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Commentary

Current Economic Conditions/Outlook

Timothy Geithner

Tue, January 18, 2005

This combination of fiscal sustainability problems, large external imbalances, and the tension in the existing exchange rate system creates the risk of unanticipated shocks to financial prices, even in a context where monetary policy credibility is strong. The probability of these shocks may be low, but it is higher than it has been, and higher than we should be comfortable with. These shocks could be large enough to lower future growth outcomes.

Timothy Geithner

Tue, January 18, 2005

By many measures, the economic landscape looks reasonably good.

Anthony Santomero

Mon, January 17, 2005

As we are in the fourth year of recovery, we have to be vigilant. And as long as the Fed is, people are aware that we are watching closely, I think the expansion can move in a very constructive way through 2005.

Susan Bies

Mon, January 17, 2005

The business sector is in good financial shape...In my view, even with a rise in interest rates and some moderation in profit growth, the business sector should remain financially strong and continue to expand.

Gary Stern

Mon, January 17, 2005

I think the economy is fundamentally sound, fundamentally resilient.  It doesn't require policy-makers getting things precisely correct, indeed it has a great ability to absorb shocks and surprises, positive and negative, and continue to advance.

Jeffrey Lacker

Mon, January 17, 2005

Adaptability will be increasingly important in the years ahead.  A worker can no longer count on an initial occupation to maintain its relative position over time.

Timothy Geithner

Wed, January 12, 2005

Our underlying fiscal position is stronger, our debt to GDP burden lower, our demographic cliff more moderate, and our trend growth rate substantially higher than that of the other major economies.

Cathy Minehan

Tue, January 11, 2005

We may be expecting too much if we think we can return to the late 90’s combination of unemployment in the low 4’s and low inflation.

Roger Ferguson

Tue, January 11, 2005

Relative to other recessions, this recession was shallow and did not appear to impart an unusual drag on investment, despite the sharp asset-price correction.

Jeffrey Lacker

Sun, January 02, 2005

The key improvement in 2004 has been the long-awaited pickup in net job growth.

Jeffrey Lacker

Sun, January 02, 2005

Looking forward to 2005, it seems reasonable to project a continuation of growth along a quite similar trajectory.

Jeffrey Lacker

Sun, January 02, 2005

My discussion of the outlook for 2005 has placed productivity trends rather than inflation at center stage, because it strikes me that greater uncertainty surrounds productivity over the coming year.

Jeffrey Lacker

Sun, January 02, 2005

We are well-positioned for fairly healthy economic conditions next year. Real growth, led by healthy capital formation and solid consumer outlays, should boost employment more rapidly than the working age population grows, and inflation should remain well-contained. A central banker couldn’t ask for much more than that.

Alan Greenspan

Mon, July 19, 2004

Both equity prices and capital goods spending have turned up over the past year, and the probability that economic activity might stagnate has receded.

Alan Greenspan

Tue, February 10, 2004

In retrospect, last year appears to have marked a transition from an extended period of subpar economic performance to one of more vigorous expansion.

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