Boston Globe Online
WASHINGTON - A good chef sharpens his knives. A good
carpenter hones her awl. And a good economist... seems to live
with the same dull tools of yesterday.
As the Federal Reserve showed Tuesday with its
surprising decision to leave interest rates unchanged, the strong
economy is giving off mixed and confusing signals. Many economists
claimed they saw clear signs of inflation, and they predicted
the Fed would move as usual to squelch it by raising the cost
of loans, a step to slow the strong economy.
But the Fed looked at the same picture and decided
otherwise. Its monetary policy makers may have had other motives
for standing pat - speculation includes internal and presidential
politics - but the decision revived a series of questions about
the strong economy: Are we measuring it incorrectly? Is it healthier
than the numbers show?
If the answer to those questions is yes, as a mix of economists across the politic
al spectrum believe, the implications are big. It
would mean that the strong economy can grow faster than economists
thought without sparking inflation - creating more jobs and higher
paychecks for millions of Americans.
Setting policy on interest rates is more art
than science, and an odd combination of recent signals has made
it less scientific than usual.
Housing is booming, but retail sales are down.
Consumers report plans to spend money, but credit card debt is
so high that many are going bankrupt. Unemployment is at a six-year
low, but there are few signs that it has forced businesses to
raise wages to attract workers and raise prices to offset the
wages, as many economists predicted.
Adding to the uncertainty, many economists are
challenging whether these economic trends are being measured accurately.
``We can't see inflation. It's unobserveable,''
said Larry Hunter, chief economist with Empower America, the policy
group led by Republican vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp.
``Inflation is sort of like a quark. All you can observe are the
traces it leaves.''
``I think the Fed is sitting down with the equivalent
of a 10-key adding machine,'' said Sen. Byron Dorgan, a North
Dakota Democrat. Economic yardsticks designed for a manufacturing
economy do not consider the impact of software, fax machines and
other modern productivity-enhancing tools. ``The whole thing has
passed them by,'' he said.
Alan Greenspan, the Fed chairman, expressed
frustration with his economic indicators in testimony before Congress
two years ago. ``The list of shortcomings in US economic data
is depressingly long,'' he said.
Greenspan added: ``Making inferences about the
future is always harder when readings on the economy are contaminated
by measurement error.''
Greenspan said measures of inflation are particularly
error-prone, and a commission of economists confirmed his opinion
last September. Headed by Michael Boskin of Stanford University,
the commission concluded that the consumer price index overstates the rise in the cost of living by
about 1.5 percentage points each year.
The price index measures the cost of a fixed
basket of goods. According to the commission, it does not consider
that products improve over time so buyers get more for their money,
as anyone who has bought a personal computer lately would likely
know. It does not adequately note that consumers might respond
to a price increase for one product, like beef, by substituting
a cheaper product, like chicken. It does not adequately factor
in the impact of discount outlets like Wal-Mart.
Similarly, economists often measure productivity
as worker output per hour. But newer measures include not only
hours worked but the quality of their work and the capital employed,
said Dale Jorgenson, a Harvard University economist.
Some economists challenge the way the government
measures imports, exports, producer prices and other economic
trends. Unemployment, for example, does not include people who
have given up looking for a job. Because that group of people
is thought to be growing, the unemployment number may understate
the number of people without jobs.
But economists are split on the effect that
mismeasurement has on public policy.
These things have to do with long-run trends
and not the short-term issues that concern the Fed, Jorgenson
said. In setting interest rates, he said, ``the Fed focuses on
indicators of inflation - commodity prices, labor costs - and
we know those are going down.''
Moreover, if biases have been built into the
consumer price index, then they have been there for years. If
a whole series of inflation figures have been inflated themselves,
then comparisons between them are still valid.
But some indexes, like productivity, may show
an increasing bias over time. ``We measure the service sector
less well than the manufacturing sector, and the service sector
has been growing,'' said Joseph Stiglitz, chairman of the White
House Council of Economic Advisers. ``That means the bias has
been growing.''
As a result, Stiglitz contended, progress that
the Clinton administration has made in boosting productivity has
not shown up yet in the numbers.
If Stiglitz and other like-minded economists
are correct, the nation may have more people available to work
than previously thought. The economy may also be producing more
with its current work force and level of investment. And any signs
of inflation may be overstated.
All that would indicate that the economy has
more capacity to grow without inflation - and that the Fed should
allow it to grow. The Fed may be taking such a position itself
by avoiding an interest rate increase. Several years ago, many
economists say, the current figures for productivity and unemployment
would have pushed it to do just that.
This story ran on page d1 of the Boston Globe on 09/26/96.