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For release on delivery
7:30 p.m. EDT
April 20, 2009

The Economic Outlook
Remarks by
Donald L. Kohn
Vice Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Hutchinson Lecture
University of Delaware
Newark, Delaware
April 20, 2009

I’m pleased to be here and honored to be invited to deliver the Hutchinson
Lecture. Although I never met Harry Hutchinson, I very much wish I had. Like Harry, I
received a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan, and my professional
interests have centered on money and banking. Given Harry’s expertise and his keen
interest in teaching, I’m sure he would have had valuable insights about the recent
financial turmoil to share with all of us. In this talk, I will focus on the economic
outlook, which, of course, has been significantly influenced by that turmoil. After a brief
review of recent developments, I will discuss the factors that are likely to support a
resumption of economic growth over coming quarters as well as the likely contour of that
recovery.1
Recent Developments
The U.S. economy and financial markets have been through an extraordinarily
difficult period. The downturn in economic activity that has been under way since late
2007 steepened considerably last fall as the strains in financial markets intensified, credit
conditions tightened further, and asset values continued to slump. Partly in response to
the financial turmoil, consumer and business confidence plummeted, and nearly all major
sectors of the economy registered steep declines in activity. In all, real gross domestic
product (GDP) dropped at an annual rate of 6-1/4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008;
the Commerce Department’s advance estimate for the first quarter of 2009--which will be
released next week--is expected to show another sizable decrease. This recession seems
likely to be among the deepest and longest in the post-World War II period.

1

The views are my own and not necessarily those of other members of the Federal Open Market
Committee. Andrea Kusko and Daniel Sichel of the Board’s staff contributed to these remarks.

-2Labor market and production data continued to deteriorate through the first
quarter. Businesses shed more than 650,000 jobs in March, the fifth consecutive month
of job losses in the neighborhood of 600,000 or more, and the unemployment rate jumped
to 8-1/2 percent. Moreover, the number of new claims for unemployment insurance
benefits remained elevated in early April, which suggests that job losses have remained
appreciable. And in the industrial sector, another large drop in output was recorded in
March as manufacturers continued to cut production in response to weak demand and
excess inventories.
The recent spending indicators, however, have been more mixed. On the negative
side, businesses have continued to make sharp reductions in their capital expenditures,
and exports have been hard hit by the steep drop in economic activity abroad. However,
there are a few tentative signs that the pace of decline in some other key components of
demand may be lessening. To be sure, consumer spending continues to suffer the effects
of the poor job market and the sizable losses of equity and housing wealth over the past
two years. But after smoothing through the data for the first three months of 2009,
consumption appears to have steadied some after a sharp drop in the summer and autumn
of 2008. And in the housing sector, the declines in sales and construction of singlefamily homes have abated in the past couple of months--in part, perhaps, because of the
low levels of mortgage interest rates and the greater affordability of housing. As demand
firms, and once inventories of houses and a broad range of goods are brought into line
with sales, economic activity should begin to stabilize.

-3The crosscurrents in the recent data and a bit more favorable financial news of
late stand in contrast to the uniformly bleak picture of a few months ago. These
developments may be an early indication that conditions are falling into place for real
GDP to decline at a slower rate in the second quarter and to stabilize later this year. I
want to emphasize that the high-frequency data are very noisy, and considerable
uncertainty attends the near-term path of the economy. Still, I don’t think it is premature
to start to ponder the shape that a recovery--when it occurs--would be likely to take.
The Outlook for Recovery
Consideration of the likely shape of the recovery depends very much on
understanding how we got to where we are now. For a number of years earlier in the
decade, U.S. economic growth was supported importantly by rapid increases in
consumption and housing, which, in turn, were fueled by an extended surge of global
credit. Housing demand was propelled, in part, by persistently low long-term interest
rates, loose underwriting standards on mortgages, and, for a while, expectations of
continuing increases in house prices that resulted in the building of too many houses and
the elevation of home prices to unsustainable levels. These same developments fed a
surge in consumption through the effects on wealth of rising house prices and through
various financial innovations that allowed many households to liquefy their housing
wealth. Financial intermediaries were further exposed by generally inadequate
compensation for risk and increased leverage. As the housing boom petered out and then
reversed, both households and lenders found themselves overextended, developments that
led to a mutually reinforcing pullback in spending and lending. The dynamics of this

-4adjustment, which coincided with the collapse of the global credit boom, helped push the
U.S. economy into deep recession.
Economic policymakers have moved aggressively to counter the threat to
economic stability by, in effect, filling some of the gap in private lending and spending
with government lending and spending. Because the disruptions in the economy have
been so closely related to problems in the financial sector, many of the policy measures
have been focused on financial institutions and markets and on countering the tightening
of financial conditions that occurred as lenders became more risk averse and took steps to
conserve capital and liquidity. These measures should result in improved credit
conditions for businesses and households and thus are expected to help mitigate the
negative feedback between the financial sector and the real economy. Such improvement
is crucial because we will not have a meaningful recovery without a stabilization of our
financial system and credit markets.
The Federal Reserve has played an active role over the past 18 months in the
development and implementation of policies to counter the financial crisis and its
economic fallout. Steps taken have included lowering interest rates, making backup
sources of liquidity available to private lenders, and using the Federal Reserve’s lending
capacity to try to revive a variety of financial markets. The easing of monetary policy, as
conventionally defined by the target for the federal funds rate, has been very aggressive;
by the end of last year, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) had brought the
target federal funds rate down essentially to zero. Moreover, the FOMC noted, in the
statement after its March meeting, “that economic conditions are likely to warrant
exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.” By

-5communicating this expectation, the Committee reinforced market beliefs that interest
rate policy is likely to remain on hold, thereby putting downward pressure on longer-term
rates, which have the largest effects on spending.
In addition, the Federal Reserve has taken other policy steps to ease credit
conditions and support the broader economy. Throughout the crisis, the Federal Reserve
has moved to ensure that U.S. depository institutions can obtain the liquidity that they
require. Given the global nature of financial markets and institutions, the Federal
Reserve also established swap lines with foreign central banks, allowing them to obtain
dollars so that they could meet the dollar liquidity needs of banks in their jurisdictions.
As some large investment banks came increasingly under pressure in early 2008, the
Federal Reserve, consistent with its role as lender of last resort and in light of the key
roles these institutions play in a range of financial markets, introduced programs under
which it could provide liquidity to primary dealers. And, as the financial situation
deteriorated last fall, the Federal Reserve established liquidity facilities for money market
mutual funds and introduced programs to provide liquidity directly to borrowers and
investors in key credit markets, including the commercial paper market, where strains
threatened the ability of many financial and nonfinancial firms to place their paper. The
Federal Reserve and the Treasury have worked together to try to restart the asset-backed
securities markets, where loans are packaged for sale to final investors. And just
recently, the Federal Reserve started making substantial purchases of longer-term
Treasury and mortgage-related securities to support market functioning and reduce longterm interest rates in the mortgage and other private credit markets.

-6Along with its monetary policy actions, the Federal Reserve has been part of a
broader government effort--one that includes the Treasury and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC)--to provide more direct support to financial firms and the
economy. In part, this effort has involved targeted actions to prevent the failure or
substantial weakening of specific systemically important institutions when the disorderly
failure of a large, complex, interconnected firm would disrupt the functioning of a range
of financial markets and impede the flow of credit to households and businesses. Besides
this targeted support, the government has been injecting capital into the banking system
to ensure that U.S. banking institutions are well capitalized and can support the recovery
by lending to sound households and businesses. In addition to the programs to provide
capital, the government, through the FDIC, has temporarily guaranteed selected liabilities
of insured depository institutions and their holding companies, thereby improving their
access to funding. The government has also taken steps, most recently through the
Making Home Affordable program, to reduce unnecessary foreclosures. Beyond helping
homeowners stay in their houses, limiting foreclosures should benefit lenders, mitigate
adverse impacts on affected communities, and, by limiting the decline in overall home
prices, help support the broader economy. Finally, the Treasury recently announced a
program to assist banks and other lenders in finding markets for their “legacy assets”-that is, real estate-related assets that were accumulated during the housing boom and have
since declined in value and become relatively illiquid. Uncertainty about the value of
legacy assets is weighing on confidence in banks, and so helping banks to dispose of such
assets should contribute to their ability to raise capital and increase lending.

-7Employing its fiscal policy tools, the government has enacted a multifaceted
program of stimulus that will provide direct support to spending and economic activity.
In February, the President signed into law a $787 billion package that included cuts in
taxes and increases in transfer payments for households, lower taxes for businesses,
higher spending for infrastructure investments, and additional financial assistance to state
and local governments, many of which would otherwise have been forced to cut spending
in response to declining revenues. Although the exact effects of these measures on the
economy are difficult to gauge, they will likely provide a significant boost to activity.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the effect of the stimulus package on the
level of real GDP at the end of 2010 could range from about 1 percent to more than 3
percent, relative to a baseline forecast that does not include the stimulus. That additional
GDP translates into an unemployment rate by the end of next year that is between 1/2 and
2 percentage points lower than it otherwise would be. With the tax cuts already showing
up in paychecks, increases in transfer payments already in place, and grants to states and
localities starting to flow, the effects of the package on aggregate demand should start to
provide some support to activity fairly quickly.
Thus a broad range of policies are in place to foster recovery. But economic
recoveries are also typically shaped by powerful internal cyclical dynamics. Indeed, it
appears that some of the forces that had been holding down growth are starting to abate.
In particular, the recent data suggest that the multiyear contraction in home sales and new
construction may be nearing an end. House prices could well continue to fall for a while,
and months’ supply of unsold homes will likely remain elevated for some time. At some
point, however, house prices will begin to flatten out, and fears about buying into a

-8falling market will start to wane. At the same time, the improved affordability of
homeownership resulting from reduced house prices, low mortgage interest rates, and
government programs (including incentives for first-time homebuyers) should boost
demand. Because inventories of unsold homes are still very high relative to sales, it may
take a while for any pickup in demand to translate into higher production. But even
stabilization in residential construction would remove what has been a significant drag on
the U.S. economy.
Addressing inventory overhangs of goods other than houses is another important
part of the adjustment process. In a number of industries, inventory-sales ratios soared
late last year, and they remain elevated despite substantial reductions in manufacturing
output and a marked quickening in the rate of inventory liquidation. Businesses still have
a ways to go to bring inventories into alignment with sales. But as these excesses are
worked off, production will begin rising back up to the level of sales, thereby providing a
boost to GDP growth.
Another factor at work is the sharp fall in prices of oil and other commodities
since the middle of 2008. This decline in prices--which partly reflected the worldwide
drop in demand--has helped bolster real incomes and consumer spending in the United
States.
More broadly, we are in the midst of an adjustment to the negative shocks that
have hit the economy over the past two years and that intensified last fall. In particular,
late last year we experienced a marked deterioration in a broad range of financial
markets, severe cutbacks in spending in response to the tighter financial conditions, and a
sudden and substantial erosion of confidence among households and businesses that

-9greatly steepened the ongoing recession. In response to the effect of these shocks,
businesses have instituted sharp reductions in production, ratcheted down capital
spending plans, and laid off workers. At the same time, households have scaled back
spending in response to lower wealth, diminished access to credit, and the deterioration in
their prospects for employment and income. Financial markets have improved some
since last fall, though they remain disrupted and fragile. Over time, as businesses and
households gradually adjust to these adverse shocks, the drag on activity will abate, and
the stage will be set for recovery and a resumption of growth.
How Strong Will the Recovery Be?
The historical record provides a natural starting point for gauging the likely
strength of the coming recovery. According to the research literature, the recessions that
occurred between the end of World War II and the 1980s were typically followed by
high-growth recovery phases that relatively quickly pushed output back up to its prerecession level, and policy--sometimes fiscal but especially monetary policy--contributed
significantly to those bouncebacks.2 All else being equal, that historical pattern would
point to a strong recovery in this episode.
However, the last two business cycles cast some doubt on that conclusion. The
recovery that followed the recession in the early 1990s was fairly sluggish. And with a
lackluster recovery after the 2001 recession, the evidence supporting rapid bouncebacks
after downturns was weakened further. Some analysts have suggested that those slow
2

See for example, George L. Perry and Charles L. Schultze (1993), “Was This Recession Different? Are
They All Different?” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, iss. 1, pp. 145-95; Christina D. Romer and
David H. Romer (1994), “What Ends Recessions?” in Stanley Fischer and Julio J. Rotemberg, eds., NBER
Macroeconomics Annual 1994 (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press), pp. 13-57; and Daniel E. Sichel (1994),
“Inventories and the Three Phases of the Business Cycle,” Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, vol.
12 (July), pp. 269-77. Burns and Mitchell (1946) made a similar point about the strength of recoveries in
an earlier period. See Arthur F. Burns and Wesley C. Mitchell (1946), Measuring Business Cycles (New
York: National Bureau of Economic Research).

- 10 recoveries reflected the shallowness of the downturns--indeed, the research on the pre1990 episodes indicated that the strength of recoveries was correlated with the depth of
the preceding recessions, and the slowness of the recoveries from the 1990 and 2001
recessions would be consistent with that correlation.3 However, many commentators
instead attributed the slowness of those recoveries to the drag from structural factors-namely, the financial headwinds in the early 1990s and the need to work off capital
overhangs after 2001. All in all, the historical record leaves us with at least two
possibilities for the coming recovery: a strong recovery from the deep recession or a
sluggish recovery because drag from the underlying structural factors partly offsets the
usual forces that generate a rapid bounceback.
In the current episode, the imbalances preceding this contraction were substantial,
and we are still dealing with the consequences of the developments that precipitated the
downturn. Accordingly, my best guess is that we are in for a relatively gradual recovery,
though a very wide range of uncertainty surrounds that outlook.
In the financial markets, we are in the midst of a massive restructuring of credit
flows and adjustment of risk premiums. After the recent experience, there is likely to be
less reliance on securitization markets to intermediate credit flows and more reliance on
banks and other intermediaries. But those intermediaries are still rebuilding the capital
and liquidity positions they need to substantially increase their participation in credit
markets.

3

See Perry and Schultze, “Was This Recession Different?” p. 149. For related evidence, see Paul Beaudry
and Gary Koop (1993), “Do Recessions Permanently Change Output?” Journal of Monetary Economics,
vol. 31 (April), pp. 149-63; and Sichel, “Inventories and the Three Phases of the Business Cycle.”

- 11 As I noted, we have taken important policy steps to support financial institutions
and markets and to restart the flow of credit. Indeed, risk spreads in both short-term and
long-term markets have narrowed since late last year, and equity prices, after a sharp
decline earlier this year, have rebounded substantially in recent weeks. However,
financial markets continue to be fragile, many risk spreads are still elevated, and
investors appear to remain uncertain about the strength of some financial institutions.
Some of the government programs I have discussed--those to restart markets, provide
additional capital buffers, and open outlets for legacy assets--are just now being
implemented. While these programs are promising, we will not be able to judge their
success for a time. Thus, I suspect that credit conditions will ease only slowly and will
continue to exert restraint on spending for a time.
The sharp drop in consumer spending since the middle of last year has been
reflected in a noticeable upturn in the personal saving rate, which now stands above 4
percent after fluctuating between 0 and 1 percent for most of the period since 2005. I
would not be surprised to see the saving rate rise somewhat further in coming quarters as
the lagged effects of the steep declines in home values and equity prices over the past
couple of years restrain spending relative to income. In addition, shoring up personal
financial positions may trump a rebound in spending for a time--especially if
unemployment continues to rise, as it did in the initial phase of the past two recoveries.
Confidence about future economic prospects will be a critical influence on people’s
willingness to spend. Confidence took a major hit last fall, and my best guess is that it
will recover slowly along with the financial markets and the economy. But once
financial conditions stabilize, the economy regains its footing, and households sense that

- 12 better prospects lie ahead, confidence could rebound more vigorously, leading to a more
rapid pickup in purchases at that point.
Business fixed investment has also fallen sharply since last fall, and it is likely to
remain weak through the remainder of 2009. Indeed, businesses will probably be
reluctant to undertake new projects in the absence of a substantial improvement in the
outlook for sales and profitability and a lifting of uncertainty. And tight credit
conditions--especially for commercial construction--likely will be a significant negative
force. But here too, confidence could bounce back more rapidly, and if credit conditions
were to ease appreciably, businesses might move ahead quickly with capital spending
projects that had been postponed during the recession.
Exports were an important source of strength for the U.S. economy in recent
years. However, the global nature of the current economic downturn means that they are
unlikely to provide much support for domestic production going forward. Activity in
foreign economies, taken together, contracted in the fourth quarter at a rapid pace-similar to that in the United States. Recent indicators point to equally dismal outcomes in
the first quarter and, although there have been a few signs of stabilization, have yet to
send a clear signal that the global economy has hit bottom. The intensification of
financial turmoil was global, and many of our trading partners are also facing constraints
on credit availability.
Although the recovery in the U.S. economy is likely to be gradual in its early
stages, it should gain momentum over time. As credit markets improve, the
accommodative stance of monetary policy will show through more clearly. And a
rebound in confidence about the future should help spur demand. As demand strengthens

- 13 and financial markets improve, some of the adverse feedbacks should reverse and begin
working to bolster activity. In time, as these forces come into play, economic growth will
pick up, ultimately returning the economy to its full productive capacity and bringing the
unemployment rate down to a more normal level.
Inflation Prospects
If, as I have described, the economic recovery initially follows a relatively gradual
track, margins of slack in labor and product markets are likely to remain wide for a time,
implying some further downward pressure on inflation. The extent of a decline in
inflation, however, should be limited by the relative stability of longer-term inflation
expectations. That said, there are sizable risks on both sides of the inflation forecast.
On the one hand, we cannot rule out the possibility that adverse economic
conditions will cause deeper cuts in prices, a greater softening in wages, and a steep
decline in inflation expectations. Substantial declines in inflation would raise real
interest rates, thereby restraining the recovery even more. Moreover, the risk that
inflation could be lower will be exacerbated to the extent that economic activity falls
short of the path that I have described. In these circumstances, the Federal Reserve
would continue to look for ways to relieve financial pressures and encourage spending.
On the other hand, the Federal Reserve’s actions to ease credit conditions have
resulted in a tremendous increase in its assets and in bank reserves. Some observers have
expressed concern that these actions, if not reversed in a timely manner, are sowing the
seeds of a sharp pickup in inflation down the road. As I just noted, near-term prospects
appear to be for a decline in inflation rather than an increase. But my colleagues and I
are acutely aware of the risk of higher inflation as the economic recovery gains speed.

- 14 We are firmly committed to acting in a way that preserves price stability, and we believe
we have the tools to absorb reserves and raise interest rates when needed. Moreover, we
are working with the Treasury to introduce legislation that would enlarge our tool kit for
moving away from the extraordinary degree of financial stimulus we have put in place
when the time arrives.
Conclusion
To sum up, the uncertainty around the economic outlook is substantial. The path
of the economy will depend critically on how quickly the current stresses in financial
markets abate; these events have few if any precedents, and thus it is very difficult to
predict how the adjustment process will play out. But at the end of the process, our
financial system will be on firmer footing. Both markets and regulators will continue to
press financial firms to employ less leverage and have more reliable sources of liquidity,
and those firms will have every incentive to more effectively price, monitor, and manage
risk. Improvements to the supervisory and regulatory framework will help create a more
stable financial system. In addition, we will have a stronger economy. Businesses will
have boosted the efficiency of their operations. And households will be less indebted and
saving more. That greater saving will, all else being equal, support greater investment or
allow domestic saving to displace foreign saving for a more sustainable international
position. The U.S. economy has proven itself over the years to be flexible and resilient as
well as innovative and productive, qualities that enable it to rebound from serious
economic shocks, and I am confident that, in a like manner, we will rebound from our
current economic and financial challenges.