[note that leftist economist Tom Palley is quoted below. I hope that the 
AFL-CIO isn't saying that financial controls should be imposed at this 
point in the business cycle...]

September 1, 2001 / Los Angeles TIMES.

Talk about it Fed Chairman Talks of Limits to His Powers

Economy: Greenspan says stock market swings, home price fluctuations are 
making consumer behavior less predictable.

By ROBERT A. ROSENBLATT, TIMES STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON -- Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan warned Friday 
that huge swings in the stock market and big changes in home prices are 
making consumers more unpredictable in their behavior, making it much 
harder for policymakers to influence the economy.

"There can be little doubt that sizable swings in the market values of 
business and household assets have created important challenges for 
policymakers," the Fed chairman said in a speech at the agency's annual 
gathering at Jackson Hole, Wyo. The audience was a select gathering of 
economists, bankers, business officials and high-ranking Fed officials.

The easy cash obtained from home equity lines of credit and from stock 
market profits can be poured into sudden bursts of consumer spending, 
triggering quick changes in the performance of business. The Federal 
Reserve's powers operate much more slowly, with a change in interest 
rates--either up or down--taking from six months to a year or more to 
ripple through the economy. Greenspan, who is widely admired on Wall Street 
and in the business world as a key contributor to a decade of strong 
economic growth, offered a rare public admission of the limitations of his 
powers. And he acknowledged the great depths of uncertainty and guesswork 
in making policy decisions.

Traditional accounting systems may be inadequate tools for a 
computer-dominated high-technology age, the Fed chairman acknowledged. 
"Technology has facilitated the production of information at a far faster 
rate than at any time in the past," he said. "But in the information 
economy, it remains up to us to organize and use that information in ways 
that improve the quality of decision making."

Economists agree that the intellectual terrain they navigate is much more 
uncertain and confused these days. Greenspan's remarks underscored that 
uncertainty.

The conventional wisdom, for example, formerly held that unemployment 
couldn't fall below 6% without triggering a burst of inflation. But it has 
remained steady at far below 5% for a protracted period, and there is no 
sign of rising prices.

"We have to admit we know less about things than we thought we did," said 
Martin Regalia, chief economist at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

In the current economic climate, Regalia said, "it is surprising the 
economy has slowed as much as it has, yet with so few layoffs."

The changes in financial institutions give consumers more knowledge and 
more opportunities to change their spending rapidly, undermining the powers 
at Greenspan's disposal.

Rising real estate prices have long provided consumers a chance to enjoy 
profits. But previously, homeowners couldn't cash in until they sold the 
house. Now, with home equity lines of credit, consumers have access to big 
sums of cash while living in the house. This means more money is 
immediately available to consumers.

Information on stock gains also has an effect. Traditional pension systems, 
with the money invested by corporations, could enjoy stock market gains, 
but individual workers did not pay attention until they retired and began 
collecting their monthly pension checks.

The current system emphasizes the 401(k) salary set-aside accounts, with 
individuals getting monthly or quarterly statements showing their 
retirement balances. The stock market boom often changed consumers' 
outlook, sometimes making them enthusiastic spenders, said Tom Palley, 
deputy chief of public policy at the AFL-CIO. "You receive a statement 
saying that your wealth has increased, and you think that means there is 
less need to save, that the savings is being done by the [stock] market," 
Palley said. Consumers, feeling rich, rush to spend, he said.

Greenspan acknowledged that the stock market gains have given the economy a 
major boost.

"No matter how one differentiates the effects on consumer spending of 
capital gains on stock market and housing wealth, it is clear that the 
massive increase in capital values over the past five years had a profound 
impact on output and income," he said.

The AFL-CIO would like Greenspan to use other tools than interest rate 
changes to deal with the economy. Imposing new reserve requirements on 
banks could slow down the growth of home equity loans, or the Fed could ask 
mutual funds to hold more of their assets in cash to dampen stock market 
fluctuations, Palley said. Such steps would slow the erratic swings in 
consumer spending, he said.

However, the Federal Reserve does not want to take such steps. Greenspan 
instead is relying on a single tool of economic policy: the Fed's power to 
drive interest rates.

Greenspan indicated that he is looking for more data and understanding, 
rather than different policy approaches. "We need far more information than 
we currently possess about the nature and the sources of capital gains and 
the interaction of these gains with credit markets and consumer behavior," 
he said.

New accounting methods may provide the necessary clues, he suggested.

"As we endeavor to better understand how changes in the level and 
composition of wealth affect economic behavior, new accounting systems may 
be required to supplement those that have long served us so well," he said.

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~JDevine

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