Title: The Long Boom:
1The Long Boom Sosa, McGwire, and Greenspan
JOHN B. TAYLOR Stanford Breakfast Briefing March
17, 1999
WWW.STANFORD.EDU/JOHNTAYL
2U.S. economy is now in the longest expansion in
its peacetime history
- Despite economic crises in Thailand, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Korea, Japan, Russia, Brazil,... - Real GDP and job growth is up
- Inflation is down
3Real GDP growth stays strong
Percent
8
GDP growth rate 1988-98
6
4
2
0
98Q4 6.1
-2
-4
-6
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
4Inflation rate stays low
Percent
6
5
4
Inflation rate (GDP)
3
Inflation rate (GDP)
2
(4 quarter average)
1
Q4 0.7 percent
0
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
5But the 1990s expansion is part of a much longer
and more amazing economic phenomenon
- 1999 will be 17th year of The Long Boom
- Includes not only the first, but also the second
longest peacetime expansion in U.S. history - 1990s (now 95 months),
- 1980s (92 months)
- Recession in between was short and mild
6Two Record Breakers Together
Growth rate of Real GDP
5.9
5.4
4.2
4.1
3.9
3.6
2.9
1.8
7Two Record Breakers Together
McGwire is trying out Sosa's trademark kiss
8No period like this in the history of baseball
72
9/25 Sosa takes lead
68
McGwire in early
66 to 65 for 45 minutes
September
"wouldn't it be great
64
if we ended up tied"
60
56
52
8/31
9/05
9/10
9/15
9/20
9/25
SOSA
MCGWIRE
9Similarly, no period like this in the history of
market economies
- Precedented Stability
- 17 years before this (1966-82) had 5 recessions
- In the 1890s there were three big recessions,
leading to unrest and populist politics...
10We will answer their demands for a gold standard
by saying to themYou shall not press down upon
the brow of labor this crown of thorns.You
shall not crucify mankind upon across of gold.
11Though Stanford was an oasis of prosperity
beating Cal twice in 1896
12Why has the Long Boom kept on going?
- Weaker pitching, better baseballs,?
- Good luck?
- No big shocks like the 1970s?
- But global shocks were huge in 1998
- Change in the economic rules?
- Services, inventories, high-tech new economy?
- Good policy?
- Fiscal policy?
- Deficit reduction and elimination?
- Counter-cyclical policy?
- What about the tax cuts of the early 1980s?
13A great supply side policy, but where did the
increased stability come from?
14The answer is monetary policy
- But what is it about monetary policy
- More reactive to changes in inflation
- federal funds rate rises by twice as much when
inflation rises 75 versus 150 basis points - This has kept inflation (and expectations of
inflation) low, thereby preventing recessions.
15Consider Alan Greenspan's recent testimony
concerning the long boom
16He asks and then answers as follows
- Why has pricing power of firms of late been so
delimited? - Monetary policy certainly has played a role in
constraining the rise in the general level of
prices - But our current discretionary monetary policy
has difficulty anchoring the price level over
time in the same way that the gold standard did
in the last century.
17This relationship between monetary policy,
inflation, and economic stability was not always
so clear. Remember this?
18Other potential benefits of the the recent
monetary policy experience
- Policy can be followed in other countries or
regions - The European Central Bank?
- Good monetary policy might become less dependent
on outstanding people, such as Alan Greenspan - Maybe the ideas can be taught in school!
19WELCOME TOA school dedicated to teaching
the science and art of monetary policy.
20Out with the old.In with the new.OLD
NEW
21Outlook for the rest of 1999 2000 The Long
Boom Goes On.
- Real GDP growth slowing a bit
- Inflation rate increasing a bit
- And the federal funds rate steady in the current
4.75 percent range
22But it would be wise to consider some alternative
scenarios
- Scenario 1 inflation scare CPI inflation rises
from 1.5 percent to 3.0 percent - high money growth, tight labor markets
- Federal funds rate would probably go up by about
2.25 to 7.0 - Likelihood of recession in 2000-2001 increases
- Scenario 2 big slowdown US growth falls to 1.0
percent - Funds rate would probably go down by about .5 to
4.25
23(No Transcript)