To: Tommaso who wrote (2203 ) 10/24/1998 6:35:00 AM From: Box-By-The-Riviera™ Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3339
Friday October 23, 1:29 pm Eastern Time Chicago Fed Moskow sees risk US growth slows fast NEW YORK, Oct 23 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Michael Moskow said on Friday there is a risk the U.S. economy may slow too fast going into 1999 due to the adverse impact of overseas problems and domestic financial markets woes. ''The risk, and it's only a risk at this point, is that this (economic) slowing will be too quick,'' Moskow told a banking forum in Indianapolis, in a speech also available in New York. Moskow noted ''financial market volatilities have already reduced consumer wealth substantially,'' while higher financing costs are also restricting business investments. With both consumer and business spending expected to slow dowm, ''it will be difficult for the components of aggregate demand that strongly propelled the U.S. economy in 1996, 1997, and the first half of 1998, to continue to drive growth rates of spending at their previous extraordinarily high rates of increases,'' Moskow said of a 2-1/2-year period where U.S. GDP growth exceeded 3-3/4 percent. The Chicago Fed president added such considerations led the Fed to ease credit at a regular policy meeting on September 29 and again with an inter-meeting move on October 15. Moskow said the two interest rate cuts were a ''moderate change in policy'' that ''would be consistent with achieving the Fed's goal of low inflation and sustainable economic growth.'' Looking forward, Moskow acknowledged a certain degree of uncertainty remained, mainly because ''the full extent of the aftershocks to our domestic economy (from foreign developments) is hard to gauge.'' He cited the downward revision in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast for 1999 world growth to 2.5 percent from 3.7 percent. The Chicago Fed president also remakred on uneasiness in the U.S. financial sector as ''Federal Reserve surveys indicate that banks are less willing to lend to some borrowers.'' ''Financial market volatilities have already reduced consumer wealth substantially and continuing pressures on corporate profit margins and widening risk spreads have increased the cost of capital investment,'' he also said.