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For release on delivery
8:55 a.m. EDT
October 9, 2016

The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy

Remarks by
Stanley Fischer
Vice Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
31st Annual Group of Thirty International Banking Seminar
Washington, D.C.

October 9, 2016

With Friday morning’s labor market data prominently in the news, I will start
with the labor market and end with a discussion of monetary policy. 1
Recent reports pertaining to the labor market, including Friday’s release, have
been solid, showing continued improvement. So far this year, payrolls are reported to
have increased by 180,000 per month. That is down from last year’s gains of 230,000 per
month but well above what is needed to provide jobs for new entrants into the labor
force. Despite the strong job growth, the unemployment rate, at 5 percent in September,
has essentially moved sideways this year as individuals have come back into the labor
market in response to better employment opportunities and higher wages. As a
consequence, the labor force participation rate has edged up against a backdrop of a
declining longer-run trend owing to aging of the population. This increase is a very
welcome development.
All told, with the unemployment rate not far from levels that most Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) participants view as normal in the longer run and the rise in
the participation rate, I see the U.S. economy as close to full employment, with some
further improvement expected.
Real gross domestic product (GDP) rose at a subdued 1 percent pace during the
first half of the year and only 1-1/4 percent over the past four quarters. This pace likely
underestimates the momentum in aggregate demand because it includes a sizable
inventory correction that began early last year. It is likely that this correction has by now
run its course, and most analysts are expecting inventories to make a positive contribution

1

I am grateful to James Clouse and Glenn Follette of the Federal Reserve Board staff for their assistance.
Views expressed are mine and are not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open
Market Committee.

-2to demand over the second half of the year and for GDP to increase in the neighborhood
of 2-3/4 percent. 2
Household spending has been the main contributor to real GDP growth over the
past four quarters, and, with solid gains in employment and household income and upbeat
consumer sentiment, this sector should continue to support growth over the second half of
the year. In contrast, residential construction has cooled this year despite rising home
prices and low interest rates. Housing starts have been moving sideways, suggesting
little pickup in construction over the near term.
In addition, business investment spending has been weak, held down in part by
declining activity in the energy sector, which has obviously been hard hit by the steep
drop in oil prices. The recent stabilization of rig counts in the United States suggests that
this source of restraint on business investment may be coming to an end. That said,
business investment outside of the energy sector has been unusually soft for the past three
quarters, and this weakness will bear close watching. Perhaps investment is being held
down as firms respond to the flat trajectories for manufacturing and exports, reflecting
subdued foreign demand and the appreciation of the dollar since mid-2014. Another
possibility could be that firms are reassessing the prospects for growth and profitability in
an environment of weak productivity growth and are accordingly scaling back investment
plans. Notwithstanding these downside possibilities, I expect that business investment
will pick up in the second half of the year as the drag from the oil sector wanes and as
firms expand capacity to meet rising demand.

2

The September Blue Chip forecast projects real GDP to increase at an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the
third quarter and 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter.

-3The combination of strong job gains and lackluster GDP growth over the past four
quarters reflects exceptionally poor labor productivity growth. Indeed, productivity
declined 1/2 percent over the most recent four quarters and has increased only about
1/4 percent per year, on average, since 2011. While improving labor market conditions
have led to higher household incomes in recent years, the key to improved living
standards over the long haul will be a revival in productivity growth--at least to more
normal levels, possibly in the range of 1-1/2 percent per annum.
Foreign economies have been growing at a moderate pace, even in the face of
numerous shocks, including concerns about China’s exchange regime at the start of the
year and Brexit over the summer. The economic effects of the steep appreciation of the
dollar that began in mid-2014 have begun to fade, and U.S. exports have returned to
growth following a weak 2015.
Turning to inflation, I believe that transitory effects of the fall in oil prices and the
rise in the dollar are the primary reason that inflation has fallen short of the FOMC’s
2 percent goal. Total personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation was 1 percent
in August on a 12-month basis, held down by earlier declines in gasoline prices, but core
PCE inflation has moved up somewhat, and its 12-month change stood at 1.7 percent in
August. As oil prices and the dollar stabilize, the drag on consumer price inflation from
these sources ought to dissipate, and inflation will likely move closer to 2 percent. This
projection, however, depends critically on expectations for future inflation remaining
reasonably well anchored; as the FOMC has noted, low readings for some indicators of
expected inflation deserve close watching.

-4Let me now turn to the monetary policy outlook. As you know, at our September
meeting, the FOMC decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 1/4 to
1/2 percent. As we noted in the statement, the recent pickup in economic growth and
continued progress in the labor market have strengthened the case for an increase in the
federal funds rate. 3 Indeed, in our individual economic projections prepared in advance
of the September meeting, nearly all FOMC participants anticipated an increase in the
target range for the federal funds rate by the end of this year. Moreover, as economic
growth has picked up and some of the earlier concerns about the global outlook have
receded, the Committee judged the risks to the U.S. economic outlook to be roughly
balanced.
Given that generally positive view of the economic outlook, one might ask, why
did we not raise the federal funds rate at our September meeting? Our decision was a
close call, and leaving the target range for the federal funds rate unchanged did not reflect
a lack of confidence in the economy. Conditions in the labor market are strengthening,
and we expect that to continue. And while inflation remains low, we expect it to rise to
our 2 percent objective over time. But with labor market slack being taken up at a
somewhat slower pace than in previous years, scope for some further improvement in the
labor market remaining, and inflation continuing to run below our 2 percent target, we
chose to wait for further evidence of continued progress toward our objectives.
As we noted in our statement, we continue to expect that the evolution of the
economy will warrant some gradual increases in the federal funds rate over time to

3

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2016), “Federal Reserve Issues FOMC
Statement,” press release, September 21,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20160921a.htm.

-5achieve and maintain our objectives. That assessment is based on our view that the
neutral nominal federal funds rate--that is, the interest rate that is neither expansionary
nor contractionary and keeps the economy operating on an even keel--is currently low by
historical standards. With the federal funds rate modestly below the neutral rate, the
current stance of monetary policy should be viewed as modestly accommodative, which
is appropriate to foster further progress toward our objectives. But since monetary policy
is only modestly accommodative, there appears little risk of falling behind the curve in
the near future, and gradual increases in the federal funds rate will likely be sufficient to
get monetary policy to a neutral stance over the next few years.
This view is consistent with the projections of appropriate monetary policy
prepared by FOMC participants in connection with our September meeting. 4 The median
projection for the federal funds rate rises only gradually to 1.1 percent at the end of next
year, 1.9 percent at the end of 2018, and 2.6 percent by the end of 2019. Most
participants also marked down their estimate of the longer-run normal federal funds rate,
with the median now at 2.9 percent.
However, as we have noted on many previous occasions, policy is not on a preset
course. The economic outlook is inherently uncertain, and our assessment of the
appropriate path for the federal funds rate will change in response to changes to the
economic outlook and associated risks.

4

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2016), “Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open
Market Committee Release Economic Projections from the September 20-21 FOMC Meeting,” press
release,” September 21, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20160921b.htm.