Gosh, looks like AG is finally getting it!! Cheers Alohal
bloomberg.com
Greenspan Sees Sustainable U.S. Economic Growth, More Productivity Gains By Bill Arthur and Vincent Del Giudice
Greenspan Sees Sustainable Growth, Productivity Gains (Update2)
Boca Raton, Florida, Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. economy is likely to stay on a sustainable, non-inflationary path and that American productivity gains are genuine and lasting.
The Fed chairman's comments to an audience of business executives -- hours after the government reported the economy expanded in the third quarter at the fastest pace this year without triggering higher inflation -- suggest the central bank chief isn't itching to raise the overnight bank lending rate a third time this year. ``The process of containment may already be significantly advanced,' Greenspan told the Business Council in a dinner speech. That's because a rise over the last two years in real, or inflation-adjusted borrowing costs for businesses, home buyers, and consumers should eventually slow growth and keep the economy from overheating, he suggested.
The current U.S. prosperity has been produced by ``a major acceleration in productivity' spurred by technological developments such as the Internet, Greenspan said.
Businesses get information faster and make quicker decisions that enable them ``to remove large swaths of inventory safety stocks and worker redundancies,' he said.
The result is a ``virtuous cycle,' Greenspan said, in which ``a whole new set of profitable investments raises productivity, which for a time raises profits -- spurring further investment and consumption. At the same time, faster productivity growth keeps a lid on costs and prices.'
Productivity Statistics
While some argue that the growth in ``productivity is ephemeral, I find such arguments hard to believe,' Greenspan said. ``It seems likely that we will continue to experience vast advances in the application of the newer technologies and their associated increases in output per work hour.'
Stocks were poised to rise and bonds were little changed even though they both fell for a time after Greenspan's speech in which he also cautioned that strong U.S. domestic demand might outpace productivity gains. December futures on the Standard & Poor's index of 500 stocks rose 3 points in electronic trading. The Treasury's benchmark 30-year bond was little changed in Asian trading to yield 6.25 percent.
Greenspan said gross domestic product revisions released today by the Commerce Department translate into productivity gains of 2 1/4 percent per year over the past five years. That compares with about a 1.7 percent average annual increase over that period, based on previous government calculations. In addition, productivity growth accelerated to about 2 3/4 percent over the past two years, he said.
Nevertheless, productivity improvements can't guarantee long- term, sustainable growth, Greenspan said. Consumer demand could speed up so much it outstrips productivity improvements, he said.
That extra demand can be met only by rising imports or increasing domestic output produced by an expanding labor pool, he said.
Trade Deficit Warning
Greenspan also repeated earlier warnings that a reliance on imports to satisfy domestic demand -- while helping to hold down prices -- has caused the trade deficit to balloon, and that could undermine investor confidence in the U.S. economy. ``Imports presumably can continue to expand for a while, since the rising rate of return on U.S. assets' has attracted foreign capital, Greenspan said. ``For the recent past, direct investment inflows have almost matched the total current account deficit. ``But a continued widening of the deficit could eventually raise financing difficulties, ultimately limiting import growth,' Greenspan said.
He also echoed his earlier concerns about worker shortages and the potential for rising labor costs translating into accelerating inflation. ``Over the past two years, the pool of people seeking jobs -- the sum of the officially unemployed plus those not in the labor force waiting to work -- has declined from 11.2 million to 9.6 million,' Greenspan said.
`Best of Both Worlds'
While that carries inflationary implications, Greenspan also suggested that higher interest rates are likely to eventually lead to a slowdown of job growth.
Treasury bonds and U.S. stocks soared in trading before Greenspan spoke, sending the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to the biggest gain in a year, after government reports showed wages and prices rose less than expected in the third quarter even as growth topped forecasts. ``You have the best of both worlds -- higher-than-expected growth and lower-than-expected inflation,' said Robert Bloom, chief investment officer for Friends, Ivory and Sime, which manages $4.3 billion.
The employment cost index -- measuring wage and benefit costs -- grew 0.8 percent in the third quarter after rising 1.1 percent in the second, the Labor Department said.
The nation's gross domestic product rose at a 4.8 percent annual pace in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said. That's up from a 1.9 percent growth rate in the second quarter and a 3.7 percent pace in the first.
Personal Spending Cools
The third-quarter GDP price deflator, a measure of inflation followed by investors, grew at a 0.9 percent pace, down from a 1.4 percent rate the previous quarter. The third quarter increase was at the slowest pace since the first quarter of 1998.
Personal spending rose at 4.3 percent annual rate in the third quarter, down from an increase of 5.1 percent in the second quarter and 6.5 percent in the first. Business inventories rose $28.1 billion in the third quarter, more than double the $14 billion increase in the second quarter.
The government also released benchmark revisions to GDP today. The changes -- going back to 1959 -- boosted 1998 GDP to 4.3 percent and 1997's growth rate to 4.5 percent, both previously 3.9 percent.
U.S. economic growth has increased at an average annual rate of 3.5 percent compared with the previously reported rise of 3.1 percent, the benchmark revisions showed.
The revisions also showed the economy grew at a 4.3 percent rate in 1998 and 4.5 percent in 1997, both faster than the 3.9 percent previously reported.
Those gains are also restraining inflation. From 1990 to 1998, the implicit price deflator rose an average of 2.3 percent a year, less than the 2.6 percent average previously estimated by the Commerce Department. Last year the deflator rose 1.2 percent, the slowest since 1963. |