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At the Annual Economic Outlook Conference, Middle Tennessee State University,
Murfreesboro, Tennessee
October 8, 2003

Comments on the Current State of the Economy
It is a pleasure to be with you this morning at the Annual Economic Outlook Conference of
Middle Tennessee State University to discuss the state of the economy. As you will hear,
recent readings on the economy suggest that the pace of economic activity has picked up of
late, our financial system is healthy, and inflation pressures remain subdued. Although
uncertainties remain, I believe that the economic fundamentals are now in place to generate
a sustainable, non-inflationary upturn. As always, the views that I will express are my own
and do not necessarily reflect those of the Board of Governors or the staff of the Federal
Reserve System.
I am going to describe the key factors that have dominated this recession and recovery. Then
I will talk about the current state of the household and business sectors. Finally, I want to
make some remarks about corporate-sponsored, defined-benefit pension plans.
The Recent Economic Cycle
Before delving into current events, I think it is helpful to review some of the key aspects of
our recent economic history. After a record, ten-year economic expansion, the U.S.
economy slipped into recession in March 2001. This recession was unusual in that it was led
by a drop in business investment, rather than a decline in consumer spending. According to
the National Bureau of Economic Research (the traditional record keeper of U.S. business
cycles) the downturn lasted eight months--a bit less than the duration of the average
post-war recession. But thereafter, between the trough of the recession in 2001 and the
second quarter of this year, real gross domestic product grew at a rather disappointing
annual rate of 2-3/4 percent, on average. Although household disposable income and
spending increased appreciably over this period, capital spending continued to weaken.
Indeed, in the second quarter of this year, real business fixed investment was 4 percent
below its level at the trough of the recession--an unusually weak investment performance
almost two years into a recovery.
Financial conditions undoubtedly played an important role in these developments. In the late
1990s, financial conditions were easy. Very narrow risk premiums in both debt and equity
markets and lofty expectations about returns on the part of investors and borrowers greatly
reduced the cost of external funds. A frenzy of capital-raising followed, led by
telecommunication and Internet firms. Corporate debt and equity issuance soared--adding
almost $2 trillion in new debt and equity to the balance sheets of nonfinancial corporations
from 1998 through 2000 alone, with a good portion of the money raised by risky firms in the
junk bond, venture capital, and initial public offering (IPO) markets. Firms used the
proceeds not only to fund investment, but also to finance acquisitions of other companies,

stock repurchases, and operating expenses.
The spectacular collapse of high-tech equity valuations in the spring of 2000, led by the
same telecommunication and Internet firms, wreaked havoc with corporate credit quality in
some sectors and began a prolonged retrenchment in financial markets. Subsequently,
financial markets were buffeted with a barrage of terrorism, war, and corporate governance
shocks that further eroded investor confidence and stoked uncertainty and pessimism. The
consequent retreat from risk-taking led to a substantial markdown in asset values, with
obvious negative consequences for portfolios. Between early 2000 and the end of 2002,
more than $6 trillion of stock-market wealth evaporated, and more than $200 billion of
corporate bonds went into default. Many of the telecommunication firms that did IPOs or
issued junk bonds during the easy market conditions of the late 1990s went bankrupt. For
other firms, debt burdens that had appeared manageable suddenly looked excessive.
Investors and lenders rightly responded to these events by becoming more wary, and
financial conditions accordingly became more restrictive.
Businesses faced a similar set of shocks: bankrupt clients, elevated uncertainty, skeptical
investors, and expected rates of return that had plummeted. With limited pricing power and
opportunities for sales expansion, businesses had to focus on expense management to
increase their earnings. Businesses re-engineered processes. Their inventories and hiring
slumped, and demand for funds fell. Although tighter financial conditions contributed, this
pullback reflected mainly defensive actions by the borrowers themselves. Surveys of bank
loan officers and small businesses support this view. Both groups have consistently pointed
to weak business demand as the main factor behind sluggish borrowing during this recovery.
In this environment, economists pushed out the expected date of the recovery in capital
spending, and concerns grew that the household sector--the mainstay of the economic
recovery--might become overextended and curtail its expenditures before capital spending
perked up.
But this is not evident from recent data. Business investment increased over the spring and
summer, and the household sector remains in good financial health and has demonstrated a
continued willingness to spend. Let me now discuss these recent economic developments in
more detail.
Households
In the household sector, real personal consumption expenditures rose briskly over the
summer, with strength widespread among the various types of goods and services.
Supporting these gains have been large increases in real disposable incomes, higher stock
prices, and favorable buying attitudes among consumers. The reductions in income tax
withholding and the advance refund checks for the child tax credit mailed in late July and
August likely added to the magnitude of the spending increases. Homes sales and new
residential construction remained very strong during the summer, although the rise in
mortgage rates could result in some cooling in the housing sector in coming months.
Although households have been borrowing rather heavily to finance the rise in spending,
they also have taken steps to keep the repayment burden of that debt in check. Notably,
many homeowners have taken advantage of low interest rates to refinance their mortgages,
some having done so several times over the past couple of years. In more than one-third of
these "refis," the borrower took cash out during the transaction, often to pay down loans
with higher interest rates. The resulting drop in the average interest rate on household debt,
combined with the increase in after-tax income, has helped households stay current on their

loan obligations. Indeed, delinquency rates on consumer and mortgage loans held by banks
have been trending lower, and most other measures of household loan performance have
been stable on net this year.
Businesses
Capital spending by businesses increased at an annual rate of 7-1/4 percent in the second
quarter, and orders and shipments of nondefense capital goods--a key indicator of equipment
spending--rose briskly over the June-to-August period. Moreover, the tenor of anecdotes
from the corporate sector seems more upbeat, as corporate managers see sales picking up
and the financing environment improving.
Four important factors have contributed to this improvement in financial conditions: a
widespread restructuring of corporate liabilities over the past two years, a bounceback in
corporate profitability from its trough in 2001, a narrowing in market risk premiums, and low
interest rates. I will discuss each factor in turn.
First, pulled by low long-term rates and pushed by nervous investors burned by a few
high-profile, rapid meltdowns, firms have done a great deal to strengthen their balance
sheets. Many firms have refinanced high-interest-rate debt, paring the average interest rate
on nonfinancial corporate debt by almost 150 basis points since the end of 2000. At the
same time, businesses have replaced short-maturity debt with longer-maturity debt, both to
lock in low rates and to improve their ability to withstand a liquidity shock (since long-term
debt does not need to be continually rolled over). In addition, many firms--especially in the
most troubled industries--have retired debt via equity offerings and asset sales, helping to
hold growth of total nonfinancial corporate debt in 2002 to its smallest gain since the early
1990s.
Second, firms have significantly tightened their belts. Over the past two years, the drive to
cut costs has generated rapid productivity gains, and this greater efficiency has boosted
corporate profits despite tepid revenue growth. Profits at Standard & Poor's 500
corporations grew almost 6 percent in 2002 from depressed 2001 levels and have increased
another 10 percent in the first half of this year. Although this growth has been somewhat
unevenly distributed across sectors, large-firm profits in the aggregate are now up smartly.
Profits at smaller firms, which had fallen more precipitously, also appear to have rebounded
sharply.
Third, risk premiums have fallen substantially this year as corporate governance scandals are
less notable and investor sentiment has turned favorable. Stock prices reflect this brighter
view. The broadest index of stock prices--the Wilshire 5000--has risen about 20 percent so
far this year, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq index and the Russell 2000 small-cap index have
logged even more impressive gains. Meanwhile, bond spreads have narrowed appreciably-especially for the riskiest firms--and are now back around historical averages. Declining
spreads have, no doubt, been helped along by the beneficial effect of the balance sheet
improvements on measures of credit quality. Indicators such as rating changes and default
rates, though still elevated, have eased notably this year.
In another sign of improved sentiment, money has flowed into risky securities--for example,
equity mutual funds have registered strong net inflows since March after net outflows in
2002 and early 2003, and extremely large inflows have boosted assets of high-yield bond
funds nearly 15 percent over the same period. Offerings of risky securities have also
reappeared since March, including a handful of IPOs and many low-tier junk-bond deals
among a surge of corporate bond issues.

Improved profitability, coupled with subdued capital spending, inventory investment, and
hiring, has translated into better corporate cash flow. Looking ahead, this larger income
stream can help finance expansion directly out of internal funds or indirectly by supporting
firms' borrowing capacity. Furthermore, over the past year or so, many firms have retained
their excess cash and built up liquid assets. Thus, firms will be able to draw not only on
improved cash flow but also higher liquid assets.
Fourth, and finally, the federal funds rate remains at just 1 percent. As a result, extremely
low short-term borrowing costs have helped firms keep their interest expenses down. This is
a direct benefit of the accommodative stance of monetary policy. For longer-term debt, the
combination of low yields on benchmark Treasury securities and reduced risk spreads has
kept borrowing costs attractive. The yield on Moody's Baa corporate bond index, although
up a bit from this spring and summer, is otherwise at its lowest sustained level since 1968.
These four points all suggest that financial conditions are capable of supporting a sustained,
healthy pickup in economic growth. By and large, firms are well positioned to fund
expansion both internally and externally. And, given the successful efforts to pare costs,
firms are set to benefit from a further pickup in the growth of revenue. Thus, future rates of
return should be favorable. Accordingly, equity analysts are calling for S&P 500 profits to
advance 5 percent more in the third quarter and by a similar amount in the fourth quarter of
this year, before rising an additional 13 percent in 2004; and profits at small firms are
expected to continue outpacing those at large firms.
As you know, banks are an important source of external funding for businesses. Although a
small number of individual banks have been weakened by the downturn, I do not see a need
to worry about banks' overall health. Banks continue to have strong financial positions and
have weathered the credit deterioration in the corporate sector quite well, largely because of
the improvement in their risk-management practices over the past decade. In marked
contrast to the 1990-91 recession, bank profitability reached record levels in the past two
years, and bank capital continues to strengthen. In addition, delinquency rates on most major
loan categories have decreased noticeably since the end of 2001.
Employment, Productivity and Inflation
So far, I have talked about the upbeat part of the current economic picture. The downbeat
portion is the lack of any appreciable improvement in the labor market. Although aggregate
demand appears to have grown rapidly in the third quarter, nonfarm payrolls continued to
fall through August and increased only a bit in September--the result of ongoing efforts by
businesses to restructure their operations and boost efficiency. Based on recent economic
research at the Federal Reserve and on many anecdotal reports, I suspect that a large part of
these net job losses--particularly in manufacturing, airlines, and telecommunications--are
permanent and will not be reversed as the economy gains steam. Instead, new jobs will need
to be created in other sectors of the economy to replace them. This process will take time.
But if history is a guide, in an expanding economy job creation will eventually outstrip job
destruction, and lower the unemployment rate. The increase in payrolls in September was a
start, and I hope will be followed by larger gains in future months. I will be watching
conditions in the labor market closely because an expansion that is sustainable in the long
run will require solid growth in employment.
The flip side of this so-called jobless recovery is that labor productivity has been increasing
very rapidly. Output per hour in the nonfarm business sector rose almost 7 percent in the
second quarter, bringing the four-quarter change to more than 4 percent. That pace is quite

high by historical standards and suggests to me that the productivity gains of recent years are
not cyclical developments that will disappear as labor demand strengthens but are permanent
gains in efficiency. That is good news because growth in labor productivity generates growth
in real wages of workers and thus raises our nation's overall standard of living.
Strong growth in productivity also has been an element in the low rates of core consumer
price inflation in recent years. The personal consumption expenditure price index excluding
food and energy increased only 1.3 percent over the twelve months ending in August--about
1/2 percentage point less than in the year-earlier period. In the current environment of
excess capacity and intense global competition, most businesses simply do not have the
ability to raise prices. As a result, I do not see a large risk of a pickup in the underlying pace
of price inflation anytime soon.
Pension Obligations
Before concluding, I would like to discuss an element of corporate financial statements that
has attracted a good deal of negative attention lately--namely company pension obligations.
As you know, pension plans come in two varieties, with very different effects on corporate
balance sheets and cash flow. Defined-contribution plans, such as the 401(k) and 403(b)
plans that many of you are familiar with, are essentially employee savings accounts and
generally do not have much effect on corporate reports. But traditional defined-benefit, or
DB, plans can have large effects. DB plans, which are more common in older and larger
firms, promise workers a stream of benefits during retirement, and companies that sponsor
them are required by law to set aside sufficient funds to cover the payments they have
promised to their workers. If the investment returns on the pension fund's assets are not
enough to keep up with the growth in pension liabilities, firms must make additional pension
contributions.
Three years of negative equity returns, combined with sharply falling interest rates, have put
considerable stress on some DB plans. Because pension funds typically invest more than half
their portfolios in equities, stock market losses significantly eroded pension assets; at the
same time, sharply declining interest rates raised the present value of future liabilities,
weakening the funding status of many DB plans.
Just among the firms in the S&P 500, the combined effect was to subtract nearly half a
trillion dollars from pension net asset values from the end of 1999 to the end of 2002. At the
end of 1999, about 20 percent of S&P 500 plans were underfunded, meaning that their
assets were valued less than their liabilities. But by the end of last year, the figure was 90
percent, and DB plan assets across all S&P 500 firms were more than $200 billion shy of
liabilities. The implication is clear: Many companies need to make additional contributions to
their pension plans, and in some cases the contributions need to be large.
Indeed, last year S&P 500 firms contributed $46 billion to their pension plans, three times
more than in either of the previous two years. Some contributions were considerable, and
this trend continued in the first half of 2003: Twenty-five sponsors of the most underfunded
pension plans have already made contributions this year as large as last year's.
This situation does not mean investors should panic about the financial positions of the firms
sponsoring these plans. The bulk of the pension underfunding is concentrated at large firms
with good access to capital markets. Among S&P 500 firms last year, about 90 percent of
the underfunding occurred in firms with investment-grade debt. In the current market
environment, these firms likely would have little difficulty raising funds to replenish their
pensions. This suggests that pension contributions will not likely be a major cash flow

impediment to corporate investment.
That is not to say, however, that many firms--indeed, whole industries--are not struggling
with their pension plans. Severe cases can be found in the auto, steel, and airline industries,
where long-term business structure issues make the recent business-cycle effects on pension
plans more acute. These firms face a confluence of negative trends, including increasing
competitive pressures, aging workforces, rapidly growing retiree populations, and a history
of collective bargaining agreements that emphasized larger pension benefits over wage
increases.
Automakers currently face some of the largest dollar amounts of underfunding, but as noted
earlier, they generally have good access to credit markets, which has allowed them to
weather these difficulties. Steel companies and airlines have had a harder time. In the past
two years, a half-dozen large, established steel firms and airlines have declared bankruptcy,
and their pension plans either have collapsed or remain mired in uncertainty.
Not surprisingly, required pension contributions represent a greater burden on cash flow to
the surviving firms in these troubled industries. Although most DB pension contributions are
made in cash, some airlines and steel companies have turned to making noncash
contributions--company stock, generally--to their pension plans. While this conserves cash
for other uses, it increases the risk in plan funding since the value of plan assets will be more
correlated with the health of the sponsor. Thus when the company gets into financial
difficulties, the ability to contribute to the pension plan will be the weakest just when the
declining value of those plan assets requires larger contributions.
The recent experiences of the steel and airline industries, in particular, have led to the
sudden reversal of fortune for the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, or PBGC--the
federally chartered company that partially insures pension benefits by assuming the assets
and some of the liabilities of failed plans. Each time the PBGC takes over a bankrupt firm's
plan, it assumes a new claim that comes due as the firm's workers retire. New claims have
skyrocketed in the past few years--from an average of $150 million per year in the late
1990s to $3.3 billion in 2002. This year will be worse. Thanks to several large new
bankruptcies, claims exceeded $5 billion in just the first half of fiscal year 2003.
These plan failures have had an enormous impact on the PBGC's balance sheet, which
swung from a net positive position of nearly $10 billion in 2000 to a net negative position of
nearly $6 billion by July of this year. Despite this negative position, the PBGC does not face
an immediate liquidity crisis because of the relatively long duration of its liabilities and its
steady stream of premium income from active plans. However, it faces serious challenges
beyond those indicated by its current balance sheet, including substantial underfunding that
exists at troubled, but still operational, DB plans. Indeed, the PBGC estimates that its annual
tally of underfunding in "financially troubled" companies could exceed $80 billion this year.
So what is the prognosis for corporate pension plans in the near and long term? For the near
term, I see some indications that the stresses have abated somewhat. So far this year, the
financial condition of these plans have likely improved due to the rising stock market and
higher contributions, although the precise extent of that improvement will not be known
until year-end financial statements are released. But under a reasonable set of assumptions,
perhaps $50 billion of last year's S&P 500 funding gap, or about one-quarter of the total,
apparently has already been closed by improved market conditions.
And what about the longer-term prognosis for S&P 500 firms? Assuming current discount

rates and normal pension asset returns, these firms would need to make about $150 billion in
contributions to close the funding gap over the next three years. And once the current
funding hole is filled, these firms would still need to make contributions to cover their rising
liabilities. Indeed, DB plans are increasingly concentrated in mature industries with aging
workforces, for which the growth rate of liabilities is relatively high (and rising), while their
duration is relatively low (and falling). These longer-term challenges remain even if market
conditions improve.
Conclusion
In summary, recent indicators suggest the pace of economic activity has picked up, the
banking system is healthy, corporate financial conditions are strengthening, and inflationary
pressures remain subdued. Although uncertainties remain, I believe the fundamentals are in
place to generate sustainable economic growth.
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Last update: October 8, 2003