A
Year-End Wrap-Up of the Economy and a Peek Ahead
Remarks before the Longview Rotary
Club
Longview, Texas
December 19, 2006
I am delighted to be here today
with a fine group of Rotarians. Before I went up to
Washington to serve as the deputy U.S. trade representative,
I was a member of the Downtown Dallas Rotary. I enjoyed
the camaraderie and sense of purpose that the Dallas
Rotary shares with Rotarians here in Longview and everywhere.
The vision Paul Harris had in 1905 is one of lasting
influence, and I can’t think of a nicer group
of solid, patriotic citizens to have lunch with on the
Tuesday before Christmas.
As I left the house this morning,
my wife, Nancy, said: “Now don’t you go
spoil those nice people from Longview’s holiday
by talking economics. You know, Richard, it is not for
nothing that they call it ‘the dismal science,’
and no one wants to hear dismal stuff at this happy
time of year.”
Well, this bothered me driving
all the way here. Then I remembered a tale one of the
wittiest of the Federal Reserve’s economists,
David Stockton, told last week. It seems a bachelor
who thought himself in tip-top physical form was called
in by his doctor. “My friend,” the doctor
said, “I have just read your lab tests from your
physical, and I have very bad news. You have a horrible
disease for which there is no known medical cure. I
suggest that you marry an economist and move to Arkansas.”
“Geez, that’s awful,”
the man said. “Are you telling me that settling
down with an economist in Arkansas will help me live
longer?”
“No,” the doctor said,
“but it will seem longer.”
So as to not dispense too much
dismal science today, I thought I would limit myself
to a brief brief on the economy to leave plenty of time
to answer questions.
As usual, I will speak today only
for myself and the Dallas Federal Reserve, not for any
other members of the Federal Open Market Committee or
for the rest of the System. So what you are going to
get today is just one man’s opinion.
Here is the bottom line. The economy
is sending mixed signals. The bad news is that the housing
industry is undergoing a sharp correction that may not
have run its full course and auto production is more
anemic than desirable. The not-so-good news is that
expansion of manufacturing activity and things made
in factories has shown signs of slowing, but—and
this is important—from high levels of activity.
As one of my friends in manufacturing and industrial
production likes to put it, "We are not stepping
on the brakes, just lightening our foot from the accelerator."
The good news is that the dampening
effect of the housing and auto sectors and the slowdown
in manufacturing activity have been offset by continued
growth in the service sector.
Now I am going to lay a little
dismal science on you.
America has about 144 million
workers, producing over $13 trillion in output. Our
workers produce more output than the combined total
of the next four largest economies, which are Japan,
Germany, China and the United Kingdom. When you sit
down with your family over the holidays, you can feel
good about what American brawn and brains produce.
And you can be proud of being
Texans. Our state alone produces more than Korea or
Brazil or Mexico. Here is a fact that will startle you:
We Texans produce 25 percent more output, measured in
dollar terms, than all of India. That’s just the
production of 10 million workers in one state alone.
We are blessed to live in a mighty big country with
a whopping big, growing economy.
How do we do it? What are the
dynamics of that mighty economic machine we know as
America? How do we keep growing when we hear about the
downturn in housing and the woes of our auto industry,
or when the papers tell you that China and others are
taking away our manufacturing business?
Well, first you have to understand
that the United States is no longer just a manufacturing
economy. In fact, it hasn’t been a manufacturing
economy for quite some time, just as we have not been
an agricultural economy for an even longer period of
time. This is not to say that the United States is not
an agricultural or a manufacturing powerhouse. We very
much are. But these sectors have less and less impact
on our well-being as we continue our inexorable climb
up the value-added ladder.
Agriculture employs only 1 percent
of our workers and accounts for only 1 percent of our
gross domestic product. Manufacturing employs 10 percent
of our workers and contributes 12 percent of our output.
If you add those numbers to the contribution of utilities,
mining, and oil and gas and construction activity, you
will account for 25 million workers and $2.7 trillion
in output. In other words, the goods-producing sectors
of our economy employ a sixth of our workers and produce
a little less than one quarter of our output.
Keep this in mind as you read
in the press or hear on the radio and television that
the markets went into spasms after this or that index
of manufacturing activity—the Philadelphia Fed
Manufacturing Index or the Empire State Index or the
Dallas Fed’s newer manufacturing index—was
released, or when dour economists report on declining
auto production. Certainly these indicators matter and
are taken seriously, particularly by the families whose
incomes depend on work in those sectors of the economy.
But in trying to divine the course
of the whole U.S. economy, remember that, for example,
about 1.1 million people work in motor vehicle manufacturing
in this country, producing eight-tenths of one percent
of our GDP. The legal services industry, in contrast,
employs 1.2 million people who collectively contribute
1.5 percent of our GDP. I am tempted to make a lawyer
joke here—God knows there are plenty of them (both
lawyers and jokes)—but it is not a laughing matter
to economists. The legal services industry provides
as many jobs as the auto manufacturing industry and
contributes almost twice as much to our economic output.
In contemplating the course of
the economy, we need to look beyond manufacturing and
consider where the other five-sixths of our workers
work. Where do we produce over three quarters of our
$13 trillion in output?
The answer is in the service sector.
We have almost 120 million people producing over $10
trillion in output working in law firms and hospitals
and restaurants and offices and classrooms and laboratories
and sales rooms. From the medical complexes in Houston
and Dallas to the biotech labs of Boston, from the trading
floors of Wall Street to the government offices in Washington,
from the retail stores in Miami to the entertainment
emporiums of Las Vegas, from the universities in California
to the software salons of Seattle. As our society has
progressed, we have moved up the value-added ladder
toward what Winston Churchill once called the “superfine
processes” where the greatest profit is reaped
and the quality of life is best; where we work more
with our brains than with our backs.
Economists will point out that
this is where America enjoys its comparative advantage.
We have created a system that harnesses the greatest
brain power in the world and the most nimble and flexible
business culture on the planet. Our comparative advantage
is at the nano and bio and techno and financial end
of the economic spectrum, not at the part of the spectrum
where we till fields or bend metal. As we have moved
up to these higher rungs on the value-added ladder and
positioned ourselves to master the “superfine
processes,” others have taken our old place on
the lower rungs of the ladder.
For example, Vietnam produces
the second-largest robusta coffee crop in the world.
They have a comparative advantage in that aspect of
agriculture that we don’t have. China churns out
all kinds of manufactured goods that they can produce
more cheaply than we can. We employ over 100 million
people to take these foreign inputs, as well as what
we make here in the good ol' U.S.A., refine them, transport
them, package them and sell what we make from them in
order to grow our economy. This is the service sector,
and it is the service sector that drives our economy.
To be honest, one of our problems
is that we do not have very good data on the service
sector. We have tons of data that tell us every squiggle
and wiggle of the agriculture and manufacturing sectors,
but we do not have sufficient equivalent data on services.
The dearth of data makes it hard to do what economists
love to do: build models that accurately forecast economic
growth. We still have a lot of useful indicators for
identifying changes in the business cycle from back
when manufacturing ruled the day, but we have yet to
identify counterparts for an economy that is service-sector
driven.
This is all just a long-winded
way of saying that it is difficult to say with true
precision just how the economy will close out this year
in terms of growth and pace. My guess is that we are
most likely going to finish the year at a pace that
exceeds the gloomy forecasts making all the headlines
lately. If you net the downdrafts from the housing and
auto sectors against the tailwinds from other countries
that are growing faster than the United States, then
adjust for the updrafts of a dynamic service sector
and thank your lucky stars for a warm start to winter
and burgeoning oil and gas inventories that have softened
energy prices, I wouldn’t be surprised if the
economy proves to have grown at better than two percent,
net of inflation, in the second half of this year, then
picks up pace in 2007. This is not a forecast, mind
you. There are risks out there that, should they come
to pass, would result in slower growth. Barring any
unforeseen circumstances, however, I think this is a
reasonable expectation. At least, that’s how I
see it from my perch at the Dallas Fed.
On the inflation front, the good
news is inflationary pressures appear to have reached
a stasis, despite the labor shortages in certain sectors—particularly
in chemicals and petroleum industries and in functions
requiring skilled and semiskilled workers. The bad news
is that the stasis is at too high a level for party
poopers like me who will have no choice but to advocate
tightening monetary policy further if inflation does
not ratchet downward.
At the Dallas Fed, we prefer to
look at inflation through a prism called the Trimmed
Mean PCE. I won’t bore you with the details of
how it works, but I’ll tell you this: We had some
encouraging news in September when the Trimmed Mean
showed inflation had dropped down to 1.6 percent. Unfortunately,
it rose back to 2.6 percent in October, close to where
it had been nestling before the September drop. This
uptick was partially caused by costs in that pesky service
sector: medical services.
When we analyzed all the items
in the personal consumption expenditure basket from
medical costs to the costs of restaurant meals, we noticed
that the median inflation rate was running at 4 percent
and that over 30 percent of the items in the basket
had prices that were increasing at a rate of over 5
percent. Now, this was for October. The November numbers
come out on Friday, so we will have to wait until then
to see the latest movements. While we at the Dallas
Fed are hopeful that the measures taken to raise the
federal funds rate from 1 percent to 5.25 percent will
quell inflation and, very important, expectations about
future inflation, we cannot yet say with conviction
that we have turned the corner and have this problem
fully contained.
Given all of this, I would have
to say that the risk of unacceptably high inflation
still outweighs the risk of substandard economic growth.
Nonetheless, I think we are ending
the year in pretty good shape. I do not agree with pundits
who argue about whether we can engineer a “soft
landing.” “Landing” implies stopping.
I prefer to say that the Fed’s job is to provide
the monetary conditions necessary to pilot our economy
at a comfortable cruising altitude and speed while preventing
the engine from overheating with inflation. As we look
to 2007, I consider this objective to be within reach.
And that, good Rotarians, would be far from a dismal
outcome. You needn’t marry an economist and move
to Arkansas. You can stay right here in Longview and
thrive.
| About
the Author
Richard W. Fisher
is president and CEO of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas. |
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