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At the Canton Forum Speaker Series, Canton, Ohio
February 27, 2002

A Review of Economic Developments in 2001 and the Economic Outlook
I am pleased to address the Canton Forum today. As always, the views I will be expressing
are my own and are not necessarily shared by other members of the Board of Governors or
of the Federal Open Market Committee.
Review of 2001
A confluence of factors shaped economic developments last year, and I would first like to
review these factors, to provide a backdrop for assessing our economic prospects in 2002.
A year ago, signs of the recession that eventually unfolded were just beginning to
materialize. After several years of booming growth, economic indicators started sending
mixed signals. Although consumer sentiment had dropped around the end of 2000,
consumers were still spending at a healthy clip. Though consumption growth had decelerated
somewhat over the previous year, the modest slowing was consistent with the deceleration
of aggregate demand necessary to better align supply and demand.
Businesses, however, appeared to be struggling. As data for the end of 2000 became
available, it became clear that businesses--amid disappointing sales and earnings--had
abruptly curtailed the record-setting expansion of investment spending. Of course, some
reduction of investment usually accompanies the recognition of a downshift in the economy,
as firms bring their capital stocks in line with a revised outlook for sales. But the severity of
the adjustment last year appeared to reflect more than the usual reaction. Businesses seemed
to be reassessing the profitability of additional fixed capital in a more fundamental way. New
capital, especially capital that embodies new technologies, continues to promise efficiency
gains, but expectations seemed to have gotten ahead of even the more favorable reality,
resulting in an unsustainable buildup of capital and run-up of equity market values. Capital
expenditures on high-tech equipment were especially hard hit. Moreover, the sudden
drop-off in business demand, coupled with some slowing in the consumer sector, apparently
caught producers off guard. And despite rapid cuts in production, inventories were
uncomfortably high relative to sales. Early last year, manufacturers took steps to address the
unwanted stocks and began liquidating inventories in earnest by slashing production of all
types of goods.
Against this backdrop, the Federal Open Market Committee reduced the target for the
federal funds rate sharply last January to contain the weakness and head off a more serious
slackening. This was to be just the first installment of a series of policy easings to counter the
weakness in the economy that emerged over the first half of last year.
In the business sector, a serious retrenchment in spending and production was under way. In
addition to the initial causes of the pullback, the abruptness of the slowing seemed to jar

business confidence, leading firms to postpone spending while they reassessed their
situations. In this way, the investment downturn became self-reinforcing. At the same time,
financial developments, including a stronger dollar, sharply lower equity prices, and tighter
lending standards at banks and in security markets, tended to offset some of the influence of
the lower federal funds rate. By midyear, investment--and high-tech investment in
particular--was posting some of the largest decline in decades. The weaker job market and
lower stock prices also began to weigh on consumers, though to a much lesser extent. With
overall sales sagging, inventories remained excessive in many sectors.
As the weakness in the economy intensified, policymakers responded. In June, President
Bush signed the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 into law. The
first installment of the reduction in personal income tax rates went into effect in July. In
addition, the act provided tax rebates of $300 to $600 per household that were paid directly
to taxpayers.
As for monetary policy, between March and June, the FOMC voted to ease monetary policy
four more times, bringing the cumulative reduction in the federal funds rate to 275 basis
points in the first six months of the year--the most rapid reduction in the funds rate since the
early 1980s. Despite both fiscal and monetary efforts to bolster sagging aggregate activity,
by late summer only a few hard signs had surfaced that recovery was at hand.
The terrorist attacks on September 11--whose worst effects were felt by those people and
their families directly touched by the tragedies--were a blow to our already weakened
economy. In the weeks immediately following those events, most forecasters expected the
damage to the economy to be extensive. The initial effects on the airlines and the travel
industry were severe. Also, a rapid deterioration of business and consumer confidence
seemed highly probable. In addition to immediate crisis-related injections of liquidity, the
Federal Reserve moved to address the perceived shock to the macroeconomy by lowering
the federal funds rate 50 basis points on September 17 and an additional 75 basis points by
the end of the year.
Over the past few months, we have all been watching closely to see how aggregate activity
would unfold in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks. No doubt a great deal of pain has been
inflicted on the economy. But, given the magnitude of the shock, the economy has proved
more resilient than initially anticipated. Though several industries have been hit very hard,
the worst-case scenarios spun in late September have not materialized. In particular,
households' views of the economy have remained relatively stable, all things considered. In
fact, in one of the most recent readings, consumer confidence was not much lower than it
had been in August. While spending has surely been buttressed by some temporary factors
such as aggressive discounting on motor vehicles and other retail goods, the effect of
terrorism on consumer spending has not been as severe as most had feared in late
September.
To be sure, 2001 was a rough year for the economy--one of the roughest we have faced in a
long time. The weak economic outcome despite sizable reductions in the federal funds rate
has led some to question the effectiveness of monetary policy. But I believe that monetary
policy substantially cushioned the negative forces weighing on the economy. Residential
construction has been visibly buoyed by policy easing. Housing activity remained at a high
level all year, as lower mortgage rates apparently offset the restraint from declines in
employment, smaller gains in income, and lower levels of wealth. Also, although
delinquency rates have risen, few restrictions have emerged on the availability of credit to

consumers. Indeed, low interest rates have made it attractive to refinance mortgages to
reduce mortgage payments, extract some home equity buildup, and pay down more
expensive forms of consumer credit. Even businesses, which have been feeling the pinch of
lower corporate profits, have benefited from lower interest rates; aggregate interest expense
has remained fairly low relative to cash flow, and businesses have moved aggressively to
bolster their financial stability by locking in more-certain, longer-term sources of funds.
Automakers in particular have been able to offer inexpensive financing to customers
because their own funding costs have fallen.
In many ways, the mechanism that propagated the weakness last year was quite traditional:
A negative demand shock led to unwanted inventories and to an adjustment of production.
That, in turn, idled workers and fed back into even weaker demand. But even before the
shock of the terrorist attacks, two aspects of last year's slowdown were atypical. First, the
main source of the negative hit to demand was a large shock to capital expenditures. In the
past fifty years, investment spending has nearly always begun its decline one to four quarters
after the peak of the economic cycle, not before it. What started out as a very gradual
cooling of an overheated economy became much more serious because of the severe
shakeout that hit the high-tech sector. Second, consumer spending on goods and
services--which represents about two-thirds of the gross domestic product--held up
remarkably well last year. In the past, consumption spending has almost always declined as a
recession started. But last year, despite a sharp drop in consumer confidence and a decline in
wealth from lower equity values, households kept buying.
At this point, it is still too early to classify this recession as mild or severe. In general,
economic fluctuations in the past fifteen to twenty years have been tamer than their
counterparts in earlier eras. Economists have conjectured that this is so because improved
technologies allow businesses to monitor their demand more closely and manage their
inventories better. Recent developments ought to give us more evidence on this subject. One
thing is certain: Because of the unusual, investment-led nature of this recession, we cannot
put too much weight on the shape and profile of past recoveries in trying to predict this one.
Current Situation and Near-Term Outlook
That said, the data we have received in recent weeks have been encouraging and suggest
that economic activity is in the process of turning up. Although payroll employment
continued to fall in January, the pace of that decline was slower than in the fourth quarter of
last year. Initial claims for unemployment insurance have moved lower over the past two
months--another hopeful sign of recovery. Industrial production fell in January, but here, too,
the rate of decline was well below the pace in preceding months.
As we obtain more information on spending patterns since September, the behavior of
households is increasingly proving to be the key stabilizing force on economic activity. Sales
of cars and light trucks--though down from the extraordinary rates of the fourth
quarter--have continued at quite healthy rates. In addition, retail sales outside motor vehicles
were very strong in both December and January. Housing construction, too, has been robust,
bolstered in part by favorable weather and low mortgage rates.
In the business sector, the very rapid pace at which companies liquidated inventories in the
fourth quarter contributed to the weakness in manufacturing output. However, the
downward adjustment of stocks to more desired levels now seems well along in most
industries, and this drag on production may be diminishing.
Business fixed investment has not as yet shown consistent and sustained evidence of a

turnaround, although there have been some positive indicators. After a year of dealing with
an overhang of capital goods, many firms are being cautious in their capital spending. With
corporate profits under pressure and capacity utilization rates near past cyclical lows, many
businesses report that their expansion plans remain on hold. However, capital investments
that allow businesses to reduce cost might be more attractive. Spending indicators have been
more positive in the past few months, particularly with respect to computer equipment.
Developments in this sector will importantly influence the strength of our economy in the
months ahead, and will therefore warrant careful monitoring.
As you know, Chairman Alan Greenspan presented the Board's semiannual Monetary Policy
Report to the Congress this morning. As he indicated, the central tendency of the forecasts
of the members of the Board of Governors and the Federal Reserve Bank Presidents for real
GDP growth this year was between 2-1/2 and 3 percent. I am comfortable with that range of
forecasts. As I just noted, recent data indicate that household spending has been reasonably
well maintained. In addition, there are some signs that capital spending may be improving,
but the strength and durability of that improvement are still uncertain. Until there is a clearer
perspective with regard to business investment, I believe that there is still reason for some
reservations regarding the contours of the recovery.
The Longer-Run Outlook
One of the main forces that will lead to the recovery from this temporary slowdown is the
confidence of businesses and households that, in the long run, the outlook for the U.S.
economy is still bright. Despite our current problems, the fundamentals of this economy are
strong. Our workforce is well educated and adaptable. Our banking system is healthy, and
our capital markets, which are flexible and multifaceted, are well equipped to handle shocks.
Perhaps the most notable feature of our economy in recent years, however, has been the
acceleration in productivity. In the second half of the 1990s, output per hour in the nonfarm
business sector increased at an annual rate of almost 3 percent per year, well above the pace
earlier in the decade. These efficiency gains allowed real GDP to rise 4 percent a year, on
average, over the period. With these rapid increases in productivity, business costs were well
contained, and the rate of price inflation was stable, despite a fall in the unemployment rate
to below 4 percent.
Productivity growth continued over the four quarters of 2001. That it increased is
impressive, given the historical tendency of productivity growth to turn negative when the
economy enters recession. This performance provides additional evidence that the
improvements in productivity growth that we have witnessed since the mid-1990s have been
largely structural and will persist for a time.
But the fundamental factor leading me to be cautiously optimistic that much of the
improvement is likely to be sustained is my outlook for the state of technological
advancement in the United States. As Fed economists Dan Sichel and Steve Oliner have
shown, one major source of the gains in output per hour were the high and rising levels of
business investment, which increased the amount of capital per worker, thereby boosting
productivity. Booming investment in the 1990s was due importantly to steep declines in
prices of high-tech equipment, which largely reflected rapid technical progress. About ½
percentage point of the increase in productivity growth in the 1995-99 period can be
attributed to this so-called capital deepening. Although the extraordinary pace of investment
spending in those boom years was not sustainable, I believe that technological progress will
continue to drive down the cost of information technology in the coming years, inducing still

robust growth of the capital stock. Moreover, businesses have reaffirmed their intentions to
improve productivity by substituting cost-saving high-tech capital for labor.
Though there are certainly risks to the view that improvements in productivity growth will
persist, I do not believe the terrorism of last fall is going to permanently harm increases in
output per hour (and thus the health of the economy). Most assuredly, in the aftermath of
these attacks, many businesses have been forced to redirect resources from efficiencyenhancing investment to meet greater demands for security. Businesses may also have been
compelled to increase redundancy to cope with the greater potential for supply disruption.
However, these effects will be mainly a one-time hit to the level of productivity. They are
not likely to change the trend growth rate of output per hour. Moreover, their effects will be
ameliorated as businesses use new technologies and find creative ways to hold down the cost
of enhancing security and providing for contingencies.
Conclusion
Obviously, 2001 was a challenging year. But the American people once again proved to be
up to the challenge, and signs of economic recovery are increasing. At the Federal Reserve,
we stand ready to do what is necessary to maintain financial stability, as we did on
September 11, and to maintain a monetary policy stance that will foster price stability and
promote maximum sustainable growth in output.

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