Monetary Policy Report submitted to the Congress on July 16, 2002, pursuant
to section 2B of the Federal Reserve Act
Section 1
MONETARY
POLICY
AND
THE
ECONOMIC
OUTLOOK
The pace of economic activity in the United States picked up
noticeably in the first half of 2002 as some of the powerful forces
that had been restraining spending for the preceding year and a half
abated. With inventories in many industries having been brought into
more comfortable alignment with sales, firms began boosting production
around the turn of the year to stem further runoffs of their stocks.
And while capital spending by businesses has yet to show any real
vigor, the steep contraction of the past year or so appears to have
come to an end. Household spending, as it has throughout this
cyclical episode, continued to trend up in the first half. With
employment stabilizing, the increases in real wages made possible by
gains in labor productivity and the effects of a variety of fiscal
actions have provided noticeable support to disposable incomes. At
the same time, low interest rates have buoyed the purchase of durable
goods and the demand for housing. Growth was not strong enough to
forestall a rise in the unemployment rate, and slack in product and
labor markets, along with declining unit costs as productivity has
soared, has helped to keep core inflation low. The exceptionally
strong performance of productivity over the past year provides further
evidence of the U.S. economy's expanded capacity to provide growth
over the longer haul.
The Federal Reserve had moved aggressively in 2001 to counter the
weakness that had emerged in aggregate demand; by the end of the year,
it had lowered the federal funds rate to 1-3/4 percent, the lowest
level in forty years. With only tentative signs that activity was
picking up, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to retain
that unusual degree of monetary accommodation by leaving the federal
funds rate unchanged at its January meeting. Confirmation of an
improvement in activity was evident by the time of the March meeting,
and the FOMC moved toward an assessment that the risks to the outlook
were balanced between its long-run goals of price stability and
maximum sustainable economic growth, a view maintained through its
June meeting. The durability and strength of the expansion were
recognized to depend on the trajectory of final sales. The extent of
a prospective strengthening of final sales was--and still
is--uncertain, however, and with inflation likely to remain contained,
the Committee has chosen to maintain an accommodative stance of
policy, leaving the federal funds rate at its level at the end of last
year.
The economy expanded especially rapidly early in the year. As had
been anticipated, much of the first quarter's strength in production
resulted from the efforts of firms to limit a further drawdown of
inventories after the enormous liquidation in the fourth quarter of
2001. With respect to first-quarter sales, purchases of light motor
vehicles dropped back from their extraordinary fourth-quarter level,
but other consumer spending increased substantially. Housing starts,
too, jumped early in the year--albeit with the help of weather
conditions favorable for building in many parts of the country--and
spending on national defense moved sharply higher. All told, real GDP
is now estimated to have increased at an annual rate in excess of
6 percent in the first quarter.
Economic activity appears to have moved up further in recent months
but at a slower pace than earlier in the year. Industrial production
has continued to post moderate gains, and nonfarm payrolls edged up in
the second quarter after a year of nearly steady declines. However,
several factors that had contributed importantly to the outsized gain
of real output in the first quarter appear to have made more modest
contributions to growth in the second quarter. Available data suggest
that the swing in inventory investment was considerably smaller in the
second quarter than in the first. Consumer spending has advanced more
slowly of late, and while the construction of new homes has expanded
further, its contribution to the growth of real output has not matched
that of earlier in the year.
Notable crosscurrents remain at work in the outlook for economic
activity. Although some of the most recent indicators have been
encouraging, businesses still appear to be reluctant to add
appreciably to workforces or to boost capital spending, presumably
until they see clearer signs of improving prospects for sales and
profits. These concerns, as well as ongoing disclosures of corporate
accounting irregularities and lapses in corporate governance, have
pulled down equity prices appreciably on balance this year. The
accompanying decline in net worth is likely to continue to restrain
household spending in the period ahead, and less favorable financial
market conditions could reinforce business caution.
Nevertheless, a number of factors are likely to boost activity as the
economy moves into the second half of 2002. With the
inflation-adjusted federal funds rate barely positive, monetary policy
should continue to provide substantial support to the growth of
interest-sensitive spending. Low interest rates also have allowed
businesses and households to strengthen balance sheets by refinancing
debt on more favorable terms. Fiscal policy actions in the form of
lower taxes, investment incentives, and higher spending are providing
considerable stimulus to aggregate demand this year. Foreign economic
growth has strengthened and, together with a decline in the foreign
exchange value of the dollar, should bolster U.S. exports. Finally,
the exceptional performance of productivity has supported household
and business incomes while relieving pressures on price inflation, a
combination that augurs well for the future.
Monetary Policy, Financial Markets,
and the Economy over the First Half of 2002
The information reviewed by the FOMC at its meeting of January 29
and 30 seemed on the whole to indicate that economic activity was
bottoming out and that a recovery might already be under way.
Consumer spending had held up remarkably well, and the rates of
decline in manufacturing production and business purchases of durable
equipment and software had apparently moderated toward the end of
2001. In addition, the expectation that the pace of inventory runoff
would slow after several quarters of substantial and growing
liquidation constituted another reason for anticipating that economic
activity would improve in the period immediately ahead. Nonetheless,
looking beyond the near term, the FOMC faced considerable uncertainty
about the strength of final demand. Because household spending had
not softened to the usual extent during the recession, it appeared
likely to have only limited room to pick up over coming quarters.
Intense competitive pressures were thought to be constraining the
growth of profits, which could damp investment and equity prices. At
the same time, the outlook for continued subdued inflation remained
favorable given the reduced utilization of resources and the further
passthrough of earlier declines in energy prices. Taken together,
these conditions led the FOMC to leave the stance of monetary policy
unchanged, keeping its target for the federal funds rate at
1-3/4 percent. In light of the tentative nature of the evidence suggesting
that the upturn in final demand would be sustained, the FOMC decided
to retain its assessment that the more important risk to achieving its
long-run objectives remained economic weakness--the possibility that
growth would fall short of the rate of increase in the economy's
potential and that resource utilization would fall further.
When the FOMC met on March 19, economic indicators had turned even
more positive, providing encouraging evidence that the economy was
recovering from last year's recession. Consumer spending had remained
brisk in the early part of the year, the decline in business
expenditures on equipment and software appeared to have about run its
course, and housing starts had turned back up. Industrial production,
which had been falling for nearly a year and a half, increased in
January and February as businesses began to meet more of the rise in
sales from current production and less from drawing down inventories.
Indications that an expansion had taken hold led to noticeable
increases in broad stock indexes and in long-term interest rates. But
the strength of the recovery remained unclear. The outlook for
business fixed investment--which would be one key to the strength of
economic activity once the thrust from inventory restocking came to an
end--was especially uncertain, with anecdotal reports indicating that
businesses remained hesitant to enter into major long-term
commitments. While the FOMC believed that the fiscal and monetary
policies already in place would continue to stimulate economic
activity, it considered the questions surrounding the outlook for
final demand over the quarters ahead still substantial enough to
justify the retention of the current accommodative stance of monetary
policy, particularly in light of the relatively high unemployment rate
and the prospect that the lack of price pressures would persist.
Given the positive tone of the available economic indicators, the FOMC
announced that it considered the risks to achieving its long-run
objectives as now being balanced over the foreseeable future.
By the time of the May 7 FOMC meeting, it had become evident that
economic activity had expanded rapidly early in 2002. But the latest
statistical data and anecdotal reports suggested that the expansion
was moderating considerably in the second quarter and that the extent
to which final demand would strengthen was still unresolved. Business
sentiment remained gloomy as many firms had significantly marked down
their own forecasts of growth in sales and profits over coming
quarters. These revised projections, along with the uncertainty
surrounding the robustness of the overall economic recovery, had
contributed to sizable declines in market interest rates and weighed
heavily on equity prices, which had dropped substantially between the
March and May meetings. The outlook for inflation had remained benign
despite some firming in energy prices, as excess capacity in labor and
product markets held the pricing power of many firms in check, and the
apparent strong uptrend in productivity reduced cost pressures. In
these circumstances, the FOMC decided to keep the federal funds rate
at its accommodative level of 1-3/4 percent and maintained its view
that, against the background of its long-run goals of price stability
and sustainable economic growth, the risks to the outlook remained
balanced.
Over the next seven weeks, news on the economy did little to clarify
questions regarding the vigor of the ongoing recovery. The
information received in advance of the June 25-26 meeting of the FOMC
continued to suggest that economic activity had expanded in the second
quarter, but both the upward impetus from the swing in inventory
investment and the growth in final demand appeared to have diminished.
In financial markets, heightened concerns about accounting
irregularities at prominent corporations and about the outlook for
profits had contributed to a substantial decline in equity prices and
correspondingly to a further erosion in household wealth. But some
cushion to the effects on aggregate demand of the decline in share
prices had been provided by the fall in the foreign exchange value of
the dollar and the drop in long-term interest rates. Although the
FOMC believed that robust underlying growth in productivity, as well
as accommodative fiscal and monetary policies, would continue to
support a pickup in the rate of increase of final demand over coming
quarters, the likely degree of the strengthening remained uncertain.
The FOMC decided to keep unchanged its monetary policy stance and its
view that the risks to the economic outlook remained balanced.
Economic Projections for 2002 and 2003
The members of the Board of Governors and the Federal Reserve Bank
presidents, all of whom participate in the deliberations of the FOMC,
expect the economy to expand rapidly enough over the next six quarters
to erode current margins of underutilized capital and labor resources.
The central tendency of the forecasts for the increase in real GDP
over the four quarters of 2002 is 3-1/2 percent to 3-3/4 percent, and
the central tendency for real GDP growth in 2003 is 3-1/2 percent to
4 percent. The central tendency of the projections of the civilian
unemployment rate, which averaged just under 6 percent in the second
quarter of 2002, is that it stays close to this figure for the
remainder of the year and then moves down to between 5-1/4 percent and
5-1/2 percent by the end of 2003.
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