View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Search Site
Home > Newsroom >

St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses "The U.S. Economic Situation and
Regulatory Reform" at Tennessee's "A Day with the Commissioner"
5/12/2010
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — In remarks today at the Tennessee Department of Financial
Institutions’ “A Day with the Commissioner,” St. Louis Fed President James Bullard
discussed the U.S. economic situation and provided an overview of the Tennessee
economy. He also repeated his call for regulatory reform that enhances the Fed’s
regulatory authority and maintains its ability to remain at arm’s length from politics.
The State of the U.S. Economy
“We are seeing continued signs of recovery for the U.S.,” Bullard said in his
presentation, “The U.S. Economic Situation and Regulatory Reform.” In particular, he
noted that real gross domestic product has surpassed pre-crisis levels and is expected
to reach its 2008 second quarter peak before the end of this year.
“Real consumption of nondurables and services held steady during the recession and
has increased,” Bullard said. “While real investment had declined more than 30 percent
at one point during the recession, it is now improving.” He added, “We have had ve
positive employment reports in the past six months, which is evidence that labor
market conditions are slowly improving,” and noted that he expects this trend to
continue going forward through the spring and summer. Bullard also said the U.S. has
led G-7 economies in productivity improvements since 2007, and that “U.S. monetary
policy remains extremely accommodative.”
One risk to the outlook is the sovereign debt crisis in Greece, Bullard said. “The crisis in
Greece has escalated and spread, leading to volatility in world markets,” Bullard
explained. “This is causing a ight to safety, depressing U.S. Treasury yields.”
He added, “Some of this ight to safety reversed after the announcement of major
initiatives by EU governments over the weekend,” and although LIBOR-OIS spreads — a
measure of market stress — have increased during the recent weeks, they are “nowhere
near 2008-2009 peaks.”
Bullard also noted that the debt burdens of U.S. states are an order of magnitude lower
than typical European sovereign debt burdens.
Tennessee’s Economy
Turning to Tennessee, Bullard addressed the state’s economic situation.
“Like nearly all states, Tennessee’s state government is facing a budget crisis in 2010,
which will be more challenging than it was in 2009,” Bullard said, noting that in 2009,

Tennessee’s total tax revenue was nearly 9 percent lower than in 2007, the year before
the recession began.
Bullard noted that in percentage terms, Tennessee’s job losses during the recession
have been higher that the U.S. as a whole. “At the beginning of the recession,
Tennessee’s unemployment rate was higher than that of the U.S., and it also rose by
more during the recession, reaching nearly 11 percent last summer,” Bullard said. “It has
since begun to drift down along with the U.S. unemployment rate.”
On the foreclosure front, Bullard said, “The foreclosure wave for the U.S. peaked
through 2009 and began to fall by the end of the year. At its peak, the U.S. foreclosure
rate was about 3.5 times its 2005 level. Tennessee’s foreclosure rate rose more steadily
and less sharply and ended 2009 a bit below its high of about 1 percent.”
Financial Regulatory Reform
As the debate continues in Congress over nancial regulatory reform, Bullard said that
under the current system, “Regulation works well for the thousands of community
banks in the U.S. This system features deposit insurance plus prudential regulation, and
also allows failure — capitalism at work — but prevents bank runs and the associated
panic.”
In addition, Bullard noted, some reform proposals would have created a “Wall Streetonly” Fed.
“The Fed should remain involved with community bank regulation so that it has a view
of the entire nancial landscape,” Bullard explained. “It is important that the Fed does
not become biased toward the very large, mostly New York-based institutions.”
He further explained, “Community banks tend to fund smaller businesses, an important
source of job growth for the economy. Understanding the entire nancial landscape
helps the Fed make sound monetary policy decisions.”
“The Federal Reserve’s regional structure was designed to keep some power out of New
York and Washington and allow for input on key policy questions from around the U.S.,”
he said. “Some proposals for auditing monetary policy would have diminished the
independence of the Fed. Allowing short-term politics to mix too closely with monetary
policy leads to poor economic outcomes. The consequences for the U.S. and the global
economy would be large. No one would be served well by this outcome.”

GENERAL
Home
About Us
Bank Supervision
Careers
Community Development
Economic Education
Events
Inside the Economy Museum
Newsroom
On the Economy Blog
Open Vault Blog
OUR DISTRICT

Little Rock Branch
Louisville Branch
Memphis Branch
Agricultural Finance Monitor
Housing Market Conditions
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Bridges
Economic Synopses
Housing Market Perspectives
In the Balance
Page One Economics
The Quarterly Debt Monitor
Review
Regional Economist
ST. LOUIS FED PRESIDENT
James Bullard's Website
INITIATIVES
Center for Household Financial Stability
Dialogue with the Fed
Federal Banking Regulations
FOMC Speak
In Plain English - Making Sense of the Federal Reserve
Timely Topics Podcasts and Videos
DATA AND INFORMATION SERVICES
CASSIDI®
FRASER®
FRED®
FRED® Blog
GeoFRED®
IDEAS
FOLLOW THE FED
Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Google Plus
Email Subscriptions
RSS

CONTACT US

|

LEGAL INFORMATION

|

PRIVACY NOTICE & POLICY

|

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ONLINE