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For release: Nov. 9, 2005
U.S. Net International Investment Position Will Stabilize Over
Time; Current Account Deficit Will Decline to Sustainable Levels:
St. Louis Fed’s Poole
St. Charles, Mo. — In addressing the U.S.'s
growing current account deficit, the question is not whether it
will fall but whether the inevitable adjustment is likely to be
painful and disrupt U.S. economic growth and stability—a “hard
landing.”
That was the viewpoint of William Poole, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis, in a speech to Lindenwood University
faculty and students today. And Poole’s answer to the question?
“A hard landing is very unlikely, provided that U.S. monetary
and fiscal authorities maintain sound policies,” he said.
“The Federal Reserve needs to pursue policies that yield low
inflation and financial stability, and the federal government needs
to pursue policies that yield fiscal balance in the long run. I
believe that the current account adjustment will be fairly slow
and orderly and that it may not begin for quite some time.”
Poole said a point that is not widely understood is that in the
U.S., unlike almost all other countries, a hard landing process
is “inherently self-limiting.” “U.S. assets owned
by international investors are mainly denominated in dollars, and
a large fraction of U.S. assets held abroad are denominated in foreign
currencies,” he said. “Dollar depreciation, should it
occur in a hard-landing process, will be self-limiting because the
dollar value of U.S. assets abroad will rise, thus improving the
U.S. net international investment position. Market participants,
knowing this fact, are therefore unlikely to drive down the foreign
currency value of the dollar in a rapid and disruptive fashion.”
Poole said the international financial markets view of U.S. international
capital account determination highlights the dynamic role of international
capital adjustments as investors exploit opportunities in globalized
financial markets. “Because the technological progress and
capital market liberalizations driving this process have evolved
over time, the process has been protracted,” he said. “Ultimately,
however, when portfolio adjustments have optimally exploited new
diversification opportunities, and as growth abroad rises, the net
international investment position of the U.S. will stabilize. So,
also, over time, will the current account deficit decline to sustainable
levels.”
According to Poole, the forces driving the U.S. capital account
represent a “persistent, but ultimately temporary,”
process that might result in a higher negative level of net claims
without necessarily posing a threat to long-run sustainability of
the U.S. current account. Nor, he added, will the transition to
a sustainable long-run path necessarily require wrenching adjustments
in domestic or international markets or in exchange rates.
“We can all benefit from our good fortune in having access
to increasingly safe, liquid and transparent financial markets,”
said Poole. “The United States has created for itself a comparative
advantage in capital markets, and we should not be surprised that
investors all over the world come to buy the product.”
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