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SPEECH

Credit Growth and Economic Activity after the Great Recession
April 16, 2015
James McAndrews, Executive Vice President and Director of Research
Remarks at the Economic Press Briefing on Student Loans, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York City
As prepared for delivery

Good morning and let me welcome you to our press briefing focusing on developments in the student loan market. My remarks
will concentrate on the role of credit markets more generally during this economic expansion. As a reminder, these remarks
reflect my own views, and not those of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or of the Federal Reserve System.
First, let me say a few words on the current economic outlook. Real GDP grew 2.4 percent over the course of 2014. As New York
Fed President Dudley noted earlier this month, despite what appears to be a soft first quarter, we expect that real GDP growth will
continue over the next couple of years at a similar rate, supported by solid underlying fundamentals and accommodative financial
conditions. Unemployment should continue to decline and approach 5 percent by late this year. Because of the recent sharp fall
in oil prices and the appreciation of the dollar, inflation will be very low over the coming months. However, as these temporary
factors dissipate, economic slack declines further and inflation expectations remain stable, inflation should slowly move up toward
the Federal Open Market Committee’s longer-run objective of 2 percent.
Using data from the National Income and Product Accounts, this expansion so far has exhibited unusual features compared to
previous long expansions. Most notably, the pace of growth during the early years of this expansion was well below that of the
early years in previous long cycles (Table 1). Among the factors for the slower growth were unusually low contributions from
residential investment and from nondurables and services consumption. In contrast, the contribution from durables
consumption, particularly for motor vehicles, was similar to that observed in previous expansions. Even though real GDP growth
has picked up some in the past two years, these patterns are still evident (Table 2).
The slow growth during the current expansion, what we might call the long shallow recovery, is likely a result of a confluence of
many factors including constrained monetary and fiscal policies, demographic factors and economic and financial developments
abroad.
Today, I’d like to consider developments in credit markets in the context of this shallow recovery. Credit availability is a crucial
ingredient in any advanced economy’s recipe for economic growth because credit can support investment in productive enterprises
and can smooth household spending from fluctuations in income. Credit is the means through which financial assets accumulated
by savers can earn returns by being put to productive uses.
Based on data from the Financial Accounts of the United States (Flow of Funds), real credit (that is, credit after taking into account
the effects of inflation) to both corporations and households in prior recoveries generally started to grow fairly quickly after the
end of the recession. By contrast, in the most recent recovery the real credit outstanding of businesses (corporations and noncorporations) declined for about two years after the end of the recession. And only recently—more than five years after the end of
the recession—has it attained pre-recession levels (Figure 1). More dramatically, real credit to households continued to decline for
about four years and, while it has finally begun to expand, is still well below its pre-recession levels (Figure 2).
These different patterns of credit growth partly reflect the weak state of the banking sector following the financial crisis. The U.S.
banking sector experienced record losses in the Great Recession that impaired a significant portion of banks’ capital and triggered
many failures. These losses would have been even higher had it not been for the liquidity and solvency support from the official
sector—including the U.S. Treasury, the FDIC and the Federal Reserve. Sorting banks by the losses incurred during a recession
relative to equity capital at the beginning of the recession, it is clear that the U.S. banking industry across this spectrum was much
more adversely affected in the latest recession than in the two prior recessions (Figure 3). The legacy of those losses has likely
limited the banking sector’s ability to extend new loans during this expansion, as banks acted in a highly precautionary way to
accrue capital that had been depleted as well as to add to their previous capital levels.
The need for banks to repair their balance sheets following the financial crisis contributed to the far slower growth of outstanding
bank loans during this expansion when compared to previous long expansions. Real outstanding loans to businesses, which are
dominated by bank loans, declined more in this recovery than in previous recoveries (Figure 4). On the household side, real
outstanding residential mortgages, which are largely originated by banks, have declined through most of this expansion while they
grew steadily in previous expansions (Figure 5). Consumer credit has risen at a modest rate in this recovery—comparable to that

of the last cycle (Figure 6). This category includes auto loans, credit cards and other consumer debts that are mainly originated by
banks. But it also includes student loans where the federal government is the dominant lender. Student loans have risen robustly
during this expansion, and have driven much of the rise of overall consumer credit. We will have much more to say about them
later in today’s briefing.
The U.S. financial system relies more heavily on capital markets than other advanced economies. Bonds and other negotiable debt
instruments are an important source of funding to credit-worthy corporations. Indeed, the growth rate of real nonfinancial
corporate bonds outstanding during this expansion has been roughly similar to that of previous expansions (Figure 7). A similar
pattern is evident in the commercial paper market (Figure 8). Notwithstanding the robust performance of debt markets during
this expansion, the sharper decline in outstanding bank loans to businesses that I mentioned earlier was likely a contributing
factor to the slower economic recovery we have observed this time around.
These developments appear to have had adverse consequences on the cost and availability of credit for bank-dependent
borrowers. Also, in the early years of this recovery, bank-dependent firms appear to have deleveraged more and invested less than
firms with access to capital markets. So, the impairment of banks’ ability to extend credit still has the potential to hinder
investment and adversely affect the overall economy.
We see similar correlations when it comes to lending to households. The expansion in auto lending that commenced in 2010
coincided with a recovery in auto sales, which have now essentially regained the ground they lost during the recession. Until
recent quarters, overall consumption growth has been slow, consistent with a pattern of slow growth in credit card balances. The
most obvious case is mortgages where—after a massive tightening from 2007 to early 2010—underwriting standards remain very
tight. This tightness, especially for non-prime borrowers, has likely been a factor behind a persistently sluggish housing market
that has held back this recovery relative to earlier ones.
Overall, these patterns of credit growth support the idea that the weakness of banks at the end of the Great Recession has been a
contributing factor to the slow recovery of the U.S. economy since the recession. These patterns are consistent with evidence
provided in the work of Carmen Reinhardt and Kenneth Rogoff, and in that of Christina and David Romer, indicating that the
severity of recessions and strength of the subsequent recovery are associated with the amount of financial distress experienced in a
financial crisis.1
There is also a strong likelihood that decreased credit demand—for example, from households whose homes fell in value below
what they still owed on the mortgage—also has played a part in the slow growth of credit in this expansion, as has been expressed
in the work of Atif Mian and Amir Sufi.2 Nevertheless, the patterns that I have reviewed here point to an adverse impact from a
relatively weak banking sector on credit supply. However, it also suggests that the recent improvement in banks’ financial
condition should provide support to credit growth going forward, which in turn would provide support to the economic growth we
project over the medium term.
As I noted earlier, one area where credit has flowed freely is student lending. Of course, an important factor distinguishing student
loans from other forms of household debt is the fact that banks are far less important players and the federal government is
instead the dominant lender. But this is just one factor that makes student loans unique, and I will now ask my colleagues to
provide some more details on this important and fascinating market.
Charts
1 Christina

D. Romer and David H. Romer, “New Evidence on the Impact of Financial Crises in Advanced Countries,” NBER
Working Paper No. 21021, March 2015; and Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries
of Financial Folly, Princeton,NJ: Princeton University Press, 2009.
2 Atif

Mian and Amir Sufi, House of Debt: How They (and You) Caused the Great Recession, and How We Can Prevent It from
Happening Again, University of Chicago Press, 2014; and a number of scholarly articles.

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Charts
Press Briefing on Student Loans