural foundations for renewed expansion;
new growth opportunities must be allowed to emerge

Similarly,

-9in providing any international financial assistance, we need to
be mindful of the desirability of minimizing the impression that
international authorities stand ready to guarantee the
liabilities of failed domestic businesses.

To do otherwise could

lead to distorted investments and could ultimately unbalance the
world financial system.
The recent experience in Asia underscores the importance of
financially sound domestic banking and other associated financial
institutions.

While the current turmoil has significant

interaction with the international financial system, the recent
crises

would arguably have been better contained if

long-maturity property loans had not accentuated the usual
mismatch between maturities of assets and liabilities of domestic
financial systems that were far from robust to begin with.

Our

unlamented savings and loan crises come to mind.
These are trying days for economic policymakers in Asia.
They must fend off domestic pressures that seek disengagement
from the world trading and financial system

The authorities in

these countries are working hard, in some cases with substantial
assistance from the IMF, and the World Bank, and the Asian
Development Bank, to stabilize their financial systems and
economies.
The financial disturbances that have afflicted a number of
currencies in Asia do not at this point, as I indicated earlier,

-10threaten prosperity in this country, but we need to work closely
with their leaders and the international financial community to
assure that their situations stabilize.

It is in the interest of

the United States and other nations around the world to encourage
appropriate policy adjustments, and where required, provide
temporary financial assistance