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To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (16679)1/26/2000 8:38:00 PM
From: zbyslaw owczarczyk  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18016
 
Fed chief vows to fight inflation, offers solution
to tight labor market
By Staff Writer M. Corey Goldman
January 26, 2000: 5:50 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
offered no hint Wednesday as to what the Fed will do at its key
interest rate meeting next week, focusing instead on the
economy's "remarkable" progress.
Speaking to the Senate Banking Committee, Greenspan said
he is looking forward to steering the U.S. economy into its ninth
year of uninterrupted expansion characterized by low inflation.
The banking committee is currently considering whether to
approve Greenspan's nomination to a fourth term as chairman of
the Fed. Greenspan was scheduled to address another Senate
committee on Tuesday, but the session was canceled due to
inclement weather.
His remarks came less than a week before Fed policy makers
are scheduled to gather for their first meeting of the year, a
meeting most analysts and economists expect will result in
another quarter-point increase in short-term interest rates.
"It has been an extraordinary privilege to be able to serve my
country at the Federal Reserve, and I would be honored if the
Senate saw fit to enable me to continue this association for
another four years," Greenspan said in prepared remarks.

Marveling at productivity

Greenspan's discussion of the economy was abstract as usual
and was marked by his now-familiar marveling about
technological progress boosting productivity and keeping prices
stable.
"For the economy overall, the marked pickup in technological
innovation has accelerated productivity and raised standards of
living for many -- though regrettably, not all -- Americans," he
said. "Our challenge in monetary policy is to foster, as best we
can, the financial conditions that will allow this economic
expansion and technological revolution to continue as long, and
as vigorously, as possible."
Addressing Senators' questions following his remarks,
Greenspan said, that as of yet, there have been no discernable
signs that U.S. productivity has reached its peak, suggesting
there's still room for the economy to expand without fueling an
increase in consumer prices.
"There is really no evidence at this stage that the acceleration
process has as yet shown early signs of cresting," the Fed chief
said, adding that, "it is far better to have this type of problem than
others we have seen in the past." (462K WAV) (462K AIFF)

Tight labor markets

At the same time, that does not mean the Fed should let down
its guard when it comes to being vigilant against accelerating
inflation, particularly with the tight U.S. labor market, as
economists call it - where there are too many jobs for too few
workers. A tight labor market can fuel faster inflation as
companies are forced to pay their workers more to keep them
happy and on the job.
To resolve that problem, Greenspan suggested that U.S.
immigration laws be relaxed, boosting the supply of available
workers to fill positions. Others on Capitol Hill have also supported
the relaxation of immigration laws that would allow more skilled
labor from Mexico, Canada and Europe to enter the United
States.
"Aggregative demand is putting very significant pressures on
an ever-decreasing available supply of unemployed labor,"
Greenspan said. "The one obvious means that one can use to
offset that is, expanding the number of people we allow in."
"Reviewing our immigration laws in the context of the type of
economy which we will be enjoying in the decade ahead is
clearly on the table in my judgment," he added.

Focused on the debt

As in previous sessions to Congress, Greenspan took the
opportunity to pitch to Senators that any budget surplus be put
toward paying down the country's national debt rather than
toward boosting spending or reducing taxation levels.
"As I have said previously to this committee, because of the
nature of the type of acceleration in productivity and dynamic
change that is occurring in the American economy, my first
priority would be to allow as much of the surplus to flow through
into a reduction in debt to the public," Greenspan told the
committee.
The fact that the 73-year-old Greenspan has so
enthusiastically embraced another term as chief of the central
bank has already put financial markets at ease, even as investors
brace for at least one more rate increase in 2000. Most analysts
expect the Federal Open Market Committee to raise the Fed
funds target for overnight loans between banks to 5.5 percent
next Wednesday.
The news also put Senators in Washington at ease, Democrat
and Republican alike. Lawmakers asking the Fed chief questions
following his testimony began their remarks with words of praise
and respect for Greenspan. "I'm confident that the vote in the
Senate will be overwhelmingly in your favor," Minnesota
Republican Rod Grams told Greenspan.
Indeed, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Phil Gramm
said he hopes a full vote on Greenspan's nomination will begin
Feb. 1 after the Senate vote is completed.