The Daily - The Economy Is Booming. Or Is It?
Episode Date: August 1, 2019The United States economy is in the middle of a record-long expansion. So why is the government deploying an economic weapon it last used during the 2008 financial crisis? Guest: Ben Casselman, who co...vers the economy for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: The Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time in more than a decade as it tried to insulate the economy from President Trump’s trade war and a global slowdown.The quarter-point reduction is unlikely to get you a better mortgage rate. Here’s where you might see effects.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is Daily.
Today, the U.S. economy is in the middle of a historic boom. So why is the government
now deploying an economic weapon it last used during the financial crisis?
Plus, last night's Democratic debate.
It's Thursday, August 1st.
Hey, is C-SPAN where it's at for Federal Reserve announcements?
I mean, it'll be on every channel, man.
On Wednesday afternoon, economics reporter Ben Castleman stopped by the studio.
C-SPAN will have the whole thing.
I checked online. We'll keep it on C-SPAN.
So, Ben, give us a little bit of context about what we're waiting for.
So, the Fed announced 28 minutes ago that it is cutting
interest rates for the first time since the financial crisis. They cut a quarter percentage
point, which sounds very, very small. Truly. But makes a very big difference. There had been some
talk they might go crazy and cut a half percentage point, but they didn't go that crazy. Okay. We are now waiting to hear Jay Powell, the Fed chair,
come out and talk to us about why they did that and what that means.
And what everybody's going to be listening for is any hint of what happens next.
And was there a lot of debate around that decision?
There has been a lot of debate in the months leading up to this.
Because on the surface, the economy right now is pretty good, right?
The unemployment rate is close to a five-decade low.
This is now the longest economic expansion
in American history.
We have been adding jobs
for eight or nine years straight now.
Wages are rising.
I mean, things are pretty good.
And normally the Fed cuts rates when things are bad or when it's worried things are pretty good. And normally, the Fed cuts rates when things
are bad or when it's worried things are getting bad. And so, there were a lot of people who looked
at that and said, why would the Fed be taking action now when the economy is in pretty good
shape? In fact, often, in a situation like this, you might expect the Fed to be raising interest
rates to try to keep the economy from overheating. But they're looking out there and they're seeing
a lot of things to be worried about in overheating. But they're looking out there and they're seeing a lot of things to be worried about
in the future.
And they're basically trying to take out an insurance policy here and make sure that we
don't go over the edge.
So there are real differences of opinion, it sounds like, about whether the federal
government should intervene in this moment.
And we're waiting to hear what the Fed chief, Jerome Powell, says about why they did it.
That's right.
The Federal Reserve announcing
today it's cutting interest rates by a quarter of a percent. Okay, we're going to listen.
Can you guys turn this up? And I'll discuss the thinking behind today's interest rate reduction
and then turn to the path forward. As the year began, both the economy and monetary policy were
in a good place. The unemployment rate was below 4%, and inflation had been running near
our 2% objective. So he's making the, it's been good case. That's exactly right. Over the first
half of the year, the economy grew at a healthy pace, and job gains pushed unemployment to near
a half-century low. So we're waiting for a but. We're waiting for a but. It will come. People who
live and work in low- and middle-income communities tell us that many who have struggled to find work are now getting opportunities to add new and better chapters to their lives.
What we're listening for is how big is the but.
The median committee participants' assessments of the neutral rate of interest and the longer-run normal rate of unemployment have also declined this year.
I warned you the fireworks were muted, right?
Yes.
These changes in the anticipated path of interest rates have eased financial conditions and have supported the economy.
Are we sure that we want this to be a full episode of The Daily?
That only you can decide.
But manufacturing output has declined for two consecutive quarters.
But?
Business fixed investment fell in the second quarter.
This is the downside.
That's the downside.
Foreign growth has disappointed, particularly in manufacturing and notably in the euro area and China.
So what case is he making here?
He's making the case that there is a lot of uncertainty right now and that there are signs that the global economy is slowing and that that might be starting to affect the U.S. as well.
After simmering early in the year, trade policy tensions nearly boiled over in May and June.
And that that is making businesses nervous about what the future looks like. Looking through this
variability, our business contacts tell us that the ongoing uncertainty is making some companies
more cautious about their capital spending. And that's maybe a sign that the economy is not as
strong as some of these other measures might suggest. We're mindful that inflation's return
to 2% may be further delayed
and that continued below-target inflation
could lead to a worrisome and difficult-to-reverse
downward slide in longer-term expectations.
It's a sense that the Fed needs to
insure against things getting worse.
It's not just that things are weaker overseas
as they could get weaker still.
It's not just that there's a trade war.
It's that the trade war could get worse.
And the Fed would rather give the economy sort of a little bit of a kick now
so that it has some momentum in case things get worse
rather than waiting for things to actually slow down
and needing to give it a bigger shove to get things moving.
It will continue to monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook
and will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion with a strong labor market and inflation
near its symmetric 2% objective.
I feel like you guys have your own vocabulary.
There is absolutely a Fed vocabulary.
It's subtle.
Okay, thank you very much.
Thank you.
So is that all crystal clear to you?
Yeah, crystal clear like an opaque window.
Can we start with a really basic question?
What is the role of the Fed?
And in particular, what's the role of its leader in a moment like this?
The Fed is our primary tool
for trying to keep the economy in a good place.
It's as simple as that.
They have two missions.
They're meant to try to maintain maximum employment,
to basically keep unemployment as low as possible,
and price stability,
to try to avoid letting inflation get out of control.
And their main tool for dealing with that is interest rates.
And tell me how that works.
So the Fed basically sets the interest rates that are then used to decide everything else
through the economy, what your mortgage rate is going to be, what companies that want to borrow
money in order to invest or to hire more workers, what they're going to pay. When interest rates are
low, it's cheap to borrow. And so that encourages people to borrow more and to spend more, and that helps the
economy go faster. The risk is if it goes too fast, then we start to see inflation. Prices go up,
and they start going up so fast that that can become a really big problem in the economy,
right? We saw this in this country in the 70s. The Fed doesn't want to let that happen. So if
the economy starts to go too fast, they're going to try to tap the brakes and slow it down. By raising the
interest rate, which raises the cost of borrowing, which raises the price of things like your
mortgage or your credit card bill. That's right. Or for a business, they'll be less likely to borrow
money. So they'll be less likely to keep investing. They'll be less likely to hire more workers and
it'll slow things down. Okay. So it's been how long since we did this last?
Since the middle of the recession, more than a decade ago.
Okay, so help us understand how we got to this moment today where the Federal Reserve decided to lower interest rates for the first time since then.
then? So, in the middle of the financial crisis, the Fed had to act aggressively to try to basically keep the economy from pitching into the Great Depression again. They cut interest rates as far
as they could, all the way to zero. To zero. To zero. Which means what exactly? It means,
essentially, for the safest borrowers, they could borrow money for practically nothing.
for the safest borrowers,
they could borrow money for practically nothing.
There was essentially...
Cost-free borrowing of money.
That's right.
I mean, no actual human being
could borrow money for literally zero,
but it was as cheap as money could be.
If you wanted to borrow money,
you could have it.
And what's the rationale for doing that?
That the economy was in really bad shape
and they needed to find some way
to encourage businesses to invest, consumers to spend, to try to get things moving again.
And they went to lengths that the Fed has never gone to before to try to make that happen.
And it worked in the sense that the economy began to get better.
The unemployment rate got as high as 10%.
It began to fall. Jobs had been getting cut at the rate of hundreds of thousands a month. They began to increase. Incomes gradually began to go back up, right? Corporate profits rebounded. The stock market rebounded.
And what's happening to that interest rate as that recovery begins. For most of that period, nothing at all. It stayed at zero for years.
Even though the economy was starting to see some signs of improvement, it wasn't enough that the Fed felt that they could start to raise interest rates.
And when does that start to change?
So finally, at the end of 2015.
Good afternoon.
The Fed raises rates.
Earlier today, the Federal Open Market Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate by one quarter percentage point.
A quarter point.
Bringing it to one quarter to one half percent.
The smallest possible increase they could make.
And that's a kind of vote of confidence in the health of the economy.
That's right. The economy was finally starting to return to normal.
As I will explain, the process of normalizing interest rates is likely to proceed gradually.
And they actually talked about it. They talked about it that way as normalization,
that they were trying to get back to a period where interest rates were no longer
near zero. They were the way we think about interest rates, right? It actually costs money
to borrow again. This action marks the end of an extraordinary seven-year period during which the
federal funds rate was held near zero to support the recovery of the economy from the worst financial crisis and recession
since the Great Depression. So they raise interest rates by a quarter point and then they do it again
and they do it again and they do it again. They eventually do it nine times over that period from
2015 until just last year. Eventually rates were basically at two and a quarter to two and a half points.
Still very, very low by historic standards, but more normal compared to where they had been in the middle of the recession.
And at the end of all these gradual interest rate increases, where does the economy stand?
So the economy right now is good.
There are a lot of caveats and we can go through a lot of those
caveats. But on a basic level, the economy right now is in good shape.
We'll be right back. Ben, I think we should go through those caveats for just a moment.
This has felt a bit like a funny moment in the economy because many Americans see that the economy is doing well, but there's also a pretty pervasive sense of insecurity.
Does that feel right?
I think that's right.
I think that it helps to step back and think about what we even mean
when we say, how is the economy doing?
So one way to think about that is, how is the economy doing right now?
Do people have jobs?
Do they have incomes that are sufficient to pay for their needs and for their desires?
And in that sense, things right now are looking really good.
But there are concerns about where things are in sort of a larger context.
And I think that's some of what you're picking up on, which is, okay, I have a job, but is
it enough to set aside money for retirement?
I have a job, but is it enough to pay off my student loans?
Am I ever going to be able to buy a house?
Am I confident that my job is not going to be lost to a robot or an algorithm or to a worker overseas. And that, I think, ends up getting to this sort of larger question of whether this
economy is working for the average person. If you own stocks, you're doing great. If you were just
relying on wage income, not so much. And if you are further down to the bottom of the ladder,
if you have less education, if you are in a part of the country where there aren't a lot of good jobs, if you are black or brown or an immigrant, you may very well
be working a job that's part-time, that may not offer health insurance, where you may be a gig
worker who's not an employee at all. For those people, this economy doesn't feel like it's
working. And so they can look at this and say, I hear the unemployment rate is low, and I believe that. I can get a job, but it doesn't
feel like I can afford that sort of middle-class life that I might have anticipated. Okay. So,
with that in mind, what are we to make of this decision by the Fed just 35 minutes ago to cut the interest rates.
So the conventional wisdom has been that all that stuff I was just saying about the long run
and inequality and all of those concerns, the conventional wisdom has been none of that is
something the Fed should even be thinking about. They are thinking about how is the economy doing
today and where is it going over the next couple of years.
But I think there was a really interesting moment
in the press conference.
Powell made a point where he said,
earlier this year when things were going so well,
we were seeing wage growth especially at the bottom.
And there's been a bit of a shift
in the way that the Fed has been thinking
over the last several years,
where there's a recognition that
in periods of a really strong economy, the benefits often flow disproportionately to people
at the bottom, to the exact same people that we've been saying have been left behind in a lot of the
recovery. It helps people at the bottom. That's right. And there's a pretty simple reason for
that. When the economy is really strong, and especially when the unemployment rate is really low, it gives bargaining power to people who don't normally have it.
So we've written stories about people with criminal records getting jobs, people with disabilities
getting jobs, people who've been out of the workforce for a really long time getting jobs,
or being able to demand better pay. Companies offering training.
We saw just the other day,
Amazon announced a big training program
because they're saying,
we can't find the people that we really want to hire,
so we'll hire other people and we'll train them up.
We'll give them skills and we'll pay them more as a result.
So when unemployment is low
and the economy is doing really well,
the most vulnerable members of our economy
suddenly have more leverage and greater opportunity.
That's exactly right.
And what Powell was saying there is this is finally happening.
Why would we let it end?
We should do everything we can to try to keep this going while we can
because it's finally benefiting the people
who didn't benefit
for such a long time. And because we're in that moment right now, that kind of moment where the
unemployment rate is really low and it's starting to help people at the bottom, keeping things going
for longer, at least in theory, will help those people at the bottom more. And maybe some of that
even lasts when the economy eventually does slow. Some of
those benefits will stick around. So even though the Federal Reserve doesn't see its job as kind of
socioeconomic engineering, fixing the income inequality in this country, you're saying the
interest rate cut is in a way designed to try to fix that. That's right. The Fed has faced a lot of criticism for a long time
for thinking mostly about people at the top, for helping Wall Street, for helping finance,
and not thinking about the way that its policies flow through the whole economy. And there have
been groups that have been pushing, saying, hey, don't get overstressed about inflation.
Don't get too worried about what's happening on Wall Street.
Think about how your policies affect people who are often left out of the economy.
And the way to help them is to let the economy get hot, hotter maybe than the Fed in the past would have been comfortable.
And Powell, to some extent, is saying, I'm buying into that, at least to some degree.
And it may not be his overriding goal,
but it's baked in to how the Federal Reserve behaved on Wednesday.
That's exactly right.
Ben, everything you've just said makes me think that
the economy's doing pretty well.
The Federal Reserve wants to keep it that way,
but that it sees signs of storm clouds.
So does everything that happened today
pretty much mean that soon enough
there's going to be some sort of problem in the economy,
some sort of recession?
Is that kind of what happened today,
that we were officially put on notice,
that the good times are probably going to come to an end
in the near future?
So there are sort of two paths you could think about here.
One is now that we've gone from a period where we're raising interest rates to a period where
we're cutting interest rates, we've officially crossed over the peak, and now we're on the way
down. That's one interpretation, that we're going into a cutting cycle, into a downturn that the
Fed has to respond to. There's another possibility,
which is what the Fed is hoping is happening here, which is that the Fed is just trying to
nudge the economy along so that it doesn't have to take those more aggressive moves down the road.
And we don't know yet which of those two paths we're on. The Fed's going to be watching those numbers very, very
closely to try to figure out whether it needs to keep cutting or whether it can get by with a cut
or two and just keep the economy going. When will we know? Economists almost never see a recession
coming ahead of time. The best they can do is know that we are in a recession now. The Fed is trying to prevent
us from falling into one. We won't know if they succeeded until we look up one day and we say
we're in a recession. Or we are talking in six months and we say, man, we're not in a recession.
That's right. So that's when we'll know. On some level, if the Fed succeeds, we may never know.
We will never know exactly what would have happened in the economy if the Fed had not taken this action today.
So if we don't fall into a recession, we'll never be able to play it back through without the cut and say, would we have gone into a recession if it weren't for the Fed?
Right.
Because like you said, the Fed is very subtle.
They try to be.
Thank you, Ben.
Thanks so much.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Tonight, we have to get to the heart and soul of who we are as Democrats.
Joe Biden told wealthy donors that nothing fundamentally would change if he were president.
Kamala Harris said she's not trying to restructure society.
Well, I am.
From the opening moments of Wednesday night's Democratic debate,
the leading candidates on stage, former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris, were repeatedly attacked by their opponents
as guardians of the status quo
on issues from healthcare to immigration.
What did you mean when you said,
when a woman works outside the home,
it's resulting in, quote, the deterioration of family?
No, what I- And that we are avoiding, these are quotes. It was the title of the op-ed.
And that just causes concern for me because we know America's women are working.
Thank you, Senator Gillibrand. I want to bring Senator Harris into this conversation.
Either he no longer believes it. I mean, I just think he needs to.
I never believed it.
Thank you, Senator Harris. Please respond.
Much of the night's focus was on Biden. In a series of pointed exchanges,
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand,
former Housing Secretary Julian Castro,
and Senator Cory Booker
challenged Biden on his past record and current positions.
The fact is that there's a lot we've done,
but here's the deal.
The fact is that we're talking about things
that occurred a long, long time ago.
And now all of a sudden, you know, I...
Both Biden and Harris defended their records against what they said were unfair and inaccurate attacks.
Everybody's talking about how terrible I am on these issues.
Barack Obama knew exactly who I was.
He had 10 lawyers do a background check on everything about me and civil rights
and civil liberties, and he chose me
and he said it was the best decision he made.
I'll take his judgment.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.