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Issue 1, January/February 1996
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Southwest
Expansion to Continue in 1996
The Southwest economy's expansion during
1995 nearly matched its historical average and remained strong
relative to the national average (Chart 1). All three states
in the region—Louisiana, New Mexico
and Texas—benefited from strength in
the construction sector. Strong growth in the maquiladora
industries and in exports to countries other than Mexico allowed
Texas to avoid the potentially large negative effects of the
peso devaluation. The gaming industry remained the key source
of activity in the Louisiana economy. New Mexico continued
to be propelled forward by expansions in high-tech manufacturing.
In 1996, the Southwest economy is likely
to see its 10th consecutive year of economic expansion. Sluggish
overall growth in the U.S. economy and some tightness in regional
labor markets, however, could restrain growth. After growing
at an annual rate of 3 percent in 1995,[1] combined nonfarm
employment in Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas should slow
to about 2.4 percent in 1996. Of the three states, New Mexico
is likely to have the fastest rate of growth, followed by
Texas and Louisiana.
Southwest Construction Activity Strong
in 1995
While the sources of strength varied
throughout the region, the construction sector generally was
strong in all three states (Chart 2). The residential sector
benefited from lean inventories at the start of the year and
a sharp decline in mortgage rates throughout the year. While
nationally the average value of residential construction was
lower in the first 10 months of 1995 than in 1994, it was
higher by 5.8 percent in New Mexico, 5.3 percent in Texas
and 1.4 percent in Louisiana. Nonresidential contract values
also increased, particularly in Louisiana, where the retail
sector saw steady growth and a major flood in New Orleans
triggered construction activity.
Texas Shakes Off Peso Effects
Texas nonfarm employment slowed
from a strong 4.5-percent growth rate in 1994 to a more moderate
rate of 3.2 percent in 1995. Employment growth in 1995 was
equal to its historical average and was stronger than national
growth of 1.4 percent. The strength of the Texas economy in
1995 was somewhat surprising in light of the peso devaluation
and ensuing sharp recession in Mexico. Because exports to
Mexico represent about 40 percent of Texas exports and Mexican
shoppers are responsible for much of the retail activity along
the Texas border, events in Mexico can have a significant
impact on the Texas economy.
Although the Mexican peso's devaluation
hit the border retail industry hard, strength in the maquiladora
industry offset much of the blow. The maquiladora companies
on the Mexican side of the border, whose budgets are dollar-denominated
but whose costs are in pesos, received a boost from the devaluation.
The thriving maquiladora industry resulted in greater warehousing,
distribution and manufacturing needs on the Texas side of
the border. Federally mandated intrastate trucking deregulation,
which began in January 1995, also added some stimulus to the
region. The deregulation put downward pressure on trucking
rates in the state, stimulating demand for warehouse space
along the border and throughout the state. The increased demand
for warehouses and other commercial and industrial space led
to a surge in construction activity that offset much of the
decline in the retail sector (Chart 3).
While the peso devaluation resulted
in a significant decline in exports to Mexico, a surge in
exports to other countries largely offset the reduction. While
exports to Mexico declined at an annual rate of 13.8 percent
during the first three quarters of 1995, Texas exports to
other countries increased at an annual rate of 23.1 percent,
resulting in an overall export gain of 8.4 percent (Chart
4).
The petrochemical industry has been
particularly successful in shifting export markets for its
products. While exports of chemical and allied products from
Texas to Mexico slowed sharply during the first three quarters
of 1995, total exports from this industry surged 44 percent.
The value of chemical and allied product exports in the first
three quarters of 1995 was $11.1 billion, which led all other
industries and represented 22 percent of the value of total
Texas exports.
Electric and electronic equipment manufacturers
in Texas were also successful at shifting exports. A worldwide
surge in demand for semiconductors and telecommunications
equipment allowed Texas manufacturers of these products to
compensate for reduced demand from Mexico with increased shipments
to countries around the world. Although Mexican exports have
been an important source of strength for Texas electric and
electronic equipment manufacturers,[2] employment and exports
in this industry accelerated in 1995 despite the reduced demand
from Mexico.
The growth in the electronics industry
contributed to Texas high-tech industries' overall strength.
While the share of high-tech industries in the state is about
the same as the national average, Texas' employment growth
in the high-tech sector over the past six years has been twice
as strong as the nation's.[3] Texas' strongest relative performance
has been in computer- and telecommunications-related industries
such as computer, semiconductor, cellular phone manufacturing
and service firms that provide programming and data processing.
While the monthly employment data are too aggregated to measure
recent growth in the high-tech sectors, anecdotal evidence
and movements in broader employment categories suggest that
the high-tech sector grew strongly in Texas in 1995.[4]
Gaming Industry Remains the Driver
in Louisiana
Employment growth in Louisiana
slowed from a strong [5].1-percent rate of growth in 1994
to a more moderate pace of 1.9 percent in 1995. Employment
growth in 1995 was just slightly below its historical average
rate of 2.1 percent. The gaming industry, despite some setbacks
in 1995, remained the major driving force behind growth in
the Louisiana economy. After rapid expansion in 1994, the
gaming industry slowed in 1995 as two riverboat casinos and
one temporary land-based casino in New Orleans closed their
doors. Also, plans for a permanent land-based casino in New
Orleans were put on hold. Even with these setbacks, however,
employment in the amusement industry in Louisiana increased
31.1 percent in 1995 after growing 64.3 percent in 1994 (Chart
5).
The energy industry was also a positive
force in the Louisiana economy in 1995. Improvements in offshore
drilling techniques and strong expectations about future natural
gas consumption resulted in a December-to-December gain of
15.3 percent in the rotary rig count, which indicates oil
and gas exploration activity. Employment in oil and gas extraction
increased at an annual rate of 2.6 percent through the first
10 months of the year. Increased profit margins and exports
for petrochemicals led to continued strong capital expansion
in this industry throughout the Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast
region in 1995.
High-Tech Industries Fuel Strong Growth
in New Mexico
New Mexico nonfarm employment increased
4.7 percent in 1995, only slightly less than the state's strong
5.1-percent growth rate in 1994. In 1995 and for the fourth
consecutive year, New Mexico's growth surpassed its historical
average of 3.3 percent. While Texas businesses were concerned
about the impact of the peso devaluation in 1995, businesses
in New Mexico worried about how downsizing in the defense
sector would affect employment at the two national labs, Sandia
and Los Alamos. Employment at Los Alamos declined by about
1,000 jobs, while Sandia experienced only slight employment
losses.
Job losses at the two national labs
have been more than offset by strength in New Mexico's high-tech
industries. High-tech firms such as Intel, Motorola, Philips
Semiconductor and Intuit have had an important impact on growth
in the New Mexican economy. While high-tech jobs represent
about 3.1 percent of total U.S. employment, high-tech employment
in New Mexico represents about 5.4 percent of total jobs.
Announced expansions at many of the large high-tech firms
in the state and growth in broad employment categories suggest
that the New Mexican high-tech sector grew strongly in 1995.
As a rough measure of high-tech growth, 1995 employment increased
12.1 percent in electric and electronic equipment manufacturing
and 17.9 percent in business services (Chart 6).
Other sources of strength in New Mexico
include expansions in bus manufacturing, food processing and
retail trade. An important source of weakness in New Mexico
in 1995 was a decline in the mining sector. Employment in
both mineral mining and oil and gas extraction declined. The
devaluation of the Mexican peso also had a negative effect
on the New Mexico economy, although total exports and exports
to Mexico represent a much smaller share of the economy in
New Mexico than in Texas.5
Southwest Economy's Growth Likely
to Slow in 1996
While growth should remain positive
in Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas, a sluggish national economy
and other factors may slow the region's growth in 1996. In
late 1995, business contacts in Texas reported a significant
increase in labor market tightness across a wide range of
occupations. The market for skilled workers—such
as mechanics, electricians, machinists, engineers and software
developers—remained tight. Contacts
also noted that wages were being bid up for accountants and
lawyers from top-tier schools. Several contacts also noted
difficulty finding lower skilled workers with basic reading,
writing, math and communications skills. Slow U.S. growth
and the apparent mismatch between the skills of the unemployed
and the skills demanded by the growing industries in the state
may hinder growth in Texas. Recent movements in the Texas
leading index suggest that growth in Texas nonfarm employment
will likely slow from 3.2 percent in 1995 to 2.4 percent in
1996.
Reduced construction activity may result
in slower growth in the Louisiana economy. Although gaming
activity is likely to remain level in 1996, subsiding expectations
about its profitability should diminish capital investment.
A colder than normal winter would bode well for natural gas
producers in the state, who are already benefiting from improved
offshore drilling technology.
After growing in excess of 4.5 percent
for three consecutive years, nonfarm employment will probably
slow somewhat in New Mexico in 1996. Construction activity
is likely to slow from the strong pace in 1995, due to a reduction
in high-tech capital expansions. Continued declines in defense
spending should also be a significant drag on the state.
—Keith R. Phillips
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| Notes
I wish to thank Loren Scott
at Louisiana State University and Andrew Krikelas
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta for helpful
discussions about the Louisiana economy and Brian
McDonald and Lawrence Waldman at the University
of New Mexico for information on the New Mexico
economy.
- In this article, 1995 employment growth refers
to the annualized rate of growth from December
1994 to October 1995, the most recent data available.
All data used are seasonally adjusted. The state
employment data are adjusted using the Berger/Phillips
two-step technique, and the Texas employment
data is bench-marked through March 1994. These
employment adjustments are described in the
July/August 1993 issue of Southwest Economy.
- In Issue 1, 1995, of Southwest Economy,
Lori Taylor and Rhonda Harris find that the
electronics and electric equipment industry
is the third most sensitive Texas manufacturing
industry to changes in the value of the Mexican
peso.
- For the definition of high-tech industries
and a description of their importance to the
Texas economy, see D'Ann M. Petersen and Michelle
Thomas in "From Crude Oil to Computer Chips,"
Southwest Economy, Issue 6, 1995.
- For example, employment increased at an annual
rate of 5.9 percent in electric and electronic
equipment manufacturing, 8.7 percent in nonelectrical
equipment and computer manufacturing, and 9.8
percent in business services. While each of
these employment categories contains some industries
that are not classified as high-tech, it is
likely that the high-tech industries in these
categories are responsible for much of the overall
growth. Although the high-tech component of
business services is small, anecdotal evidence
suggests that high-tech industries are responsible
for much of the growth in temporary employment
agencies, which is a large share of business
services.
- In 1992, total exports as a share of nominal
gross state product was 12 percent in Texas
and 1.2 percent in New Mexico. Also, 1994 exports
to Mexico represented 40 percent of Texas exports
and only 17.9 percent of New Mexico exports.
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Tax
Reform:
Is the Time Right for a New Approach?
In the eyes of many Americans, our income
tax system is overly complex, basically unfair and—in
short—fatally flawed. At least half
the citizens surveyed in recent public opinion polls would
support radical reform.
They have a point. Although length is
not necessarily synonymous with complexity, the U.S. income
tax code now has more than 700 times as many words as the
U.S. Constitution. Furthermore, the costs of complying with
the individual income tax code are high and rising (Chart
1). Estimates of the compliance costs associated with the
corporate income tax are even higher, ranging from about 50
percent to more than 100 percent of the revenue collected.
In other words, the sum the average firm pays to keep track
of tax-related information may exceed what it pays in taxes.
The complexity of the tax code feeds
public suspicion that the tax system is unfair. Many taxpayers
would agree with Nobel Prize winning economists Milton Friedman
and James Buchanan that much of the system's complexity results
from politicians' trading tax preferences for campaign contributions.
Economists' training leads them to focus
more on the tax system's inefficiencies than its complexity
and unfairness (though the three problems are closely related).
Here too, the U.S. income tax code falls short. A striking
example of inefficiency in the income tax code is its unequal
treatment of income from different sources. Under current
law, wage and interest income is taxed only once—at
the individual level. Meanwhile, profits are taxed twice—first
at the corporate level then again at the individual level.
For profits that are distributed as dividends, the top combined
marginal tax rate can exceed 65 percent. This heavy taxation
of dividends and capital gains discourages saving and entrepreneurship;
it encourages firms to use debt finance rather than equity
finance, making them more vulnerable to economic downturns;
it slows economic growth.
The Consumption Tax
The principal alternative to an
income tax is a consumption tax. Consumption taxes encourage
saving and investment by deferring taxes on income until that
income is spent. They make moot a host of complex issues concerning
depreciation schedules and the timing of capital gains. Furthermore,
a household's wealth and well-being are more directly tied
to its consumption spending than to its income.
Three alternative versions of the consumption
tax have been proposed. Two of the proposals can be described
as direct taxes on consumer purchases—the
national sales tax and the flat tax. The third proposal, known
as the unlimited savings allowance (USA) tax, exploits the
principle that income must either be saved or consumed by
taxing the difference between income and savings.
Although equivalent in spirit, the proposals
differ in important details. Before discussing the likely
economic consequences of replacing the income tax with a consumption
tax, it may therefore be helpful to review the distinguishing
characteristics of the alternative plans.
The National Sales Tax. Representative
Bill Archer (R-Texas) and Senator Richard Lugar (R-Indiana)
argue that consumption spending should be taxed directly.
A national sales tax on retail purchases would be one such
strategy. An equivalent measure would be to impose a tax at
each stage of production on the difference between sales revenue
and payments made to other businesses for materials, equipment
and supplies. Such a sales tax is called a value-added tax,
or VAT. Most sales tax proposals would exempt food and medicine
to reduce the burden of taxation on the poor. All other goods
and services would be taxed. Economists estimate that the
sales tax rate would have to be at least 21 percent to raise
as much revenue as the current income tax.
An attractive feature of a national
sales tax is that even those with illegal sources of income
would pay taxes with every purchase. In the same vein, a sales
tax is anonymous: no one need know how much money the taxpayer
makes or where it comes from. Another advantage is that the
sales tax concept is familiar and easy to understand.
The proposal does have drawbacks, however.
A 21-percent sales tax levied at the retail level would invite
widespread under-the-counter sales. The VAT approach would
reduce the incentive to cheat by taking many small bites instead
of one large one. However, the costs of complying with a VAT
would be extremely burdensome to small businesses. Moreover,
because taxes would be hidden in the prices consumers pay
rather than transparent as with the sales tax, a VAT could
be an invitation to tax increases.
The Flat Tax. Representative
Richard Armey (R-Texas) proposes a modified VAT known as the
flat tax. Under a VAT, firms pay tax on their sales less the
sum of their purchases from other businesses. The flat tax
would work in exactly the same way, except each firm's employees
would be paid with pre-tax dollars, and employees would write
checks to the government for the taxes due on the wage component
of value added. In effect, the flat tax treats each worker
as an independent contractor. This difference in the treatment
of wages has two important benefits. First, taxes wouldn't
be hidden, as they are under a standard VAT. Second, the flat
tax approach would allow a certain amount of each individual's
wages to be exempted from taxation ($13,000 for singles, $26,000
for couples, plus $5,300 per dependent under the Armey proposal),
making it easy to limit the tax burden on the poor.
On the negative side, flat tax opponents
claim that people without labor income would pay no tax. The
statement is only superficially true: nonwage income would
be taxed before it is distributed, at the same rate as wage
income.
Representative Armey proposes that the
initial tax rate be 20 percent. Most economists think the
rate would need to be closer to 23 percent to replace the
revenue from the current income tax.
The USA Tax. Senators
Sam Nunn (D-Georgia), Pete V. Domenici (R-New Mexico) and
Bob Kerrey (D-Nebraska) propose a consumption tax disguised
as an income tax. The key difference between the current income
tax and their USA tax is that under the USA plan net new saving
would be fully deductible from income for tax purposes. Households
would continue to report wage, dividend, interest and capital
gains income on their tax returns. They would continue to
deduct home mortgage interest and charitable contributions.
A modest deduction for higher education expenses would be
introduced. The value of fringe benefits such as employer-provided
health insurance would be included in household taxable income
for the first time. Tax rates on personal income would be
graduated—rising from 19 percent to
40 percent—while the corporate income
tax would be scrapped and replaced with an 11-percent VAT.
Tax rates would be higher than under the other reform proposals,
partly because the USA tax would retain more deductions than
the other proposals and partly because Social Security benefits,
in effect, would be financed from general revenue under the
USA plan.
Of the three reform proposals, the USA
tax is the only one that uses the tax code to stimulate investment
in education as well as in plant and equipment. It is also
the only reform proposal that incorporates Social Security
taxes.
On the minus side, the USA tax would
do little to simplify the tax code. It would continue the
current subsidy to home ownership and actually would increase
the incentive for home ownership by not counting new home
equity loans as taxable dissaving. Additionally, households
would be able to accumulate up to $35,000 in nonmortgage debt
without tax liability. Consequently, the USA tax would provide
less overall stimulus to saving and investment than the other
tax reform proposals reviewed here.
Likely Effects of Switching to a Consumption
Tax
Once enacted, any of these three
proposals would likely have a positive effect on saving and
investment, for two reasons. First, because they are consumption
taxes, each proposal defers the taxation of income until the
income is spent. Second, each proposal eliminates the current
system's punitive taxation of dividends and capital gains.
As shown in the right-hand column of Table 1, increased saving
and investment will eventually pay off in a higher capital
stock, higher real wages and greater consumption. Laurence
Kotlikoff of Boston University has estimated that switching
to a consumption tax would boost the nation's stock of plant
and equipment by nearly 27 percent after 20 years. A 27-percent
increase in the capital stock would mean nearly 10-percent
increases in real wages and real output, relative to their
level under an income tax.
In the near term—described
in the left-hand column of Table 1—greater
investment can be achieved only at the expense of consumption.
So, in the years immediately following tax reform, consumption
would be lower than it would have been under the current system.
On a cautionary note, the prospect of
tax reform may have a perverse effect on the economy in the
prereform period. Knowing that investment would soon be receiving
more favorable tax treatment, people would be likely to spend
more on consumption and defer investment in the months before
the new tax law takes effect.
The Effects on Interest Rates.
The real yield on short-term bonds
moves opposite from the capital stock, all else being constant.
Since the capital stock would gradually increase under a consumption
tax, relative to its level under an income tax, the real yields
on short-term corporate and Treasury debt would gradually
decline after tax reform, eventually stabilizing at about
three-fourths their current levels.
The time path of short-term municipal
bond yields would be quite different. Municipal bonds currently
have an advantage relative to corporate and Treasury bonds
because they are tax-exempt. Under either a national sales
tax or the Armey flat tax, this advantage would disappear:
all bonds would be treated the same. After the implementation
of tax reform, the yield on municipal bonds would jump upward
to match the yield on other bonds. Thereafter, the yields
on all short-term bonds would move in tandem.
The current return on a 30-year bond
is an average of the one-year returns expected over the next
30 years. Therefore, if people think that either a national
sales tax or the Armey flat tax is coming, a gradual closing
of the gap between long-term Treasury and long-term municipal
bond yields should already be apparent. There should be no
corresponding closure of the gap between short-term Treasury
and short-term municipal bond yields until reform is imminent.
The behavior of municipal bond yields
relative to Treasury bond yields suggests that traders began
taking the possibility of comprehensive tax reform seriously
following the appointment of Jack Kemp (R-New York) to chair
a reform commission (Chart 2). At the long end of the maturity
spectrum, recent months have seen the percentage gap between
30-year Treasury bond yields and 30-year municipal bond yields
cut in half, from 20 percent to 10 percent. However, no change
in tax regime is expected until after the 1996 elections:
no shrinkage of the yield gap is yet apparent for bonds that
mature before November 1996.
The Politics of Tax Reform: Winners
and Losers. The vast majority
of people would gain from the switch to a consumption tax.
But the gains would not be distributed evenly, and—especially
in the years immediately following reform—some
people would suffer net losses. Risky new businesses in high-growth,
capital-intensive industries would be clear winners from tax
reform. These firms would benefit from the more favorable
treatment of equity finance and the increased flow of savings
provided by a consumption tax. Holders of existing municipal
bonds would be short-term losers under the national sales
tax or Armey flat tax because these plans remove current tax
preferences for municipal bonds. (The USA tax plan would remove
the tax preference for new municipal bonds but retain it for
existing bonds.) People who live in high-tax areas—like
New England and the Great Lakes region—are
also hurt by tax reform in the short run because they lose
their ability to deduct state and local income and property
taxes. Similarly, homeowners would likely find that the fall
in long-term interest rates caused by tax reform would not,
at first, fully offset the elimination of the mortgage interest
and property tax deductions.
Conclusion
The choice between the current
U.S. income tax and a consumption tax is like the choice a
family makes when deciding whether to trade in its 5-year-old
car for a new model in its first year of production. The new
model has no track record. Its handling might take some getting
used to, and buying it would mean pulling together a down
payment. On the other hand, it has an engine that is more
powerful, more efficient, and easier to repair and maintain.
The performance of the older vehicle has been slowly deteriorating,
and the car needs more and more repair. While there's room
for disagreement on exactly which options package is right,
there can be little doubt that the consumption tax is an idea
whose time has come.
—Evan F. Koenig
and Lori L. Taylor
Beyond
the Border
Exchange Rates, Capital Flows and Monetary Policy in a Changing
World Economy
Does a country's exchange rate policy
influence its economic prosperity? This and other issues were
addressed during the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas' September
14-15 conference, "Exchange Rates, Capital Flows and
Monetary Policy in a Changing World Economy." An important
focus of the conference was what countries should think and
do about exchange rates. For example, a country can fix its
exchange rate, as most industrial countries, including the
United States, did under the Bretton Woods system for 25 years
after World War II. The other extreme among foreign exchange
choices is to let the rate float, as the United States has
more or less done since 1972. A third option for countries
is a policy somewhere in between that's aimed at controlling
exchange rate movements within predefined limits.
Do Exchange Rates Make a Difference?
Some economists have argued that
nominal exchange rates, those quoted in the daily newspapers,
have few effects on the real economy. In the 1970s, economist
Milton Friedman advocated floating nominal exchange rates
instead of fixed rates. Friedman argued that floating rates
would adjust to economic activity and let markets operate
more efficiently. Friedman and others believed that only changes
in real exchange rates—those adjusted
for price changes in each country—would
affect real economic activity.
Furthermore, economists have argued
that changes in nominal exchange rates would not affect real
exchange rates. Prices would adjust to offset changes in the
nominal rate. Suppose that France had a small devaluation
of the nominal exchange rate against the dollar, so that the
dollar bought a few more francs after the devaluation. According
to the argument, if a nominal devaluation occurred, France's
domestic prices would increase to offset the exchange rate
move. As an example, if the exchange rate went from 5 to 6
French francs per dollar, sellers might adjust by pushing
up French wine prices from 25 francs to 30. A 25 franc bottle
of wine with a 5 franc per dollar exchange rate is $5. A 30
franc bottle of wine at a 6 franc per dollar exchange rate
is still $5, even though a dollar now buys 6 francs instead
of 5. That is why a nominal devaluation would have no effect
on the real, inflation-adjusted exchange rates, and there
would be no real effects on the economy.
However, if a nominal devaluation occurred
without an offsetting increase in France's prices, there would
be real effects. A 20-percent devaluation of the franc with
no change in the franc price of French wine, for example,
would mean French wine would be 20 percent cheaper in dollars.
Americans would most likely buy more French wine and less
California wine. That would be a real effect. This scenario
more closely resembles how things really work.
The relationship between the U.S. dollar
and the Canadian dollar illustrates how changes in nominal
rates affect real rates. Chart 1 is a plot of the Canadian
dollar/U.S. dollar nominal and real exchange rates during
a period of fixed exchange rates—the
late 1960s and very early 1970s—and
during a period of floating rates—1972
to the present. If changes in the nominal exchange rate had
no effect on the real exchange rate, the real rate on this
chart would stay flat around zero, no matter how much the
nominal rate changed. But that is not what happened. When
Canada fixed its nominal exchange rate in the 1960s, real
exchange rate volatility declined. But when the Canadians
floated their dollar in 1972, real exchange rate volatility
also rose. Thus, when the nominal exchange rate moved around
a lot, so did the real rate. Clearly, nominal exchange rate
changes can have real effects.
Floating Exchange Rates
Despite this finding, many conference
speakers expressed support for floating exchange rate systems,
citing several advantages. Speaker Michael Dooley, professor
of economics at the University of California at Santa Cruz,
argued that a fixed exchange rate regime gives short-term
insurance for investors. By using a floating rate, these investors
bear more investment risk. The result is less movement of
the hot in-and-out money some analysts accuse of disrupting
many developing economies.
Another advantage of floating rates
is they are less likely to move so far out of line with economic
fundamentals as to create sudden megadevaluations. For example,
the Mexican peso's overvaluation and subsequent crash could
have been avoided with a floating exchange rate. Moreover,
it may be more difficult today to maintain an overvalued exchange
rate with the large size of international capital movements
and new innovations, such as derivatives. Conference speaker
Peter Garber of Brown University showed how derivatives could
render some standard tools for defending a currency, such
as raising interest rates to attract new capital, completely
ineffective in some cases.
Floating exchange rates also have their
problems. Speaker Jeff Frankel of the University of California
at Berkeley noted that floating exchange rates have tended
to be very volatile, and their volatility may also discourage
trade. Vittorio Corbo of the Catholic University of Chile
observed that exchange rate volatility may hamper international
investment because it makes it more risky. When investment
slows, so does overall economic growth. Frankel also explained
that exchange rate fluctuations may cause an exchange rate
bubble. Bubbles develop when speculators, thinking that a
move in a certain direction might continue, bet on the trend
no matter how far out of line with economic fundamentals it
actually is. This progressively wider wedge between the exchange
rate and economic fundamentals eventually gets corrected,
with negative repercussions for financial markets and economic
stability.
Fixed Exchange Rates
Heavily controlled exchange rates—those
that are pegged at a constant rate, allowed to crawl at a
preannounced rate or allowed to fluctuate within a band—received
a lot of interest in the 1980s, as World Bank economist Sebastian
Edwards pointed out. Many people thought that controlled rates
could serve as an anchor that tethered domestic prices to
international prices by targeting the exchange rate. The idea
was that managed exchange rates would serve as part of a credible
anti-inflation policy. Countries with pegged exchange rates,
it was believed, would be less likely to dare to expand their
money stocks at a faster rate than the countries to which
their exchange rates were pegged. Doing so would mean that
the exchange rate would have to be abandoned.[1]
However, fixed exchange rates have their
own their problems, as many conference participants pointed
out. Fixed exchange rates, or even currency boards, are not
as immutable as some might believe. The collapse of the European
exchange rate mechanism and the Mexican peso are two examples.
Also, Peter Garber argued that it is getting even harder for
countries to defend a fixed rate from speculative attacks
and bubbles. Sooner or later, these attacks always seem to
come if the exchange rate does not match the economic fundamentals.
Finally, countries that use the exchange
rate as a nominal anchor against inflation rarely reduce their
inflation rates to the level of the country whose currency
they're pegged to. This can lead to a serious overvaluation,
which is what happened in Mexico. Although exchange rate policy
contributed to a drastic drop in Mexican inflation, it was
not enough to match U.S. inflation. Because inflation in Mexico
grew faster than the exchange rate, Mexican products became
expensive relative to U.S. goods. Mexican imports rose and
capital inflows fell. The result was a balance of payments
crisis, an attack on the currency and a large, disruptive
devaluation.
Conclusion
One consensus of the conference
was that, despite valid circumstances for managing exchange
rate movements, floating rates appear to be a more practical
policy. The strongest case for fixed exchange rates could
be made for very small and very open economies, such as Panama
or Bermuda. But even in these cases, periodic exchange rate
adjustment could be necessary.
Participants wholeheartedly rejected
a return to the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates.
Also rejected was explicit monetary coordination between countries
if it meant domestic concerns would take a back seat to international
objectives. The consensus generally was that countries should
look toward domestic stability as their objective, which would
reduce long-run exchange rate volatility.
—Beverly Fox,
David Gould and Bill Gruben
| Note
- For small countries, Steve Hanke of Johns
Hopkins University and Allan Meltzer of Carnegie
Mellon University both endorsed something even
stronger—a currency board.
Steve Hanke argued that this currency arrangement
would ultimately lead to more stable financial
markets. For a more detailed analysis of currency
boards, see Carlos Zarazaga, "Can Currency
Boards Prevent Devaluations and Financial Meltdowns?"
Southwest Economy, Issue 4, 1995.
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Regional
Update
The Eleventh District economy grew at
a healthy pace in the fourth quarter of 1995. Fourth-quarter
data showed that employment growth slowed in Louisiana, accelerated
in New Mexico and remained quite strong in Texas. In early
January, Beige Book respondents reported continued economic
expansion but at a more moderate pace. Recent movements in
leading economic indicators also suggest that the District
economy is likely to grow at a slightly slower pace in 1996
than in 1995.
District nonfarm employment increased
at a 3.8-percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, a healthy
increase from the 2.8-percent annual average during the first
nine months of 1995 but slower than the very strong 4.8-percent
posted in 1994. Employment growth was concentrated in the
private sector, which grew at a 4.5-percent annual rate in
the fourth quarter, up from the 2.8-percent annual rate of
the first nine months of the year. In contrast, the volatile
government sector grew at 0.7-percent annual rate in the fourth
quarter, after posting a 2.8-percent growth rate in the first
nine months of 1995.
Fourth-quarter employment grew strongly
in construction, trade, business, health and transportation
industries. Trucking deregulation, which took effect in January
1995, likely contributed to the pickup in transportation industry
jobs in Texas. District construction activity continued to
increase at a healthy pace. Construction employment increased
strongly in the fourth quarter, jumping 12.2 percent. Recent
gains in housing permits suggest continued strength in home
building over the next several months.
Employment continued to decline in apparel
and transportation equipment and posted anemic growth in finance
and real estate. Texas industrial production declined in November
due to declines in mining and utilities.
While prospects remain good for the
Eleventh District, the January Beige Book suggests three trends
that might dampen growth in 1996. First, contacts expressed
concern about less stimulus from a slower growing national
economy. Second, labor market tightness is reported to have
recently begun to push up wages. Finally, an expected consolidation
of retailers might slow employment growth in that sector as
well as nonresidential construction.
—Keith R. Phillips
| About Southwest
Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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