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The U.S. Economy and Financial Market Turmoil
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October 14, 2008
Memphis, Tenn.
*I appreciate assistance and comments provided by my
colleagues at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Kevin
Kliesen, associate economist, and Marcela M. Williams,
special research assistant to the president, provided
assistance. I take full responsibility for errors. The views
expressed are mine and do not necessarily re ect o cial
positions of the Federal Reserve System.

Introduction(1)

James Bullard

U.S. nancial markets are currently facing severe
challenges. Credit and money markets are under unusual
stress. Uncertainty regarding the true value of complex
assets associated with mortgages has led the volume of
trade in some markets to approach zero. Collateralized
lending has also become less attractive, as lenders have
grown concerned that they may not be able to sell the

President and Chief
Executive O cer

collateral should the borrower default. The Federal Reserve
has responded to these challenges in timely and innovative
ways. Our actions have included traditional monetary
policy moves, but we have also implemented new and
unconventional tools. This innovation has intensi ed in
response to market events over the past several weeks.
Today I will discuss the near-term outlook for the economy
and the challenges my Federal Reserve colleagues and I
face as we strive to implement a policy that is designed to
deliver low and stable in ation along with maximum
sustainable employment.

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In recent weeks, nancial markets have experienced high
levels of volatility that re ect magni ed uncertainty about
future U.S. economic performance. When markets are this
volatile, I think it is unwise to guess the level of future
economic activity, because the economy can take sudden
turns in one direction or another. One way to cope with this
uncertainty is to describe two possible paths for the
economy. Along the rst possible path, nancial market

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"Rationally, let it be said in a
whisper, experience is certainly
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Amerigo Vespucci

turmoil has a dampening effect on output and
employment, but these effects are mild in comparison with
periods of weakness experienced by the U.S. economy
since the 1970s. I will call this the benchmark scenario.
Along a second possible path, nancial market turmoil
causes severe dislocation, which sends the economy into a
prolonged downturn that matches or exceeds previous
recession experiences. I will call this the downside risk
scenario.
The main challenge in the current environment is clearly to
nd ways to navigate through very substantial nancial
market turmoil and the associated uncertainties
concerning real economic performance. Many of the
initiatives undertaken to mitigate the effects of nancial
market unrest on the non nancial sectors of the economy
are targeted efforts aimed at speci c problems in nancial
markets. This is a distinct approach from the Fed's much
blunter interest rate policy, which determines medium-term
in ation. Overreliance on interest rate policy in this
environment does little to solve the problems at hand and,
in addition, may cause a new and di cult-to-solve in ation
problem in the wake of the current turbulence.
Let me say before I continue that any views expressed here
are my own and do not necessarily re ect the o cial views
of other Federal Open Market Committee members.
Current Economic Developments
Second-quarter growth in real gross domestic product
turned out to be much stronger than many observers
predicted earlier this year. Yet, despite this heartening
performance, it now appears that the economy may have
slowed signi cantly in the third quarter. This slowing is
associated not so much with nancial market turmoil, but
instead with the rapid run-up in energy and commodities
prices during the spring and summer, along with increasing
weakness in labor markets.
One of the most signi cant recent developments on the
real side of the economy has been the steady slowing in
the pace of spending by U.S. households. Economists pay
close attention to consumer spending, since it comprises
about three-quarters of expenditures on real GDP. After
increasing by more than 3 percent per year from 2004 to
2006, the growth of real consumer spending began to taper
off in the second quarter of last year. In the rst half of
2008, consumer spending has increased at an annualized
pace of about 1 percent.
The slowdown in consumption spending has occurred
against the backdrop of the sharp increase in oil and other
commodities prices that began last year. In response to
record-high gasoline prices, consumers have changed their
buying patterns. Sales of domestically manufactured cars
and light trucks, in particular, are on pace to be their
weakest since 1991. In addition, record-high gasoline

prices have caused consumers to switch from relatively
high-priced, less-fuel-e cient light trucks and SUVs to
relatively lower-priced, more-fuel-e cient passenger cars.
The end result has been a decline in total expenditures on
motor vehicles over the past year. Although the demand for
durable goods such as cars and trucks is highly cyclical, it
seems likely that higher gasoline prices can account for a
large percentage of the recent declines in automotive
sales. Recent dramatic reversals in oil prices may mitigate
this effect going forward. West Texas Intermediate crude
oil has been trading around $80 in recent sessions, down
from a peak of $145 last July.
Recent developments in the labor markets will likely
compound the slowing in real consumer spending over the
second half of this year. In September, nonfarm payroll
employment declined by 159,000. So far in 2008, the U.S.
economy has shed 760,000 jobs. For comparison, nonfarm
payroll employment declined by almost 1.8 million jobs,
more than twice as much, during the nine months following
March 2001, the last recession in the U.S. It remains to be
seen whether job losses will accelerate during the
remainder of the year and become more consistent with
previous episodes. Job losses this year have been largest
in the sectors comprising manufacturing, construction,
transportation and utilities, as well as professional and
business services.
One of the most startling statistics to come out of the
August employment report was the unexpected rise in the
unemployment rate. Over the past year, the unemployment
rate has increased sharply—from 4.7 percent to 6.1 percent
—mostly during the summer. The rise in unemployment is
consistent with a cyclical slowing in GDP growth, as rms
respond to weaker sales by scaling back their workforce.
Initial claims for unemployment insurance have risen to
levels not seen since the 2001 recession.
Beginning late last year, business capital spending on
equipment and software weakened. In the second quarter
of 2008, for example, real equipment and software
expenditures declined at the fastest rate in ve and a half
years. For the most part, the bulk of this weakness was
concentrated in the outlays for industrial and
transportation equipment; business spending on
information processing equipment and software has
remained brisk. Thus, part of this slowdown is undoubtedly
energy related.
One source of strength in the most recent GDP report was
the robust export sector, which has been a key part of the
economy's resilience in the face of declining employment.
Net exports added close to three percentage points to GDP
growth in the second quarter. Many forecasters expect this
contribution to decline in the third quarter, in part due to
less robust growth globally among major trading partners.

To be sure, the timing and extent of a strengthening in the
economy will also largely depend on the recovery of the
housing sector. Since the rst quarter of 2006, the
residential investment component of real GDP has
subtracted, on average, almost a full percentage point from
each quarter's real GDP growth. This has been a very
signi cant drag, and; so, any stabilization in the housing
sector should provide a sizable stimulus to overall growth,
all else equal. Housing starts are currently at levels not
seen since the recession troughs of 1981-82 and 1991, and
those lows were on smaller population bases. To the
extent that history is a guide, the current housing
landscape suggests we are near a cyclical bottom in house
construction. By the rst half of 2009, homebuilders will
probably have worked off the bulk of their excess
inventories of unsold new homes, and, after three years, we
will nally see an end to the drag from this sector.
The inventory of existing homes on the market, however,
remains near record-high levels, and it seems likely that it
will take longer to work off that inventory. Sales of
previously sold single-family homes appear to have
stabilized during 2008. It seems unlikely that existing home
sales would have stabilized if buyers were still expecting
steep price declines.
These developments broadly suggest an economy growing
at less than the average rate over the postwar era. This is
consistent with the baseline scenario I mentioned at the
beginning of my remarks. But intensi ed nancial market
turmoil has raised the risk of the second scenario, one
involving a protracted slump for the economy. Let me now
turn to a discussion of recent events in nancial markets
A Shakeout in Financial Markets
The decline in home prices has been most severe in parts
of the West and in the Southeast—places where home
prices had earlier posted the largest increases. Substantial
macroeconomic effects from falling house prices may
eventually lter through nancial markets. A large number
of nancial institutions have had considerable holdings of
mortgage-backed securities and related assets on their
balance sheets. Total mortgage debt outstanding in the
U.S. is about $14.7 trillion, slightly larger than one year's
GDP. The mortgage-backed and related securities had
provided holders with a ow of income derived from the
monthly mortgage payments of the underlying asset. The
recent decline in house prices, along with a slowing
economy, destabilized these assets by causing many
homeowners to default or walk away from their homes—
especially those with nontraditional mortgages. The value
of these mortgage-backed and related securities has since
eroded and thus reduced the net wealth of those investors
and institutions that held them. Because these securities
are so opaque, many nancial market participants have

questioned the valuations of these securities, and trading
volume has fallen off dramatically.
The resulting illiquidity of mortgage-backed securities and
related nancial instruments has caused severe stress for
the U.S. nancial system over the past year. Many nancial
rms simply did not manage risk exposure on these
securities well and, as a result, have struggled with losses
and write-downs. A nancial sector shakeout has ensued,
one which was entirely appropriate considering the
magnitude of the mismanagement involved. As is normal
during an industry shakeout, weaker rms are forced into
bankruptcy or merge with stronger partners, and
opportunity abounds for those rms that are able to
survive and build market share in the post-shakeout
industry structure.
The Federal Reserve has responded aggressively in an
attempt to mitigate the effects of the shakeout on the rest
of the economy. The key concern has been that if
important nancial market players are failing, the failure
should occur in an orderly way with the lowest level of
market disruption. In the banking sector, there are wellestablished procedures for resolving a failed institution in
an orderly way. It is very important to recognize that in the
non-bank nancial sector there are no such procedures.
This has kept the Fed improvising, especially during the
past seven months.
The Bear Stearns episode provided the rst case of a largescale failure. The novelty of a large investment-bank failure
suggested that a Bear Stearns bankruptcy was largely
unexpected within nancial markets and therefore likely to
cause signi cant market disruption. In that case, the Fed
helped arrange a merger with JPMorgan Chase as the
stock price of Bear Stearns was declining toward zero.
During the summer, mortgage giants Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac experienced increasing stress in the face of
mounting losses and a rapidly declining equity price, which
eventually led to an aggressive policy change. Placing
these entities into conservatorship was largely a Treasury
action in conjunction with the primary regulator, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), with only a consultative
role for the Federal Reserve. The GSEs were previously
implicitly backed by the U.S. government, and the recent
action makes that backing completely explicit. The GSE
conservatorship removes a key uncertainty from the scene
and should help to stabilize markets going forward.
In September, the investment bank Lehman Brothers
appeared to be in a position similar to Bear Stearns. The
Lehman Brothers situation had been evolving for a year,
and at this point, market players had already seen the
demise of an investment bank. In this case, counterparties
had plenty of time to assess the potential for Lehman to
fail. As a consequence, nancial market participants were
much less likely to have been surprised, and signi cant

market disruption was judged less probable. In addition,
the Fed had implemented additional liquidity facilities in
the wake of Bear Stearns in an attempt to mitigate adverse
consequences from future failures. Lehman led for
bankruptcy. Since then, important pieces of the company
have been sold to Barclays Capital.
One di culty in dealing with a crisis is the element of
surprise. Just as the events surrounding Lehman were
coming to a head, solvency problems at insurer American
International Group, with $1.1 trillion in assets, became
acute. In the U.S., insurers are regulated on a state-by-state
basis with no federal-level regulator. While AIG's stock price
had been declining for some time, its demise was rapid
and unanticipated. A bankruptcy ling in the immediate
aftermath of Lehman was judged likely to cause signi cant
market disruption. The AIG board of directors agreed to a
Fed bridge loan secured by the assets of the rm. The
terms included the ouster of the CEO and an interest rate
set at Libor plus 850 basis points.
It is important to stress that the Federal Reserve's intent in
each of these cases has not been to save these rms but
to orchestrate an orderly transition for nancial markets as
these rms exit the scene in their current form. Bear
Stearns, Lehman and AIG are all radically changed entities.
Stronger existing rms will be the winners as the shakeout
proceeds. In a related development, investment bank
Merrill Lynch agreed to sell itself to Bank of America. The
two remaining large U.S. investment banks, Goldman
Sachs and Morgan Stanley, have changed their charters to
become bank holding companies. These events have left
the U.S. with no large investment banks.
Again, because of the lack of a regime for the orderly
resolution of failed institutions in the non-bank nancial
sector, the Fed was forced to improvise in the Bear Stearns,
Lehman and AIG episodes. These improvised actions have
had mixed success. In the Bear Stearns episode, there was
signi cant, but manageable, turmoil in the aftermath of the
merger announcement. In the Lehman-AIG episode, there
was signi cant turmoil, which has spread globally to
seemingly unrelated markets. Part of this was attributable
to the largely unexpected nature of the AIG bankruptcy
threat within 48 hours of Lehman's bankruptcy ling. Last
week, world equity markets declined precipitously in
response to the problems in U.S. nancial markets.
The continuing turmoil prompted Treasury Secretary
Paulson to approach Congress concerning a more
systematic method of handling the shakeout in the
nancial sector. As has been widely discussed, the
Congress recently passed, and the president signed, the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. The original intent
of the legislation was to create a market for the illiquid
asset-backed securities and related instruments that are at
the heart of the present situation. Currently, these assets

have very low prices, the so-called re sale price, because
there are many rms that would like to sell their holdings
and there are few buyers in the current climate. But these
securities also have a hold-to-maturity price that re ects
the likely value of the stream of revenue for a patient
investor who is willing to simply hold the asset for a period
of time. Under the proposal, the government would play the
role of the patient investor, buying the securities at auction
and holding them or selling them at a future moment when
nancial market stress has receded. In principle, this idea
could be executed at no ultimate cost to the taxpayer,
although taxpayer money would be put at risk. An
important part of the concept is that taxpayer money
would be used to purchase assets, which would then be
sold in the future, recouping most or all of the initial outlay.
While there are many challenges ahead for this program, if
successfully implemented it will probably go a long way
toward liquefying illiquid asset-backed securities markets
and so would help make progress toward an orderly
nancial market consolidation. This in turn would reduce or
eliminate the downside risk to economic performance.
A drawback of the auction approach to buying troubled
assets is that it will take some time to design effective
auctions in order to get accurate pricing in the
marketplace. As the legislation was being passed and
signed by the president, banks and other nancial
institutions in Europe began to experience acute problems
similar to their U.S. counterparts. The subsequent global
sell-off in equity markets suggested that governments
would need to take action with more immediate impact to
restore con dence in the markets.
One place to look for a model for handling nancial crises
of this magnitude is the Nordic countries during the early
1990s. For a recent summary, see the speech by my friend
and colleague Seppo Honkapohja, a governor at the Bank
of Finland(2). These countries were hit by severe nancial
turmoil and sharp recessions, in part associated with
currency crises, in the early 1990s. The general response
was for the governments to take equity positions in banks
and to manage the resulting consolidation in the industry.
As Honkapohja documents, the ultimate expense to the
taxpayers in these countries was much less than the initial
outlay of government funds. Most observers regard the
government intervention in these cases as a success.
It is far from clear how nancial market turmoil of this
magnitude will ultimately affect the real economy.
Unchecked, the turmoil could have severe negative
consequences. However, the idea is not to leave the turmoil
unchecked. The recent legislation along with many other
initiatives of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury, in
conjunction with governments around the world, are
intended to return nancial markets to more normal
functioning over time. To the extent that this effort
succeeds, the ultimate effect of the turmoil could be

muted. In addition, much of the uncertainty surrounding
the most vulnerable players in this saga has already been
resolved—in particular, no large investment banks remain
on the scene and the GSEs have been placed into
conservatorship. Turmoil is still signi cant, to be sure, but
some of the largest uncertainties have been addressed.
One way to look at the possible effects of nancial market
turmoil is to consider recent experience in the U.S. and
abroad. By recent experience I mean the last 25 years,
during which the economic experience around the world
has been more comparable to the current U.S. situation.
Analogies to the Great Depression are badly strained as the
U.S. economy was very different at that time. For instance,
there were no bank failures in the U.S. until 1931, after real
output had already fallen 30 percent. In contrast, in the
current situation real output has yet to fall while the
banking and nancial sectors are already under
considerable stress. So, the order of events is dramatically
reversed. In addition, during the onset of the Great
Depression, most major economies were on the gold
standard, which limited the policy response. Friedman and
Schwartz argued that the Federal Reserve allowed the
money supply to decline from 1929 to 1933, signi cantly
exacerbating what otherwise would have been a mild
recession. This cannot be said for the current setting, as
the current Federal Reserve could hardly be viewed as
inactive during the past 15 months. Also, during the early
1930s, the U.S. Congress passed the protectionist SmootHawley legislation, which caused signi cant deterioration
of global trade. For all these reasons, and probably many
more, the 1930s is not the right comparison point for the
current situation.
Instead, the leading modern example for large economies
is Japan. The Japanese economy is technologically and
nancially very sophisticated, not unlike the U.S. The
Japanese stock and real estate markets peaked around
1990, and the subsequent decline caused severe problems
for Japanese banks. The policy response to the banking
crisis has generally been judged ineffective, and the real
economy in Japan was plagued by a decade or more of
sub par performance. This seems to be the primary risk for
the U.S. going forward.
Other modern examples include the countries most closely
involved in the Asian currency crisis of 1997 and 1998.
Many countries suffered through severe recessions during
that episode. So, between the Japanese experience since
1990, the Nordic countries' nancial crises of the early 90s
and the Asian currency crisis, there is considerable recent
precedent for very negative macroeconomic performance
associated with nancial market turmoil. Certainly, this is
not an exhaustive list, but other examples often involve
countries with more specialized problems.

In the modern U.S. experience, we have been more
fortunate so far. The 1987 stock market crash—when the
Dow fell 22 percent on a single day—has often been
mentioned in conjunction with recent events. However, real
GDP growth was actually strong during the second half of
1987: Third quarter growth was 3.7 percent, and fourth
quarter growth was 7.2 percent. At the time, many
suggested that the U.S. was in or would immediately go
into recession due to nancial market disruption. It did not
happen, which provides an object lesson about how
di cult it can be to really understand what is driving shortterm dynamics in the economy. Similarly, the collapse of
Long-Term Capital Management occurred in the second
half of 1998, the culmination of a year of turmoil in global
nancial markets. But U.S. real GDP growth in the second
half of 1998 averaged about 5.5 percent. To be sure, there
were important policy responses in both 1987 and 1998.
Still, combined with an adequate policy response, these
were episodes of turmoil that did not have a clear impact
on real economic performance.
All of these events offer clues but also differ in important
ways from the current episode. We do not know what will
happen this time around, and we should be humble in our
predictions. Part of the answer depends on how successful
the current policy initiatives will be. Still, these examples
suggest that there is substantial downside risk. There is
some possibility that the turmoil will be mitigated in part
on its own and in part because of successful policy,
ultimately leading to a relatively benign outcome, where the
nancial market shakeout unfolds and real economic
performance is muted but not disastrous. But there is also
some possibility of a very adverse outcome, perhaps
similar to Japan's, in which policy initiatives do not work
well, the turmoil is exacerbated and the entire economy is
drawn into a protracted downturn.
Conclusions
In summary, the U.S. economy by the numbers looks like it
is slowing. Many of the most recent events have injected
tremendous uncertainty into the national outlook, but we
have few hard numbers at this point that directly indicate
the effect of that uncertainty. If nancial market turmoil
can be contained, possibly through aggressive government
policy, then a relatively benign outcome is possible in
which U.S. economic performance is sluggish but does not
involve a protracted downturn.
During the last 15 months, the Fed has been forced to
improvise in response to evolving nancial market
conditions. This is in part because there is no clear method
for handling large failing rms in the non-bank nancial
sector. By contrast, the methodology for closing failed
banks and thrifts is well established and indeed served the
nation well during the S&L crisis of the late 1980s and early
1990s. The improvised actions have had mixed success,

with manageable volatility following Bear Stearns but
substantially higher volatility later, especially on the heels
of the near-bankruptcy of insurer AIG. The recent
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act was intended in
part to provide the tools to enable a more systematic
response to nancial market turmoil. One way to use these
tools is to follow the example of the Nordic countries'
response to nancial market turmoil during the early
1990s. In considering the nature of the downside risks we
face, the most reasonable comparison point may be the
experience in Japan since 1990. A well-executed
government intervention can avoid the problems that
Japan faced and help to stabilize the nancial sector along
with the U.S. economy.
Footnotes
1. Portions of this speech were delivered as: "Near-Term
Challenges for the U.S. Economy," in Murfreesboro,
Tenn., on Sept. 26, 2008.
2. "The 1990's Financial Crises in Nordic Countries,"
Philadelphia 28 September 2008. The Global
Interdependence Center.

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