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To: SisterMaryElephant who wrote (43789)1/4/1998 12:32:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Steve & Thread - Greenspan Now Addresses DEFLATION

Folks - get ready for another Roller Coaster Ride. For the past several years, the Stock Market seems to have ebbed and flowed based on Alan Greenspan's monthly mutterings on his assessment of "anticipated inflation".

When the FED didn't raise Interest rates at their periodic FOMC meetings, the market almost always surged upwards.

Then Greenspan worried about Irrational Exuberance.

But Now, he is looking at the flip side scenario - DEFLATION.

Are we in store for another irrational PANIC?

Read on.....

Paul

{============================}

Greenspan Warns of Deflation Danger

By Caren Bohan

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan Saturday warned of dangers if the U.S. economy
should enter a period of falling prices, reinforcing beliefs he is
not inclined to raise interest rates.

In his most detailed talk yet on the potential for deflation,
Greenspan said a debate on the issue was hampered by faulty
price measures and lacked clarity.

''Some observers have begun to question whether deflation is
now a possibility,'' the central bank chief told the annual meeting
of the American Economic Association (AEA).

''Even if deflation is not considered a significant near-term risk
for the economy, the increasing discussion of it could be clearer
in defining the circumstance,'' he added.

Deflation has not occurred in the United States on a broad scale
since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Greenspan declined
to say whether there was an imminent risk of a deflationary
cycle, but said it could be at least as bad for the economy as
inflation.

''Both rapid or variable inflation and deflation can lead to a state
of fear and uncertainty that is associated with significant
increases in risk premiums and corresponding shortfalls in
economic activity,'' he said.

Economists listening to Greenspan's speech were struck by the
attention on deflation after decades in which the Fed has made
the fight against rising prices its overriding mission.

''Today, he devoted a full 15 minutes to discussing the negative
consequences of deflation,'' said Peter Kretzmer, an economist
at NationsBank. ''It indicates that Greenspan will take a lot of
care before he decides to tighten monetary policy and there is
even a possibility of an easing.''

Inflation, running at 2.1 percent, is at its lowest level in a
generation and Fed research suggests even that figure may be
double the actual rate of price increases.

Asia's financial crisis has put a spotlight on deflation as
producers in the battered region are expected to unload a glut of
cheapened goods, bringing down global prices.

Before the Asian troubles mounted, Fed policymakers were
leaning in favor of higher interest rates because of worries that
the nation's tight labor market would generate wage pressures
that could feed inflation.

Allen Sinai, chief economist at Boston-based Primark Decision
Inc., said Greenspan's remarks on Saturday clearly showed that
deflation was at least on the Fed's radar screen.

''It's a tip-off they will not raise interest rates,'' he said. ''The Fed
will be on guard in either direction.''

Fed policymakers next meet on Feb 3-4 to consider interest
rates. The key overnight federal funds rate currently stands at 5.5
percent and has remained unchanged since last March.

Discussing deflation, Greenspan drew a distinction between
declines in the prices of assets, such as stocks and houses, and
those of goods and services.

He said a gradual fall in asset prices had contributed to the
recent troubles in Asia but that in most cases this type of
deflation could be absorbed by the economy.

''But historically, it has been very rapid asset price declines -- in
equity and real estate, especially -- that have held the potential
to be a virulently negative force in the economy,'' he added.

The Fed is charged with seeking an environment of stable
prices, in which neither inflation nor deflation is a threat, while
maintaining the maximum level of employment.

Greenspan said the ''remarkable progress'' that had been
made in bringing down inflation had brought the issue of price
measurement into especially sharp focus.

He said there were ''uncertainties surrounding the accuracy of
our measured price indexes,'' adding his weight to criticism of
the main U.S. inflation gauge, the consumer price index.

Inflation had declined to the point where even an upward bias of
a few tenths of a point mattered, he said. ''Inflation has become
so low that policymakers need to consider at what point effective
price stability has been reached,'' he noted.