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THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR THE SOUTHEAST
Remarks by Robert P. Forrestal
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
To the Panhandle Tiger Bay Club
Pensacola, Florida
June 18,1993

As a former Naval person, it is a pleasure to be here in Pensacola near the Naval Air
Station to address this prestigious club. Speaking of the military, defense spending has been
much in the news of late, but not exactly for the kinds of reasons that warm the hearts of military
people. The decline in defense spending can be difficult for those individuals and communities
that depend on the military for jobs, particularly in the short run. However, we have to keep our
sights on the long term as well and remember that, with the freeing of military talent and highly
technical productive capacity in the defense industry, a number of new enterprises will develop
over time that should more than offset these losses. The problem is that the losses are
concentrated here and now whereas the gains will be diffuse and gradual.

These changes in defense spending notwithstanding, on balance, I believe the outlook for
the national economy is positive. In my remarks today I will be sharing some views on the
United States as a context for where the Southeast is headed. As you will see, I believe the U.S.
economy has a number of underlying strengths that augur well for the year ahead. That strength
is illustrated by the experience of some military-related businesses here in the Florida panhandle
that formed a network for joint marketing, production, and training. This group has apparently
succeeded in creating new jobs despite the recent sluggish economic performance. Their success
also has implications regarding the long-run economic development prospects for the Southeast-a
topic I will touch on at the close of my comments.




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Hie U.S. Economy
Let me begin by briefly outlining U.S. economic prospects to provide a context for
discussing the outlook in Florida and the Southeast. For the near term, that is the remainder of
1993,1 expect the overall economy to do better than it did last year when gross domestic product,
or GDP, expanded by only around 2 percent. Still, economic growth is likely to be moderate, but
also not anemic. The recent GDP figure for the first quarter of less than 1 percent was, in my
opinion, a retreat from an unsustainable pace late last year. Even without the effects of the
March blizzards, growth would have slackened. The weak first quarter numbers are as unlikely
to be repeated as were the extraordinarily strong third and fourth quarter numbers from 1992.
Growth in this second half of the year should be stronger than in the first half, and GDP for 1993
should end up, on an annual average basis, at around 3 percent.

Inflation still remains under control, although it has begun to creep up and may go higher
than the 3 percent level of last year to land somewhere between 3 percent and 3-1/2 percent. The
unemployment rate has moved down from 7.1 percent in January to 6.9 percent. Nonetheless,
I expect this number will average out at 7 percent.

The main sources of strength underlying the U.S. economy will be consumer spending
(particularly on durables), residential construction, and capital investments by businesses,
especially on computers and other equipment. Lower interest rates are a factor in all of these
areas. First of all, they have enabled households and businesses to restructure their balance
sheets. As a result, households are in a better position to purchase goods that are typically




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financed with credit, and the cost of doing so is much lower than before. Moreover, there is
pent-up demand in that durables simply wore out during the period of slow growth. These
developments, along with employment being likely to remain on an upward trend, mean that
consumer spending should remain fairly healthy-even at moderate rates of income growth.

At the same time, however, the aging evident in most of our population, despite the recent
uptick in births, will constrain any jump in demand for either housing or consumer durables.
Thus, it seems certain that demand for cars, household appliances, and the like will not rebound
as sharply as it did during other post-recession expansions in the past two decades.

This

population trend will also delay the turnaround in construction of multifamily housing—a sector
that remains overbuilt. While there are still too many apartments and condominiums on the
market, the good news is that this component of the construction industry may be approaching
its lowest point.

On the business side, capital spending will continue to be enhanced by the reduction in
borrowing costs. Also, businesses are focusing on purchasing efficiency-promoting equipment
like computers.

Demand for industrial equipment has been hurt somewhat by a sluggish

manufacturing sector but is beginning to pick up. In the commercial construction area, office
construction is not likely to turn around this year because it still suffers from a glut of office
space on the market. Retail store construction, however, is beginning to show a healthy increase
based on construction contracts, which should carry into next year.




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Areas of weakness in the economy include not only office construction but also
government spending and, for the first time in many years, international trade. With the new
Administration still working to get its deficit reduction package passed, it is somewhat risky to
forecast government spending, even knowing what spending cuts and increases the President has
proposed. Clearly, though, defense expenditures will decline. Therefore, on balance, I believe
that in 1993, as in 1992, government spending will not add to growth. I find more worrisome the
shift in international trade from the positive to the negative side of the growth ledger. The main
reason for this change is the worsening economic outlook for most of our major trading partners.
This worldwide weakness is not likely to be reversed in 1993. Fortunately, our largest trading
partner, Canada, is recovering at a moderately healthy pace. Also, the outlook for Mexico, our
third largest trading partner, continues to show strong demand for capital goods--an area where
the United States has a strong advantage. Still, imports will continue to outpace exports as U.S.
growth remains stronger than many of our trading partners until next year.

To recap, the outlook for the nation for the rest of 1993 is one of moderate growth with
some promise for increased consumer spending and business investment thanks in the main to
lower interest rates. The proposals to reduce the deficit made by the Administration have not
caused me to make any major changes in my overall economic outlook for the nation. However,
they do make some areas of the outlook less certain. For instance, spending may shift among
the consumer, government, and investment categories. Generally speaking, though, while the new
fiscal policy should have an impact on the economy, significant effects probably will not be felt
this year.




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Southeastern Outlook
Turning to the Southeast, I am pleased to say that the outlook for 1993 is brighter than
it has been in several years. In the area of employment growth, the Southeast has been ahead
of the nation and should remain so. During 1992 the region added nearly 300,000 new jobs. This
figure represents more than a 2 percent growth rate, which is at least twice the national gain. On
an average annual basis, the Southeast could add more than 400,000 jobs this year to the
economy, which is certainly not bad. As good as that number sounds, it also shows, though, how
moderate this rebound is. During the recovery in the early 1980s, by contrast, the Southeast
added around 700,000 jobs—and it did so from a smaller base.

Why will the Southeast do better than the nation? The main reason is that this region
produces the goods that people have been buying once the recession ended and the recovery
began. For instance, with lower interest rates, more people have been able to purchase homes.
Fortuitously, the Southeast is a major nationwide supplier of lumber used in residential
construction. Additionally, because southeastern lumber producers have been treating timber as
a cultivated crop for decades, they stand to benefit from environmental restrictions in the
Northwest.

In addition to lumber, the large textile industry in the Southeast tends to fare well when
the residential building industry is doing well since many textile products are turned into carpets,
draperies, and other home furnishings. Several southeastern states are important producers of
home appliances, like air conditioners and stoves. Demand for these products is also receiving




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a temporary boost from the rebuilding going on in south Florida and Louisiana as a result of
Hurricane Andrew. A spending surge on building materials and related household goods in
southern Florida and Louisiana should persist through most of the year. Although localized, this
stimulus is likely to be large enough to boost regional sales to well above 1992 levels. However,
the stimulus from Hurricane Andrew will abate in the second half of the year as the rebuilding
effort peaks.

Aside from construction-related spending, the expected nationwide increase in demand for
consumer durables is good news for the numerous auto and auto-related manufacturers in the
Southeast. Textiles mills should also gain from this development since many textile products are
destined for automobiles.

On balance, regional manufacturing should lend strength to the

economy of the Southeast.

Another sector contributing strength to the regional expansion is construction, which is
likely to continue the growth begun in 1991. Most building activity will be concentrated in
single-family housing, as in the nation.

New home sales remain strong. In fact, payroll

employment figures show that the southeastern construction industry created more jobs in the first
quarter than were recorded nationwide on a net basis. A good part of this activity is due to the
many young home-buying people who live in or who have moved to this region of the country.
While apartment and condominium building will remain weak, the long slide in multifamily and
nonresidential construction appears to be over.




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The good news even extends to banking and financial services employment, which is
slowly edging higher. This turnaround may be attributed to the increased refinancing activity
from both households and business. The level of business loans also is improving slowly and
should gain momentum through the year. However, the increase in demand for banking services
is not expected to cause a wave of new hiring. To cut costs, financial services institutions will
probably continue to focus on gains in worker productivity, restraining new employment growth
through 1993.

There are, to be sure, certain areas of weakness. Industries that specialize in nondurable
goods, most prominently apparel, will contribute less than they did during the initial recovery
period, and this will have an effect on the economy, most notably in Alabama. These producers
began to experience weaker demand by the end of last year. In the longer term, apparel producers
face increasing competition from countries where unskilled and semi-skilled workers are willing
to work for less. Moreover, there are other areas of potential weaknesses. The region is not a
major capital goods producer. Thus, the expected strength in capital spending by businesses on
equipment will be less of an advantage. It also remains to be seen whether the trend toward
consolidation and layoffs in communication, transportation, and other professional and business
services has hit bottom. This dynamic has been a blow to several large southeastern cities, just
as it has been nationally.

The decline in defense spending nationally will certainly have an adverse impact on the
Southeast. For the most part, though, defense-related manufacturing is less important in this




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region than in areas like the Northeast and the Far West. While the region depends less on
defense contracting than other parts of the nation, the Southeast does have a greater proportion
of military personnel. Therefore, the proposed military base closures will affect this region
through job losses. I will have a bit more to say on this subject in relation to Florida in just a
moment.

Florida Outlook
Focusing on Florida, I can say that overall the state is expected to be outperforming
economic growth in the region and in the nation by the end of the year. This outlook should be
welcome news for Floridians who have lived through a vexatious past two years when just about
everything that could go wrong with the local economy did. The problems included everything
from cutbacks in defense spending to natural disaster. Perversely yet fortunately, good economic
news often follows disasters. Such has been the case with Hurricane Andrew. Even though
Florida was already recovering from its relatively deep recession before the hurricane, the
rebuilding after the storm has given retail and construction industries in the state a boost. At the
same time, tourism, a major source of economic strength for the state, is rebounding from a long
slide. The decline started back in 1991 with the Persian Gulf War and continued through the
recession as consumers reined in their discretionary spending.

On the down side, the recovery in Florida will be constrained by the continuing loss of
jobs in its manufacturing sector.

Although the state is not known for its factories, its

manufacturing sector actually makes up a large part of the industrial base in the Southeast.




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Unfortunately, defense-related production is the main source of manufacturing in Florida,and, as
we know, this is a time of cutbacks in defense spending.

Communications and aircraft

production are the leading income-generators in Florida. It also looks as if the state will take a
strong hit in lost jobs through military base closings. Thus, the defense mix makes Florida more
vulnerable than other states in the region to declines in military spending.

Long-Term Growth Challenges
With the outlook for 1993 looking relatively good for the Southeast as a whole, let me
address a common concern about growth best expressed by the phrase, "What goes up must come
down." Specifically, many people have been predicting a convergence in growth rates among
different regions of the United States, which would mean that growth in the Southeast region
would have to slow down once it catches up with other regions. I would like to explain briefly
why this supposition is not necessarily true.

Capital plays an important role in economic growth, and the Southeast has an excellent
track record of being able to attract capital. Some research being done at the Federal Reserve
Bank of Atlanta points to a continued advantage for this region basically because the return to
capital here is highly competitive with other parts of the nation. At the same time, we cannot
rest on our laurels. Other research being done at the Atlanta Fed shows that we should not rely
on old strategies that tout manufacturing and commodities as the only basis for growth.
Certainly, goods that are "exported" to other countries or even to other regions can help a poor
area to bootstrap itself. However, other factors like capital inflows are equally important in




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catalyzing economic development on a local basis.

As we pursue new strategies to attract

investment, I believe we must pay more attention to our physical and human capital. That is, we
must improve the physical and educational infrastructure in this region. This way, people can
take on the more challenging jobs that can be created in or attracted to this region.

Conclusion
In conclusion, the national economy is embarking on an expansion, and the Southeast will
do better than the United States during 1993 in terms of growth. As a nation, we have begun
to grapple with the budget deficits, which I believe have created a significant drag on economic
growth in the past few years. If we are able to succeed with solid deficit reductions, the
implications for the Southeast are extremely encouraging. We have already shown our ability
to attract capital that spurs growth. Still, the region needs a broader vision to maintain economic
development and growth. I am more hopeful than ever that we can meet this challenge and that
the business leaders in this room will be among those who help to solve the problems.