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For release on delivery
1:30 p.m. EST
January 7, 2011

The Economic Outlook

Remarks by
Elizabeth A. Duke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
The Maryland Bankers Association First Friday Economic Outlook Forum
Baltimore, Maryland

January 7, 2011

I am pleased to be here at the beginning of a new year to offer my assessment of
recent economic developments and the economic outlook for 2011. I also plan to discuss
the actions that the Federal Reserve has been taking to support the economic recovery.
Before I begin, I want to emphasize that the views that I will be presenting are my own
and not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) or the Board of Governors.
Recent Economic and Financial Developments
In the third quarter of 2009, the U.S. economy began to emerge from the deepest
recession of the post-World War II period--one that had been precipitated by a severe
financial crisis. Economic history teaches that such downturns typically are deeper, and
that the pace of their subsequent recoveries is more moderate, than is the case for
business cycles not associated with financial crises. Certainly, that has been the U.S.
experience for the past year and a half: Real economic activity has been steadily
recovering overall, but the speed and strength of the rebound have been restrained by
significant financial headwinds.
Perhaps the most telling measure of the modest pace of the economic recovery is
the painfully slow improvement in the labor market. To be sure, we are seeing some
signs of improvement in the data. Indicators of hiring and job openings have continued
to rise in recent months, and, more recently, new claims for unemployment insurance
have begun falling again. Still, 18 months into recovery, there are more than 7 million
fewer jobs in the economy than there were just prior to the recession, and the
unemployment rate remains stubbornly close to its peak. American families have not
experienced such a prolonged and severe period of unemployment since the early 1980s.

-2On a positive note, the recent news on production and spending offers some
encouragement that the expansion may be gaining traction. Manufacturing production,
which rebounded sharply during the first year of the recovery, has continued to expand at
a solid rate in recent months. Importantly, while earlier gains in factory production were
supported largely by the rebuilding of business inventories, the recent increases represent
a strengthening in domestic demand for domestically produced goods. Moreover, with
the recovery in economic activity abroad, exports have also been providing a boost to our
manufacturing sector.
Consumer spending, which rose at only a modest rate in the first year of the
recovery, has strengthened in recent months. Personal consumption expenditures (PCE),
adjusted for inflation, increased at an annual rate of 3-3/4 percent between June and
November, with sales increasing across a relatively broad range of consumer goods and
services. The pickup included an increase in purchases of autos and light trucks that, in
turn, prompted automakers to increase their assembly schedules for early this year. And
while we don’t have December data yet, initial reports of holiday spending have been
strong.
Nonetheless, even with the recent pickup, consumer spending has not provided its
usual cyclical boost to the recovery, as households have been restrained by the substantial
loss of wealth they sustained during the financial crisis, persistently high unemployment,
and reduced availability of credit. The good news is that some of these restraints have
been easing: Rising stock prices have been helping rebuild household wealth, the ratio of
debt to income has come down, and delinquency rates on consumer loans have been
falling. The supply of consumer credit has also improved somewhat over the past year,

-3although the terms and conditions for some types of consumer loans are still tight relative
to historical norms.
Business investment in equipment and software, which rebounded strongly early
in the recovery, continued to post solid gains through the fall. The health of larger firms
with access to capital markets has shown steady improvement over the past year.
Operating earnings per share for S&P 500 firms have been rising, net debt financing by
nonfinancial corporations has been increasing, and indicators of corporate credit quality
have continued to improve. For these firms, the outlook appears positive: Recent
surveys of purchasing managers across a range of manufacturing and nonmanufacturing
firms indicated an increase in their plans for capital spending in the coming year. In
contrast, for small businesses, the situation has been more difficult. Surveys of bank
lending indicate that banks are no longer tightening credit terms for loans to small
businesses, but interest rates on small business loans remain high relative to market rates,
and outstanding volumes of small loans to businesses continue to decline. According to
the latest survey by the National Federation of Independent Business, small business
owners see some improvement in credit availability, but they still have not seen the
pickup in sales that would trigger more investment.
One area of continued stress is housing. After what looked to be a gradual
recovery in new homebuilding during 2009 and early 2010, new single-family starts
slumped again during the summer and remained depressed in recent months. Sales of
new and existing homes are still at very low levels, and inventory remains high compared
with the monthly pace of sales. House prices--even apart from sales of bank-owned
properties--have been falling again, and many households appear to have lost confidence

-4that prices will turn up anytime soon. Disturbing reports of foreclosure improprieties
have heightened concerns about mortgage loan servicing and mortgage modifications and
have created uncertainty about the pace and volume of foreclosure sales yet to come.
Delinquency and default rates on existing mortgages seem to have peaked, but they
remain at historically high rates. And while low mortgage interest rates have contributed
to strong refinancing activity, many households are still unable to qualify for the loans
with the most favorable terms due to depressed home values, reduced income, or weaker
credit scores.
The commercial real estate market is also still quite anemic. Even after almost
three years of declining investment in office and commercial structures, vacancy rates are
still elevated and property prices remain weak. Financing conditions for commercial real
estate remain tight, and delinquency rates deteriorated further during the third quarter of
2010. That said, some modest signs of improvement have surfaced: After having
declined for two years, prices of commercial real estate, although still volatile, have
changed little, on net, since the spring, and the number of property sale transactions has
increased recently. Also, issuance of commercial mortgage-backed securities has turned
up, albeit from a low level.
State and local governments also continue to struggle. The federal fiscal stimulus
of the past two years helped shore up this sector, but did not prevent significant cutbacks
in services and employment that were associated with the steep decline in revenues
sustained during the recession. In the second half of 2010, with some pickup in retail
spending and moderate gains in taxable income, revenues began to firm and outlays by
state and local governments appeared to stabilize. Nonetheless, these jurisdictions will

-5continue to face significant pressures to satisfy balanced budget requirements and to
rebuild their depleted reserve funds at the same time that federal stimulus grants are
winding down.
With the recovery proceeding at a moderate rate and the margin of economic
slack quite wide, the underlying rate of inflation has been trending lower despite upward
pressure from rising costs of energy and other commodities and rising prices of imported
goods. In the 12 months ending in November, overall inflation in PCE prices was
1.0 percent, and the 12-month change in core PCE inflation, which excludes morevolatile food and energy costs, was just 0.8 percent. Both measures show that inflation
has drifted lower over the preceding year, and that slowing appears to have been broadly
based. Indeed, even after reviewing a number of measures of the underlying trend in
inflation, I find it difficult to identify a single measure that doesn’t show that inflation has
drifted steadily lower. At the same time, longer-run inflation expectations still appear to
be stable.
The Economic Outlook
Although the recovery continues to be uneven across sectors, recent economic and
financial developments are broadly consistent with my forecast that the economic
recovery will gain even more momentum and that the expansion will become sufficiently
strong to gradually bring down the unemployment rate. Key elements of my forecast
include further strengthening in consumer spending and business investment in
equipment and software, both of which will receive additional support from the recently
enacted tax package. Given the currently high level of resource slack and my projection

-6for only a gradual reduction in unemployment, I expect that inflation will remain
subdued.
My forecast for continued growth in consumer spending is predicated on an
assumption of ongoing recovery in wage and salary income that should accompany an
expected pickup in hiring. In addition, household balance sheets should gradually
strengthen as asset prices firm and continued deleveraging reduces household debt.
As the recovery continues, businesses should become more confident about
expanding--by both upgrading facilities and adding workers. To date, larger firms have
contributed importantly to the recovery in business spending, and they seem well
positioned for further investment. Over time, small businesses, which have been held
back by the slow recovery in demand and greater difficulties in obtaining credit, should
also become more able to increase their spending and expand their operations.
Prospects for U.S. trade are generally favorable. Global economic activity
rebounded rapidly during the initial stages of the recovery, buoyed by a bounceback in
global trade and inventory restocking around the world. Activity abroad has slowed more
recently and seems to be settling on a sustainable path that still should result in rising
demand for U.S. exports. Barring any significant spillover from the financial turmoil in
peripheral European countries, the expansion abroad should continue. In that regard, I
should note that renewed concerns about fiscal strains and banking-sector problems in the
euro-area periphery have recently contributed to increased volatility in financial markets,
but, to date, we have not seen a widespread pullback.
My outlook for the housing market and for commercial real estate is more
cautious. A sustained recovery in income and jobs will be an important prerequisite for a

-7recovery in the housing industry. But until the overhang of vacant homes is reduced
significantly and home values begin to firm, new residential construction is likely to
remain at low levels. Similarly, time will be required to absorb the currently large
amount of vacant office and commercial space before construction in that sector begins to
turn up noticeably.
One important element of the outlook is my expectation that financial market
functioning and lending conditions will continue to improve, providing additional support
for a further pickup in consumer and business spending. During the financial crisis,
banks reported on our quarterly survey an extraordinary tightening of their lending
standards. To date, only a small part of that tightening appears to have been reversed. As
banks continue to repair their balance sheets and develop greater confidence in the
economic outlook, I anticipate that standards will improve further over coming quarters.
Nonetheless, I expect loan volumes, especially real estate loan volumes, to recover only
slowly as both borrowers and lenders proceed cautiously.
One notable exception to my forecast for gradual improvement in financial
markets is my expectation that residential mortgage markets could take a number of years
to repair as policymakers and market participants grapple with the role of government in
housing finance, adapt to changing regulation, and look for ways to better manage and
price the risks associated with mortgage lending and servicing. Whatever the structure of
housing finance is to become, the large overhang of problem loans and weak housing
markets will necessitate a gradual transition.
Based on all of these assumptions, I expect a gradual decline in unemployment
this year and little change in the underlying rate of inflation.

-8Monetary Policy
The Congress has charged the Federal Reserve with two monetary policy
objectives, known as our dual mandate--the achievement of maximum employment and
price stability. As I noted earlier, the financial crisis and severe recession left the
economy far below levels of resource utilization consistent with maximum sustained
employment. And the wide margins of economic slack that have persisted have moved
inflation below a level of 2 percent or a bit less, which is the rate that most FOMC
participants see as consistent with our dual mandate. In light of these disappointing
results, monetary policy continues to be focused on ensuring that the economic recovery
is sufficiently strong to sustain noticeable progress toward our mandated objectives.
I would like to take a few minutes to offer some perspectives on how monetary
policy has been meeting this challenge. As you know, the Federal Reserve responded
forcefully to the financial crisis by employing a range of measures and programs to
provide badly needed liquidity to financial institutions and markets. At the same time,
the FOMC used both standard and less-conventional forms of monetary policy to
promote economic recovery and to preserve price stability.
The standard way in which the FOMC stimulates the economy is by reducing the
target for the overnight federal funds rate and shaping expectations about future policy
actions through the FOMC’s statement and other communications. Such policy actions
typically lead to lower interest rates and a broader easing of financial conditions that
together boost business and household spending and net exports. However, after the
FOMC lowered its target for the federal funds rate to near zero in December 2008, that
conventional policy tool was essentially no longer available. To provide additional

-9accommodation, between December 2008 and March 2010, the FOMC elected to
purchase large amounts of longer-term Treasury, agency, and agency mortgage-backed
securities (MBS). Those purchases put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates
generally and helped normalize the spread between mortgage rates and long-term
Treasury rates, which had widened during the financial crisis. Reducing longer-term
rates influences the economy in much the same way as lowering the expected path of
short-term rates. For instance, the decline in longer-term rates lowers the cost and
increases the availability of capital and credit, which in turn encourages business
expansion. In the most recent episode, another important result of lower rates has been a
reduction in debt service burdens from existing debt. Households in particular have
significantly reduced mortgage payments through refinancing. And numerous small
business owners have told me that they could not have survived the downturn without
low rates.
Economic activity picked up in early 2010, but by the time the FOMC met in
August, the rate of growth seemed to be slowing and inflation continued to drift lower.
In addition, lower mortgage rates were resulting in faster prepayment of mortgages
underlying the agency MBS held by the Federal Reserve. To avoid the modest monetary
tightening that would result from the Fed’s gradually shrinking portfolio of agency MBS,
the FOMC voted to reinvest all principal payments from agency debt and agency MBS in
longer-term Treasury securities. The Committee also began a discussion about the
strength of the recovery, the amount of slack in the economy, the likely path of inflation,
and the appropriate action to provide additional monetary accommodation should such
action be deemed necessary. In November, the FOMC judged that additional monetary

- 10 policy stimulus was needed to support the economic recovery and help ensure that
inflation, over time, returned to desired levels. To implement that stimulus, the
Committee decided to expand its holdings of securities by purchasing an additional
$600 billion in longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011.
After considering the costs and benefits of the action and recognizing that taking
no action would have its own risks, I believe that the expansion of securities holdings was
worth implementing to support the economy and make the recovery more durable. I
don’t want to overpromise. This action is not a panacea. While it is still premature to
judge the overall efficacy of the program, I believe that by exerting downward pressure
on longer-term interest rates, it has provided and will continue to provide support for a
vulnerable recovery. At the same time, I believe the risks associated with this action are
manageable, that we have the safeguards in place to monitor evolving conditions, and,
most importantly, that we have the conviction to act when necessary.
Based on our own research and that of others, evidence is accumulating that
purchases of longer-term assets have been successful in exerting downward pressure on
longer-term rates.1 Consistent with research on the effects of asset purchases, between
August, when Chairman Bernanke in a speech first publicly suggested the Federal
Reserve might take additional action, and November, when the action was taken, longer1

See, for example, Diana Hancock and Wayne Passmore (2011), “Did the Federal Reserve’s MBS
Purchase Program Lower Mortgage Rates?” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2011-01
(Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, January), available at
www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2011/index.html. Other papers include Stefania D’Amico and Thomas
B. King (2010), “Flow and Stock Effects of Large-Scale Treasury Purchases,” Finance and Economics
Discussion Series 2010-52 (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, September),
available at www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2010/index.html; Joseph Gagnon, Matthew Raskin, Julie
Remache, and Brian Sack (2010), “Large-Scale Asset Purchases by the Federal Reserve: Did They Work?”
Staff Report 441 (New York: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, March), available at
www.ny.frb.org/research/staff_reports/sr441.html; and James D. Hamilton and Jing (Cynthia) Wu (2010),
“The Effectiveness of Alternative Monetary Policy Tools in a Zero Lower Bound Environment,” working
paper (San Diego: University of California, San Diego, August (revised November)).

- 11 term Treasury rates fell as market participants priced in additional Fed purchases.2
However, since the announcement of the decision to purchase longer-term Treasury
securities, longer-term rates have actually increased. It might seem that the recent
increase in rates contradicts the view that Fed asset purchases put downward pressure on
rates. However, the logic behind this view works in both directions. If the market
expects the Fed to respond to weak economic conditions by buying more assets, investors
bid up the assets and rates fall. Conversely, if the market expects the economy to
strengthen, investors ratchet back expectations for Fed purchases and reduce their bid for
the assets, and rates rise. I believe that the current rise in rates is due to exactly this latter
circumstance--a strengthening in market participants’ outlook for the economy and a
corresponding decrease in the market’s expectation for future accommodation.
One concern that has been raised about asset purchases is the resulting expansion
of the Fed’s balance sheet and the corresponding increase in reserves. For example, some
observers have noted that an increase in reserve balances could lead to an increase in the
money supply, which would in turn generate inflation pressures. Others have worried
that elevated levels of reserve balances might make it difficult for the Federal Reserve to
remove monetary accommodation at the appropriate time. While we will need to remain
alert to economic developments, I am convinced that we can and will manage these risks.
The monetary policy objective of asset purchases is to foster downward pressure
on interest rates. But assets are “paid for” by crediting the reserve balances of banks,
generating higher levels of reserve balances in the banking system. Reserves are relevant

2

See Ben S. Bernanke (2010), “The Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy,” speech delivered at
“Macroeconomic Challenges: The Decade Ahead,” a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank
of Kansas City, held in Jackson Hole, Wyo., August 26-28,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20100827a.htm.

- 12 to the growth of the money supply because banks are required to hold a percentage of
some types of deposits as reserves with the Federal Reserve. Thus, the total amount of
reserves in the banking system acts to cap maximum reservable deposits. It is important
to note that it is deposits, not reserve balances, that are included in the monetary
aggregates used to measure the money supply. For example, M1 is made up of currency,
traveler’s checks, demand deposits, and other checkable deposits, while M2 is made up of
M1 plus savings, small time deposits, and retail money market mutual funds.
Moreover, the linkage between the level of reserve balances and the monetary
aggregates in the current environment is quite weak. You were probably taught, as I was,
that the broad monetary aggregates increase when reserve balances increase because the
larger volume of reserves supports increased lending, which in turn leads to a larger
volume of reservable deposits. While that argument might hold in normal circumstances,
in the current environment excess reserves are many multiples of required reserves, and
adding reserves is unlikely to spark a further increase in the volume of deposits. As a
result, the textbook linkage between reserve balances, bank loans, and transaction
deposits just is not operative at present. Fundamentally, the levels of M1 and M2 are
determined by the strength of the economy and the preferences of businesses and
consumers for money, which depend on the yields on monetary instruments and
competing assets.
Recent experience has again illustrated the difficulty in identifying a reliable
relationship between reserve balances and the monetary aggregates. Even though Federal
Reserve actions to fight the financial crisis and support the economic recovery added

- 13 roughly $1 trillion to a base of about $43 billion in aggregate bank reserves, M1 and M2
rose at relatively moderate rates over the same period.
Going one step further, I should note that the linkage between the monetary
aggregates and either real economic activity or inflation has been very weak over recent
decades. The lack of a reliable relationship between the monetary aggregates and the
economy led the Federal Reserve to abandon M1 as a key policy instrument in the early
1980s and then to reduce the role of M2 as a policy instrument in the late 1980s and early
1990s. Indeed, in a 2006 speech about the historic use of monetary aggregates in setting
Federal Reserve policy, Chairman Bernanke pointed out that, “in practice, the difficulty
has been that, in the United States, deregulation, financial innovation, and other factors
have led to recurrent instability in the relationships between various monetary aggregates
and other nominal variables.”3 Still, my colleagues and I will be monitoring a wide range
of financial and economic developments very closely--including the growth of the money
supply, inflation, and many other financial and nonfinancial variables--and, based on a
full assessment of those developments, the FOMC will withdraw monetary
accommodation at the appropriate time. My view is that the elevated reserve balances
would be inflationary only if they prevented the FOMC from effectively removing
monetary accommodation by raising interest rates when the time comes to remove such
accommodation, and I am convinced that that will not be the case.
The FOMC has a number of tools at its disposal for raising interest rates. When
appropriate, the Federal Reserve can put upward pressure on interest rates by raising the
rate it pays on reserve balances. Moreover, we have developed new tools that will allow
3

See Ben S. Bernanke (2006), “Monetary Aggregates and Monetary Policy at the Federal Reserve: A
Historical Perspective,” speech delivered at the Fourth ECB Central Banking Conference, Frankfurt,
Germany, November 10, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20061110a.htm.

- 14 us to drain reserves if necessary. In particular, we can drain large volumes of reserves by
replacing them with repurchase agreements and term deposits. Finally, we can always
sell the securities we purchased. Such sales would not only drain reserves but would also
put direct upward pressure on longer-term rates.
Conclusion
Overall, the recovery in economic activity to date has been uneven and has not
been sufficient to reduce unemployment noticeably. But I am encouraged by signs that
the recovery may have gained traction recently. And I believe that sustained gains in
consumer spending and business investment and a further easing of credit conditions will
reinforce each other, leading to greater confidence and improving the prospects for an
extended expansion that, over time, will reduce unemployment to a level consistent with
full employment. At the same time, I anticipate that inflation will remain subdued.
Finally, I believe that the actions taken by the FOMC to support the economic recovery
are appropriate, and I am confident in our commitment to monitor economic conditions
and take action as needed.