Public Hearing - February 25, 2016

    


       1                         NEW YORK STATE
                      2016 ECONOMIC AND REVENUE CONSENSUS
       2                     FORECASTING CONFERENCE

       3      ------------------------------------------------------

       4
                                         State Capitol - Room 124
       5                                 Albany, New York

       6                                 February 25, 2016
                                         1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
       7

       8      PRESIDING:

       9         Robert F. Mujica Jr.
                 Budget Director, NYS Division of the Budget
      10

      11      PRESENT:

      12
                 Senator Diane J. Savino
      13         Chair, Banking Committee,
                 and IDC Member of Senate Finance Committee
      14
                 Senator Catharine Young
      15         Chair, Senate Finance Committee

      16         Senator Liz Krueger
                 Ranking Minority Member, Senate Finance Committee
      17
                 Assemblyman Herman D. Farrell, Jr.
      18         Chair, Assembly Ways and Means Committee

      19         Assemblyman Robert C. Oaks
                 Ranking Minority Member, Assembly Ways and
      20         Means Committee

      21         Robert B. Ward, Deputy Comptroller
                 NYS Office of the Comptroller
      22

      23

      24

      25







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       1
              SPEAKERS:                                     PAGE
       2
              Michael Jacobs                                  17
       3      New York City Independent Budget Office

       4      James Diffley (presentation interrupted)        31
              IHS Economics
       5
              Jason Bram (via telephone)                      32
       6      Federal Reserve Bank of New York

       7      James Diffley (presentation resumed)            47
              IHS Economics
       8
              Hugh Johnson                                    64
       9      Hugh Johnson Advisors, LLC

      10      Chris Vavares                                   83
              Macroeconomic Advisers
      11
              Commence questions to the panelists            100
      12

      13

      14

      15

      16

      17

      18

      19

      20

      21

      22

      23

      24

      25







                                                                   3
       1             Good afternoon.

       2             I'd like to welcome everyone to the annual

       3      Economic and Revenue Consensus Forecasting

       4      Conference.

       5             My name is Robert Mujica, Director of the

       6      Budget.

       7             Joining me today at the joint economic

       8      revenue consensus forecasting panel are:

       9             To my right, Senator Catharine Young,

      10      Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee;

      11             Assemblyman Herman D. Farrell, Chairman of

      12      the Assembly Ways and Means Committee;

      13             Senator Diane Savino, Chair of the Senate

      14      Banking Committee, and member of the Senate Finance

      15      Committee;

      16             Senator Liz Krueger, Ranking Member of the

      17      Senate Finance Committee;

      18             Assemblyman Robert C. Oaks, Ranking Member of

      19      the Assembly Ways and Means Committee;

      20             And, Robert B. Ward, Deputy Comptroller.

      21             I'm pleased to be presiding over this panel

      22      for the first time.

      23             Today's conference represents the first step

      24      in what we all hope will be a smooth process towards

      25      another on-time balanced budget.







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       1             Each member of this panel will have the

       2      opportunity to provide brief opening remarks.

       3             Afterwards, we'll hear testimony from a

       4      cross-section of experts who will offer their

       5      perspectives on the current economic and revenue

       6      situation.

       7             Let me begin with some positive news.

       8             New York State's main-street economy is doing

       9      quite well.

      10             We have been seeing some of the strongest

      11      rates of private-sector job growth since the heady

      12      days of the high-tech Y2K bubble, but this time,

      13      without the bubble.

      14             The state economy has become more diversified

      15      and less dependent on the financial sector.

      16             Our construction sector, professional and

      17      business services, and tourism-related industries

      18      are doing well, and many of the jobs being created

      19      pay solid, middle-class wages.

      20             Of course, we also know that not every

      21      New Yorker has been able to share in the relative

      22      prosperity, so we continue to work on this issue.

      23             Also, the New York State economy is highly

      24      regionalized, and some parts are still trying to

      25      recover from the job losses that were lost during







                                                                   5
       1      the last recession.

       2             We've come a long way, but there still

       3      remains a lot to do.

       4             Of course, we also know that, despite our

       5      recent successes, the financial sector still

       6      contributes disproportionately to the state's

       7      revenue stream.

       8             By our estimates, both this year's and last

       9      year's bonus seasons were either flat or down.

      10             And if the volatility we're seeing thus far

      11      this year continues, we will fully expect that it

      12      will, next year's bonus season could be even worse.

      13             And those forms of non-bonus income that are

      14      also important components of our revenue base, such

      15      as capital-gains realizations, will also likely be

      16      negatively affected next year.

      17             Because of the lag between economic activity

      18      and the revenues generated by that activity, we will

      19      likely not see the full impact of these recent

      20      developments until well into the 2017-18 fiscal

      21      year.

      22             National economic growth appears to be stuck

      23      in a low-growth rut.

      24             For sure, some areas of domestic economy are

      25      doing well: autos, housing, and restaurants.







                                                                   6
       1             But we have, virtually, recession-like

       2      conditions in the energy sector and the

       3      manufacturing outside of the auto industry.

       4             Just as the U.S. was poised to take its

       5      current place in the world's leading liquid-energy

       6      producer, the Chinese economy, whose energy needs at

       7      one time seemed insatiable, began to slow.

       8             As they say, timing is everything.

       9             We seem to be living in a world where low oil

      10      prices have become a net negative for the U.S.

      11      economy instead of a positive.

      12             Who would have thought that was even a remote

      13      possibility five years ago.

      14             Global economic conditions remain grim,

      15      helping to strengthen the U.S. dollar, and as a

      16      result, corporate earnings have been generally

      17      dismal, particularly in the export and energy

      18      sectors.

      19             Unfortunately, those businesses that are most

      20      affected by these adverse conditions are

      21      disproportionately represented in the major stock

      22      market indices.

      23             Equity markets noted, my first few weeks as

      24      budget director, with a 10 percent correction in the

      25      middle of the Wall Street bonus season.







                                                                   7
       1             Not ideal conditions to begin budget

       2      discussions.

       3             We all know that the Federal Reserve has

       4      finally embarked on a path towards interest-rate

       5      normalization, and, historically, there has been a

       6      shift in monetary policy.

       7             New York State, the home of the world's

       8      financial capital, will be disproportionately

       9      affected.

      10             Again, we look to the panel for guidance on

      11      the timing of the future Central Bank actions.

      12             Recent events have demonstrated how sensitive

      13      markets can be to the shifting expectations

      14      surrounding Federal Reserve policy, and the

      15      resulting market gyrations are likely to have a

      16      larger impact on the state economy than the nation

      17      as a whole.

      18             So while some numbers are quite strong -- our

      19      economy now has more private-sector job growth than

      20      ever before -- for example, we must remind ourselves

      21      that significant risks remain.

      22             Thanks to the greater diversification of the

      23      state economy and prudent state budgeting practices,

      24      we are weathering the weakness in bonus payouts

      25      without too much difficulty this year.







                                                                   8
       1             Thanks -- that said, this is exactly the

       2      right forum for acknowledging that adding

       3      uncertainty to our income and revenue projections,

       4      and we must resolve to plan accordingly in the

       5      future years.

       6             So it is against this backdrop of economic

       7      uncertainty that we embark upon this

       8      revenue-consensus process.

       9             It is important to note, that while there are

      10      differences in our forecasts at a fundamental level,

      11      there is broad agreement that New York State faces

      12      substantial risk, given the nature of its revenue

      13      base.

      14             We will need to take the types of

      15      responsible, necessary actions proposed in the

      16      executive budget, on both the revenue and spending

      17      sides, to strengthen New York's fiscal condition.

      18             For five years we have worked together to

      19      enact on-time, fiscally-responsible budgets that

      20      embrace the principle that state spending must grow

      21      slowly -- or, slower than the national economy.

      22             With the establishment of the 2 percent

      23      spending benchmark, the unsustainable trends of

      24      yesteryear have been reversed, and we are seeing

      25      measurable improvements in the state's financial







                                                                   9
       1      position.

       2             By controlling and managing spending growth,

       3      we have reduced the need to engage in

       4      overly-aggressive revenue projections, and all

       5      parties deserve credit for this responsible

       6      budget-making.

       7             I am particularly interested in hearing from

       8      our expert panel as to when global conditions can be

       9      expected to significantly improve, and when we can

      10      expect the benefits of low gasoline and heating oil

      11      prices to more than offset the negative impacts to

      12      our economy.

      13             We also would like to hear your estimates as

      14      to when equity markets might be expected to bottom

      15      out.

      16             Each of the forecasts before us today

      17      represents a good-faith contribution to the

      18      consensus process.

      19             Looking ahead, I know that we are all

      20      committed to meeting the statutory March 1st

      21      deadline for a consensus revenue agreement.

      22             Revenue consensus is an important component

      23      of achieving our shared goal of a timely and

      24      responsible enacted budget.

      25             And at this point, I'd like to offer to the







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       1      other members of this panel an opportunity to make

       2      their opening remarks.

       3             Senator.

       4             SENATOR YOUNG:  Thank you.

       5             Thank you, Budget Director Mujica.

       6             And, I also welcome the State Legislators and

       7      our distinguished panel of experts here today, and

       8      everyone who is in attendance, as we go over our

       9      annual conference on economic and revenue

      10      forecasting.

      11             As you all know, we're here to listen to the

      12      testimony of our invited guests panel of experts, in

      13      order to have that testimony help our fiscal

      14      committees reach a consensus forecast on the economy

      15      and tax revenues.

      16             We are eager to hear your views on the status

      17      of the economy, Wall Street, and the state, in

      18      general.

      19             The Senate and the Assembly fiscal committees

      20      have now released our economic and revenue

      21      projections for the remainder of the current fiscal

      22      year, and for state fiscal year 2017.

      23             And you have been provided with those

      24      forecasts.

      25             This conference is the important first step







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       1      to helping the two houses of the Legislature and the

       2      Division of Budget come to an agreement on a

       3      budget -- I guess the Governor is part of that too,

       4      right? -- by helping to come to an agreement on

       5      revenue.

       6             After we reach a consensus on revenues and

       7      other available sources of funding for fiscal-year

       8      2017 budget, the legislative budget process can

       9      commence working through the details of various

      10      appropriation bills and Article 7 bills as we

      11      approach the start of a new fiscal year.

      12             I have to agree with Budget Director Mujica

      13      about the path of fiscal responsibility that we have

      14      been on for the several last years, by controlling

      15      spending, but at the same time, we are looking in

      16      the Senate, as the majority, to invest in important

      17      programs.

      18             Whether it's tax relief for New Yorkers,

      19      creating jobs and opportunities, investing in

      20      education and transportation, all of these are

      21      important to New Yorkers in improving their quality

      22      of life.

      23             And so we look forward to working together to

      24      make things happen.

      25             Again, I would like to thank the members of







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       1      the panel for taking the time out of their schedules

       2      to be here with us today.

       3             I look forward to the analysis and insights

       4      that we will receive from you.

       5             And I would suggest that, today, we in the

       6      Legislature and representatives of the Governor,

       7      begin, in earnest, the discussions which ultimately

       8      will lead to another on-time state budget.

       9             So thank you very much.

      10             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Senator.

      11             ASSEMBLYMAN FARRELL:  I look forward to

      12      hearing the panelists, your thoughts on economic

      13      outlook for both the state and nation, with a

      14      particular focus on your views about the outlook of

      15      New York State's economy and the increasing risks we

      16      face, going forward.

      17             I am particularly interested in hearing your

      18      assessment as to how the unbalance of risk for the

      19      national and state economies will affect New York's

      20      fiscal outlook.

      21             This analysis is important to us as we look

      22      to gauge the economy, and to act as effective as

      23      possible.

      24             Your independent viewpoints, along with

      25      today's discussion, help to provide a solid







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       1      foundation as we discuss and debate various aspects

       2      of the budget.

       3             And I look forward to being here and hearing

       4      your comments.

       5             Thank you.

       6             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Chairman.

       7             Senator Savino.

       8             SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, Budget Director

       9      Mujica.

      10             I'm very pleased to be here today with my

      11      colleagues and our new budget director.

      12             And on behalf of Senator Klein and the

      13      members of the Independent Democratic Conference,

      14      I want to thank all of the panelists for joining us.

      15             We look forward to hearing your thoughts on

      16      the outlook for New York State, and the economy,

      17      more generally.

      18             As the national and state economies continue

      19      to expand in the aftermath of the great recession,

      20      there is still uncertainly as to how widespread and

      21      sustainable the recovery in New York State will

      22      ultimately be.

      23             We continue to be concerned about weak

      24      economic growth in the housing markets.

      25             And in New York State, we continue to see







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       1      that wage growth still lags behind the national

       2      pace, and the unemployment rate is expected to

       3      remain at 5.5 percent.

       4             This slow economic recovery, coupled with the

       5      exorbitant costs of everyday life in New York,

       6      continue to present a challenge to working

       7      New Yorkers.

       8             The Independent Democratic Conference

       9      believes that this is a persistent problem that

      10      requires the State's attention.

      11             It's also important to remember the broader

      12      context in which we're working, because there are

      13      still many risks threatening the state's recovery.

      14             New York's role in the national economy means

      15      that disruptions at the national and global levels

      16      can have an immediate impact on the state.

      17             Declining oil prices and slow global economic

      18      growth have caused volatility that could threaten

      19      New York's recovery.

      20             Therefore, today's discussion will be crucial

      21      in assessing the realities of our economic situation

      22      so that we can develop an understanding of how to

      23      best move forward to face our challenges.

      24             The consensus that we're confident we will

      25      reach will lay the foundation for passing an on-time







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       1      budget that will allow the state economy to continue

       2      growing, and will enable New York's working families

       3      to prosper.

       4             We are eager to begin laying the groundwork

       5      for that process, and to hear the input of all of

       6      our panelists in that regard.

       7             Thank you for your participation.

       8             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you.

       9             Senator Krueger.

      10             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you all for being

      11      here today.

      12             I think that, pretty much, all the

      13      introducers have raised exactly the same issues, so

      14      I don't think I need to give a speech.

      15             Thank you.

      16             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Senator.

      17             Assemblyman Oaks.

      18             ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Yes, I would just like to

      19      say, thank you, for all of our panel to be here

      20      today.

      21             For me, this is -- we depend on a lot of

      22      internal information, and us processing things, to

      23      try to get to the end product.

      24             I think today is the opportunity to hear some

      25      expert advice, and to hear if we're on the right







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       1      track, or we're off.

       2             As far as the Assembly Minority, we -- we're

       3      very close in a lot of the numbers to what the

       4      Governor has put out.  Sometimes we come off a bit

       5      more than that.

       6             But I know that, for us, we see, you know,

       7      just policy-wise, that, tax cuts, we have some

       8      middle-class tax cuts that ought to become

       9      permanent.

      10             We have some on higher earners that might --

      11      are set to expire.

      12             The question of whether that should be done,

      13      we would agree that they should, to help stimulate.

      14             And, also, giving our small businesses

      15      predictability of our -- what our tax structure is.

      16      And we always tweak it some.

      17             But, always looking forward to hearing your

      18      input, so that we, as I said, get -- can get to that

      19      final -- our target date of the end of March for a

      20      state budget.

      21             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you,

      22      Assemblyman.

      23             Bob Ward, do you have anything,

      24      Deputy Comptroller?

      25             ROBERT B. WARD:  Comptroller DiNapoli has







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       1      observed that, although the state's fiscal position

       2      currently is strong, there is rising uncertainty

       3      about economic conditions that we are watching

       4      closely.

       5             The report on the executive budget that the

       6      comptroller released yesterday, included cautionary

       7      comments about the prospect of slowing revenue

       8      growth, and the possibility of increasing budgetary

       9      challenges for the state, in coming years.

      10             We look forward to learning more from the

      11      informed analysis of the economic experts gathered

      12      for today's meeting.

      13             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Bob.

      14             So we'll start with the presenters.

      15             Michael Jacobs, from the New York City

      16      Independent Budget Office.

      17             MICHAEL JACOBS:  It's on?

      18             Okay.

      19             I'm a little concerned.  I had a handout

      20      I was going to be talking from, and I don't have a

      21      copy in my blue folder.

      22             Is it, somewhere?

      23             They were being printed up earlier, so they

      24      exist.

      25             My presentation will be easier to follow with







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       1      some of the numbers.

       2             Okay.

       3             Just keep in mind, I'm going to be presenting

       4      an outlook and a forecast that we produced in late

       5      November.

       6             And a lot of the more specific forecasts of

       7      growth and employment, income and output, are a lot

       8      more optimistic than either what, you know, is

       9      currently warranted, given problems in the -- the

      10      output problems in the last quarter of 2015 and the

      11      financial-market uncertainty.

      12             So, you know, this is what we were thinking a

      13      couple of months ago.

      14             We're actually in the middle of revising the

      15      forecast.  I can assure you it's not going to be

      16      quite as optimistic.

      17             So, with that caution in mind, let me present

      18      some things from our forecast that we had done.

      19             The first is, New York -- and I'll be

      20      concentrating on New York City.

      21             New York City's economy has outperformed the

      22      nation's economies since the end of recession, in,

      23      both, that the severity of the recession was not as

      24      great in New York City, and economic -- and economic

      25      growth and employment was quicker to recover in







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       1      New York City.

       2             And the second page of the handout has some

       3      projections of real GDP growth.

       4             Again, I think we're way optimistic in terms

       5      of national growth.

       6             I don't want to say that, you know, I -- we

       7      are going to -- how much we're going to reduce it,

       8      but it, clearly, will be reduced.

       9             Employment growth is -- has been pretty

      10      phenomenal in New York, whether you measure

      11      employment growth by taking the average of one year

      12      over the average of the preceding year, or, to

      13      forward to Q4, as I prefer to do it.

      14             We've had two years in a row where we've

      15      added 100,000 jobs.  And, the growth -- employment

      16      growth rate is, clearly, stronger than the U.S. at

      17      large.

      18             That is probably not going to continue in the

      19      near future, as the forecast values we have

      20      indicate.

      21             Also, the unemployment rate was slower.

      22             And this is one area where New York wasn't do

      23      so -- New York City was not doing so well.  The

      24      unemployment rate did not fall as quickly or as --

      25      as steadily as the U.S. unemployment rate did for







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       1      the first few years of the recession.  But, after

       2      2013, there's been this -- there has been a fall in

       3      the unemployment rate.

       4             Page 3, you'll -- just to repeat some of this

       5      stuff:

       6             The annual increases in employment have

       7      averaged close to 100,000 jobs a year.

       8             In recent years, the last two years, or --

       9      there have been -- there's been a decline of the

      10      unemployment rate, from -- you know, by nearly

      11      3 percentage points.

      12             And what's -- what's indicate -- what the

      13      strength of the labor market has indicated, by the

      14      fact that the labor-force participation rate also

      15      rose at this time, you'd think with more people

      16      entering the labor force, it would be hard for the

      17      economy to generate the jobs to absorb them.

      18             But, clearly, New York City, in at least the

      19      last two years, has been absorb -- finding a way to

      20      absorb those in the labor force, or at least a large

      21      portion.

      22             The unemployment rate is still higher than

      23      the United States as a whole.

      24             And, the labor-force participation rate has

      25      been rising in New York, while it's been falling on







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       1      the U.S. -- in the United States as a whole.

       2             Our job forecasts are certainly not for a

       3      continuation of $100,000 -- 100,000 jobs created

       4      each year.

       5             We see slower growth in the -- both the

       6      national and the local economy, particularly the

       7      local economy, and, a decline in the number of jobs

       8      we will add.

       9             Someone asked about the unemployment rate

      10      being stuck at 5 percent.

      11             Probably will go under that.

      12             We don't see a whole -- enough of a growth

      13      that it will go much below that.

      14             And, I think the -- that we're pretty much at

      15      the end of -- or, at least end of an increase in the

      16      labor-force participation rate.

      17             Slide -- the fourth slide has some

      18      comparisons of employment growth in various

      19      industries, in the years after the recession, and

      20      during the forecast period.

      21             One of the bright spots, and someone,

      22      I think, referred to this, is that there's been a

      23      diversification of the -- the city's economy, still

      24      very dependent on the financial industry, but a

      25      little less so.







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       1             And one of the bright spots is that

       2      professional and business services has been -- has

       3      been adding jobs at quite a strong pace, and those

       4      jobs seem not to be tied to the fate of the

       5      financial industry.

       6             And that's a good sign for New York City's

       7      economy.

       8             Education and health:  We believe education

       9      and health, which has been fairly -- growing fairly

      10      steadily, will slow down a bit, mostly because of

      11      constraints in health-care growth.

      12             Leisure and hospitality has been strong, much

      13      to the surprise of a lot of us who thought that

      14      tourism was going to fall off, given the economic

      15      troubles, both, here, and after the recession, and

      16      elsewhere in the -- for foreign visitors.

      17             The securities-industry employment has not

      18      been great in the last few years.

      19             In 2015 it added, roughly, 2,000 jobs to the

      20      city's economy, but that's after years of either no

      21      growth or actual declines.

      22             But, compared to the pre-recession expansion,

      23      from about 2013 through 2000 -- to the middle of

      24      2018 (sic), they added almost 10 percent of all new

      25      jobs in the city.







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       1             That's not going to continue.

       2             Growth we -- had started to resume again in

       3      2015.

       4             We expect there will be some growth in the

       5      future, but not -- not -- nothing like accounting

       6      for 10 percent of the job growth in the -- total job

       7      growth in the city.

       8             If you go to the next page, we're -- we look

       9      at industry shares of wage growth.

      10             While I should mention that, you know, in --

      11      there doesn't appear to be much difference from

      12      the -- in the wage growth of the securities industry

      13      from -- in the last few years, to -- and what we're

      14      forecasting.

      15             However, this contrasts with the securities

      16      industry accounting for over half, about 52 percent,

      17      of wage growth in the years leading up to the

      18      recession.

      19             It's still -- you know, the share of wage

      20      growth has declined because of less employment

      21      growth, and a decline in real wages, though average

      22      salaries are still running around $400,000 a year.

      23             So even with little -- little employment

      24      growth expected in the securities industry, its

      25      share of wage growth will -- is expected to rise.







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       1             Many of us look at the data that comes out of

       2      the New York Stock Exchange for its member firms as

       3      a general proxy for the health of Wall Street.

       4             And I've -- here, I've compared the

       5      pre-recess -- some pre -- 5-year period before the

       6      recession, to 6 years since economic growth has

       7      resumed, and then 4 years of our forecast period.

       8             The employment-growth numbers are actually

       9      not from the New York Stock Exchange.  Those are

      10      standard numbers from the Bureau of Labor

      11      Statistics.

      12             These are annual figures, so, we see that

      13      there's has been a, you know, great decline by about

      14      a quarter in the job growth in the securities

      15      industry.

      16             Revenue has also shrunk.  And, the

      17      net-profits numbers are a little misleading because

      18      of wild swings in the profitability of Wall Street.

      19             When the recession started, there were

      20      two years of in -- of decreases -- well, not

      21      decreases -- with -- of losses by securities firms,

      22      almost 54 billion worth.  And then there were

      23      two years where firms' profits totaled 89 million.

      24             So, that 2 percent decline you see for the

      25      five years leading up to the recession is a bit







                                                                   25
       1      misleading, as is the 18.2 percent of the following.

       2             And the reason for this, for the, you know,

       3      relatively decent profits in the last few years, and

       4      we expect this to continue in the forecast period,

       5      is that interest-rate costs, net-interest expenses

       6      of firms, have been quite low, in comparison to what

       7      they had been leading up to the recession.

       8             I talked about real wages decreasing.  And,

       9      they have not -- they've -- they have increased a

      10      little bit since the recession, but nothing like

      11      before the recession.

      12             We don't expect -- while we expect there to

      13      be some employment growth and some wage growth,

      14      it's, obviously, much less than before the

      15      recession.

      16             You can call this a "new normal," if you'd

      17      like.

      18             And we are also thinking that net-interest

      19      expenses will stay low because, yeah, the fed is

      20      starting to nudge up interest rates, but, it's,

      21      obviously, going to be doing so very gradually.  And

      22      the interest rate -- the interest costs to firms

      23      will not be anywhere what -- like what they were

      24      before the recession.

      25             I'm going to -- in the interest of time, I'm







                                                                   26
       1      going to just, very quickly, go through some

       2      comments on real estate.

       3             These -- the forecast data is not produced by

       4      our model.  It's a little more of, I don't want to

       5      say subjective, but, informed opinion by the people

       6      in our office who look at the data carefully.

       7             They believe that the sales growth of

       8      commercial real estate is unlikely to continue, that

       9      it's unsustainable for the next few years.

      10             New records were set in 2015 of the value of

      11      commercial real-estate sales.

      12             And the value of commercial real-estate

      13      sales, year to year, depends very heavily on whether

      14      there are these, you know, very high-end sales of

      15      $100 million or more.

      16             The biggest sale last year was a 2.2 billion

      17      sale of the New York Telephone building in midtown.

      18             So, we expect sales to decline in the near

      19      term this year, maybe into 2007 (sic), but then

      20      grew -- and then stabilize or increase a little bit.

      21             Obviously, the role of foreign buyers who

      22      notoriously have been buying up a lot of property as

      23      a safe-haven for wealth is something that we're

      24      watching.

      25             Residential real estate:  The low interest







                                                                   27
       1      rates have continued to fuel activity in the

       2      residential real-estate market, which didn't decline

       3      as much as the commercial market in the wake of the

       4      financial crisis; and, yet, the volume of sales is

       5      still, in this year's, it's just about equal to its

       6      peak in 2007.  And that's in nominal terms, not

       7      adjusted for inflation.

       8             As I said before, commercial sales are a

       9      function of -- unlike commercial sales, the volume

      10      of sales in residential real estate is more a

      11      function of rising prices than increases in the

      12      number of transactions.

      13             We expect the value of sales to taper off in

      14      2016, into 2017 and '18, although we also expected

      15      greater interest-rate rises than we're now

      16      predicting.

      17             So, I'm not sure that will be borne out in

      18      the new forecast.

      19             Next two slides have some details about

      20      residential real estate in Manhattan and outside of

      21      Manhattan.

      22             And, at the back of the packet are some

      23      graphs, for people who like to look at graphs, of

      24      the median sales prices and sales volumes, both

      25      inside Manhattan and in the other boroughs.







                                                                   28
       1             I'm going to skip over those in the interest

       2      of time.

       3             And I want to get to something that we did

       4      back in late November.

       5             We're certainly not predicting a downturn or

       6      a recession in the national economy or in New York's

       7      economy, but, you know, there is concern over a

       8      possible recession.

       9             The Mayor mentioned this in his introduction

      10      of the preliminary budget.

      11             What we've done is a hypothetical exercise,

      12      is to take one of the recession scenarios, a very

      13      moderate recession scenario, that Moody's Analytics,

      14      formerly economy.com, has shared with us, and we fed

      15      it into our local model.

      16             And, you know, reasons for concern obviously

      17      are, that we've had a long expansion.  There's

      18      been -- the stock market instability.

      19             Neither a long expansion or spare markets

      20      don't necessarily lead to downturns.

      21             There are possibility of various shocks,

      22      which I'm sure the macro presenters will talk about.

      23             But, if you go to Slide 12, you'll see

      24      what -- where the declines -- how the declines in

      25      New York City's employment pay -- play out over







                                                                   29
       1      scenario.

       2             The recession starts in the beginning -- as

       3      we modeled it, starts in the beginning of 2016, and

       4      it lasts until the third quarter of 2017.

       5             And, the graph is a cumulative job loss

       6      from -- from whenever that recession starts.

       7             And we've -- we've made -- we -- the graph

       8      compares the severity of the projected downturn, in

       9      this hypothetical exercise, to previous downturns.

      10             It's a little more severe in terms of the

      11      number of job losses than the last recession, but,

      12      it's nothing like the much greater job losses that

      13      occurred in the recessions that began in 2001, and

      14      1990.

      15             So, by the middle of 2017, we expect the

      16      city's economy to have lost about 168,000 jobs, and

      17      that's almost two -- 250,000 less than the base --

      18      our baseline forecast, than -- the difference

      19      between the job loss under the alternative scenario

      20      and the job gains we have in our baseline forecast.

      21             Finally, I just -- I know this is a meeting

      22      about economic forecast, but I thought it might be

      23      useful to look at how this hypothetical recession

      24      plays out in terms of city taxes.

      25             The least sensitive tax is -- at least in the







                                                                   30
       1      next few years, is the property tax of because --

       2      largely, because of the byzantine structure of

       3      New York City's tax system, where you have four

       4      classes of taxes, you have constraints and phase-ins

       5      of assessment growth, you have limits to changes in

       6      the share of total liability or -- that each class

       7      bears, and a few other change -- a few other

       8      constraints.

       9             Of the more sensitive taxes, obviously, would

      10      be income taxes, both personal and business income.

      11             And, as measured as a percent of the baseline

      12      forecast, we would say that property tax --

      13      property-transfer taxes -- the mortgage-recording

      14      tax and the real-property transfer tax -- that's the

      15      most sensitive, in terms of as a percentage of

      16      baseline forecast.

      17             The declines in all of -- of the -- the

      18      declines in revenue increase over a two-year period,

      19      as was said.  You know, economic downturn doesn't

      20      immediately affect the revenues hit -- the revenue

      21      hit plays out over time.

      22             Our model suggests that the greatest hit

      23      is -- or, the peak of the revenue loss is in

      24      two years from the start of a recession.

      25             And that's -- that's about it.







                                                                   31
       1             I would be happy to answer any questions, now

       2      or later.

       3             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Any questions now?

       4             No?

       5             Okay.  We'll go on to James Diffley, from

       6      IHS Economics.

       7             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Hello?

       8             JAMES DIFFLEY:  I've got -- glad to be here

       9      again.  Thanks for inviting me once again.

      10             I've got a presentation packet for you there.

      11             So I'll go over --

      12             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Am I on?

      13             JAMES DIFFLEY:  -- U.S. macroeconomic

      14      forecast, and move on to the regional --

      15             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Hello?

      16             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Hello?

      17             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Is he on -- oh, there you go.

      18             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Jason?

      19             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Oh, am I next, or

      20      am I not next?

      21             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Are you ready now,

      22      Jason?

      23             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Oh, I'm ready,

      24      yeah, if you guys are.

      25             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Okay.  Go ahead.







                                                                   32
       1             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  I'm sorry.

       2      I didn't mean to interrupt, Jim.

       3             JAMES DIFFLEY:  That's okay.

       4             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Go ahead.

       5             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Okay.  Can

       6      everyone hear me?

       7                  (Multiple people say "Yes.")

       8             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Okay.  Great.

       9             So if you want to -- I assume you have the

      10      printout.  If you want just to follow along on

      11      there, I'll try to be quick, to leave a decent

      12      amount of time for the macro folks.

      13             First, let me say that the views that

      14      I express are mine, and not those of the Federal

      15      Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve

      16      system.

      17             I'm going to go through this presentation,

      18      but some of what -- some of what's on these charts

      19      has pretty well been covered by Michael Jacobs

      20      there, so I'll kind of speed through some parts of

      21      it and -- where appropriate.

      22             So the first chart refers to our

      23      Federal Reserve Bank of New York business surveys,

      24      which we've been doing monthly for a number of

      25      years.







                                                                   33
       1             The Empire State Manufacturing Survey, as you

       2      would gauge from the name, covers manufacturers in

       3      New York State.

       4             The Business Leader Survey covers service

       5      firms, largely, in New York State, but also in

       6      northern New Jersey and southwestern Connecticut

       7      which are parts of our district.

       8             And, these are fairly good indicators.

       9             You can see that, going into the 2008-2009

      10      recession, they both went down pretty fast and

      11      pretty hard.

      12             There have been some other, I don't want --

      13      I guess we would call them "false signals," that the

      14      late 2012, you'll see a big drop in the

      15      service-sector index.  That was right after "Sandy,"

      16      understandably, but things sort of snapped back.

      17             And, now, in the last six or seven months

      18      we've had a very deep and protracted slump in our

      19      manufacturing index, which has been at its lowest

      20      level, and for the longest time, since the 2008-2009

      21      recession.

      22             And we found that a little bit disconcerting,

      23      except that our service-sector index seemed to be

      24      holding up.  But that also fell in February, to a --

      25      to a -- sort of a -- not a disastrously low level,







                                                                   34
       1      but to a level below zero, which is kind of the

       2      break-even point.

       3             To give you some intuition, for those of you

       4      aren't familiar with these surveys:  The concept of

       5      these diffusion indexes are very, very simple, in

       6      the sense that it's, basically, the percent of

       7      people that say things are getting better, minus the

       8      percent that say things are getting worse.

       9             So when you have an index reading of below

      10      zero, that suggests that more people say things are

      11      getting worse than better.

      12             That's all it says.  It doesn't say anything

      13      about the magnitude.

      14             So, this is -- this is a sort of a warning

      15      sign.

      16             We're not that concerned yet, because it's

      17      only really been one month that the service-sector

      18      index has been weak, but it's something that we're

      19      definitely watching.

      20             The next chart is on a regional-activity

      21      index, which is a composite measure based on

      22      employment, unemployment, a measure of hours, and a

      23      measure of wage and salary earnings.  And these are

      24      then blended together and smoothed, and re-trended,

      25      to create a measure that's supposed to sort of mimic







                                                                   35
       1      economic -- the level of economic activity.

       2             And as you can see here, New York State has

       3      bounced back pretty strongly, and New York City has

       4      been exceptionally strong.

       5             These indexes, by the way, are all based on

       6      the beginning of the national recession, which was

       7      in late 2007, at 100.

       8             So what it really means, is that

       9      New York City's economy, if you take it literally,

      10      has -- is -- is -- is up -- is up more than

      11      25 percent from where it was before the recession,

      12      and New York State's is up a little more than

      13      10 percent more, if you take it literally.

      14             And, yeah, you probably noticed there's been

      15      a little slowing in New York State.

      16             That's probably reflective of hours, and some

      17      weakness in the manufacturing sector.

      18             We're not too concerned about that, but,

      19      again, it's something that we're watching.

      20             Now, the next chart looks at private-sector

      21      employment trends.

      22             Again, these measures, so that we can put

      23      them all on the same scale, are indexed to the

      24      beginning of the recession.

      25             And you can see that the -- much to, I think,







                                                                   36
       1      to a lot of the -- our regional economists'

       2      surprise, the recession wasn't nearly as steep in

       3      New York State or New York City as it was

       4      nationally.

       5             And you can see that New York City has come

       6      roaring back quite strongly, and New York State

       7      as well, and, again, it's, largely, due to

       8      New York City.

       9             New York City's had its strongest boom in

      10      decades, at least in terms of employment.

      11             And then New York State, of course, has also

      12      been outperforming the nation in terms of the

      13      comeback.

      14             Now, before I go to the next few charts, you

      15      know, one of the -- New York City has been

      16      exceptionally strong, compared to the nation,

      17      compared to the rest of the district, and so forth.

      18             One of the things that we're looking at, as a

      19      sort of long-term trend that might be supporting

      20      this, is -- is this sort of urbanization trend; that

      21      is, you know, through a good part of the

      22      twentieth century, you had this gradual migration of

      23      people, and then businesses, from central cities to

      24      the suburbs.  And, more recently, there seems to be

      25      have been somewhat of a reversal of that.







                                                                   37
       1             Now, it's not clear how much of this reflects

       2      changing preferences, how much of it reflects

       3      elevated energy prices, because, you know, you spend

       4      a lot less on energy in a New York City, for

       5      example, apartment than you would in a house out in

       6      the suburbs.

       7             I don't -- I don't -- and now, obviously,

       8      that's important, because now energy prices are much

       9      lower, and the question is:  Does that then tilt

      10      that balance in favor of the suburbs versus the

      11      city?

      12             I don't think that that's as big a factor as

      13      the other parts of it, but, again, that remains open

      14      to be seen.

      15             But, New York City doesn't seem to really

      16      have slowed much at all, going into the end of 2015.

      17             And I should add that, you know, with

      18      benchmark revisions coming up soon, we look at

      19      the -- we closely track the data that the numbers

      20      get revised to, and it doesn't look like --

      21      (speakerphone failure) -- you know, weaken at all.

      22             In fact, they may even make it look slightly

      23      stronger, the trends in New York City, and, to some

      24      extent, New York State.

      25             So these are -- these are very, very, you







                                                                   38
       1      know, positive developments.

       2             The next few charts are a look at sort of

       3      different parts of the -- within the region --

       4      within the state.

       5             I'm not going to get into much detail, but

       6      you can kind of look them over yourself, and I'll be

       7      more than happy to take questions at the end.

       8             But, basically, I think the big take-away is

       9      that downstate is -- has done better than upstate in

      10      terms of job growth.  But, upstate has not done too

      11      badly relative to other business-cycle recoveries.

      12             So, for example, if you go -- I don't know

      13      what number chart it is -- it looks like it's about

      14      Chart 6, maybe:

      15             You can see that Buffalo has actually

      16      outperformed the U.S. in terms of where it is

      17      relative to before the recession.

      18             Rochester has done reasonably well.

      19             And these are areas that have typically

      20      underperformed, consistently, the nation.  And

      21      they've underperformed it, in part, because you

      22      don't have population growth at the same rate as in

      23      other parts of the country, and so forth.

      24             And then we see that Syracuse is lagging a

      25      bit.







                                                                   39
       1             The next chart, you see that Albany, largely,

       2      reflecting the tech boom there, has done pretty

       3      well.

       4             But, again, most parts of Upstate New York,

       5      it's really a mixed bag.  You have some laggards,

       6      and some areas that are doing really well.

       7             Binghamton and Elmira, which are old

       8      manufacturing hubs, have been very weak.

       9             And then one -- one which was, for some

      10      reason, missing from the downstate chart,

      11      Long Island has been doing pretty well.  It's been

      12      pretty much tracking along with where the nation is.

      13             So, Long Island is performing about average.

      14             Now, in case any of you have lost track of

      15      which chart we're on, moving into this -- what we

      16      call a "bubble chart," it's not -- "bubble" has

      17      nothing to do with, you know, housing or financial

      18      bubbles.  It's that the actual data points look like

      19      bubbles.

      20             Just to make that clear.

      21             And the way this chart is set up, it's a

      22      somewhat complex chart, but, really, it's -- the way

      23      to look at it is that, each bubble, each dot, is an

      24      industry.  The size of the dot reflects how big it

      25      is.







                                                                   40
       1             And we're focusing here on Manhattan.

       2             We could do this for New York State, we could

       3      do it -- you could it for any one of a number of

       4      regions, but since Manhattan is such a core part of

       5      the state, especially in terms of revenue, we're --

       6      I just thought I would focus on that here.

       7             And you can see that the securities -- so

       8      the -- the right-to-left axis, or, the -- the

       9      industries on the right, are the ones that are very

      10      highly concentrated in New York City.

      11             So, for example, securities has about

      12      10 times the share that it would nationally in

      13      New York City.

      14             And then -- then the firm -- the businesses

      15      on the left are -- tend to be underrepresented in

      16      New York City -- in Manhattan.

      17             And then the vertical axis simply indicates

      18      how they've done over the last -- from 2009 to 2014.

      19             So, basically, what you want for your region

      20      or your county, or whatever, is you want industries

      21      in the upper right and lower left, because the upper

      22      right means it's very important there, and the fact

      23      that it's high up reflects that it's growing

      24      rapidly.

      25             And then the industries that are on the left







                                                                   41
       1      tend to be underrepresented here, and they're

       2      shrinking or underperforming the average.

       3             So this -- this kind of points out that the

       4      securities industry, and some of the others which

       5      are very important, have not really been drivers of

       6      growth.  But things like Internet publishing and

       7      motion pictures, and then some aspects -- some parts

       8      of the professional and technical services, have

       9      been -- are fairly important for New York City and

      10      have been driving a lot of the growth.

      11             So let me -- let me focus in a little on the

      12      securities industry, which I think Michael Jacob

      13      summed up pretty well, but I'm just going to show

      14      you a chart here -- a couple of charts.

      15             The first one shows, over the last few

      16      decades, that each boom and bust in New York City's

      17      economy has been preceded, or, you could argue,

      18      driven, by booms and busts in the securities

      19      industry, or, Wall Street.

      20             And the gray-shaded areas are downturns in

      21      the securities industry.

      22             And you can see that each -- each upturn and

      23      each downturn, pretty much, has been led by the

      24      securities industry; that is, the securities

      25      industry turns, and then the rest of the economy







                                                                   42
       1      turns.

       2             There are -- obviously, these two are on

       3      opposite scales.

       4             The interesting thing about this last

       5      recovery expansion is that, it's been one of the

       6      strongest, probably the strongest, certainly,

       7      I don't want to say in history, but, certainly, in

       8      the past half century.

       9             As you can see from this chart, the "gold"

      10      line is outside the securities industry, is sort of

      11      the rest of the economy.

      12             And, it's really quite surprising how well

      13      the city's economy has done with, really -- without

      14      any help from its key industry, which is securities.

      15             And if you go to the next chart, it just sort

      16      of zooms in on the past few years, and you can see

      17      that, you know, it's been driven by, pretty much,

      18      everything but securities.  Not everything, but a

      19      lot of different industries.

      20             And so the next question that might come

      21      across your minds is:  So if Wall Street's not

      22      driving it, what is?

      23             And you have a lot of different, mostly

      24      service-based industries, and, specifically, health

      25      and education, leisure and hospitality, retail.







                                                                   43
       1             And one thing that those industries tend to

       2      have in common, is that they tend -- not all of

       3      them, for example, not so much education, but,

       4      certainly, retail and restaurants, and so forth,

       5      tend to be low-paying industries.

       6             And so what you see is that, the mix of job

       7      growth has not been favorable in terms of total wage

       8      and salary earnings; and, thus, in terms of total

       9      revenues.

      10             But, because the overall employment growth

      11      has been so strong, it's sort of -- it's sort of

      12      helped offset the fact that you have this shift in

      13      the mix of employment.

      14             And, then, we also did -- we did a report on

      15      this last year, we looked very closely at

      16      New York City's tech sector.  And that's been a

      17      pretty -- as you remember, the Internet publishing,

      18      and other industries that we considered to be sort

      19      of tech industries, have been growing very rapidly

      20      in New York City.

      21             They're not nearly as important here, for

      22      example, as they are in places like Silicon Valley,

      23      Route 128 in Boston, Seattle; but, nevertheless,

      24      they've been growing very rapidly, and they've been

      25      not an insignificant contributor to overall job







                                                                   44
       1      growth and earnings growth.

       2             And then, to sort of try to wrap up quickly,

       3      the last few charts refer to the housing market.

       4             The first one kind of points out that

       5      Upstate New York didn't really have, if we went

       6      back, you know, before 2006 -- again, these are

       7      indexed to the peak of the housing market in 2006 --

       8      Upstate New York didn't really have a huge housing

       9      boom, or a bubble, or whatever you want to call it.

      10      And so when the housing bust came, it didn't really

      11      have a big bust.

      12             Not so much true, obviously, not for the U.S.

      13             And New York State, and downstate and

      14      New York City, obviously, did get hit, but not as

      15      hard as the nation.

      16             Obviously, the nation includes, you know,

      17      a lot of places like Florida, like California,

      18      the -- what they call the "sand states," which were

      19      particularly hard-hit.

      20             And so New York State -- and so

      21      Upstate New York has done pretty well.

      22             Downstate New York has come back.

      23             New York City has done a lot better than the

      24      suburbs around New York City, and, as a whole, the

      25      metro area is kind of, you know, inched its way back







                                                                   45
       1      up to where it was before the recession.

       2             And then the next couple of charts, again,

       3      I don't want to get into too much detail, but it's

       4      really remarkable that Buffalo has been the leader

       5      in terms of the housing market.

       6             Now, obviously, in terms of the level of home

       7      prices, it's still a long shot from, you know,

       8      New York City or, pretty much, anywhere in Downstate

       9      New York.  But, nevertheless, there's been more

      10      home-price appreciation in Buffalo than in the rest

      11      of the region, and also more than Buffalo has

      12      probably experienced over this long a time, in -- in

      13      a long, long time.

      14             Let me just -- let me just mention that

      15      these -- the home-price indexes we're using are

      16      core -- it's an organization, CoreLogic.  They look

      17      at repeat sales, and, they have a model that kind

      18      of -- it -- so what you are looking at, in theory,

      19      and, hopefully, in practice, is how much the same

      20      home would have sold for.

      21             It's not affected, like some of the median

      22      home-prices indexes are, by shifts in the mix within

      23      Buffalo.

      24             So, for example, if, suddenly, the high end

      25      of the housing market went dead, and a lot of







                                                                   46
       1      low-prices homes were selling, it would look like

       2      median prices are going down.

       3             That -- this isn't distorted by that.  This

       4      is based on same-home sales -- similar home --

       5      same-home sales.

       6             And then the last one shows that there are

       7      parts of New York State, the Lower Hudson Valley,

       8      that have lagged, where home prices really have not

       9      recovered at all.

      10             And the last chart is based on the -- we have

      11      a big database of mortgages, you know, the status of

      12      mortgages, across different parts of the country.

      13             So if you look at New York State, we divide

      14      into downstate and upstate.  I think the dividing

      15      line is somewhere around, like, Kingston.

      16             So, I know everyone has a different

      17      definition of what "upstate" and "downstate" is, but

      18      I think the picture remains the same; and that is,

      19      that there's still a huge backlog of foreclosures in

      20      New York State.

      21             And the reason for that is, not that it's a

      22      bigger problem here, necessarily, but more that

      23      properties remain in foreclosure for a much longer

      24      period than in the rest of the nation.  It has to do

      25      with the judicial; the laws that govern how







                                                                   47
       1      foreclosures go.

       2             And so it's been coming down, but, it's

       3      still a pretty high stock, especially in

       4      Downstate New York.  You see that over 5 percent of

       5      mortgages, at the moment in time, the latest point,

       6      which is late November, late last year, are in

       7      foreclosure.

       8             And I think I'm going wrap up.

       9             I'm -- I'm, you know, perfectly happy to take

      10      questions, whenever.

      11             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Jason.

      12             Any questions for Jason?

      13             No.

      14             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Okay.  Thank you.

      15             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  James.

      16             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Again, I'm glad to be here.

      17             So I've got a slide show of the U.S. economic

      18      forecast here.

      19             I guess I'm the first this morning to talk

      20      about -- this afternoon to talk about the U.S. macro

      21      economy, so, we'll go there.

      22             And I'm sure you and Chris will have a lot to

      23      say in response to that.

      24             The summary is simply that, we think the U.S.

      25      economy is sound, but, it's being buffeted by global







                                                                   48
       1      financial- and commodity-market turmoil.  And we'll

       2      see how we expect that to play out in a second.

       3             2016 is shaping up globally now as another

       4      substandard year.

       5             Since 2012, the world economy has been --

       6      which, previously, had been growing at 3 to

       7      4 percent per year regularly, has been stuck between

       8      2.5 and 2.6, 2.7, percent growth every year.  And

       9      that's unlikely to change in 2016.

      10             So, we've reduced our -- recently, our world

      11      GDP forecast to 2.6 percent this year.

      12             We do see it coming up, though, in 2017,

      13      2018, 3.1 percent, and 3.2 percent.

      14             So that's important to note, going forward.

      15             What's happening here that affects us?

      16             The sluggish global economy.

      17             The strong dollar.

      18             All right?  The strong dollar is a very

      19      important factor here this year, related somewhat to

      20      the price of oil, but, by itself, makes imports --

      21      makes our -- makes for import substitution by

      22      American consumers more interested in buying

      23      imports, makes our exports less competitive.

      24             And that's a huge factor, going forward.

      25             Even in -- and, of course, in Buffalo, for







                                                                   49
       1      instance, New York is affected by the sharp decline

       2      in the loonie, which I think is down to about

       3      70 cents to the dollar, so that, no doubt, is

       4      affecting consumers coming across and visiting

       5      Western New York.

       6             The service sectors in the economy are --

       7      talking about the U.S. now, are expanding.  We

       8      expect that to continue.

       9             Manufacturing production, I'll come back to

      10      this in a couple of slides, is on decline a bit, and

      11      will continue, at least for the first half of this

      12      year.  And you'll see why -- why in a moment.

      13             But consumer spending's import -- supported,

      14      generally, by rising incomes, low inflation, and

      15      also low unemployment now in the U.S.  The

      16      fundamentals are strong there.

      17             Housing construction:  The rebound in

      18      housing, from the great recession and the

      19      housing-bubble burst, continues to lag behind

      20      expectations, but it is continuing to recover.

      21      Prices are moving up.  Starts are moving up, albeit

      22      slowly.

      23             We expect pent-up demand from young adults,

      24      and improving credit availability, finally going

      25      forward, to boost that, but, gradually, over the







                                                                   50
       1      next few years.

       2             Growth in domestic demand for products and

       3      stabilization in commodity prices will finally lead

       4      to moderate gains in business fixed investment.

       5             We think we're at the bottom now, okay, of

       6      what's been a commodities super-cycle.  And we

       7      include oil prices in that, that oil prices have

       8      gone lower than we expected.

       9             We do think we'll gradually come out of that,

      10      going forward, which will serve as a boost to

      11      growth.

      12             As Director Mujica pointed out, oil prices

      13      seem high -- low oil prices seem, surprisingly, to

      14      be a negative to the U.S. economy.

      15             We don't think they're, on net, a negative,

      16      but there's certainly a large sense now, that unlike

      17      decades of the past, that the U.S. has become an

      18      oil-producing nation.  Right?

      19             So low oil prices are not ambiguously good.

      20             And there's certainly been a large negative

      21      response in terms of manufacturing -- the

      22      manufacturing sector, owing to the supply chain of

      23      oil and gas investments, and capital expenditure,

      24      which had been driving a lot of the U.S. economic

      25      growth earlier this decade.







                                                                   51
       1             So that's all pulling back.  All right?

       2             And we see that -- you'll see that in some

       3      regional slides, going forward -- as we go forward.

       4             Okay.  The next slide, we graphically show

       5      our real GDP growth has behaved, and how the growth

       6      in employment has behaved, and will behave, going

       7      forward.

       8             The one thing you'll note here, GDP growth

       9      finally coming up to reach 3 percent, that

      10      "3 percent" line there, in the second half of 2016,

      11      but staying below it, going out in the near term

      12      forecast, through 2018, which, again, is a little

      13      surprising, as productivity growth has been lower we

      14      would have expected, and the economy is stuck in a

      15      bit of a lower-growth mode than we would have hoped

      16      a few years ago, as we finally came completely out

      17      of the recession.

      18             The one thing I'll note, though, is that

      19      we're under 5 percent employment, not only in

      20      New York, as has been mentioned, but for the U.S.,

      21      and the U.S. is even a little lower.

      22             We're at, essentially, "full employment," in

      23      economist terms.

      24             So we're going to see, and this is an

      25      important point in our forecast here, if you see the







                                                                   52
       1      line graph here, employment growth is going to be

       2      slowing, all right, because we're not employing

       3      previously-unemployed workers.  Okay?

       4             So normal demographic growth and labor-force

       5      participation is going to slow the rate of growth.

       6             We see that in the U.S., our U.S. forecasts.

       7             We're going to see it significantly in our

       8      New York forecast, which, if you looked at the

       9      comparison graphs, is the key difference -- or,

      10      table, is the key difference between our forecast

      11      and the rest of the panelists, I think, generally.

      12             Although, the IBO did have a fairly low

      13      employment rate for New York City, going forward.

      14             On the next slide, we show the Institute of

      15      Supply Management Index.

      16             And there we see the distinction, as has been

      17      mentioned before, the service sector recently -- if

      18      you look to the right of the graph, the service

      19      sector behaving in increase -- with increase in

      20      demand, but manufacturing sector having turned

      21      negative.

      22             Again, the high dollar effect on exports,

      23      import substitutions, negatively affecting

      24      manufacturers in the near term.

      25             The table on the next slide shows real GDP,







                                                                   53
       1      and the components of real GDP, out for the next

       2      three years.

       3             Real GDP growth:  2.4 percent in 2016.

       4      2.8 percent in 2017.  2.6 percent in 2018.

       5             I'll note, the consumption line, the second

       6      line, is near 3 percent for the period, and higher

       7      than GDP growth, so it's contributing a greater

       8      amount.

       9             Also, notice at the bottom two -- two rows,

      10      you see exports and imports fast -- faster growth,

      11      finally, in exports in 2017, but, very sluggish

      12      growth in 2015 and 2016, while the imports are

      13      relatively strong, because that's the effect of the

      14      strong dollar, and the effect of the trade imbalance

      15      on U.S. domestic demand.

      16             Other key indicators on the next table

      17      include industrial production.

      18             Notice, 2016, negative 0.4 percent in the

      19      measure of output of our manufacturing firms.

      20             I'll point out a couple of other.

      21             Light-vehicle sales, which has been a strong

      22      spot in the manufacturing economy, with some

      23      benefit, particularly that -- to Western New York,

      24      to be sure.

      25             Jason mentioned Buffalo's relative







                                                                   54
       1      performance, for instance.

       2             But we think that's peaking.

       3             New-car sales of about 18 million are about

       4      as high as we're going to get, so we increased

       5      rapidly to 2015, 2016, but that's going to level

       6      off.  Not decline, but level off.  It's not going to

       7      be contributing to further growth.

       8             "Housing start" line, you can see how slowly

       9      it's come up, and will come up to what we think is a

      10      normal level by 2018, of 1.5 million new units in

      11      the U.S.  All right?

      12             Again, slow -- approaching that level much

      13      slower than we would have guessed back a few years

      14      ago.

      15             The CPI, very restrained.  0.1 last year.

      16      0.6 this year.  But then reappearing, at some level

      17      of inflation, in 2017 and 2018, a moderate level, of

      18      course.

      19             If you're interested in our oil price, we see

      20      it, notice, for Brent level, $39, averaging, in

      21      2016; 49 in 2017; 59 in 2018.

      22             That's a very volatile forecast, I'll admit,

      23      but we certainly put a lot of effort into trying to

      24      get that right, but recognize the -- the uncertainty

      25      of that.







                                                                   55
       1             The fed fund's rate, the Director asked

       2      about -- I guess about that.  I should answer that.

       3             I mention that the fed will be cautious in

       4      raising rates this year -- the first bullet -- the

       5      first slide's bullet mentioned that -- more cautious

       6      than we previously had thought.

       7             A few months ago, we would have guessed that

       8      the fed would raise rates four times during 2016.

       9             We've now reduced that to two, all right, in

      10      light of the current sluggishness.

      11             So the -- but our end result is that, in

      12      2014, the fed fund's rate average was 1.4 percent,

      13      low by historical terms.

      14             So, the fed's going to take a very cautious,

      15      gradual process.

      16             If you turn to the next slide, "Risks to the

      17      U.S. Forecast," the colored slide, I think is

      18      important.

      19             We normally talk about scenarios of either

      20      greater optimism or greater pessimism.

      21             At this point, we think about the possibility

      22      of a mild recession.  Give it a probability --

      23      relatively low probability of 20 percent.

      24             If there's even weaker global growth and a

      25      stock market plunge, or further stock market plunge,







                                                                   56
       1      could push us into a mild-recession scenario.

       2             On the positive side, productivity growth has

       3      been slower.  And it's very much a matter of debate

       4      as to how we're measuring productivity growth, and

       5      why it's slower.  But suppose that accelerates, that

       6      would be a positive outcome, as well as home

       7      building picking up faster than is the case in our

       8      baseline forecast.

       9             If you turn to the next graph, the next

      10      slide, you'll see the implications of those two

      11      scenarios playing out.

      12             And what I want to focus on is the gap

      13      between the red line and the green line, how much a

      14      difference it would make in real GDP growth in late

      15      2016 under those different scenarios.

      16             So there's a wide range of possibilities

      17      there.

      18             But the bottom line is that, while growth

      19      will continue to disappoint in 2016, we think it

      20      would take a lot more pain and stress to push the

      21      global economy, include -- and, especially, the

      22      United States, into recession.  Okay?

      23             We turn to the regional outlook.

      24             I show, in the first map, the employment

      25      picture as it appears.  And there will be a







                                                                   57
       1      re-benchmark, as somebody mentioned earlier, coming

       2      up in a couple of weeks from the BLS.

       3             The south and west are returning to the lead

       4      in employment growth in 2015, very much a pattern,

       5      where the southern states and the western states are

       6      growing -- are growing faster, which is -- was the

       7      typical case before the great recession.  And they

       8      were states that were more dramatically negatively

       9      affected by the housing boom and bust, in many

      10      respects.

      11             That's, apparently -- returned to normalcy,

      12      in that sense, is apparent.

      13             That's one of the reasons we have relatively

      14      low New York forecast, going forward, as

      15      I mentioned.

      16             Migration flows to the sunbelt have

      17      reappeared.

      18             They stalled in the housing boom and bust,

      19      particularly the housing bust, and also in the

      20      recession.

      21             We see in the 2015 data from census that

      22      that's now returned.  Florida is attracting a lot of

      23      New Yorkers again, as is Arizona.  And the same is

      24      true, generally, for the rustbelt versus the

      25      sunbelt.







                                                                   58
       1             You notice the middle of the map is not so

       2      bouyant in 2015.

       3             Again, that's the part of the country that

       4      really is an oil producer.

       5             Texas's growth has been cut in half,

       6      essentially, nowhere near a recession, because Texas

       7      has such a, you know, high fundamentals.  But, a

       8      significant negative impact on Texas.

       9             And North Dakota is certainly in a recession,

      10      and that that's, obviously, a special case.

      11             What do we see, going forward?

      12             On the next map, in 2016, again, that sunbelt

      13      prominence continues.

      14             New York is somewhat in the lower part of

      15      that.

      16             Let's turn to the -- if you turn to the next

      17      slide, I'll describe where we are -- well, I won't

      18      describe it here.

      19             Let me talk about New York versus the rest of

      20      the economy, though, in a minute.

      21             In New York State we have achieved, as others

      22      have mentioned, particularly in New York City, high

      23      growth.

      24             The job growth at the end of the year is

      25      about 2.1 percent per year, which is stronger by







                                                                   59
       1      1.7 percent for the year.

       2             In the fourth quarter, it was 22nd among

       3      states, so in the top half, but in the middle for

       4      2015.

       5             Downstate, however, did exceed the U.S., as

       6      Jason and -- Jason and others have pointed out.

       7             And, indeed, Buffalo, as has been mentioned,

       8      and in the very near term, Syracuse and Utica,

       9      actually performing very fast, as we go to the end

      10      of the year.

      11             Unemployment, notably, is below 5 percent

      12      across the state.  Across New York State,

      13      4.8 percent, on average, across there.  And 26th,

      14      right in the middle, across -- among states.

      15             Okay.  If we go to the -- the one thing I'll

      16      mention here -- well, I'll wait for the bottom line

      17      to mention the construction surge in New York City,

      18      which I think was focused on somewhat indirectly

      19      earlier.

      20             But let's go to the -- the following slides

      21      here.

      22             The -- the graph shows our -- for -- history

      23      and forecast for New York and jobs versus the

      24      U.S. and New York unemployment rate.

      25             And here you see the strong performance of







                                                                   60
       1      the state now, versus the U.S,; the blue versus the

       2      red line.  And, the unemployment rate coming down

       3      consistently since 2011, to under 5 percent now.

       4             As we go into the forecast period, we do

       5      have, and we would have noticed in the tables for

       6      the U.S., a slowing -- as I mentioned, a slowing in

       7      the U.S. rate of employment growth.

       8             We also have the slowing -- even deeper

       9      slowing in the New York rate of employment growth.

      10             That's because we've reached, in our view,

      11      we've got a mature stage of the recovery and growth.

      12             We've reached full employment, essentially.

      13      And labor-force growth here is much less than it is

      14      in the rest of the U.S.

      15             And that's why -- what's generating less than

      16      half a percent employment growth in the out years

      17      for the forecast.

      18             So that's a very significant difference --

      19      difference with the others, as I mentioned.

      20             Jason had a good rationale for why

      21      New York City growth has been high in a way that, if

      22      the "new normal" is for increasing demand for

      23      urbanization, you might consider the New York City

      24      rate of growth could continue to be higher.

      25             That's a big question mark, and a very







                                                                   61
       1      important question mark in anybody's forecast, going

       2      forward.

       3             I'll point out, though, that low -- that low

       4      employment rate of growth goes along with a healthy

       5      economy.  The unemployment rate remains low.  It's

       6      not laggard.  It's just moving at the normal rate

       7      of -- that you would expect for a healthy

       8      New York State economy, all right, which is, full

       9      employment, essentially, but at a relatively low

      10      rate of growth, owing to demographic trends,

      11      compared to the nation, say.

      12             The next graph shows income, in that

      13      scenario, following the U.S., but lagging behind the

      14      U.S. a bit.  And this is total income, and it

      15      includes non-wages, as well as wage income, which

      16      causes some deviation in the line there.

      17             Wages -- one of the other benefits of the low

      18      unemployment rate is that wage growth finally

      19      grows -- per worker, grows a little faster than it

      20      has been, which has been generally sluggish across

      21      the country, as most of you know.

      22             The bottom line for New York:

      23             Labor markets tighten -- are tightening, have

      24      tightened -- and job gains are going to slow, with

      25      wages rising with low unemployment.  That's the good







                                                                   62
       1      side.

       2             New York City is leading, although, as was

       3      mentioned before, not by finance.

       4             The construction boom, importantly, it has

       5      been mentioned, but I'm sure the previous panelists

       6      know, that includes the outer boroughs.  Brooklyn's

       7      been fantastic.  And Queens and The Bronx are seeing

       8      construction too.

       9             A large spate of multi-family starts in the

      10      city, owing to the expiration of a tax credit, that

      11      I'm sure you're aware of, and is of some question,

      12      that influences the numbers you'll see on the next

      13      table in a second.

      14             But we've seen Manhattan and Brooklyn values

      15      soar.

      16             I think the Director mentioned Wall Street

      17      bonuses being flat for a couple of years.

      18             And I'm taking this quote from somebody in

      19      the financial sector earlier in the year about

      20      "flat" being the "new up."

      21             And so it's a good thing this year -- we

      22      thought it was a good thing this year when we found

      23      out that bonuses were, essentially, flat, and were

      24      not going to decrease by 10 to 20 percent, as had

      25      been rumored earlier in the year.







                                                                   63
       1             I don't know how, exactly that's played out,

       2      and we'll see when we analyze the tax data.

       3             I'll add, the construction of the

       4      Tappan Zee Bridge being the single largest

       5      infrastructure project in the company (sic), and

       6      applaud that.

       7             And I mention here, Jason was surprised about

       8      Buffalo, but the "Buffalo Billions" are well -- well

       9      touted in Western New York, and Buffalo is at least

      10      seeing some strong optimism after many decades of

      11      relative decline.

      12             The -- the last chart shows the table of

      13      New York economic growth, by fiscal year, going

      14      forward, through 2018.

      15             I guess I'll point out, you'll see the

      16      employment line, showing the decline by fiscal 2018.

      17             And, housing starts, the last line, you'll

      18      notice there's a spike to 63.1 in fiscal 2016.

      19      That's owing to the surge of permits and starts when

      20      the tax was set to -- when the tax exemption was set

      21      to expire.

      22             But I'll also point out, 63.1, we express

      23      these things in annual rates.  So that's 63 for the

      24      quarter, as though the whole quarter had been -- was

      25      converted to an annual rate.







                                                                   64
       1             So if you want to get the actual number of

       2      starts, you divide that by four, on average.

       3             So with that, I'll wrap it up.

       4             Glad to answer questions later.

       5             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you.

       6             Hugh.

       7             HUGH JOHNSON:  Yeah, thank you.

       8             Usually I'm the most optimistic of this

       9      group.  It's, in part, congenital defect, and it's,

      10      in part, based on analysis.

      11             But I think compared to what Jim just gave

      12      you, maybe it's going to sound like I'm pessimistic.

      13             I'm not pessimistic.  I still am trying to

      14      preserve somewhat of a lean towards optimism, but

      15      maybe it's not quite as optimistic as Jim.

      16             I commend -- the one thing I would -- and

      17      I say, and people think I say this sort of

      18      gratuitously, is the work that's being done by all

      19      of the staff -- I'm, of course, very familiar with

      20      the staff of the Assembly, the Ways and Means

      21      Committee -- is just remarkable.  They're really,

      22      really working hard.  And, you can see it by their

      23      documents.  The detail, the level of detail, in the

      24      analysis is really -- is really incredible.

      25             And not only is it incredible, but it's







                                                                   65
       1      extraordinarily important to coming to up to -- with

       2      a good forecast for New York.

       3             And as a result of that level of detail and

       4      that level of analysis, they can come up with

       5      reasonably good forecasts for revenues.

       6             The -- as -- I've worked with this group

       7      before, and enjoyed it, and very much appreciate

       8      being invited back to share some thoughts with you.

       9             As you know, or may know, what I try to do

      10      is, I -- I look at the performance of the financial

      11      markets, I look at the performance of important

      12      monetary and economic variables, to try to determine

      13      where we are in the current -- current cycle.

      14             There have been 10 cycles in the post-war

      15      period.

      16             We're on the 11th cycle, a cycle which

      17      consists of three parts: a stock market cycle,

      18      accompanied by an economic cycle, accompanied by an

      19      interest-rate cycle.

      20             And I have found that my work, our work, that

      21      the financial markets perform in specific ways, is

      22      beginning, middle, and the end of that cycle, as to

      23      the important monetary and economic variables.

      24             And, so, if you can determine where you are

      25      on that cycle, it's very important for making good







                                                                   66
       1      investment decisions, but most -- very importantly,

       2      good decisions as -- as policymakers.

       3             But most important question you really face,

       4      I mean, it's really almost the only question you

       5      face right now is:  Has -- have we reached the --

       6      the end of the bull-market economic recovery, and

       7      are we about to see a recession?

       8             In other words, is the 7 1/2 percent or so

       9      decline that we saw in stock prices since the

      10      beginning of the year, the start of a bear market

      11      that's going to be accompanied by a recession?  Or

      12      is it simply a correction in an ongoing bull market,

      13      and that we're going to see further gains, both, in

      14      the markets, as well as the economy?

      15             That is the single most important question.

      16             Another subtle way of asking the same

      17      question, and this is very subtle, but very

      18      important, is:  Will the recession that we currently

      19      see among the oil-producing, not only states, but

      20      companies, is that going to spread?

      21             Is it going to spread -- and I should say

      22      agriculture as well, but is it going to spread to

      23      other parts of the economy; and, therefore,

      24      contaminate the entire economy?

      25             Are we going to have an ongoing bear market,







                                                                   67
       1      insidious bear market, that's accompanied by a

       2      recession?

       3             To answer that question, I look at the

       4      financial-market variables, and then, also, the

       5      monetary and economic variables.

       6             You look at not only the performance or trend

       7      in the stock market, but the trend in various sort

       8      of details within the stock market-sector

       9      performance, capitalization performance, performance

      10      of the bond market.

      11             I can give you all this detail.  I'd be happy

      12      to talk to you about this detail.

      13             Believe me, it can put me to sleep.  It would

      14      probably put you to sleep.

      15             But, you look at all the variables within the

      16      financial markets to see what the message of the

      17      financial markets, and I say the bond market as

      18      well, which would be the yield curve-quality

      19      spreads, a lot of technical stuff.

      20             The message of the financial markets,

      21      collectively, is overwhelmingly clear; and that is,

      22      that we have reached the end of a bull market.

      23             We've reached the start of a bear market, and

      24      it's going to be accompanied by an economic

      25      recession.







                                                                   68
       1             Pay particular attention to the performance

       2      of the financial sector of the financial markets

       3      which has been performing very poorly.

       4             I have a chart in there that shows you what

       5      the pattern of performance of the financial sector

       6      is, going into a recession, and coming out of a

       7      recession.

       8             And you can see that the pattern is, as you

       9      might suspect, going down -- relative performance

      10      going down prior to a recession, and improving prior

      11      to -- prior to a recovery.

      12             This is consistent with what Jason said,

      13      which he talked about the financial sector.  I think

      14      he was looking at employment performing well before

      15      the recovery, or as a leading indicator of the

      16      recovery.

      17             The point being is, that the message of the

      18      financial markets is clear.

      19             And the question is:  Is that rational?

      20             Is it consistent with a rational forecast for

      21      the economy: earnings, inflation, and interest

      22      rates?

      23             And I hesitatingly say this, but I would say

      24      it is not consistent with the performance of

      25      important monetary and economic variables.







                                                                   69
       1             Clearly, you see that the Federal Reserve has

       2      been very accommodative, even though that they've

       3      raised interest rates once, and are likely, who

       4      knows, to raise interest rates two, three times, who

       5      knows, in 2016.

       6             It's data-dependent.  Nobody up here knows

       7      the answer to that question.  It would be simply a

       8      guess.

       9             I would guess three times.

      10             You've heard two.

      11             You've heard one.

      12             You don't know.

      13             But Federal Reserve policy is, and is likely

      14      to continue to remain, accommodative, even if they

      15      raise interest rates three times in 2016.

      16             As a result of that lending is very strong.

      17             Total bank lending, lending to businesses, is

      18      very solid.

      19             Lending to finance real-estate transactions

      20      in New York State or throughout the country, very

      21      solid, very, very strong.

      22             The lending to finance consumer transactions,

      23      consumer lending, very strong.

      24             As a result of that, as a result of the

      25      strong lending by the Federal Reserve, money







                                                                   70
       1      conditions are really good.

       2             Yes, the growth rate of the money supply has

       3      slowed some, but there's enough liquidity, shall we

       4      say, to drive both the -- both the economy and the

       5      financial markets.

       6             As a result of some of those performances,

       7      some of those monetary and economic variables, a lot

       8      of the detail of this, what I'm talking about, is in

       9      my handout.

      10             I don't want to you get bogged down.  I mean,

      11      there's nothing worse.

      12             But, I'm just covering, sort of, generally

      13      speaking, what it says.

      14             And because of the good bank lending, because

      15      of pretty good monetary growth rates, leading

      16      indicators, on balance, have been performing well.

      17             Now I should add, very importantly, that

      18      they've actually -- leading indicators which, of

      19      course, are indicators from the conference board and

      20      others, that tell us where the economy is going, not

      21      where it's been, they've actually declined in three

      22      of the last six months.

      23             And, that's a little bit troubling.

      24             There's a lot of ways of looking at them,

      25      diffusion index.  There's a lot of ways of analyzing







                                                                   71
       1      leading indicators.

       2             I think when they run into trouble, we start

       3      analyzing in all these different ways, to try to

       4      make a good story out of what might be a bad story

       5      or a troubling story.  And, I'm guilty of that.

       6             And I think, on balance, after I do that kind

       7      of analysis, I come away with the conclusion that,

       8      yes, it's troubling to see indicators that lead the

       9      economy or tell us where the economy is, going run

      10      into a little bit of trouble.

      11             But I think, on balance, still the message of

      12      those indicators is that the economy will continue

      13      to expand through 2016, and probably into 2017.

      14             So the answer to the most important question

      15      of -- which is, "Is this the start of a bear market,

      16      a long and insidious bear market, that will be

      17      accompanied by at recession?" is, no.

      18             This is going to be a correction in an

      19      ongoing bull market -- a correction, I hope, in an

      20      ongoing bull market -- that will be accompanied by a

      21      continuation of the recovery through 2016, 2017.

      22             It is not at all unusual, in financial-market

      23      history, and this is important, that they had very

      24      sharp, even sharper than we've seen, corrections or

      25      declines in stock prices that were not accompanied







                                                                   72
       1      by recessions.

       2             1987.

       3             1994.

       4             1997-98, everybody kind of remembers the

       5      southeast Asia financial crisis, long-term capital

       6      management.

       7             I would be happy to talk to you about those.

       8             They were really troubling, really severe,

       9      to -- sharp decline in stock prices.

      10             2011-2012, when we had the European

      11      sovereign-debt problem or crisis.

      12             So there have been declines in stock prices

      13      without a recession.

      14             And, in my judgment, this is going to be very

      15      similar.

      16             That's what the outcome this time is going to

      17      be, very similar.  But it is going to be, in my

      18      judgment -- and this where a little pessimism comes

      19      in -- it's going to be, in my judgment, a very close

      20      call.

      21             Got to watch the numbers, as was said so many

      22      times, and watch them -- watch them very closely.

      23             In this -- in this paper that I've given to

      24      you, I've also detailed, or quantified, the

      25      forecast.  Not just simply, broadly speaking, given







                                                                   73
       1      you my idea of what's going to be the outcome, but

       2      quantified the forecast.

       3             Let me say just a couple of things about the

       4      numbers.

       5             First of all, again, the numbers are pretty

       6      close from everybody.  I mean, you know, this is

       7      coin-flipping, but, the numbers are pretty close.

       8             But there's a couple of things that you

       9      should know about those numbers, which -- which, in

      10      my -- my view, are very, very important.

      11             First of all, as has been sort of said,

      12      the -- the -- we have -- we've reached what

      13      economists call "full employment."

      14             And so, the gains, the growth rate, if you

      15      may, but the gains that you're going to see in

      16      non-farm payroll employment, in the gains in the

      17      unemployment rate, are likely to become somewhat

      18      more subdued.

      19             I looked at the consensus forecast for the

      20      economy as measured by, this one is Bloomberg

      21      surveys:  231,000 jobs added to payrolls each month

      22      in 2015; a hundred eighty-one, 2016; a hundred

      23      sixty-three, 2017; and, in 2018, if anybody can

      24      guess out that far, 149,000.

      25             Unemployment rate coming down, continuing to







                                                                   74
       1      come down, but not in the leaps and bounds that

       2      we've seen in the last few years, at 5.3 in 2015.

       3      4.8, 4.6.

       4             What this also implies, as the consensus

       5      forecast and my forecast shows, is that, although --

       6      and this is where you and I differ a little bit,

       7      Jim -- is that the consumer spending should continue

       8      to expand, but at a slower and slower and slower

       9      pace.

      10             So, 3.1 percent in 2015, 4. -- 2.7, 2.5, and

      11      then 2.4.

      12             Now, this -- this is pretty important,

      13      because it carries with it some important

      14      implications for the New York State economy and for

      15      New York State tax receipts.

      16             I've got some numbers in there on tax

      17      receipts, and what's troubling to me, but I think

      18      this is important, is that receipts for the 2016

      19      fiscal year -- personal income tax, sales tax --

      20      they look really good.

      21             That's already in the bag, pretty much in the

      22      bag.  But they slow significantly for fiscal year

      23      2017.

      24             So I'd be pretty careful, because I think

      25      this is very consistent with what I see going on in







                                                                   75
       1      the national economy, the numbers I just went

       2      through.

       3             In other words, the revenue forecast that

       4      I had in here, suggesting a slowdown in the growth

       5      rate, and, actually, a negative number for personal

       6      income-tax receipts for the fiscal 2017,

       7      minus .3 percent, I think that should be -- in other

       8      words, I'm really strongly recommending a lot of

       9      caution.

      10             I see that also show up in my housing

      11      numbers.

      12             Yes, housing's a big, pretty solid part of

      13      the economy.  Probably the best part of the economy

      14      that I can -- that I'm looking at.

      15             But, there, the growth rates of residential

      16      real estate and the GDP accounts come down,

      17      8.7 percent in 2015, which is a good number, a

      18      strong number, real.  7.1 percent.  And then

      19      4.9 percent in 2017.

      20             So the whole pattern, when you look at -- the

      21      numbers are all pretty close.

      22             The pattern is, that things are going to

      23      become a little bit slower as we move through 2016

      24      and 2017, and that will show up -- I think, that

      25      will show up in revenues.







                                                                   76
       1             Stock prices; you asked the question about

       2      stock prices.  You wanted to hear what the prospects

       3      were for stock prices.

       4             There are two things that drive stock prices.

       5             One is earnings.  And the other is

       6      price-earnings ratios, or, what people will pay for

       7      those earnings.

       8             The growth rate of earnings is negative in

       9      2015, a lot because of energy.

      10             In 2016, it looks like it's going to be

      11      breakeven.  Maybe down .5 percent.

      12             And at 2017, we're talking, like, at about a

      13      plus 2 percent growth rate, in -- whether we're

      14      looking at corporate earnings or S&P 500 earnings,

      15      the numbers are about the same.

      16             Those are not particularly inspiring.

      17             The second thing is, the Federal Reserve is

      18      going to be leaning towards restraint.  Whether it's

      19      one time, three times, I don't know.  But when

      20      they're raising interest rates, it puts a little bit

      21      of downward pressure on price-earnings ratios.

      22             It is very hard to make the case for really

      23      good stock markets in 2016 and 2017.

      24             If you were to -- if you were to start -- use

      25      as your starting point, the average price in 2015,







                                                                   77
       1      fourth quarter, you get almost no change in stock

       2      prices for 2016 and '17.

       3             The good news is, if you want to call this

       4      good news, is we've had a sharp decline in stock

       5      prices, so we're not starting at the average of the

       6      fourth quarter of 2015.

       7             We're starting at an average, which is

       8      considered our price, that is considerably lower

       9      than that, so that we're now, as I do the

      10      arithmetic, this is very grandiose, 7 1/2 percent

      11      undervalued, with the upside potential in the stock

      12      market from the current level, of being 9.9 percent

      13      through the end of 2016, and then we flatten out

      14      again.

      15             The point is, is that -- you know, is that if

      16      it was isn't for the volatility, which has created

      17      an opportunity -- and I don't want everybody to rush

      18      out and call their broker now -- but what I'm trying

      19      to say is -- because this could easily be wrong, but

      20      if it wasn't for the opportunity that's been created

      21      by the current, quote, crisis, it -- it -- the

      22      prospects for interest rates will be rising a little

      23      bit, stock prices would be level.  But, now, it's

      24      created somewhat of an opportunity, which might make

      25      you feel really great about the stock market.







                                                                   78
       1             But, in my judgment, the prospects are really

       2      not all that great.

       3             A couple of -- couple of points on this

       4      forecast, and I'll be brief.

       5             First of all, I've done this sort of as

       6      whimsy, but turns out to be pretty good research --

       7      well, it's not good research.  It's whimsy.

       8             The consensus forecast for the national

       9      economy tends to pull in one direction during the

      10      two-year forecast period.

      11             The -- it tends to either start too high, and

      12      just goes down for the whole two years, until it

      13      gets it right in the last month, of course, when

      14      you've got all the numbers.  Or, it starts too low,

      15      and it goes up.

      16             And the consensus forecast is now, about,

      17      2.1 percent for 2016, and it's been trending lower.

      18             And that means that, 2.1 percent -- I'm

      19      hoping, I'm crossing my fingers, that's where I am,

      20      I hope it's right -- but if that pattern continues,

      21      it's probably going to come down a little bit.

      22             Another reason for being a little bit

      23      cautious about 2016.

      24             So, that's one thing.

      25             The second thing which I would sort of







                                                                   79
       1      mention in passing, you know, the average growth

       2      rate of the economy, from 1980 through the -- before

       3      2009, in positive expansionary orders, was

       4      3.7 percent.

       5             In this recovery, it's 2.2 percent.

       6             The reason is, as I see it, the growth rate

       7      of the population has come down considerably.

       8             The participation rate, or the percentage of

       9      the population that's actually in the labor force,

      10      or working or actively looking for jobs, has come

      11      down considerably.

      12             And as has been mentioned, productivity has

      13      been very dismal.  The growth rate of productivity

      14      is low.

      15             I know I heard your numbers, but, getting a

      16      growth rate of above 2 1/2 percent is really hard

      17      when you take this all into consideration.

      18             So that's a kind of structural problem that

      19      the state of New York tends to mirror, or walk in

      20      march step -- in lockstep with the U.S. national

      21      economy.

      22             It's going to be hard to get the kind of

      23      growth rates we all would like to see.

      24             So -- so -- so that's important.

      25             That's the structural problem.







                                                                   80
       1             And the cyclical problem is that, we've

       2      reached full employment, and it's going to be --

       3             So, the point is, I'm saying, you know, go

       4      easy.

       5             Let me see.

       6             A couple other things -- well, let me say the

       7      other -- other thing.

       8             It's going to be hard -- the -- the -- will

       9      this recovery just end of old age?

      10             That's another question that keeps coming up.

      11             You know, (unintelligible) simply, well, you

      12      don't have a good reason for the recovery ending --

      13      recession starting.  Maybe energy's fine, and all

      14      that.

      15             Will it just end of old age?

      16             That question has been asked, and it's been

      17      studied very, very extensively.

      18             And the answer is:  No, it is not going to

      19      end of old age.  There has to be a cause for the

      20      recovery ending and a recession beginning.

      21             As has been mentioned already, probably the

      22      principal cause of the problem, the thing that we

      23      face, which is the big risk, is China.

      24             It's very indirect, but it's -- the slowdown

      25      that we've seen in China can get transmitted around







                                                                   81
       1      the world, as well as to the U.S., through four

       2      primary transmission mechanisms:

       3             Psychology.  Declines in China -- declines in

       4      the stock market in China to scare everybody around

       5      the world, they go down.

       6             The most important being commodity prices and

       7      trade flows.

       8             And, there are six countries in the world

       9      that -- that over 33 percent of their exports are

      10      commodities.

      11             Think about this:  Canada, Mexico, Brazil,

      12      Indonesia, Russia, and Australia.

      13             If you add China to that package, that's

      14      45 percent of U.S. exports.

      15             If you're asking the question, "Can the

      16      slowdown in China get transmitted around the world,

      17      and can it affect the U.S.?" it certainly can affect

      18      the U.S.  It does gets transmitted.  It doesn't

      19      happen in isolation.

      20             That's another reason to be a little bit -- a

      21      little bit troubled, or a little bit concerned.

      22             But as I say, I still don't think that's

      23      going to be enough to turn an economic recovery that

      24      we're currently experiencing into something that

      25      will be called a "recession," or something that







                                                                   82
       1      would qualify as a recession.

       2             I'm going to finish up by just mentioning a

       3      couple things.

       4             I -- the oil price, I think, I'm -- I -- I --

       5      I have no idea is going to happen to oil prices.

       6      I wish I knew.

       7             I forecast $65 today.

       8             Believe me, I work pretty hard at forecasting

       9      oil prices, and I really think I got some great

      10      models going, and they -- they're been just

      11      continuously wrong.

      12             But, it feels very much like we're as much at

      13      an emotional extreme in oil as we were in 2008 when

      14      the price got to $140 per barrel, and everybody was

      15      forecasting $200 per barrel.

      16             Well, that didn't happen.

      17             And we've gotten down to 30, and it seems

      18      like an emotional extreme once again.

      19             So, I'm crossing my fingers and hoping that

      20      oil -- that you're right on your forecast for oil

      21      prices, I would take that.

      22             That's -- I'm going to finish right there.

      23             The most important question --

      24             I think I've covered all that I wanted to

      25      cover.







                                                                   83
       1             -- was really that question is:

       2             Is this a bear market, or is this simply a

       3      correction?

       4             Are we going to see a recession, or not?

       5             And I think the answer to that question is:

       6      No, but there -- but it's going to be a close call.

       7             And I think that when you take a look at the

       8      details of your forecast, your economic forecast,

       9      and everybody is pretty close, make sure that you're

      10      coming down on those growth rates, not only for

      11      employment, but on the unemployment rate, as well as

      12      consumption, and also -- and also housing.

      13             And that has -- carries with it significant

      14      implications for tax revenues for the fiscal 2017

      15      year.

      16             I think that's about it.

      17             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Any questions for

      18      Hugh?

      19             SENATOR KRUEGER:  We're all waiting till the

      20      end.

      21             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Hugh, thank you very

      22      much.

      23             Chris Vavares, Macroeconomics Advisers.

      24             CHRIS VAVARES:  Hi.  Very good to be here.

      25             Thanks for having me back.







                                                                   84
       1             I don't believe this -- is the microphone on?

       2             Great.

       3             So, I loved the prior remarks, especially

       4      Hugh's.  I think he started with exactly the right

       5      issue.

       6             We come down on the same side.

       7             We think it's less of a close call, but I --

       8      but we think we'll -- we're in a correction and

       9      we'll avoid a recession.

      10             However, we did significantly mark down our

      11      forecast in the recent forecast round, and the

      12      primary reason was:  If you go back a bit to the

      13      summer, when concerns bubbled up again about the

      14      growth of the Chinese economy, and how that was

      15      spilling over into commodity prices, and how the

      16      strong dollar was spilling over into emerging-market

      17      economies, all of that's led to increased pessimism

      18      about near-term growth prospects for the global

      19      economy.  And that's reflected in stock prices.

      20             And, so, we've seen a major additional leg

      21      down in equities in the U.S. market, as well as

      22      other global stock markets.

      23             We -- and, of course, that impacts aggregate

      24      demand in the U.S. through wealth effects and

      25      through the cost of capital.







                                                                   85
       1             In addition, we've seen a sharp rise in

       2      credit spreads.  Some of that's related to the low

       3      oil prices and the impact on high-yield bonds in the

       4      energy sector.  It's also impacting banks; fear

       5      about banks' balance sheets, and the kinds of loans

       6      that they may have made to the energy sector, and

       7      what it will do to their ultimate profitability.

       8             In addition, the strong dollar impacts

       9      corporate profits, as well as -- and, of course,

      10      that can spill over into investment.  And, in

      11      addition, it disadvantages U.S. exports and

      12      advantages imports, and contributes to the

      13      additional drag we expect from that exports.

      14             So all of these financial conditions that

      15      have worsened are working against the continued

      16      strong expansion that we've seen; "strong," if you

      17      like something a little north of 2 percent.

      18             And, previously, we had expected that all of

      19      the -- this worsening of financial conditions, or at

      20      least the last few months of it, would be corrected

      21      at a fairly quick pace.

      22             However, with some of the weakening in the

      23      data that we've seen, and with just a greater

      24      overall sense of pessimism, including the "R" word

      25      creeping into the lexicon of the media, making







                                                                   86
       1      everyone, suddenly, a bit more cautious.  And that

       2      caution leads to more risk aversion, and that risk

       3      aversion impacts asset prices.

       4             And -- so all of that has led to us be more

       5      cautious about the rebound and improvement in

       6      financial conditions.

       7             And as a result, then, we've marked down the

       8      growth of aggregate demand in the U.S. fairly

       9      substantially.

      10             Now, there's a -- financial conditions are

      11      the things that control the growth of aggregate

      12      demand, and it includes bank lending, et cetera.

      13             But the three or so things that I highlighted

      14      are, I think, quite representative of the overall,

      15      you know, dominate financial conditions as it

      16      imposes -- as it impacts the aggregate demand.

      17             But there's yin-and-yang of financial

      18      conditions.

      19             It's sort of what's imposed by market and

      20      market expectations and perceptions.

      21             And then there's the fed who can do something

      22      to offset it, but, imperfectly.  It doesn't control

      23      financial conditions, but it influences financial

      24      conditions.

      25             So when financial conditions worsen, and







                                                                   87
       1      impacts what -- the outlook for the U.S. economy,

       2      the fed responds to that, and it tells us it's

       3      data-dependent.

       4             In the last survey of economic projections,

       5      the F1C was suggesting that the economy would grow,

       6      you know, north of 2 percent, 2 1/2 percent,

       7      something like that, and that that would be -- and

       8      inflation would gradually move to 2 percent, and

       9      that would be sufficient to have four fed

      10      tightenings in each year over the next three years.

      11             And, so, that's what the DOTS chart showed

      12      us, and we had pretty much said, Well, believe the

      13      DOTS.

      14             And that had been our forecast for the fed

      15      funds' rate.

      16             However, as a result of the larger and more

      17      persistent weakening in the financial conditions, we

      18      don't believe that they'll be able to follow that

      19      path, and the next couple of surveys will show less

      20      of a rise in interest rates.

      21             And so with that, we -- we're now expecting

      22      only two tightenings this year, in June and

      23      December.

      24             They'll skip one, we believe in 2017, if our

      25      forecast -- if the economy evolves similar to our







                                                                   88
       1      forecast.

       2             And, finally, get to four tightenings in

       3      2017 -- 2018.  And that would be consistent with the

       4      very end of the year, December, with the fed fund's

       5      rate at two seventy-five.

       6             So this is significantly below what's shown

       7      in the DOTS charts today.  And we believe that, and

       8      market expectations will be coming down towards

       9      that.

      10             Now, in addition, when we look at long rates,

      11      we know that the term premium has been squeezed to

      12      be significantly negative, most of that due to

      13      flight-to-safety issues as a result of all the

      14      global financial turmoil.

      15             And we think, as things sort of get -- gain

      16      more traction, we get going again, we're likely to

      17      see that term premium move up towards zero, and

      18      eventually into positive territory.

      19             So we can see long rates moving back up,

      20      rising from where we are today, around one seventy.

      21             On the 10-year treasury yield, probably

      22      around, you know, possibly to two fifty by the end

      23      of 2016.  And all the way up to something, like,

      24      closer to three fifty by the end of 2018.

      25             So, long rates we expect to rise.







                                                                   89
       1             We do expect, eventually, a rise in all

       2      rates, and a flattening of the yield curve.  And

       3      that's also predicated upon continued expansion.

       4             Some of the factors that will lead to that

       5      continued expansion are that we do get the

       6      improvement in financial conditions from where we

       7      are today.

       8             So risk spreads will narrow.  The equity-risk

       9      premium will decline.

      10             And that's really important, because the rise

      11      in rates is usually a significant headwind for

      12      equities, and especially during a period when, while

      13      we have growth, called "moderate growth," of

      14      corporate earnings, it's not great.

      15             So we need that decline in the equity-risk

      16      premium in order to get continued increases in the

      17      stock market.

      18             But for this year, we expect it to be a down

      19      market, down about 1 percent, and the S&P ending

      20      around twenty twenty.

      21             For next year, we expect to be up about

      22      3 1/2 percent, with the S&P ending about

      23      twenty eighty.

      24             And, 2018, we'll end up maybe around

      25      twenty one seventy-five.







                                                                   90
       1             So not great years in terms of price returns

       2      on the S&P 500.

       3             And, so, as we -- as we've already seen with

       4      the significant cutbacks in the financial-services

       5      industry, while at least these numbers are positive,

       6      they're not -- they're not that great, and so

       7      financial services will probably be under

       8      significant cost pressures.

       9             Okay.

      10             So, the other thing related to fed policy,

      11      I should mention, is inflation.

      12             And, of course, the higher dollar and lower

      13      oil prices work in the same direction to lower

      14      inflation.

      15             And there's a lot of inertia in the inflation

      16      process.

      17             So once a shock pushes inflation lower, it

      18      tends to stay there, and only gradually be drawn up

      19      to towards the -- in this case, inflation

      20      expectations, which, thus far, appear to be anchored

      21      around 2 percent.

      22             Unfortunately, when we look at the some of

      23      the measures of inflation expectations, whether

      24      they're survey measures or the market-based

      25      measures, say, from the TIPS market, the







                                                                   91
       1      5-year/5-year forward break-even inflation rates

       2      that we read from the TIPS markets, we've seen

       3      significant declines in the market-based measures of

       4      inflation.

       5             And if that ends up spilling over into the

       6      survey-based measures, and, in, fact is, a true

       7      representation of what's happening with inflation

       8      expectations, then -- then we're in a kind of whole

       9      different world.

      10             And Jim Bullard mentioned last night, that

      11      there's some credibility issues with respect to

      12      whether the fed, in fact, its 2 percent inflation

      13      target is remaining credible.

      14             And, so, if -- if we don't see a pickup in

      15      the economy and see inflation begin to move back

      16      towards 2 percent, the fed is going to have to be

      17      more aggressive.

      18             So we may see no additional tightenings out

      19      there.

      20             So I think there's significant risk if

      21      inflation expectations become unmoored.

      22             So I would put that as another, sort of,

      23      category-one risk, of seeing inflation not raise

      24      towards 2 percent, if those inflation expectations

      25      become unmoored and drift lower.







                                                                   92
       1             We do expect the unemployment rate to

       2      undershoot full employment.  That's part of the

       3      story of why we think inflation will, in fact, move

       4      up towards 2 percent.

       5             So we see the unemployment rate getting to

       6      4.6 percent by the end of this year, and staying

       7      there, with overall GDP growth that's just a little

       8      over 2 percent.

       9             So that's sort of the big picture.

      10             The -- Slide 3 has some of the numbers.

      11      I don't want to spend too much time on that.

      12             I want to call your attention instead to

      13      Slide 7 in my slide packet.

      14             And, again, this goes to the notion of what

      15      are the -- what are the foundational elements of a

      16      scenario that has the economy avoiding recession?

      17             And, here, it's the fact that fiscal -- the

      18      fiscal policy, and this includes both the state and

      19      local and the federal level, and not only taxes, but

      20      also government spending, so we pull all this

      21      together into an index of contributions to

      22      GDP growth, has moved from being a significant drag,

      23      as it was back in 2013, to a modest increase in

      24      2014-2015.  And we expect that there's still a

      25      modest boost to growth over the next three years.







                                                                   93
       1             So that's something that should be helping to

       2      sustain growth at 2 percent.

       3             You go on to the next slide, I alluded to,

       4      you know, financial conditions are bad now, not

       5      universally.

       6             I think Hugh pointed to some that were

       7      actually pretty good.

       8             Extension of credit to consumers is one area,

       9      to be sure.

      10             And that's reflected in this chart, in the

      11      blue line at the above.

      12             It's the diffusion index of -- from the

      13      Senior Loan Officer Survey from the Federal Reserve,

      14      of banks' willingness to make consumer installment

      15      loans.

      16             When it's positive, it means they're more

      17      willing in this -- on average, in this period, than

      18      the prior period, to extend those loans.

      19             So credit growth is still looking pretty

      20      solid, and we don't have to really look any further

      21      than the credit-growth numbers themselves.  They've

      22      been pretty solid.

      23             But the red line is the B, double-A, spread

      24      over the 20-year treasury yield, and it has risen

      25      lately.







                                                                   94
       1             So that's that worsening of financial

       2      conditions that I described earlier.  And, of

       3      course, that raises the cost of capital, and also

       4      impinges on credit flows into -- into both

       5      high-grade and in -- and -- and junk-bond debt.

       6             So, that's not good, in terms of credit flow

       7      to the business sector.  But we do expect that, as

       8      the economy regains traction, that those spreads

       9      will come down.

      10             And then, finally, if you go to the next

      11      chart, we put the trio up there: the mortgage

      12      spread, the bond spread, and the equity-risk

      13      premium.

      14             And the story is, that as those things come

      15      down, with -- at acceleration in both prices and

      16      GDP, cash flows are improving, the unemployment rate

      17      is a little lower, employment levels are better,

      18      consumers' balance sheets are continuing to

      19      improve...all of the factors that should lead to a

      20      less risky environment, you know, continue to

      21      unfold; and as a result, those risk premiums get

      22      squeezed, and that's a positive for growth.

      23             If you look at Slide 10, this is the house --

      24      this is the chart of the components of household net

      25      worth.  It includes:  All the consumer durables that







                                                                   95
       1      folks own.  All the liquid assets outside of the

       2      stock market.  The stock market itself.  Their

       3      equity holdings, both directly and indirectly.  And

       4      then their housing wealth.

       5             And all of that, that mountain of wealth, has

       6      been rising at a pretty good pace since the end of

       7      the recession.  And even with the last couple of

       8      corrections we've had in the stock market, you see

       9      them as small divots in that mountains of household

      10      net worth.

      11             So when you look at from it from this

      12      perspective, yes, it's not a good thing that we've

      13      had those declines, but it's not something that's

      14      going to derail consumer spending.

      15             It may -- it may take the -- sort of the

      16      bloom off the rose a bit, but we're going to see it

      17      continue to rise.

      18             The other factor that I want to address,

      19      that's come up a couple a times, is the impact of

      20      the oil-price decline on the U.S. economy.

      21             If you look at Slide 11, this calculation is

      22      the contribution to real disposable income growth

      23      from the relative decline in energy prices.

      24             So, when energy prices decline, it reduces

      25      inflation relative to what it otherwise would have







                                                                   96
       1      been.

       2             That boosts the growth of real disposable

       3      income, and that should flow through to consumer

       4      spending of, roughly, 70 to 80 cents.  Or, you can

       5      think of a factor of 70 to 80 percent of these

       6      contributions to growth will show up in consumer

       7      spending.

       8             Can we see it?  Is it there it?

       9             Well, it doesn't always come in with the same

      10      timing, but we expect that we will see it

      11      eventually.

      12             It is consistent with an immediate rise in

      13      saving rate when gasoline prices decline.  But then,

      14      laster, that saving rate declines as the spending --

      15      real spending picks up.

      16             And this has been positive.  It will continue

      17      to be positive through most of 2016.

      18             So that's another factor that we think will

      19      help to sustain overall consumer spending in this

      20      year.

      21             I had mentioned the dollar is a significant

      22      drag on the economy.

      23             If you look at -- oh, and, I'm sorry, one

      24      more thing on oil prices.

      25             When we did the analysis to look at what the







                                                                   97
       1      net impact was in 2015, we arrived at the conclusion

       2      that it was a slight negative.

       3             And the reason was, that when oil price were

       4      falling from 110 to 70, there was not that much

       5      impact on domestic oil production, because oil

       6      production in the U.S. was still sort of economical

       7      above that price level.

       8             But once you fell from 70 to 30, that

       9      $40 price decline went through and took out all of

      10      that tight oil and gas production, and it was no

      11      longer sensible to go out and explore at those

      12      prices.

      13             The producers explore -- the wildcatters, if

      14      you will, couldn't get funding to do it, and so we

      15      saw rig counts drop off dramatically.  And that then

      16      was reflected in a huge dropoff in business fixed

      17      investment in mine -- what's called "mining

      18      structures," of over $100 billion.  And that was a

      19      big negative for overall GDP growth over most of

      20      2015.

      21             So while there was the positive impact from

      22      the boost of consumer spending, we felt that the

      23      impact on business fixed investment.

      24             And as Jim alluded to, the downstream effects

      25      of that in the manufacturing of pipes and valves and







                                                                   98
       1      pumps, all of that, was -- turned out to be a slight

       2      negative.

       3             So, it was probably the first year in our

       4      history that a decline in oil prices was not

       5      positive for the U.S. economy.

       6             For 2016, we see it as a slight positive,

       7      because we think, well, first of all, oil prices, we

       8      have rising from current levels, slightly.

       9             Even with that, there's so much of a prior

      10      decline built in, that we're still going have the

      11      beneficial effect on consumers, and we're not really

      12      going see much change on the business

      13      fixed-investment side.

      14             So probably a slight positive for this year.

      15             Okay.  On to the foreign sector.

      16             We do expect that growth in the rest of the

      17      world has probably troughed, and is about to pick

      18      up.  This is predicated upon effective policy

      19      measures in both China and in Europe, and elsewhere,

      20      with growth picking up, by this measure, from about

      21      2 to 3 percent over the next year.

      22             This particular measure is a trade-weighted

      23      measure using export weights of the United States.

      24             So, it's focused on those countries that we

      25      do the most trade with.







                                                                   99
       1             But, the big headwind here is the sharp rise

       2      in the dollar, as I alluded to earlier.  That that

       3      has caused and set off a string of declines in net

       4      exports, that we think will amount to about a

       5      half-a-percentage-point drag on GDP growth every

       6      year, as we go forward.

       7             I want to then just go -- let's just go all

       8      the way to -- let's just jump up to Slide 20, since

       9      I talked about a lot of the other ones already.

      10             So Slide 20 is our stock, S&P 500, forecast,

      11      along the -- with our forecast of the equity-risk

      12      premium.

      13             And, I'll serve a good dose of humble pie

      14      here, and as Hugh does a great job of saying, don't

      15      believe these -- what do you say? -- don't believe

      16      these numbers, or something like that?

      17                  [Laughter.]

      18             CHRIS VAVARES:  You know, I don't have a

      19      great -- I don't have a great deal of confidence

      20      here, but at least there's a story; and the story

      21      is:  That, you know, we -- the level of dividends,

      22      and the expected growth of dividends, consistent

      23      with the rise in rates that we have, and, with this

      24      kind of a decline in the equity-risk premium, is

      25      consistent with modest gains in the stock market,







                                                                   100
       1      going forward.

       2             And -- and that would be -- also would say

       3      that some of this is due to the fact that we view

       4      the stock market, as Hugh mentioned, as being

       5      somewhat undervalued today.  Maybe not 9 percent.

       6      Maybe 5 percent.

       7             But, maybe 5 percent undervalued today, and

       8      able to rise beyond that, given the growth of

       9      dividends that we expect.

      10             And so I think I'll just leave it here.

      11             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Chris.

      12             Okay.  Do we have any questions for the

      13      panelists?

      14             SENATOR KRUEGER:  (Microphone turned off.)

      15             How would you like it?  Like, one at a time?

      16      back and forth?

      17             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Yeah, you can just go

      18      ahead.

      19             SENATOR KRUEGER:  (Microphone turned off.)

      20             Thank you.

      21             Thank you, all.

      22             Okay.  So I do have a series of questions,

      23      and I'm just going to throw them out there, and

      24      anybody can answer, because I think that your

      25      information doesn't necessarily conflict with each







                                                                   101
       1      other, although you approach things in different

       2      ways.

       3             So, everybody was talking, to some degree,

       4      about, you know, the story of:  Unemployment being

       5      better than it was.  Likelihood of continued slow

       6      growth, as opposed to major retraction.

       7             You had some charts -- I think it was James

       8      had some charts, showing --

       9             (Microphone turned on.)

      10             SENATOR KRUEGER:  See, the light doesn't

      11      work, so I didn't know if it was on or off.

      12             Thank you.

      13             So, somebody had some charts showing that

      14      employment for New York was actually better than the

      15      U.S. average.

      16             But then James had some maps showing

      17      New York State in a category where we actually fall

      18      quite a bit behind.  I think it was in a dark blue,

      19      the best states, to, light blue, the worst.  And we

      20      were in the light blue?  I think it was your maps.

      21             So, how does all that jive?

      22             That compared to the U.S. average, we're

      23      better, but, it's all going to fall apart?

      24             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Well, no.

      25             First of all, as a state, we're near the U.S.







                                                                   102
       1      average.

       2             But I think the chart -- the earlier charts

       3      were focused on New York City; New York City being

       4      substantially better than the state average, to be

       5      even better than the U.S.  But the upstate regions

       6      were generally lagging the U.S., and by a lot.

       7             So our charts, I mentioned some -- our charts

       8      show New York in about the middle for performance

       9      in -- I show in 2015.  But that would be the case

      10      over the 2010 to 2015 period.

      11             In fact, better than the U.S., if we look

      12      back earlier in the decade, because the New York

      13      recovery was stronger than much of the U.S.

      14             But, going forward, New York falls lower than

      15      the average by a bit, lower than the average U.S.

      16             And that's largely driven by demographics,

      17      and as I mentioned, the predominance of high growth

      18      in the sunbelt, from Florida, to Arizona, frankly,

      19      and even Texas when it gets over the oil-slump

      20      issue.

      21             So that's the relative connection.

      22             SENATOR KRUEGER:  So, also, people who follow

      23      unemployment data always talk about, there's the

      24      official unemployment rate, and then there's real

      25      unemployment.  Right?  And the numbers on real







                                                                   103
       1      unemployment are much higher, when you look at

       2      underemployment, people who have given up on

       3      looking, new entries.

       4             Is everybody's data working off of official

       5      unemployment rates and employment rates, or the more

       6      the category of what have they call "real

       7      employment" stats?

       8             MICHAEL JACOBS:  The last time I looked at

       9      the broader measures of unemployment, and those are

      10      official measures, too, that the Bureau of Labor

      11      Statistics has, counts one measure, including

      12      part-time people who want to work full-time, people

      13      that have given up on looking for work because

      14      they're discouraged.

      15             There are various measures.

      16             Last time I looked at it, which was,

      17      admittedly, back in November, there was a beginning

      18      of a decline in the U.S. of that -- or, more of a

      19      decline than we had seen.

      20             So it's still high, you know, still not

      21      great, but, I think it's been moving in the right

      22      direction.

      23             JAMES DIFFLEY:  When we report the

      24      4.8 percent that I mentioned a couple times, we're

      25      reporting the official rate, which hides the higher







                                                                   104
       1      rates that you're mentioning, and it's called, from

       2      U-1 to U-6, which is much higher.

       3             We're not ignoring them.  We're just not

       4      reporting them.

       5             They have improved over the last few years,

       6      considerably.

       7             I can't tell you the rate of change in

       8      New York versus the rest of the country, offhand, on

       9      those, but -- but I'm sure it's better.

      10             We recognize them.

      11             There's a thriving debate -- there's always

      12      been thriving debate amongst economists as to what

      13      is the full employment rate of unemployment, the

      14      natural rate?

      15             I'm arguing it's about -- that we're there,

      16      that we just got there, and it's 4.8 percent.

      17             You and Chris might have a different number

      18      on that.

      19             HUGH JOHNSON:  I agree with everything Jim

      20      said so far.

      21             I think the most important thing, and if you

      22      look at, depending on your definition of the

      23      "unemployment rate," they all kind of go together,

      24      so you can say, Well, gee, it's much higher.  Isn't

      25      that horrible?







                                                                   105
       1             Well, it's the pattern.

       2             It's whether we're getting improvement or

       3      not.

       4             That's number one.

       5             Number two, and it's the most important thing

       6      to me, and I think Jim explained it, when he talked

       7      about changing demographics, and the growth rate of

       8      employment in the sunbelt, is that the growth rate

       9      of employment in New York State, he has, and I also

      10      have, in 2016-2017, to be lower than the growth rate

      11      for the national -- the national numbers.

      12             And I think that's the most significant,

      13      because that's what's going to drive consumer

      14      spending, income-tax receipts, in New York State.

      15             That's why I come up with such numbers, but,

      16      basically, we're saying the same thing.

      17             SENATOR KRUEGER:  And this all ties into a --

      18      my bigger follow-up question which I have, and

      19      I have another -- I have all these economists in the

      20      room and one on the phone.

      21             So, one of the Governor's major priorities is

      22      an increase in the minimum wage.

      23             And if you looked at this table, there are

      24      those of us who strongly support that proposal, and

      25      I'm going to guess those of us who officially don't







                                                                   106
       1      support that proposal.

       2             If we do what's proposed by the Governor, and

       3      I'm one of those supporters, what do you believe the

       4      impact is, or will be, on the -- not just the --

       5      obviously, the wages will go up of workers, but, the

       6      impact on jobs' numbers and economic predictors for

       7      the state?

       8             HUGH JOHNSON:  I -- I -- I'll just say one

       9      thing, and rather than -- I don't even think anybody

      10      up here is going to want to touch that one -- but

      11      rather than touch it, I will say, I refer you, the

      12      Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco recently has

      13      done -- they do really good work, their economists

      14      do really good work, because it's short, like

      15      four pages, and it's readable.

      16             And they've recently done some really good

      17      work on that issue.

      18             They come in where I come in, and they think

      19      it's, on balance, not a good idea, and, for a

      20      variety of reasons.

      21             But the real bottom line is, that it, on

      22      balance, lead -- and it's a close call.

      23             I know it's, politically, you know, it's

      24      feel-good, or, it's fair, or, the kinds of things

      25      you hear, said.







                                                                   107
       1             But I think it might lead to, on balance,

       2      somewhat of a loss of jobs.

       3             And that's what they've concluded.  And they

       4      really are doing that, totally, from an academic

       5      point of view.

       6             So I think I would -- everybody is going to

       7      be different -- well, go ahead.

       8             I'll throw it back.

       9             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Chris, I can tell you want

      10      to say something.

      11             CHRIS VAVARES:  I have a somewhat different

      12      view.

      13             The Council of Economic Advisers did an

      14      extensive review of papers on the effects of the

      15      minimum-wage unemployment.

      16             And they -- there was a great graph in there,

      17      where they showed the cluster -- a cluster chart, if

      18      you will, of the employment effects: positive,

      19      negative, zero.

      20             The vast majority of them found, essentially,

      21      zero effect on employment.

      22             There were a few negatives, a few outliers of

      23      negative, that often get cited by folks who are

      24      against minimum-wage increases.

      25             A few positives who get cited by folks in







                                                                   108
       1      favor.

       2             But the vast majority were close to zero.

       3             So, I think the preponderance of the academic

       4      evidence is -- is -- is close to no impact on

       5      employment.

       6             But have you to consider where the state is.

       7             And, like, are most of the minimum jobs --

       8      minimum-wage jobs in the service industry, where

       9      those -- where those -- they can't really move them?

      10             You can't move the deli from the corner of

      11      53rd and Lex, and take it over to New Jersey.

      12      Okay?  It's -- that job is not going to go somewhere

      13      else.

      14             But are there below minimum-wage jobs, that

      15      if you raise the minimum wage, and states

      16      surrounding you have not, that those service-sector

      17      jobs, you know, could go somewhere else?

      18             So I think that's the main question.

      19             Do call centers -- well, they've all already

      20      left New York.

      21             So, I mean, that's kind of the question

      22      I would ask, that could be something peculiar to the

      23      state and the surrounding states.

      24             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Anybody else want to jump

      25      in?







                                                                   109
       1             They're all, "No, no."

       2                  [Laughter.]

       3             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Would you all agree that if

       4      low-income people's income goes up, they tend to

       5      spend that in the economy immediately, as opposed to

       6      invest it in the stock market and then lose it in

       7      Apple stocks?

       8                  (Off-camera, several presenters say,

       9        "Yes.")

      10             SENATOR KRUEGER:  "Yes."

      11             Okay.  Thank you.

      12             I think it was in Chris's chart, I think it

      13      was page 10, where you're showing household net

      14      worth, and you're breaking it down as continuing to

      15      rise, even though there was this glitch during, you

      16      know, the last recession.

      17             When we look at lots of the data on the

      18      number of people who are living in poverty in

      19      New York State, and those numbers are not going

      20      down; the number of senior citizens, which is a

      21      growing population, living, literally, on their

      22      social security income, and nothing else, that chart

      23      seems skewed to me.

      24             Is that because, when you take the

      25      uber-wealthy and you throw them in, they just skew







                                                                   110
       1      everything up?

       2             CHRIS VAVARES:  Certainly that's part of the

       3      issue, but, we focus a lot on income inequality, but

       4      there's also a lot of wealth inequality, because of

       5      the concentration of wealth.  And so the gains in

       6      the stock market that we've seen have driven a lot

       7      of, you know, increased concentration of wealth.

       8             So they're consistent, but it's just a

       9      function of the concentration of wealth.

      10             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Anybody disagree with that?

      11             JAMES DIFFLEY:  And I'll add, not only stock

      12      ownership, but ownership itself, it shows up in that

      13      wealth -- that chart, but it doesn't affect poverty

      14      statistics.

      15             HUGH JOHNSON:  It's a substantial -- it's a

      16      substantial issue, and it's hard to answer that --

      17      any of that.  The income-inequality and

      18      wealth-inequality issue, it's really hard to answer.

      19             It's -- I don't think many of us are very

      20      close to the answer.

      21             But I think that -- I think a big part of it

      22      are -- are -- is -- is the exponential progress of

      23      technology and the loss of middle-class jobs.

      24             They just simply don't exist.

      25             And you see that, if you look at the







                                                                   111
       1      employment levels for all of the major companies,

       2      what they were in 1990, and what they are today, and

       3      they're half of what they were in 1990.

       4             And you look at the number of jobs that have

       5      been outsourced to other parts of the world.

       6             Now, those are coming back, because the

       7      arbitrage -- the wage arbitrage that used to exist,

       8      U.S. being flat, and wages going up in some places

       9      like China, a lot of those -- a lot of those jobs

      10      are being shipped to places like India where there's

      11      still is an income arbitrage.  But some of them are

      12      coming back here.

      13             So it -- believe me, the income inequality,

      14      wealth inequality, in my view, my view, and I love

      15      to hear others, will be solved over time if you're

      16      patient.

      17             But I will also say that some of the work

      18      that I've seen done will not be solved by increasing

      19      taxes on the wealthy and increasing transfer

      20      payments to those -- believe me, I have a lot of

      21      sympathy for them, I really do, but I don't -- but

      22      I think we've proven that that doesn't -- that just

      23      doesn't do it.

      24             The GINI coefficient continues to increase.

      25             You know, you're familiar with that, aren't







                                                                   112
       1      you?

       2             All right -- all right.  That's -- that's

       3      all.

       4             SENATOR KRUEGER:  So, I don't have as big a

       5      vocabulary as you do, but I actually don't agree

       6      with you on that.  But we can have that conversation

       7      at another time.  I would like to.

       8             HUGH JOHNSON:  I'd love to.

       9             But tying into the other things you presented

      10      on, actually, I think it was in the Budget

      11      Director's presentation, you talked about the

      12      concerns about bonus-money income going down as a

      13      concern for the state.  And several people

      14      highlighted that.  In fact, somebody said that

      15      was -- you know, "flat" was the equivalent of "up"

      16      for bonuses.

      17             I don't remember which one of you put that in

      18      your charts.

      19             I was always taught we should be happy when

      20      we're not so dependent on Wall Street.  That

      21      we're -- you know, that it's, like, okay, bonus

      22      stories change, but our economy is diverse, not

      23      overly dependent on one industry.

      24             So, I look at that and go, okay, is that

      25      really terrible?







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       1             But, is that really terrible that we're

       2      seeing flat bonus money, which I guess means not as

       3      much of our tax revenue comes in.

       4             I understand that was your point.

       5             UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:  No, my concern was

       6      that (unintelligible) revenue.

       7             SENATOR KRUEGER:  No, I understand that.  And

       8      this is a revenue discussion.

       9             But, objectively, on the big picture, should

      10      New York State be concerned if bonuses are flat and

      11      we're less dependent on the financial sector?

      12             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Well, to turn it, to combine

      13      this question with your question of inequality, if

      14      we -- if I were to report that the bonuses were flat

      15      this year because the income wage gains was

      16      distributed more broadly in the New York City

      17      economy, say, then, you would consider that a good

      18      thing, and you would consider it on -- on -- in the

      19      aggregate, offsetting, and not a problem.

      20             However, I'm reporting that bonuses are down,

      21      but that money doesn't appear anywhere else in the

      22      New York tax-revenue streams.  So, in that sense,

      23      it's a bad thing.

      24             SENATOR KRUEGER:  And, Michael --

      25             MICHAEL JACOBS:  A lot of the inequality







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       1      measures that have been pointed to, and I've done

       2      analysis of New York City tax returns, where, you

       3      know, capital gains is the predominant form of

       4      income for, you know, people, say, filers with over

       5      a million dollars, and it's a small portion of

       6      everyone else's.

       7             The -- if can I say -- the -- oh, the

       8      income-inequality measures vary greatly, just with

       9      the fate of how the very wealthy are doing, very

      10      affluent are doing.

      11             And the question is, whether or not, you

      12      know, everyone else is getting more money, or it's

      13      just the capital gains going to a certain small

      14      portion is declining.

      15             So I think the way you put it was correct.

      16             SENATOR KRUEGER:  That was my question.

      17             Thank you, Rob.

      18             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Thank you, Senator.

      19             Chairman Oaks.

      20             ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Yes, I just had one

      21      question.

      22             You mentioned labor-force participation,

      23      showed charts saying that -- I think they were

      24      New York City numbers, saying they had hit the top

      25      since we started keeping those figures.







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       1             Is that -- do we have figures on

       2      New York State, or nationally, on workforce

       3      participation, to suggest we are in that phase, or

       4      is that unique to New York City?

       5             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Generally, I don't -- I can't

       6      quote the figures, offhand, but we do have them.

       7             There's also an ongoing debate about the fate

       8      in the, quote, new normal of labor-force

       9      participation rates.

      10             Generally, across the country, labor-force

      11      participation has declined substantially since the

      12      pre -- say, pre-recession days.

      13             Now, you can trace -- I think I can safely

      14      say, we can trace at least half of that to the aging

      15      of the population.  Right?  It's natural that

      16      60-year-olds have a different labor-force

      17      participation than 30-year-olds.  Right?  And

      18      there's more 60-years-old than there were 10 years

      19      ago.

      20             There's a debate as to whether the remaining

      21      changes are permanent or not.

      22             We have taken -- and I've had this discussion

      23      with others on this panel -- the view that the

      24      decline in labor-force participation rates are

      25      somewhat behavioral, and are not going to turn







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       1      around at least very quickly.

       2             That's -- that actually is a part of our more

       3      pessimistic job-growth picture for the state, I will

       4      admit, that you can -- that that's an open --

       5      somewhat of an open question.

       6             HUGH JOHNSON:  I have some numbers in my

       7      handout.

       8             New York State, you can get from the census

       9      bureau, and then sort of a quasi participation rate

      10      for labor force, divided by the population.

      11             And so you have to put them together.

      12             But they're right in there, in my -- in my

      13      numbers.

      14             ROBERT F. MUJICA, JR.:  Any other questions?

      15             No other questions?

      16             Nope.

      17             Thank you.

      18             This concludes this year's Economic and

      19      Revenue Forecasting Conference.

      20             I want to thank all the panelists for sharing

      21      your views.  They'll be very helpful.

      22             And, shortly, the economic and revenue staffs

      23      of both committees, and the executive, will be

      24      getting together to figure out, and hammer out, the

      25      revenue forecasts by March 1st.







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       1             So thank you, everybody, for coming.

       2             JASON BRAM (speakerphone):  Thank you.

       3                  (Whereupon, at approximately 3:40 p.m.,

       4        the 2016 Economic and Revenue Consensus

       5        Forecasting Conference concluded.)

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