Public Hearing - February 26, 2014

    


       1                         NEW YORK STATE

       2                    2014 ECONOMIC AND REVENUE
                        CONSENSUS FORECASTING CONFERENCE
       3      -------------------------------------------------------

       4
                                         State Capitol, Room 124
       5                                 Albany, New York

       6                                 February 26, 2014
                                         1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
       7

       8      PANEL PRESENT:

       9         Robert L. Megna, Panel Leader
                 Budget Director, NYS Division of Budget
      10
                 Robert Ward
      11         Deputy Comptroller, NYS Office of the Comptroller

      12         Senator John DeFrancisco
                 Chairman, Senate Finance Committee
      13
                 Senator Liz Krueger
      14         Ranking Member, Senate Finance Committee

      15         David Valesky
                 IDC Deputy Conference Leader
      16         Member of the Senate Finance Committee

      17         Assemblyman Herman Farrell
                 Chairman of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee
      18
                 Assemblyman Robert Oaks
      19         Ranking Member, Assembly Ways and Means Committee

      20

      21

      22

      23

      24

      25







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       1
              PRESENTERS:                             PAGE  QUESTIONS
       2
              Hugh Johnson                              15
       3      Chairman and Chief Investment Officer
              Hugh Johnson Advisors, LLC
       4
              Chris Varvares                            37
       5      Senior Managing Director
              Macroeconomic Advisers
       6
              James Diffley                             61       80
       7      Senior Director U.S. Regional Economics
              IHS Global Insight
       8
              Jason Bram                                81
       9      Research Officer
              Federal Reserve Bank of New York
      10
              Ronnie Lowenstein                         99
      11      Director
              NYC Independent Budget Office
      12

      13                            ---oOo---

      14

      15

      16

      17

      18

      19

      20

      21

      22

      23

      24

      25







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       1             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  [Inaudible], especially

       2      this time of year, I know, is incredibly valuable.

       3             I'd like to open up the Economic and Revenue

       4      Consensus Forecasting Conference for 2014.

       5             I'd like to make some very, very short

       6      remarks, but before I do that, let's introduce the

       7      panel.

       8             We have Senator John DeFrancisco, who's the

       9      Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee;

      10             We have Senator David Valesky, the IDC Deputy

      11      Conference Leader, and member of the Senate Finance

      12      Committee;

      13             We have Assemblyman Herman Farrell, Chairman

      14      of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee;

      15             Senator Liz Krueger, Ranking Member of the

      16      Senate Finance Committee;

      17             Assemblyman Robert Oaks, Ranking Member of

      18      the Assembly Ways and Means Committee;

      19             And, last, but not least, Robert Ward, who is

      20      the Deputy Comptroller.

      21             Again, I'll do some very brief remarks, and

      22      I would expect each of the panel members will want

      23      to give some opening remarks.

      24             Actually, we've lived, all of us, including

      25      the panel members, have lived through an







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       1      extraordinarily difficult period for the past

       2      three or four years.

       3             And, 2013, I guess, we started to see some

       4      light at the end of the tunnel.

       5             The U.S. economy grew over 3 percent.

       6             8 1/2 million private-sector jobs have been

       7      created since early 2010.  A half a million of those

       8      have been in New York.

       9             The national unemployment rate fell to 6.6 in

      10      January, the lowest level since 2008, October.

      11             And the state unemployment rate is at its

      12      lowest level since January of 2009.

      13             The housing market is also on the mend.

      14      Almost 4 trillion in real-estate wealth has been

      15      recovered since the third quarter of 2011.  Median

      16      and existing values are up 26 percent.

      17             And, the state was never as adversely

      18      impacted in the housing market, but, we're still

      19      doing better.  The state's number, a fraction of

      20      underwater homes, has fallen by 30 percent since

      21      2012.

      22             Indeed, not only has the state's real-estate

      23      market staged a healthy recovery, but, in fact,

      24      New York City's condo and co-op purchases rose to

      25      their highest level in more than 25 years, at the







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       1      end of last year.

       2             It's always, I feel, especially given my job

       3      title, to focus on risk.

       4             And, we must remind ourselves significant

       5      risks remain, a fact that Mother Nature has made

       6      abundantly clear in the past few years.

       7             The current economy, while strengthening a

       8      little bit, is the weakest of the post-war era.

       9             The labor and housing markets are in their

      10      best shape since the start of the recovery, but, the

      11      recovery has certainly not been a smooth one, as

      12      everyone here knows.

      13             For New York, the greatest risks still lie

      14      with future actions of the Federal Reserve, which is

      15      why we're always glad Jason's here.

      16             As the nation's financial capital,

      17      financial-market volatility poses a particularly

      18      large degree of uncertainty in New York.

      19             Recent events have demonstrated how sensitive

      20      markets can be to shifting expectations.

      21             Federal Reserve policy and resulting market

      22      reactions are likely to have a large impact on the

      23      state economy, larger than for the nation as a

      24      whole.

      25             In addition, the finance industry -- finance







                                                                   6
       1      and insurance industry continues to restructure.

       2             Since the third quarter of 2011, the state's

       3      finance and insurance sector has shed more than

       4      8,000 jobs.

       5             Although Wall Street has always been a source

       6      of high volatility, we have to recognize Wall Street

       7      is playing under a new set of rules and may never be

       8      the revenue-growth engine that it.

       9             Has been in the past.

      10             Wall Street firms have been altering their

      11      executive-compensation practices -- and, again,

      12      I would be interested in what the panel thinks -- in

      13      response to regulations that are still being

      14      written, excuse me, under Dodd-Frank.

      15             We've observed dramatic reductions in the

      16      cash portion of bonuses, in favor of equity grants,

      17      with large portions of compensation being deferred

      18      and subject to clawback.

      19             These changes, while necessary, have

      20      challenged our forecasting models in ways that we

      21      are still trying to figure out.

      22             This is exactly the right forum for

      23      acknowledging that added uncertainty in our income

      24      and revenue projections.

      25             Another feature of uncertainty in the market







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       1      that has made us uncertain is changes in federal tax

       2      policy.

       3             As we all know, the federal tax regime

       4      changed in fiscal 2013 for high-income tax earners,

       5      resulting in a very radical change in the pattern of

       6      tax payments.  We observed that shifting in

       7      real time, in late 2012 and early 2013.

       8             Taxpayers respond to tax-rate changes in ways

       9      that are not easily observable, such as realization

      10      of capital gains and partnership and dividend

      11      distribution.

      12             These changes have continued to affect

      13      collections up to today.

      14             Under these circumstances, we need to be

      15      particularly careful not to misinterpret transitory

      16      receipts with underlying base growth.

      17             Nevertheless, there's much positive news.

      18             The state has labor market remains strong.

      19      We added 133,00 jobs since the third quarter of

      20      2012.

      21             We remain a tourist mecca in New York,

      22      drawing visitors from all over the world.

      23             The state's business-services industry serve

      24      a growing global market.  Our real-estate and

      25      construction sectors are leading the nation.







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       1             So, we look forward to brighter days ahead.

       2      Our optimism is tempered with caution.

       3             At some point down the road, the current

       4      environment of low-interest rates and easy access to

       5      capital will come to an end.

       6             The national unemployment rate has fallen

       7      more quickly than the Federal Reserve's forecast.

       8      As a result, that day could come sooner than we

       9      think.

      10             Historically, whenever the Federal Reserve

      11      shifts from an expansionary to a contractionary

      12      policy stance, the impact on financial markets and,

      13      consequently, on New York's revenue base, has been

      14      negative.

      15             It is against this backdrop of uncertainty we

      16      embark upon revenue consensus.

      17             It's important to note, that while there are

      18      differences in our forecasts, at a fundamental

      19      level, there is broad agreement that New York faces

      20      substantial risk, given our revenue base.

      21             The logical conclusion is, that we will

      22      take -- need to take the types of tough,

      23      responsible, necessary actions that are in place in

      24      the executive budget, on both the revenue and

      25      spending side.







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       1             For three years, we have worked together to

       2      enact on-time fiscally responsible budgets that

       3      embrace the principle that state spending must grow

       4      more slowly than the overall economy.

       5             With the establishment of the 2 percent

       6      spending benchmark, the unsustainable trends of

       7      yesteryear have been reversed, and we are seeing

       8      measurable improvements in the state's financial

       9      position.

      10             By controlling and managing spending growth,

      11      we have reduced the need to engage in overly

      12      aggressive revenue projections.

      13             All parties deserve credit for this

      14      responsible budget-making.

      15             Each of the forecasts before us today

      16      represents a good-faith contribution to the

      17      consensus process.

      18             Looking ahead, I know that we are all

      19      committed to meeting the March 1st statutory

      20      deadline for revenue agreement.

      21             Revenue consensus is an important component

      22      of achieving our shared goal of a timely and

      23      responsibly enacted budget.

      24             And, I have talked way too long, so now I'm

      25      going to turn it over to Senator DeFrancisco.







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       1             SENATOR DeFRANCISCO:  Thank you, Bob.

       2             Now I have absolutely nothing to say,

       3      because, basically, everyone knows why we're here.

       4             And why I'm specifically here, is I want to

       5      hear the experts, as to what they have to say about

       6      the economy, heading into the rest of this year, and

       7      also into next fiscal year.

       8             What's really significant, I think, here

       9      today, are two things:

      10             Number one, that we're here, and when we're

      11      here, well in time to reach a consensus by the

      12      scheduled date, as was set in the 2007 Budget Reform

      13      Act, which will put us in an excellent position to

      14      do the discussions that we have to have, and, come

      15      up with a budget in a timely fashion, and a good

      16      budget, for the state of New York.

      17             So, I'm looking forward to continuing that

      18      trend; listening to what you have to say.  I may

      19      have a question now and then, if I understand what

      20      you're saying.

      21             If I don't, I'll look like I do.  I'll nod my

      22      head frequently.

      23                  [Laughter.]

      24             SENATOR DeFRANCISCO:  So, with that said,

      25      I look forward to what you have to say, and







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       1      I respect each of your opinions on the most

       2      important issue; namely, What revenues will there

       3      be, likely, in arriving at our budget?

       4             Thank you.

       5             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Assemblyman Farrell.

       6             ASSEMBLYMAN FARRELL, JR.:  Thank you.

       7             I'm pleased to be here today.

       8             The Ways and Means Committee staff forecasts

       9      a slow but steady improvement in employments and

      10      personal income in 2014 and 2015 for both the nation

      11      and the state.

      12             So, I look forward to hearing the panelists'

      13      thoughts on the economic outlook of both the state

      14      and nation, with a particular focus on your views

      15      about the outlook for New York State's economy, and

      16      the risk we face going forward.

      17             The independent analysis you will share with

      18      us today will provide a solid foundation as we

      19      discuss and debate various aspects of the budget.

      20             And, I thank you for being here today, and

      21      I look forward to hearing your comments.

      22             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Senator Valesky.

      23             SENATOR VALESKY:  Yes, thank you,

      24      Director Megna.

      25             I'm just gonna share a very brief statement







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       1      with our guests today, on behalf of the

       2      Independent Democratic Conference, and its leader,

       3      Senator Jeff Klein.

       4             The national and state economy has continued

       5      to stabilize in the aftermath of the

       6      Great Recession, but there is still uncertainty as

       7      to how widespread the recovery in New York State

       8      will ultimately be.

       9             While corporate profits are at record levels,

      10      employment in the state has barely reached

      11      pre-recession levels, and wage growth has remained

      12      weak.

      13             This slow economic recovery, coupled with the

      14      exorbitant costs of everyday life in New York,

      15      continue to present a challenge to working

      16      New Yorkers.

      17             The IDC believes that this is a persistent

      18      problem that requires the State's attention.

      19             It's also important to remember the broader

      20      context in which we are working, because there are

      21      still many risks that threaten the state's

      22      economy -- or, its economic recovery, rather.

      23             New York's role in the national economy means

      24      that disruptions at the national and global levels

      25      can have immediate impacts on New York.







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       1             Therefore, today's discussion will be crucial

       2      in assessing the realities of our economic

       3      situation, so that we can develop an understanding

       4      of how best to move forward and to face our

       5      challenges.

       6             The consensus that I am confident we will

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

       8      budget, that will allow the state economy to

       9      continue growing, and will enable New York's working

      10      families to prosper.

      11             I'm eager to begin laying the groundwork for

      12      that process.

      13             Thank you.

      14             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you, Senator.

      15             Senator Krueger.

      16             SENATOR KRUEGER:  Just looking forward to

      17      everybody's analysis, and hope that it will help us

      18      get to a right-size budget, and a timely budget.

      19             Thank you.

      20             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you, Senator.

      21             Assemblyman Oaks.

      22             ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Yes, thank you.

      23             I really think, as the Assembly Minority

      24      looked at revenue possibilities, we were extremely

      25      close to the Governor, both being a little under







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       1      this year, and a little over next year, but,

       2      probably as close as we've ever been.

       3             But I think, as Budget Director Megna's

       4      comments about tax policy, at the federal level and

       5      the state level, impacts individuals, and how they

       6      pay their taxes, and how they come in.

       7             Businesses as well are affected by that; and,

       8      so, I think that consistent tax policies, so that

       9      they can make their decisions to move ahead, is

      10      critical.

      11             And, so, we're looking forward to hearing

      12      where we are, but, also, hearing how we can help to

      13      get us faster to where we want to be.

      14             Thank you.

      15             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you.

      16             Bob, do you have some comments?

      17             ROBERT B. WARD:  Yeah, but just briefly, Bob.

      18      Thank you.

      19             The Comptroller issued his analysis of the

      20      executive budget earlier this week, and in

      21      association with that, made the observation that the

      22      state is at its best fiscal position in years.

      23             And I think most people would agree with

      24      that.

      25             Clearly, an important part of getting the







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       1      state to that position is the work that the Governor

       2      and the Legislature have done together, to take an

       3      appropriately careful approach to the balance of

       4      revenues and expenditures in recent years.

       5             And, we know that today's observations from

       6      the experts, who are here to give us their insights,

       7      will be playing an important role in helping to make

       8      sure that that continues.

       9             So, we thank you folks for joining us, and

      10      look forward to your insights.

      11             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thanks very much.

      12             And without further ado, why don't we turn it

      13      over to Hugh Johnson, of Hugh Johnson Advisors.

      14             HUGH JOHNSON:  Thank you very much.

      15             I'm proud to be here.  I appreciate being

      16      invited back to be part of this -- part of this

      17      process.

      18             I very -- see enabled associates on this side

      19      of the table, as well as yourselves.  Nice to see

      20      you again.

      21             Hopefully, that I can make some comments on

      22      the [unintelligible].  And, also, be somewhat

      23      helpful in some of the comments that I'm going to be

      24      making.

      25             The -- you know, Bob made -- well,







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       1      Mr. Budget Director -- I'm not sure what the right

       2      way of addressing you, or him, is -- but, made some

       3      great comments about the success of both the

       4      national and the state economy since 2010.

       5             And, indeed, that there's been some

       6      considerable accomplishments.

       7             I think it's important, simply to point out,

       8      and this is, maybe not as valuable as it sounds,

       9      but, that the average duration of the ten previous

      10      post-war -- uhm, post-war bull-market economic

      11      recoveries was 57.1 months.  The average magnitude

      12      of the ten prior bull markets, 126.5 percent.

      13             And we are currently -- we're, currently,

      14      just about to finish the fifth year, with the

      15      60th month.  And the bull market, of course, is

      16      156.4 percent, compared to, again, that average of

      17      126.5.

      18             So it may be that the most important

      19      question, or contribution, that this group can

      20      make -- especially because looking backwards is not

      21      what we're trying to do; we're trying to look

      22      forward -- is to be able to identify when the

      23      current bull-market economic recovery, interest-rate

      24      rise, or cycle, is gonna end, or in the -- as I've

      25      said to the Assembly group on occasion, is the







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       1      immortal words of Gerald Ford, the American

       2      President, his answer to Yogi Berra, "As the

       3      pendulum has now come full circle."

       4                  [Laughter.]

       5             HUGH JOHNSON:  But that really, to me, is --

       6      is -- it's probably the second most-important

       7      question.

       8             The most important question being:  How do

       9      we -- whether we deal with this issue of the haves

      10      and the have-nots of the employment conditions.

      11             But, certainly, helping to identify if we're

      12      at, or even near, the end of this cycle, because

      13      that's gonna change everything.

      14             It's gonna change everything in all of your

      15      numbers.  It's gonna change, certainly, your revenue

      16      forecast.

      17             So, that, if we can shed any light on that,

      18      it would be very helpful.

      19             What I ordinarily do -- and, incidentally,

      20      there's a very strong consensus.  I've looked at

      21      these numbers on the one-pager, and I'm almost

      22      thinking about Senator DeFrancisco's comment, that

      23      we want to try to reach a consensus.  And I'm almost

      24      inclined to be extremely brief, and say:  There it

      25      is; take the averages and use those.







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       1             But it's -- it's -- life's not that simple,

       2      and I usually try to talk a little bit more than

       3      that, or shed a little bit of light.

       4             Now, let me just say, first of all, in

       5      starting out:  The way I have approached this in the

       6      past, and the way I have generally approached the

       7      whole process of forecasting, is to -- first, to try

       8      to look at the most important trends that are

       9      unfolding in the financial markets.

      10             What is the message of the trends that are

      11      unfolding in the financial markets?

      12             And then to try to reconcile those trends

      13      with trends that are unfolding in important monetary

      14      and economic variables, hopefully, to answer the

      15      question:  Where we are in the cycle, or do we have

      16      further to go in the current cycle?

      17             As I have given you a handout, and I'm not

      18      going to labor through the handout.  You can look at

      19      this later if you're interested.

      20             And in the first part, it sort of summarizes

      21      my conclusions or findings on that issue, or

      22      those -- that issue, which consists of two parts.

      23             I've divided financial-market performance

      24      into the third quarter and fourth quarter of last

      25      year, as well as year-to-date this year.







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       1             And it's important just to note that there

       2      has been a change in financial-market performance;

       3      whereas, the performance in the third and fourth

       4      quarter -- or, there has been a change, and not a

       5      major change -- but, in the third and

       6      fourth quarter, the performance of the markets.

       7             And when I say "the performance of the

       8      markets," I mean the performance of the equity

       9      markets, sectors, stocks with different

      10      capitalizations, styles, fixed-income markets;

      11      meaning, quality spreads, yield curves...a lot of

      12      technical stuff.

      13             But the performance of the financial markets

      14      last year was fairly clear that we had further to go

      15      in the current stock-market, business, interest-rate

      16      cycle.

      17             That became a little bit unstuck in the first

      18      part of this year, where investors began to shift

      19      towards the defensive sectors of the market.  You

      20      saw all sorts of things happen, such as safe sectors

      21      of the market, such as utilities and

      22      telecommunications, along with health care,

      23      performed very well.

      24             You saw the quality spreads and the credit

      25      markets start to widen out, suggesting that







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       1      investors were at less of an appetite to take risk.

       2             Those kinds of things happen when investors

       3      collectively believe that there may be problems

       4      ahead for the economy.

       5             The question, of course, then is:  Is this

       6      consistent with the performance of important

       7      variables, if you may, monitary and economic

       8      variables, that we've seen?

       9             And the answer to that question is:  Well,

      10      hmm, ah, the -- no.

      11             It's still the case that monetary and the

      12      economic numbers, important numbers that I look at

      13      and everybody looks at, seemed positive, but there's

      14      no question that there's been some deterioration.

      15             So, for example, although Federal Reserve

      16      policy is certainly very accommodative, you couldn't

      17      describe it in any stronger words, we do see things,

      18      like, bank lending continues to be positive, but, is

      19      slowing.

      20             That's true, whether we're looking at

      21      commercial and industrial loans.  And particularly

      22      true if we're looking at real-estate loans, where

      23      they're no longer expanding, but now contracting.

      24             As a result, somewhat as a result of changing

      25      liquidity condition -- or, lending conditions,







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       1      domestic liquidity conditions have -- are still

       2      positive, but they -- they've deteriorated some.

       3             The growth rate and the money supply, the

       4      relationship between the money supply and the growth

       5      rate of the economy, couple of technical things:

       6      again, still positive, but, not what they used to

       7      be.

       8             And then -- and then the final thing I looked

       9      at, or we -- or some of us looked at, is the Index

      10      of Leading Economic Indicators, which continues to

      11      point upwards, or saying, essentially, that, yes, it

      12      may be the case that some of the monetary and

      13      economic numbers aren't quite as good as they were.

      14             It's still the case, they've put it all

      15      together, that the outlook for the economy, for

      16      two thousand -- at least the next six months, and

      17      probably all of 2014 and '15, remains -- remains --

      18      remains positive.

      19             So I think that, what I would say is, if

      20      I put all of that together, the performance of the

      21      financial markets with the performance of the

      22      economy, from a sort of a level of 30,000 feet,

      23      I think the answer, as to what it's all -- what it's

      24      saying for us, is -- is, essentially, what I think

      25      "The Economist" magazine said for us a couple of







                                                                   22
       1      weeks ago, where he said -- where they basically

       2      concluded that "we're experiencing a worldwide

       3      wobble; not a tumble."

       4             And I thought that put it about right.

       5             And I think that's correct, and, particularly

       6      correct, since we've seen a recovery in the

       7      financial markets since, basically, the first part

       8      of February, which, essentially, is consistent with

       9      that conclusion.

      10             Having said that, let me get to a couple of

      11      observations, looking at the numbers.

      12             What I've included is not only the consensus

      13      forecast on the overall economy, and a lot of the

      14      variables that you really have to worry about.

      15             I've also included my own forecast on the

      16      economy, and a lot of variables you have to worry

      17      about.

      18             I've done that for the national economy.

      19             I've done that for the state economy.

      20             And I've also done something that I do

      21      somewhat cautiously; and that is, make a forecast

      22      for revenues, based on the forecast for the national

      23      economy, forecast for New York State economy -- for

      24      the New York State economy.

      25             And all of -- everything looks particularly







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       1      good, but, let me -- and there's a lot of

       2      consistency between the forecasts that we've seen

       3      from various groups.

       4             Let me make a couple of observations, though,

       5      that are a little bit troubling.

       6             First of all -- and, Bob, you know, we've

       7      talked about this in the past -- I'm always talking

       8      about inflation.  I'm always wrong, but I'm always

       9      talking about it.

      10             And, what I've noticed, I -- I -- yes,

      11      there's a strong consensus about what inflation,

      12      especially the Consumer Price Index, is going to

      13      look like in 2014-'15.

      14             1.6 percent, roughly, in 2014.  2 percent or

      15      so in 2015.

      16             But, it's worth noting, and I just noted, is

      17      that leading indicators for inflation, which I pay

      18      pretty close attention to, are up fairly sharply

      19      over the course of the last eight months.  Up

      20      9.3 percent in the last 8 months.

      21             And I'm sure you haven't missed the fact that

      22      we see a rise in commodity prices concurrently

      23      unfolding, and a rise in the price of gold.

      24             A lot of this can be attributed -- or, some

      25      attributed to weather conditions; particularly the







                                                                   24
       1      rise in commodity prices.

       2             I'm not so dead-sure; particularly when I see

       3      the rise in the leading indicators of inflation, of

       4      9.3 percent, which is fairly strong, over the course

       5      of the last 8 months.

       6             So it very well may be the case, that

       7      we're -- if we're gonna be wrong on any of these

       8      numbers, and I would have guessed, where we're gonna

       9      wrong, I would be willing to bet, it's gonna

      10      probably be on inflation, and we may be a touch low

      11      on inflation.

      12             I've looked -- I read through all your

      13      numbers, the department budget numbers.

      14             I've read through all the Assembly numbers as

      15      well.

      16             And you folks know, I've talked to you about

      17      that, and this -- the work that's being done at the

      18      Department of Budget, and the Assembly, and I'm sure

      19      at the Senate as well, is just really incredibly

      20      good.  I mean, it's just really good.

      21             Policymakers in this state should be really

      22      proud of the work that you're doing.  It's

      23      comprehensive.  It's internally consistent with what

      24      I'm trying to -- not always, but, I generally look

      25      for.







                                                                   25
       1             Just a couple of comments.

       2             And I've looked at your numbers, that you've

       3      unfortunately had -- didn't have the luxury of

       4      recent data, but published back in January, so

       5      I know there's some problems.

       6             But, your forecast for the national

       7      economy -- now, I say "your forecast," I'm talking

       8      about the department -- Department of Budget -- is

       9      fairly subdued.  It's subdued when compared to other

      10      forecasts.  A little bit on the subdued side.

      11             At the same time, when I look at your

      12      forecast for consumption, imports, personal income

      13      and wages, it acts up sort of subdued.

      14             So, either your forecast for the economy's

      15      gotta come up a little bit -- this is all fun with

      16      numbers, it's all statistics, you know that.

      17             Either your forecast for the national economy

      18      has to come up, or your forecasts for some of those

      19      important variables has to come down.

      20             I try to reconcile, also, your New York State

      21      numbers, of personal income and wages, with your

      22      forecasts for employment.

      23             Either employment forecast has to come up or

      24      your personal-income and wage numbers have to come

      25      down just a little bit.







                                                                   26
       1             I think I may be right on that.

       2             Let's talk a little bit about Federal Reserve

       3      policy.

       4             You have a fairly consensus-oriented, or

       5      benign, forecast -- well, first of all, you have a

       6      benign forecast for inflation.  I've already

       7      mentioned that.

       8             And I know your forecast for the unemployment

       9      rate was made in January, so you didn't have the

      10      benefit.  And I know that's got to -- you don't see

      11      it, but I know that's got to come down, then

      12      revised.

      13             Also looking at the January forecast, you had

      14      a real spike in short-term interest rates for 2015,

      15      which implied a very strong move; stronger than

      16      I think is generally accepted by the Federal Reserve

      17      towards restraint.  Or, raising their target on the

      18      federal-funds rate from zero to 25 basis points.

      19             The implication being, up to as high as

      20      1 percent.

      21             It's very hard now to judge what the

      22      Federal Reserve is gonna do, particularly when they

      23      effectively said, that even when the unemployment

      24      rate, as you know, gets to 6 1/2 percent, that's not

      25      necessarily a trigger.  Even when the rate of







                                                                   27
       1      inflation gets to 2 percent, when the forecast for

       2      inflation gets to 2 1/2 percent, that's not

       3      necessarily a trigger.

       4             I think that's the implication, which I think

       5      is a great move in policy: that they're getting

       6      way -- backing away from strict targets.

       7             But it's very hard to judge what the

       8      Federal Reserve policy is gonna turn out to be, or

       9      their interest-rate policy.

      10             I might add, that quantitative easing is not

      11      even worth talking about.  It's been fully

      12      discounted by the markets.

      13             The fed will continue to take risks.

      14      They're -- any quantitative easing, it will be all

      15      over.  I've tried to demonstrate that in my work.

      16             The markets have totally discounted it.

      17             What really matters is Federal Reserve

      18      interest-rate policy.

      19             As I say, it's very difficult to judge what

      20      it's gonna be, but I -- I don't -- I see, maybe,

      21      some shift towards restraint as we get to the latter

      22      part of 2014, because I see employment numbers

      23      getting better, especially growth-rated non-fund --

      24      well, you know, the unemployment rate's gonna be

      25      below 600 percent, we know that.







                                                                   28
       1             And we'll start to see inflation maybe edge

       2      up a little bit.

       3             And maybe some will move towards restraint,

       4      both second half of 2014, first half -- all four

       5      quarters of 2015, but not a significant shift in

       6      that direction.

       7             It's hard for me to believe that this fed is

       8      gonna make a hard shift towards restraint.

       9             So, that's important to keep in mind.

      10             I wish I could quantify it more specifically.

      11             I have done that in my work, but, it's very

      12      difficult to quantify.

      13             I wanted just to add one other point, though,

      14      here, and here's where I differ from the whole

      15      world, and that's -- and I could be wrong, and I get

      16      criticized for it, but I'll just tell you; and that

      17      is:  That the primary driver of both short-term

      18      interest rates -- and I think everybody agrees, the

      19      primary driver of short-term interest rates is

      20      Federal Reserve policy or interest-rate policy.

      21             I would argue that the primary driver of

      22      longer-term interest rates is also Federal Reserve

      23      policy, or, the target for federal-funds rate.

      24             If you look at the performance of interest

      25      rates, historically, or, if you do a statistical







                                                                   29
       1      analysis that tries to quantify what's gonna be the

       2      outcome, given an assumption about Federal Reserve

       3      policy for longer-term interest rates, it turns out

       4      to be much more benign than the consensus; and

       5      certainly more benign than your numbers that

       6      I looked at.

       7             The 10-year treasury at 4 percent, in 2015,

       8      is too high.  Way too high.

       9             But -- but especially given my forecast,

      10      which is, yeah, rates should rise, but I wouldn't be

      11      at all surprised -- and here's where everybody's

      12      gonna disagree with me, but I'll say it anyway --

      13      I don't think the yield on the 10-year treasury is

      14      gonna even get to 3 percent.

      15             It might even get a little above 3 percent.

      16             It's not gonna get to where the consensus is,

      17      which is three -- three -- in my view, it's not

      18      gonna get to where the consensus is.

      19             And what I'm saying is consistent with

      20      history, and also consistent with, I think, sound

      21      statistical analysis.

      22             Not many people agree with that.

      23             So that's one thing.

      24             It's -- that's a comment on Federal Reserve

      25      policy, it's a comment on interest rates.  And







                                                                   30
       1      I would try to incorporate that a little bit into

       2      your -- into your trying to find the consensus

       3      forecast for the variables that are gonna try and

       4      drive up revenues.

       5             The -- let me say one thing about your

       6      revenue numbers:  They look great.

       7             From my 2015, I can only do PIT, to come up

       8      with anything that I have any comfort with.

       9             And, PIT, you look low on 2015.

      10             Trying to think if I said calendar or fiscal,

      11      but, you look a little bit low there.

      12             So much for that.

      13             Okay, emerging-market crisis:

      14             The biggest -- some think this is the biggest

      15      problem right now, are a political hurdle, or

      16      challenge or risk.

      17             I give you some charts.

      18             And what I like to do, is to throw -- put

      19      some charts that show a superimposed of the OECD's

      20      composite index for leading economic indicators for

      21      different countries, on the consensus forecast for

      22      the economy of that country.

      23             And what we saw last year, was the consensus

      24      forecast for Europe coming down, and the leading

      25      indicators have turned up.







                                                                   31
       1             And that led me to conclude that you're gonna

       2      see, not only the numbers coming out of Europe get

       3      better, but the consensus forecast will turn the

       4      corner.

       5             All of that's happened.

       6             Now the question is:  What does it look like

       7      for the emerging markets?

       8             And the answer is:  It's different.

       9             India still looks like a problem.

      10             But, China looks just about as stable as

      11      could be.

      12             So we're talking about 7.6 percent growth in

      13      2014.  Maybe 7.4 percent growth in 2015.

      14             And that's consistent with leading indicators

      15      for China, which are fairly flat.

      16             Looks better, interestingly, for Brazil.

      17      Looks like Brazil might be turning the corner.

      18             And -- and, uhm -- so, you got China, Brazil.

      19             India is not -- not looking -- not looking

      20      good at all.

      21             And Russia is looking good also.

      22             Russia looks like the leading indicators

      23      there are turning positive, even though the

      24      consensus forecast is deteriorating -- continuing to

      25      deteriorate.







                                                                   32
       1             So I'm -- I'm -- what I'm saying is, that

       2      three out of four countries are not gonna be the

       3      problem that you see in the financial press.

       4             Not true of India.

       5             There still will be problems in Chile,

       6      South America, the -- South Africa, in Turkey,

       7      Indonesia, and Israel.  That's where I don't see any

       8      turn right now.

       9             That's point one.

      10             Point two, is that even if emerging markets

      11      were to experience the kind of difficulties that you

      12      read about all the time, there's no question that

      13      that stuff gets transmitted.

      14             It gets transmitted around the world through

      15      psychology.  Markets go down, everybody gets scared,

      16      markets go down here;

      17             Trade flows;

      18             Capital flows;

      19             Commodity prices.

      20             Those are the four transmission mechanisms.

      21             The emerging market, if you take all their

      22      economies, they're not big enough.  I mean, they're

      23      substantial, and they're important.  I don't mean to

      24      take away from that.  But they're nowhere near what

      25      we experienced in 1997 -- '96 and '97 with the







                                                                   33
       1      Southeast Asia crisis.

       2             That was very big, that was very substantial.

       3             So, secondly, the declines in the currencies

       4      related to or associated with the current so-called

       5      "crisis" in these countries is nowhere near what you

       6      saw in '96 and '97.

       7             The point being -- I meant '98.

       8             The point being, is that, I think that the

       9      worries about that risk -- the emerging-market risk

      10      have been way overstated.

      11             And I don't -- although you'd have to watch

      12      it and you have to continue to monitor it, I don't

      13      think it's gonna derail the current recovery --

      14      bull-market economic recovery, and rise -- and,

      15      quote, rise in interest rates.

      16             Fiscal policy:  I don't have to tell you,

      17      U.S. fiscal policy should be certainly less of a

      18      drag.

      19             Deficits are gonna continue to come down, so

      20      long as the economy recovers; particularly if the

      21      economy recovers anywhere near the consensus of this

      22      group.

      23             And, so, fiscal policy's not gonna be the big

      24      issue.

      25             Probably the -- New York State economy is







                                                                   34
       1      gonna be, as I do the numbers, is gonna map the

       2      national -- the reason we look at the national

       3      economy, is because New York State economy, I hate

       4      to tell you, but, as much as we'd like to change the

       5      outcome and make it much better than the national

       6      economy, the truth is, it really matters: the

       7      national economy.

       8             And that's true of almost all of the

       9      variables.  And I've never seen that change.

      10             The, uhm -- the big challenge for

      11      New York State is -- and I'll just sort of say it

      12      this way:  The part that bothers me, it bothers me

      13      about the national economy, it bothers me about

      14      New York State, it bothers me when I look at all the

      15      different parts of New York State, metropolitan

      16      statistical areas, is the growth of the labor force.

      17             Yeah, the unemployment rate is coming down,

      18      and I'm sure we all look at that as being a welcomed

      19      event.

      20             But the reason it's coming down is -- is the

      21      labor force is declining, and it's -- it's -- as

      22      I look at it, in 2014 and 2015, there are only

      23      two municipalities, two MSAs, where the labor --

      24      growth of the labor force is gonna rise in

      25      New York State; and one is Ithaca, and one is







                                                                   35
       1      Glens Falls.  You can explain it to me.

       2             So, you got the unemploy- -- and, there, the

       3      unemployment rate will come down, but not as much.

       4             The unemployment rate will come down a lot in

       5      other places, but it's primarily because of the loss

       6      of the labor force.

       7             The loss of labor force is not -- is part,

       8      because of -- part, because of, you know, the

       9      demographics.

      10             People that are my age drop out of the labor

      11      force, or younger.  And, uhm -- but it's -- a much

      12      bigger part of it is that discouraged-worker issue.

      13             And that's true in New York State.

      14             That's, as you know, is a function of -- in

      15      my view, of the fundamental shift that's going on in

      16      the world economy, in the national economy

      17      particularly, driven by exponential progress in

      18      technology, which is a shift from a labor-intensive

      19      economy to a knowledge-driven economy.

      20             That, is simply not going to go away; and

      21      it's not gonna go away for a very, very long time.

      22             And that's going to create a bigger divide,

      23      in my view, between the haves and the have-nots.

      24             Create -- you know, part of this, with the

      25      slow-growth unemployment, has been certainly a







                                                                   36
       1      result of the hangover from the financial crisis,

       2      2005-2006.  But a bigger part of it is the

       3      fundamental shift that's going on in the economy.

       4             It's gonna put enormous policy -- pressure on

       5      policymakers:  How do you deal with that?

       6             Because there's not gonna be -- I don't

       7      believe -- I wish somebody knew -- I don't believe

       8      there's any really simple solution to it.

       9             There's a lot that can be done, but I don't

      10      think there's any -- and that's the biggest problem

      11      I think that we, and the state of New York, face.

      12             And I'm not dead-sure what you do.

      13             I know some of the things you might do.

      14             So, that's basically it.

      15             Most important thing:  A wobble, not a

      16      tumble.

      17             When I looked at the financial markets,

      18      performance of important monetary and economic

      19      variables, I'm led to that conclusion.

      20             Growth is gonna be a good, roughly, 2.9 in

      21      this year.  3 percent next year.

      22             I think your primary budget is a little bit

      23      low.

      24             I'd take a hard look at interest rates; the

      25      interest-rate forecast.







                                                                   37
       1             And -- and that's basically it.

       2             I don't see the risk of emerging markets

       3      being something that you'd worry about, or you

       4      should -- is significant.

       5             It needs to be monitored, but not -- let's

       6      not get obsessed with it or caught up in it.

       7             Uhm -- and that's basically it.

       8             I think this is a -- the forecast, the work

       9      that everybody has been doing, has been really

      10      great.  And, fortunately, we are coming to pretty

      11      close agreement on most of these -- most of these

      12      variables.

      13             Once again, thank you very much for being --

      14      for inviting me to be with you.

      15             Hi, Joe.

      16             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you, Hugh.

      17             Any questions from the panel then?

      18             If not, I think we'll jump right to

      19      Chris Varvares.

      20             CHARLES VAVARES:  Thanks very much.

      21             It's a pleasure to be here, and have the

      22      opportunity to share the views of my colleagues, and

      23      myself from Macroeconomic Advisers, again.

      24             Because there is fairly broad agreement on

      25      the big themes, with what we just heard, I think







                                                                   38
       1      I want to highlight a bit, say, at a fairly high

       2      level, and try to highlight some of the risks that

       3      we see to the outlook.

       4             So there is, in your stack there, if you want

       5      to follow along, feel free.

       6             The presentation packet, it looks like that.

       7             So I think, as we look at this year and the

       8      couple years ahead, we begin by taking a look back.

       9             In 2013, with growth, over the four quarters,

      10      of 2.8 percent, it was fairly impressive, given the

      11      headwinds that the economy faced.

      12             We had huge fiscal drag from the increase in

      13      the payroll tax, as a result of the expiration of

      14      payroll-tax holiday; implementation of ACA taxes,

      15      'and the high-income-earner tax; as well as the fact

      16      that interest rates jumped fairly significantly in

      17      the middle of the year.

      18             So, the economy gets a hardy pat on the back

      19      for producing 2.8 percent growth last year,

      20      suggesting some amount of resilience.

      21             Certainly, the economy carried good momentum

      22      into 2014; however, that momentum was, in part, due

      23      to a bit of an inventory cycle.

      24             There was a bit of an excessive

      25      stock-building towards the end of last year.







                                                                   39
       1             We think the rates of accumulation that are

       2      unsustainable, and there will be a price to pay for

       3      that, with slower growth up front this year.

       4             We don't view that as a fundamental thing,

       5      but it does means that manufacturing output growth

       6      is going to be fairly slow, if not stagnant, early

       7      this year.

       8             So that's a challenge that the manufacturing

       9      sector, both in terms of output incomes and

      10      employment, will be facing.

      11             In addition, weather does play a role in the

      12      economy.

      13             December was unusually cold.  January was

      14      unusually cold.  February is turning out to be

      15      unusually cold.

      16             An analysis that we did not too long ago

      17      suggested that the cold weather, just based on

      18      December and January, accounted for about

      19      three-tenths weaker growth in GDP in the

      20      fourth quarter of last year, and about four- to

      21      five-tenths weaker growth in GDP in the first

      22      quarter.

      23             And a return to normal weather in February

      24      will give us about a seven-tenths contribution to

      25      growth in the second quarter.







                                                                   40
       1             So, therefore, just the weather effects of

       2      holding us down in Q1 -- Q4 of last year, Q1 of this

       3      year, gives us a little bit of extra momentum coming

       4      into Q2.

       5             And I should say, that analysis did not take

       6      explicit analysis account of snow, which we know

       7      probably also had a little bit of a role in holding

       8      back the economy, certainly, early this year.

       9             So, a little bit of a wiggle in the numbers.

      10             And as we see the first quarter coming in a

      11      little bit soft, we see these numbers.

      12             I think we need to take those with a large

      13      grain of salt, thinking that a lot of it is weather

      14      effects, possibly inventory cycle, and not as a sign

      15      of a more fundamental slowing in the economy.

      16             The key, sort of, big-picture factors that we

      17      see affecting the economy are the lack of the fiscal

      18      drag that we had last year, which I alluded to with

      19      the payroll-tax increase.  But, also, there was big

      20      spending restraint last year, that we're not gonna

      21      see repeated this year.

      22             So, overall, the economy will be freed from

      23      about 1 1/2 percentage points of drag from

      24      contractionary fiscal policy.

      25             That's the federal level.







                                                                   41
       1             State and local budgets, as you know, are

       2      also easing up a little bit; and, so, we'll get a

       3      little bit of a help from that increase in state and

       4      local spending this year, in contrast to what we've

       5      had the last couple of years.

       6             Another sort of challenge that we face,

       7      however, is the rise in interest rates that we've

       8      had.

       9             Markets are looking ahead to the date when

      10      the fed will begin to tighten policy.

      11             I think there was some confusion about

      12      whether tapering was tightening.

      13             Tapering is less accommodation.  It's not the

      14      same thing as a turn towards tightening.

      15             But, nevertheless, the markets did respond

      16      with a rise in interest rates, and that did have an

      17      impact in slowing some spending, especially in

      18      housing construction, and probably put a little bit

      19      of a pause in some capital-spending plans.

      20             So we would -- we would expect that we will

      21      work through that.  If the economy has enough

      22      momentum, that it's not going to push us back to

      23      2 percent growth.

      24             We think there's still enough underlying

      25      momentum and pent-up demand in improvement in







                                                                   42
       1      financial conditions that will push us to growth,

       2      closer to 3 percent than the 2 percent we've

       3      experienced the last several years.

       4             So the two big forces:  Lack of fiscal

       5      restraint.  Improvement in financial conditions and

       6      building confidence.

       7             With that, we see improvement in employment;

       8      not big, but a little.

       9             So, last year, average monthly employment

      10      gains of the establishment survey, of about 185,000,

      11      building to about 200,000 a month this year, 2015,

      12      beyond.

      13             So, not great, but better than where we've

      14      been.

      15             And that will contribute to the increase in

      16      the employment-population ratio, and further

      17      declines in the unemployment rate, which, we hope,

      18      but we have very wide confidence bands around this,

      19      are going to be motivated by improvements on the

      20      employment side; not simply by declines in the

      21      labor force participation rate.

      22             We think we're close to the bottom on that.

      23             So in that environment where we have, still,

      24      a declining, but maybe a somewhat slower decline, in

      25      the unemployment rate, there's still a lot of slack







                                                                   43
       1      in the economy.  And we think some of it does help

       2      put downward pressure on inflation; not a lot, but a

       3      little.

       4             And, so, we expect inflation to remain

       5      well-contained.  It is currently running very low.

       6             Recent rates have changed on the core

       7      Personal Consumption Expenditure Price Index,

       8      running just barely above 1 percent.

       9             We do see for the year, though, coming in

      10      around 1 1/2, one-six; rising to 1 3/4 over the next

      11      year; and getting, maybe, to 2 percent, or slightly

      12      below, all the way out through 2016.

      13             So, inflation really not a big concern on the

      14      radar right now, remaining well-contained.

      15             So with that, with still high unemployment,

      16      even though, as Hugh noted, following through the

      17      fed's 6 1/2 percent threshold, inflation remaining

      18      low.

      19             And the fed has warned us, that inflation too

      20      low is just as dangerous as inflation too high.

      21             So, the fed will remain accommodative.

      22             We expect it will continue to taper, roughly,

      23      reducing its open-market purchases as part of QE3,

      24      by about 10 billion per meeting; meaning, that

      25      they'll be completely done sometime late in the







                                                                   44
       1      year.

       2             And -- and then the question is:  When will

       3      they begin to tighten the policy rate?

       4             We recently moved up in time.

       5             Our expectation for the first tightening,

       6      from the third quarter of 2015, to the second

       7      quarter of 2015.  And, it maybe worked of out to

       8      four months, not quite six months, but somewhere in

       9      that range.

      10             And part of it was simply because you cannot

      11      ignore the fact that, because of what happened in

      12      the last two months of the employment reports, the

      13      unemployment track is now about a half a point lower

      14      than what it was in our prior forecast.

      15             So, if you missed -- if you missed December

      16      and January declines in the unemployment rate, and

      17      you take those into account now, it's a very

      18      different picture of the degree of labor-market

      19      tightness.

      20             Secondly, there's an emerging body of

      21      evidence that suggests that the overall unemployment

      22      rate -- and I'm going to spin this the way -- the

      23      opposite way that you hear on CNBC:  CNBC says the

      24      real unemployment rate's 15 percent.

      25             Well, guess what?







                                                                   45
       1             The employment rate that matters for

       2      inflation is really the short-term unemployment

       3      rate, and it is back to its cyclical low point.

       4             There are other measures of labor-market

       5      tightness, including this -- you may be aware of the

       6      matching of employed to vacancies, and this thing

       7      called a "vacancy yield"; that is:  For any number

       8      of vacancies, how many people are hired?

       9             When labor markets are tight from an

      10      employer's perspective, the vacancy yield is low;

      11      that is, they can't hire very many people to fill

      12      those available vacancies.

      13             We're now back -- the vacancy yield is now

      14      back at the same level it was at the prior two peaks

      15      and cyclical -- cyclical peaks in economic activity.

      16             So that suggests, one, there's a lot of

      17      economic -- there's a lot of uncertainty about just

      18      how tight are labor markets today.

      19             And, so, we have to be aware of that.

      20             And because of that, while we think

      21      inflation's gonna be low, we think there's some

      22      uncertainty about what the -- about what the

      23      inflation outlook is.

      24             Now, hourly compensation growth has been

      25      exceptionally weak.







                                                                   46
       1             Last year it was only 0.4 percent, on a

       2      fourth-quarter-to-fourth-quarter basis.

       3             This has given rise to the very slow growth

       4      of incomes that have bedeviled the revenue

       5      estimators.

       6             And, our guess, I -- it's only a little more

       7      than a guess, that we're gonna move up towards

       8      something more normal; maybe, 2 to 2 1/2 percent

       9      growth of hourly compensation.

      10             But given the recent track record, I think we

      11      have to put, again, very large confidence bands

      12      around the growth of that income.

      13             But, nevertheless, inflation remaining low,

      14      perhaps too low, the fed being very cautious,

      15      tightening, narrowing, the second quarter of 2015.

      16             I want to illustrate just a couple of charts

      17      to show.

      18             Let's jump up to Slide 3, to show -- I'm

      19      sorry, Slide 2 --

      20             Let me put my glasses on.  I'm sorry.

      21             -- Slide 4, let's make it.

      22             I hate that.

      23                  [Laughter.]

      24             CHARLES VAVARES:  So you can see, in the

      25      fourth quarter of 2012 and first quarter of 2013,







                                                                   47
       1      this shows the change in personal tax and non-tax

       2      payments, at the federal -- at the national level,

       3      in total -- it's all personal tax and non-tax

       4      payments -- as a share of GDP.

       5             And look at the massive jump that occurred in

       6      the first quarter of last year.  That's the extent

       7      of the tax increases that we saw.

       8             That took a big wallop by the disposable

       9      income of households, and it accounted for the very

      10      slow growth in consumer spending we saw last year.

      11             So when we look at fiscal drag, that was the

      12      biggest part of it, were the tax increases.

      13             It held the growth of consumer spending, last

      14      year, to 2.3 percent.

      15             Without that same drag this year, we expect

      16      consumer spending to grow closer to 3 1/2 to

      17      3 3/4 percent.

      18             So the primary motivation for seeing economic

      19      growth step up in 2014, relative to last year, is

      20      the absence of those tax increases, and the

      21      acceleration of consumer spending.

      22             If you look at the next chart, Chart 5, this

      23      is another way of looking at the waning of fiscal

      24      drag, as we like to call it.

      25             So this chart shows both the federal and







                                                                   48
       1      state and local level.

       2             The green bar is the federal, the pink bar is

       3      the state and local; the contributions of those

       4      spending components directly to GDP growth.

       5             And, of course, you can see, over the last

       6      couple of years, those green bars have largely been

       7      strongly negative, suggesting the direct drag of

       8      declines in federal spending on economic growth.

       9             Because we now have a budget deal that does

      10      away with the part of the sequester that was gonna

      11      cause more drag this year, we basically go to a flat

      12      line.

      13             So we don't really have stimulus coming from

      14      federal spending, or, state and local spending,

      15      really, for that matter; but, pretty much, a flat

      16      line.

      17             There's a little bit of a wiggle there, as

      18      you see, between the fourth quarter of last year and

      19      first quarter of this year.

      20             There's a very large anomalous decline in

      21      defense spending, and we do expect to recoup some of

      22      that, so there's -- some of that big drag in the

      23      fourth quarter of last year we expect to be offset a

      24      little bit this year.

      25             I think -- Slide 6 talks again about the --







                                                                   49
       1      focuses on the labor-market story.

       2             You see that the decline in the labor force

       3      participation rate, a 3-percentage-point decline

       4      since the beginning of the recession, to where we

       5      are today.

       6             Some of that would have been expected, based

       7      on the aging of the population.

       8             So, as age groups move into the -- those --

       9      as cohorts of the population move into those age

      10      groups, they have lower participation rates, the

      11      aggregate participation rate falls.

      12             And that explains, roughly, one-half of the

      13      decline in the participation rate, as suggested by

      14      that dotted line there.

      15             There's a lot of speculation.

      16             We've done some work to suggest what explains

      17      the other half.

      18             We think a quarter of that 3-percentage-point

      19      decline is the normal cyclical response.

      20             And we think that last one-quarter is related

      21      to the fact that we have such persistent

      22      unemployment; that is, the percentage of long-term

      23      unemployed, those unemployed more than 26 weeks,

      24      gives them a very tenuous attachment to the labor

      25      force.  It stigmatizes them.







                                                                   50
       1             Employers, as we know, and there have been

       2      some really nice studies done on this, employers

       3      just are unwilling to look at people who have been

       4      unemployed more than 26 weeks.  They think there's

       5      something wrong with them.

       6             Until the labor market tightens up

       7      considerably, firms will continue that behavior.

       8             I know the White House is launching a

       9      campaign, to get firms to change their recruitment

      10      behaviors, so that they're not -- they've actually

      11      had robo -- you'll love this -- robo-processing of

      12      applications, where the people -- applications are

      13      just rejected if they determine that the person has

      14      been unemployed for that long.

      15             Workers are fighting back, though.

      16             They're putting in white -- in white font,

      17      key words they know HR departments search for, to

      18      put them at the top of the stack.

      19             So the robo guys put them at the top of the

      20      stack, and the humans look at the applications and

      21      can't figure out why that person was at the top of

      22      the stack.

      23                  [Laughter.]

      24             CHARLES VAVARES:  Well, in any case, the

      25      labor force participation rate is also a bit of a







                                                                   51
       1      puzzle.

       2             We expect that, with a slight pickup of

       3      employment, more consistent gains in employment,

       4      that the participation rate will, in fact,

       5      stabilize, and rise sort of sideways -- you know,

       6      rise slightly, or go sideways, over the next couple

       7      of years, suggesting, then, that further declines in

       8      the unemployment rate will only be accomplished if

       9      we see these consistent gains in employment; as is

      10      suggested by the blue line, and shows the

      11      employment-population ratio in that chart.

      12             If you turn to Slide 7, this shows our

      13      inflation forecast with a very long history.

      14             I show the long history here to make a couple

      15      of points.

      16             The first is, that we -- since the late

      17      1990s, we've really been in a -- in a relatively

      18      low and relatively stable inflation environment.

      19             We bounced around 2 percent since that time

      20      period, well off the very high inflation of the

      21      1970s and early 1980s.

      22             Number one.

      23             Number two, is that the cycle does have an

      24      impact, because slack tends to depress the rate of

      25      inflation, because there are unutilized resources in







                                                                   52
       1      labor and product markets, and there's competition

       2      that puts downward pressure on wages.

       3             So our forecast, again, is that the consumer

       4      prices will remain growing probably below 2 percent

       5      between now and 2016, remaining well-contained.

       6             I already talked about fed policy.

       7             Let me -- let me look at -- let's jump ahead

       8      to Slide 10, where I list, again, some of the major

       9      reasons why -- that are -- that are pushing the

      10      economy to accelerate and to grow faster, with a

      11      couple other concerns listed as well, as to why we

      12      still need to be cautious.

      13             So we have had very aggressive monetary

      14      policy.  Obviously, that helps.

      15             Early on in the recovery, we had very

      16      aggressive fiscal policy.

      17             So, the American Recovery Reinvestment Act

      18      tended to raise government spending, it tended to

      19      put some income out in the economy, multiplier

      20      effects...those were all good.

      21             But, it's like the pig and the python:  It's

      22      good while it's going through, but on the backside,

      23      it causes spending restraint.

      24             That, on top of the initial moves towards

      25      long-term control of federal spending, have caused







                                                                   53
       1      federal spending to be a reason, at least in the

       2      short term, for the economy to grow more slowly.

       3             So that's a bit of -- one reason, in fact,

       4      why monetary policy has had to be as aggressive as

       5      it has been.

       6             There still remains pent-up demand in the

       7      economy.

       8             We know it's there in housing, where we've

       9      been way below the trend in housing starts.

      10             We're way below the trend in the stock of

      11      motor vehicles.

      12             And the question is:  How quickly will that

      13      pent-up demand be realized?

      14             Clearly, what we hear from the automakers, is

      15      that availability of credit is not an issue in

      16      purchases of motor vehicles.

      17             Employment, is.  Credit scores, are.

      18             In housing, it's a different story.

      19             FICO scores now, on average mortgages, are

      20      well above what they were in the pre-crisis era, and

      21      even in the lead-up to the crisis in the housing

      22      boom.

      23             So, mortgage-underwriting standards are still

      24      exceptionally tight.  And until those loosen, we

      25      think, we're afraid, that the recovery in housing is







                                                                   54
       1      going to be damped or delayed a bit.

       2             I mean, we're still relatively optimistic

       3      long term on housing.  Our demographic analysis,

       4      even before immigration reform, suggests that,

       5      nationally, we should be building about 1.6 million

       6      homes over the next decade.

       7             And we're well short of that now, still

       8      under, roughly, a million.

       9             So there's a long way to go, and there's a

      10      potential housing boom out there.

      11             When exactly it will catch fire is hard to

      12      know because of the remaining difficulties in

      13      mortgage finance.

      14             There have been uneven improvement in

      15      financial conditions, to be sure.  Lots of evidence

      16      of this.

      17             And this has a lot to do with a return of

      18      risk appetite, which we view as absolutely critical

      19      to getting business decision-makers to make those

      20      hiring and investment decisions.

      21             And return-of-risk appetite only happens as

      22      assessments of downside risks are -- are mitigated.

      23             So, early in the European crisis, as that

      24      crisis flared up, it had the effect of really

      25      putting a -- of throwing cold water on the recovery







                                                                   55
       1      in 2010 and 2011 again.

       2             We seem to be getting past that.  European

       3      economies are beginning to recover.

       4             But it's critical that, as those downside

       5      risks recede, return-of-risk appetite comes in.

       6             We see it, most clearly, in the gains in the

       7      stock market last year.  And we expect that we'll

       8      see gains of about 9 percent again this year in the

       9      S&P 500.

      10             So my number, Hugh, to compare to yours, will

      11      be year-end 2010.

      12             2-0-1-0, on the S&P 500.

      13             Not -- there are risks, as Hugh pointed out.

      14             And to tell a story about that risk, at the

      15      beginning of this year, as I was looking at our

      16      forecasts of the stock market, and thinking about --

      17      in fact, let's just go look at that "stock market"

      18      story.

      19             This would be, Slide 17.

      20             So this is a -- this, obviously, is a -- the

      21      reason runup has been huge in rebuilding household

      22      balance sheets, but, look how it flatlines.

      23             So, we have another 9 percent gain this year.

      24             A little bit of a gain in 2015, and then it

      25      sort of goes sideways.







                                                                   56
       1             Well, what the picture makes clear, is that

       2      the stock market never goes sideways.  It either

       3      goes up or it goes down.

       4             So, as I look at that picture, and you never

       5      know where the exact peak is gonna be, so I set

       6      myself a reminder in Outlook that pops up now, every

       7      two weeks, that says:  Is it time to exit stocks?

       8                  [Laughter.]

       9             CHARLES VAVARES:  Because, I should pay

      10      attention, and, oftentimes, I completely -- I'm so

      11      busy making the forecast, I forget about the

      12      implications for my own portfolio.

      13             So, I think there's a risk there as well,

      14      that we may have a bit of a correction in the

      15      market.

      16             And I think we're pretty -- we're safe for a

      17      while here with the solid growth that we're

      18      anticipating.

      19             Let me go ahead to Slide 33, because it does

      20      highlight some of the risks.  And -- and because

      21      there's not all that much disagreement in the base

      22      forecast, I want to focus on those.

      23             So there's seven bullet points here, and

      24      every one of them, like a coin, is a two-sided risk.

      25             Europe is improving; it's coming out of







                                                                   57
       1      recession.

       2             I fear, however, that all of us have become a

       3      little bit too complacent about Europe.

       4             Italy still has not put in place the reforms

       5      that will lead it to have, even in the medium term,

       6      a sustainable fiscal outcome.

       7             Now, we know, in the United States, we

       8      haven't put in the needed fiscal reforms to give us

       9      a long-term sustainable fiscal position, but, it's

      10      different.  People kind of expect us to get around

      11      to doing the right thing, eventually.

      12             Italy is a harder story.

      13             And, so, it's possible that there could be

      14      another flare-up.  It's possible that Greece may not

      15      be able to make good on the last round of deals that

      16      it made with the -- the -- PREO [ph.] -- I --

      17      whatever -- the IMF, et cetera, and so there's a

      18      risk there.

      19             On the other hand, there's a positive risk,

      20      too; and that is, the European recovery could

      21      progress a pace and could surprise us on the upside.

      22             The rise in long-term rates in the U.S. had

      23      an effect in slowing our economy.

      24             It also had a very important spillover to the

      25      emerging markets, as Hugh pointed out, and then







                                                                   58
       1      there was the rebound effect that came back to the

       2      United States.

       3             Clearly, as Hugh believes, we think it was an

       4      overreaction.

       5             But you just have to be cautious, and try to

       6      think about how the financial spillovers, what it

       7      did to the stock market.  How that could potentially

       8      lead to some further headwinds on the U.S. economy

       9      this year.

      10             In 1997, clearly, was very, very different

      11      than it is today.

      12             But, I think 2008 makes us all a little more

      13      cautious about how some of these seemingly benign

      14      financial crises have a way of spinning out of

      15      control.

      16             And, so, that makes me just very wary about

      17      some of the downside risks still to come out of the

      18      emerging-markets story.

      19             China I don't think is a big concern, but,

      20      obviously, there are reasons to be concerned about

      21      China, given the growth of their shadow banking

      22      system, and the need to move from this hugely

      23      investment-led economy to consumer-led economy, and

      24      how they'll do that transition smoothly without it

      25      having big ripples throughout the global economy, is







                                                                   59
       1      certainly a risk.

       2             Home prices, I think we're in good shape.

       3             The consensus is for moderate increases in

       4      real-home prices over the next couple of years;

       5      however, we know some markets are already a little

       6      frothy.

       7             And, so, there's caution there as well, as to

       8      whether we'll get the boost from home prices.

       9             I don't think we have to worry too much any

      10      more about fiscal restraint, at least for next

      11      couple of years, with the two -- two-year deal.

      12             So, we can maybe set that one aside.

      13             Commodity prices, obviously, are always a

      14      wild card, subject to geopolitical concerns, and

      15      political uncertainty in the oil-producing parts of

      16      the world.

      17             The U.S. is less vulnerable to those shocks,

      18      as we've had big increases in our oil and natural

      19      gas production.  But, still, oil is something that's

      20      priced in global markets, and so we're not

      21      completely immune to those issues either.

      22             The real wild cards that are out there are

      23      Iran and North Korea, and moves in those countries

      24      towards developing nuclear weapons, that can be

      25      very, very destabilizing to markets.







                                                                   60
       1             And so that, again, while it's a very, very

       2      low risk, it's out there.

       3             And, it's one of those things, that when you

       4      least expect it, you know, would you really be that

       5      surprised if you -- six months from now, maybe the

       6      talks with Iran are not progressing very well, and,

       7      you pick up the newspaper, or you turn on the TV,

       8      and you find out that there's been some sort of an

       9      attack on an Iranian nuclear research facility?

      10             And, what would that do to destabilize the

      11      Middle East and throw a big monkey wrench into the

      12      economy?

      13             So, again, not a big risk, but one that would

      14      have, relatively, at least big short-lived

      15      consequences.

      16             And, so, that's another thing that is in my

      17      "worry closet."

      18             So, just to summarize:

      19             We think the preconditions are largely in

      20      place for the economy to improve this year, to show

      21      firmer growth, improved employment growth, but,

      22      those risks are still out there.

      23             They seem like this is a somewhat familiar

      24      story over the past several years:  The start of the

      25      year, we're somewhat more optimistic, and something







                                                                   61
       1      seems to jump up and bite us.

       2             This year, the one thing we can point to

       3      that's really, really -- we can do the math, and

       4      that's the fiscal restraint.

       5             The absence of the fiscal restraint is the

       6      single biggest factor that's gonna lead us to have

       7      firmer growth this year, but there are all of these

       8      other things that could get in the way.

       9             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Any questions for Chris?

      10             Okay, thank you.

      11             Let's move on; Mr. Diffley.

      12             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Thank you.

      13             And let me first apologize for being late.

      14             As Chris can tell you, I was in Washington

      15      with him the last three days.

      16             CHARLES VAVARES:  You should have taken my

      17      plane.

      18             JAMES DIFFLEY:  And I -- well, I decided to

      19      go home in between; so, my apologies.

      20             And I'm sorry I missed the opening remarks,

      21      which are usually very good, from which I usually

      22      make some notes, and I didn't have that opportunity

      23      today.

      24             But, I'll be available for questions

      25      afterwards, and during, if you want.







                                                                   62
       1             Let me summarize the forecast outlook now.

       2             We're much more optimistic for the future

       3      than we have been for the last couple of years.

       4             It's not so much that we've revised upward

       5      our forecast rates of growth; is that we're more

       6      confident that they'll actually be realized.

       7             There's less uncertainty out there, largely

       8      because of what's happened in Washington.  The

       9      federal government budget is at least resolved our

      10      issues, or are at least resolved for a couple of

      11      years.

      12             So that's the basic theme we have, going

      13      forward, that go along with any presentation here.

      14             We're on a moderate growth path.  We're not

      15      accelerating that much, but we are accelerating a

      16      solid pace, as Chris went through the numbers, and

      17      you did, through the end of last year, coming

      18      forward.

      19             The inventory accumulation, I certainly

      20      agree, will make GDP growth look a little slower in

      21      the first half of 2014, then are the underlying

      22      fundamentals which were exaggerated in the last half

      23      of 2013.  But they're, nonetheless, strong.

      24             Consumer spending reaching trend growth in

      25      real terms of 3 percent, with employment gains, and







                                                                   63
       1      much improved household balance sheets, as you've

       2      seen.

       3             Home building, we agree, it will surge, and

       4      it will take -- not that fast, though.  It will take

       5      until about 2016, until we get to the level which we

       6      agree, about 1.6 million housing starts per year,

       7      for instance, catching up to demand, as we say.

       8             Business fixed investment, largely hampered

       9      by uncertainty over action in Washington, will

      10      accelerate, again, led by equipment spending.

      11             We do have a significant increase in interest

      12      rates.  I won't go through the numbers.  I'll let --

      13      I'll defer to you on that.

      14             But, as monetary accommodation is gradually

      15      withdrawn, I think I said that in a way that Chris

      16      would agree with.  Right?

      17             And the North American energy boom will

      18      continue to create jobs investment, and, most

      19      importantly, give us, the U.S., a competitive

      20      advantage in manufacturing -- certain manufacturing

      21      sectors, particularly the chemical sector, that we

      22      haven't seen in a long time.

      23             The next slide, Slide 3, shows real GDP

      24      growth in the unemployment rate, over time, with the

      25      unemployment rate declining at a relatively fast







                                                                   64
       1      clip recently, as you know -- that's the bar there,

       2      in orange -- getting under 6 percent, finally, in

       3      the very near future.

       4             The blue bars, with the little waggle over

       5      the inventory accumulation that we saw at the end of

       6      2013, the beginning of 2014, getting above 3 percent

       7      for a solid two years, going quarter by quarter

       8      there, which is the important part of strong.

       9             Not as strong as we would have ever liked to

      10      see coming out of the deep recession we had; but,

      11      nonetheless, a strong, sustainable pace of growth

      12      for the U.S. economy.

      13             And I've extended the graph out to 2017

      14      there, as well.

      15             On the next page, you see in real terms, our

      16      sectoral forecast with real GDP.

      17             I think looking at the chart for 2015, at

      18      3.3 percent, this is calendar-year basis, we're at

      19      the highest amongst the group at the table here; so,

      20      a little more bullish than, uhm -- than my

      21      colleagues, but, continuing that way until 2016.

      22             Consumption, as I mentioned, about 3 percent.

      23             Double-digits in residential investment are

      24      that buildup in housing starts.

      25             I mentioned business fixed investment.







                                                                   65
       1             Federal government less of a drag,

       2      significantly.  Chris is exactly right, about 2013

       3      there.  The tax side is the other side of that, of

       4      course.

       5             And state and local government actually

       6      contributing to growth, going forward, slightly, in

       7      the future.

       8             Exports -- I'll show you a graph in a

       9      minute -- need to be a very important driver of

      10      growth in the U.S., and we think will be over the

      11      coming decade.

      12             To give some more numbers here, other key

      13      indicators that we like to follow, and you like to

      14      follow, I think, industrial production.

      15             Payroll employment, that's a key, getting,

      16      finally, above the 2 percent range.  And I'll show

      17      how we fare in terms of employment levels back

      18      before the recession.

      19             The automobile industry has been strong.

      20      You've noticed it around Buffalo.  But, that's going

      21      to level off, but, still, at a good level: over

      22      16 million units per year in the U.S.

      23             Housing starts you see ramping up to the

      24      1.6-metal-unit -- -million-unit number per year.

      25             CPI:  I guess we're a little more muted on







                                                                   66
       1      CPI than my colleagues speaking before me.  Under

       2      2 percent for the foreseeable horizon.

       3             Oil prices, of course, always a wild card.

       4             Federal-funds rate moving up, and same thing

       5      with 10-year treasury yields, which I guess is

       6      higher than Chris -- than Hugh's forecast, if not

       7      Chris's.

       8             Couple of points to make by the sectors on

       9      the next slide.

      10             The natural gas boom in the U.S. has been

      11      mentioned a couple of times.

      12             What it's done is, set off natural gas

      13      pricing trends as different from crude oil pricing

      14      tends -- and you see that in the green and blue line

      15      here -- continuing to benefit us.  And, a very much

      16      unexpected phenomenon in the U.S., if you go back a

      17      decade; but, yet, very profound, certainly, in the

      18      energy sector and the manufacturing sector.

      19             Consumer market is very important for the

      20      health of -- for the tracking of households, and

      21      sales tax-receipts especially.

      22             We have real consumption, following real

      23      disposable income: what consumers have to spend,

      24      after taxes, et cetera.

      25             Household net worth, almost double-digit







                                                                   67
       1      growth in 2013, largely, stock market.

       2             But, the home market, residential real-estate

       3      market, has rebounded to a degree as well.

       4             And then the other indicators that influence

       5      consumer spending:  Employment growth, wage growth.

       6             We're still relatively muted on wage growth.

       7             I agree the labor markets are getting tighter

       8      and tighter, and, certainly, in some sectors, we

       9      could see large upside gains on wages, which, of

      10      course, have positive and negative effects.  But,

      11      from the household sector, that's a benefit.

      12             Consumption [unintelligible] light-vehicle

      13      sales, I mentioned that [unintelligible].

      14             Home sales, as opposed to home starts, it's

      15      the last grow there.

      16             Looking at a bar chart on next slide,

      17      Slide 8, by category:

      18             Vehicles, strong.  Medical care, strong.

      19             It should -- you would not be surprised in.

      20             Transportation services, as well.

      21             The bars are "green" for last year, "orange"

      22      for this year, and "blue" for 2015, going forward.

      23             Again, calendar-year basis, I'll warn you,

      24      which is the normal way we think about things.

      25             Of course, when we forecast tax revenues,







                                                                   68
       1      we think in a fiscal-year basis, you understand.

       2      But, just as background there.

       3             Computer and software continuing stronger.

       4             Slide 9, light-vehicle sales ramping up

       5      dramatically from the depths of the recession,

       6      but -- and here you can calculate, you know, very --

       7      very much, what the height of demand is, as we do

       8      with housing starts, and, largely,

       9      demographically-driven and replacement demand,

      10      et cetera.

      11             So, we have good reasons to think we're gonna

      12      tap off -- top off at slightly over 16 million units

      13      in the U.S.

      14             You may have heard, this is more of a

      15      long-range issue, and more around the world, the

      16      issue now, not of peak oil, but peak car.  That the

      17      overall car use in the world is about to head down,

      18      for various urbanization reasons and the like.

      19             That's another story.

      20             Next slide, real export and import gains,

      21      they track each other, you know, for a number of

      22      reasons: world economy and exchange rates, and the

      23      like.

      24             But here we see, in blue, the bit of waggling

      25      in exports; but, again, getting above the 5 percent







                                                                   69
       1      level in the medium term, 5 percent in real term,

       2      which is an aid to you -- the U.S. growth and the

       3      balance of payments; or, the balance of trade,

       4      technically, here, improving, going forward.

       5             Those interested in the exchange value of the

       6      dollar, income competitiveness, will see our

       7      competitiveness forecast there, "blue," versus the

       8      major trading partners, Europe in particular.

       9      Canada also important here of, course.  And,

      10      "green," the rest of the world.

      11             So the bottom line for the U.S. is:

      12             GDP growth picking up in 2013 -- '14 and

      13      2015, with strengthening private-sector investment.

      14             Home building continuing to rise.

      15             And that's important, that the home sector

      16      has added to the GDP growth, and contributed lot of

      17      the recent GDP growth.

      18             Consumer spending, in the virtuous cycle,

      19      supported by employment income, and household

      20      wealth.

      21             Net exports continuing to support growth.

      22             Interest rates rising, as we said, the

      23      well-known and expected changes in Federal Reserve

      24      monetary policy.

      25             And longer term, fiscal imbalances can be







                                                                   70
       1      fixed, but the process is, of course,

       2      [unintelligible].

       3             We can turn to regional economics here.

       4             The bubble chart, on Slide 13, takes the

       5      census regions and puts them in perspective of what

       6      we like to think of as economic momentum.

       7             Here, we're using employment.

       8             On the horizontal axis, is year-over year

       9      growth; growth from a year ago.  Right?

      10             And the vertical axis is growth in the last

      11      three quarters.

      12             So the question is:  Is strongish growth --

      13      stronger or weaker growth in the last year supported

      14      in the nearer term, in the more recent growth?

      15             So, is momentum building, or not?

      16             For the first time -- the last couple of

      17      months here, for the first time, there's -- all the

      18      census regions are in the upper right-hand quadrant,

      19      and moving to the upper right, which is great.

      20             The mid-Atlantic, in "green" there, though

      21      you'll noticed, held back by New Jersey and

      22      Pennsylvania, more than New York right now --

      23      although, New York is not really out surpassing them

      24      by that much -- amongst the least -- the slowest

      25      growing of the regions, for reasons we'll come to in







                                                                   71
       1      a minute, and expected reasons we'll come to in a

       2      minute.

       3             I'll also point out that BLS is about to

       4      revise all their numbers in the standard annual

       5      revision for 2013, so, some of the positions will be

       6      changing.

       7             The map on the next page, Slide 14, gives the

       8      modest growth in 2013.

       9             New York, in the second quartile, I guess

      10      you'd call it there -- not "quintile" --

      11      second-lowest growth; so, from the bottom, below the

      12      median.

      13             But you see the median itself is less than

      14      1.2 percent growth.

      15             This is rather sluggish in 2013.  And we saw,

      16      you know, weak job gains in 2013.

      17             You see the pattern in the country of the

      18      Sunbelt leading?

      19             Flip the page, in 2014, we're going to get

      20      higher growth rates, but the Sunbelt is going to

      21      continue to lead.

      22             And, New York is gonna fall into the lowest

      23      quartile, not because its growth slows here, but

      24      because the growth of the rest of the country picks

      25      up.







                                                                   72
       1             Now, there's a reason for that, having to do

       2      with the overall shape of the business cycle here.

       3             The Sunbelt had a much worse experience with

       4      job gains than New York did and the northeast did

       5      starting in 2007.

       6             All right?

       7             And it's had a much slower return to health,

       8      as we'll see.

       9             So, comparatively speaking, over the business

      10      cycle, New York has actually been ahead of the

      11      gain -- the gain, if you will.  But, that's actually

      12      directly reflected in slower growth rates now,

      13      compared to the states, like Florida and Arizona,

      14      which are finally, once again, growing very fast,

      15      even though they have not come close to recovering

      16      all the jobs they lost in the recession.  A lot of

      17      them in construction, of course.

      18             That's, uhm -- that's summarized, in a

      19      forecast sense, in the map on page -- the page

      20      numbers are gone, sorry about that.

      21             So, technically -- well, I lost them for a

      22      while.  Sorry.

      23             But I think you'll see the colored -- the

      24      colored map there.

      25             New York, in gray, along with Texas and much







                                                                   73
       1      of the Upper Plains states, regained employment

       2      levels -- record employment levels, if you will --

       3      for the state years ago -- a few years ago.  Right?

       4             California has not yet.

       5             Florida has not yet.

       6             Arizona has not yet.

       7             Washington State just did.

       8             Right?

       9             So -- so, you know, the states in "gray" have

      10      been ahead of the game, in terms of, either they had

      11      a weaker, slower, lesser decline, or, they grew back

      12      quicker.

      13             And it's a little bit of both in

      14      New York State.

      15             Massachusetts, based on a very strong Boston

      16      economy, joins that recent -- more recently here.

      17             But you see the -- the difference in the

      18      Sunbelt here, with the yellow and the green,

      19      signifying that those states are not even getting

      20      back to where they were in 2007 or so, until 2015 to

      21      2017.

      22             The map in each state places the job growth

      23      at its peak level, which would have been 2006 in

      24      California, approximately; 2007 in most of the rest

      25      of the country.







                                                                   74
       1             It went down, and then, when does it get back

       2      up to that level?

       3             Okay?

       4             What the map doesn't do is adjust for the

       5      size of labor force, so labor force growth has

       6      occurred since then.

       7             So even when you -- parts of the country

       8      regain all of the jobs they had, the unemployment

       9      rate is higher than it was.

      10             So, in that sense, it's not a complete

      11      recovery of the economy.

      12             Let's look at New York directly, on the next

      13      graph.

      14             And you see, there's a job growth, same

      15      scale, percent change, year over year, in

      16      employment.

      17             Blue solid line for New York, red for the

      18      U.S., in growth.

      19             You see, New York -- New York -- and by the

      20      way, the U.S. economy, as a whole, will not regain

      21      the jobs, in total, that it lost in the recession

      22      until a few months from now.

      23             That's coming up close, but that's not quite

      24      there yet.  Till the middle part of this year,

      25      approximately, the second quarter.







                                                                   75
       1             So U.S. -- and New York outpaced the U.S. in

       2      2011.

       3             If you look in 2010, you see that as well.

       4             I guess I should have included that.

       5             Then growth has fallen off.

       6             I think last year I termed New York as having

       7      lost momentum.

       8             We're going to continue in our forecast down

       9      the path, between 1 and 1.2 percent growth, which

      10      is, again, which, demographically, is a

      11      slower-growing area, New York State is.

      12             So, you're going to expect lower growth.

      13             But a large part of the red-line increase

      14      there in 2014 and 2015, is a recouping of lost jobs,

      15      a return to normalcy, in those Sunbelt states, and

      16      that's what's driving it.

      17             That will ultimately peak off, as well.

      18             And I show that, yet again, to hammer the

      19      point home:  If I index job gains in both New York

      20      and the country back in 2008, you see that New York

      21      is still ahead.

      22             New York, at one oh -- approximately, 102, at

      23      the current time, it means it has 2 percent more

      24      jobs than it did in 2008.

      25             The U.S. is just now, in this year, getting







                                                                   76
       1      back to the levels it was in 2008.

       2             So there's a sense in which New York has been

       3      ahead of the cycle.

       4             It's only out in 2016 when the U.S. had, in

       5      effect, gained more jobs -- many jobs,

       6      proportionally, over the last decade as New York.

       7             Another way of looking at it.

       8             Turning to other issues for revenue

       9      forecasting, and the like, in New York:

      10             Wage and salary growth:  Now, this graph was

      11      prepared before we had the January collection

      12      experience that most of you are aware of now.

      13             So, there's a lot of uncertainty about what

      14      actual wage and salary growth is, and uncertainty in

      15      the financial sector, that I'm sure Jason and Ronnie

      16      will talk about.

      17             For now, though, we're forecasting that, with

      18      a relatively weak financial sector, relative to the

      19      job gains they've seen in the past, we're going to

      20      have lower average wage growth, and a bit lower

      21      average wage growth in the country.

      22             And, remember, the employment-growth forecast

      23      is also embedded in that, since we're looking at

      24      total wages and salaries; not on a per-worker, but a

      25      worker basis.







                                                                   77
       1             Looking at other key variables affecting

       2      New York taxes; in particular, sales taxes, and

       3      other transaction-related taxes:

       4             New car registrations in New York -- I was

       5      looking at the U.S. before -- but, again, New York,

       6      we see the rise, up through 2013, to almost a

       7      million units.  And that will stabilize now in our

       8      forecast, as we -- for similar reasons as with the

       9      U.S.

      10             Housing starts, still a bit to go.

      11             We've now -- we're approximately over

      12      30,000-houses-per-year pace at the current time.

      13      And we look for gradual increasing of about

      14      thirty-five over the next year or two.

      15             Summarize now, by fiscal-year basis, the

      16      growth rates that we project for U.S. for gross

      17      state products, employment, unemployment:

      18             We have unemployment coming down 6 percent in

      19      2016.  That may be too slow, given the way -- the

      20      dramatic acceleration of the fall in unemployment

      21      we've seen, and the tough part, as Hugh was quite

      22      correct to emphasize, that labor force participation

      23      rate is behaving in a -- in a fascinating way, shall

      24      we say.  An uncertainty.

      25             Personal income ramping up to 4 1/2 percent.







                                                                   78
       1      Wages and salaries are slightly less.

       2             And I've mentioned the other numbers before.

       3             Bottom line:

       4             Trailing the nation since 2012, New York

       5      economy, but trailing in terms of rates of growth,

       6      I think, as being in a more mature stage of

       7      recovery.

       8             New York City clearly leading, and was -- is

       9      responsible for the quicker recovery for the state

      10      as a whole.

      11             But Long Island, gladly, is now recovering

      12      strongly now.

      13             That's not so much true upstate.

      14             There's weakness -- relative weakness in the

      15      high-wage sectors.  You know, financial sector only

      16      being just one of them.

      17             Very much notable is the new upstate promise,

      18      especially in Buffalo, and even Utica, in the

      19      high-tech sector.

      20             Buffalo there, and also with -- on lake-front

      21      development just finally proceeding, so, we'll see

      22      if that jump-starts a new age for Buffalo, if you

      23      will.

      24             Wall Street retrenchment continues to be a

      25      threat.  All right?







                                                                   79
       1             I think, I'm sure, Jason and Ronnie will

       2      follow up on that.

       3             And, overall, we expect moderate growth for

       4      the near term, for the state, most of the region.

       5             Thank you.

       6             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Okay, very good.  Thank

       7      you.

       8             Any questions?

       9             ROBERT B. WARD:  I have a question.

      10             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Sure.

      11             ROBERT B. WARD:  You went back to 2008 in

      12      comparing New York to the nation, in terms of

      13      employment growth.

      14             I believe that, if we go back to 2007, we

      15      actually had five straight years of outperforming

      16      the nation, which was the first time in history,

      17      I believe.

      18             And, you referred to the impact of the

      19      recession and post-recession, and the nation growing

      20      faster because there were sharper declines.

      21             But, any sense as to why we had those

      22      five straight years after a long period of the

      23      reverse?

      24             And, why we have now gone back to, as your

      25      numbers show for the coming year, being in the







                                                                   80
       1      bottom quartile?

       2             JAMES DIFFLEY:  Oh, so I guess the question

       3      is more, long term, and why is the -- what was the

       4      anomaly?

       5             With was the anomaly when New York was

       6      growing very fast, leading up to the recession, or

       7      after?

       8             Well, the key difference in driving

       9      economic-growth differences across the country, in

      10      the time of the housing -- from the start of the

      11      housing bubble, through the recession, has been

      12      residential real-estate markets.

      13             All right?

      14             New York did participate in the rapid

      15      buildup, and the stock market gains at the same

      16      time, if we laid it back, and financial-sector

      17      gains, and huge incomes in that sector, did propel

      18      New York faster than the nation.

      19             I would argue, I guess -- so to answer the

      20      question, I think in the context you want:  I would

      21      argue that was the anomaly, rather than the longer

      22      term, slower rate of growth generated by a mature

      23      economy.

      24             Okay?

      25             And one of the big differences in the way --







                                                                   81
       1      the reason that -- you know, what's driving the

       2      difference in the Sunbelt behavior now is precisely

       3      the hangover of the housing crisis, where, finally,

       4      with real-estate markets normalizing, local demand

       5      is accelerating once again.

       6             And the same excessive bubble in housing that

       7      caused the deeper declines there, that's caused

       8      different relative timing of the cycles, so....

       9             Good question, though.

      10             ROBERT B. WARD:  Thank you.

      11             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you.

      12             Thank you very much.

      13             Mr. Bram.

      14             JASON BRAM:  Hi, it's great to be here.

      15             I'm going to try to move through this fast,

      16      and -- since a lot of what I'm saying is going to

      17      sound a little familiar.

      18             Turning your attention to this chart package,

      19      I'll try to refer to the charts by numbers; so,

      20      we'll start with Number 1.

      21             We have our index of regional economic

      22      activity that we've developed for New York,

      23      New Jersey, and New York City.

      24             And here you can see that, New York City --

      25      this, by the way, is, uhm -- what we do is, it's a







                                                                   82
       1      blend of payroll employment, the unemployment rate,

       2      a measure of hours, a measure of wage and salary

       3      income.  And we view it as kind of a very rough

       4      proxy for economic activity, with an emphasis on

       5      "rough."

       6             But, the main purpose is to kind of indicate

       7      turning points, and give a sort of general idea as

       8      to the trajectory of the economy.

       9             You can see that New York City had a somewhat

      10      milder recession than New York State as a whole, and

      11      has had -- has really rebounded pretty rapidly.

      12             New York State, as a whole, is kind of just

      13      back to where it was at its peak back in 2008.

      14             We don't do one that's based on the same

      15      methodology for the U.S., but, I'll get into other

      16      measures, like, employment, you'll see how, kind of,

      17      we've done relative to the U.S.

      18             Chart Number 2, that's called, uhm -- the

      19      next few charts are gonna be all called "last three

      20      downturns."

      21             The first one refers to the U.S., and what we

      22      do is, we index employment so that it's normalized

      23      to the last peak, to allow for an easy comparison.

      24             And this enables you to -- this is what we

      25      call a "spider chart" at the fed.







                                                                   83
       1             This is -- enables us to kind of look at the

       2      downturns, putting them in sync with each other, and

       3      seeing how we've done.

       4             And here you can see why this is called the

       5      "Great Recession."

       6             The very last downturn had a much, much

       7      deeper and longer drop in employment, and a slower

       8      rebound, to the point where we're, you know, in the

       9      early '90s and the early 2000s, the early 2000s was

      10      referred to as a "jobless recovery."

      11             But, even that one, you can see it came back

      12      to its peak well before we have in the U.S.

      13             So, basically, the last recession has been

      14      much steeper, longer, and a slower recovery.

      15             Now, for contrast, New York State, on the

      16      next page, Number 3, not that it wasn't a deep and

      17      harsh recession in New York State, but, it's a very

      18      different pattern than what you see nationally.

      19             So here we have the early '90s downturn, at

      20      least in terms of employment, was actually a much

      21      steeper and longer recession than the brown line,

      22      which is the most recent downturn.  This is more,

      23      kind of, similar to the early 2000s recession.

      24             Now, of course, there are, in terms of other

      25      things, such as, for instance, the financial sector,







                                                                   84
       1      in terms of housing, you know, there's still some

       2      differences.

       3             But, from the perspective of the overall

       4      economy, this was a somewhat less-sharp recession,

       5      certainly, than the nation, but, also, than the --

       6      certainly, than the early '90s recession.

       7             And that's true even more -- even more so for

       8      New York City, which is on the next page.

       9             You can see New York City, the blue line, we

      10      came back in New York City much faster than in the

      11      last two downturns, to the point where employment is

      12      reaching new all-time peaks; all-time, in fact,

      13      exceeding the previous peak, I think it was in 1969,

      14      in New York City.

      15             So, let's look a little more closely at the

      16      employment trends.

      17             On Chart Number 5, we've done a similar sort

      18      of so-called "spider chart"; but instead of

      19      comparing it over different time periods, we're just

      20      looking at the last business cycle, and showing

      21      different parts in New York State and how they've

      22      done.

      23             And you can see that all of New York State

      24      was -- saw a much milder -- "milder" is a bad

      25      word -- less-steep job losses than the nation as a







                                                                   85
       1      whole.

       2             And, in fact, they track pretty closely

       3      together, in terms of job losses.

       4             And what we've seen since then, is the

       5      upstate metro areas have recovered; have gotten

       6      pretty close to back to their overall peak.

       7             And I'll get into a little bit more

       8      geographic detail in a sec.

       9             New York State, as a whole, as I know one of

      10      you mentioned, is only just barely exceeded its

      11      previous peak recently.

      12             And, really, New York City, and I'll get to

      13      the next -- in one of the charts coming up soon,

      14      Long Island -- but, basically, Downstate New York

      15      has led the recovery in employment in the region.

      16             And this map kind of puts a little more

      17      perspective on it.

      18             You can see that -- what we've done is, we've

      19      looked at the peak-to-trough job losses in the

      20      different parts of the state, and then asked the

      21      question:  How much of that job loss has been

      22      reversed?

      23             So in a worst-case scenario, none of it has.

      24      There's been really no recovery, so to speak.

      25             And that's what you're seeing in Binghamton,







                                                                   86
       1      and some other areas that are in gray, have not --

       2      have only -- have recovered less -- fewer than

       3      75 percent of the lost jobs.

       4             Within that, I will say, that there are some

       5      areas that are pretty close to Binghamton, in terms

       6      of not having much of a recovery; and those would be

       7      Elmira, the Kingston, and Poughkeepsie areas.

       8             Then you see a large swath of

       9      Upstate New York as sort of in the -- you know,

      10      partway there, but certainly not having recovered

      11      that much of -- certainly not all of the job losses.

      12             Buffalo and Rochester, interestingly,

      13      these -- Buffalo to -- historically, has had,

      14      barely -- you know, weak trend growth in employment.

      15             Yet, Buffalo and Rochester have both

      16      recovered most of the -- reversed most of the job

      17      losses.

      18             And, then, to save the best for last, you

      19      have, basically, New York City, Long Island, and the

      20      Ithaca metro area have recovered all of the lost

      21      jobs, and then some.

      22             So those are really the -- kind of the

      23      booming areas of the state.

      24             On Chart 7, we -- this is kind of looking at

      25      the rate of job growth on a 12-month-percent change







                                                                   87
       1      basis.

       2             And to get -- Mr. Ward, to get to the

       3      Deputy Comptroller -- so, New York State, you're

       4      absolutely right, going into the recession, and

       5      during the recession, outperformed the U.S.

       6             But, actually, during most of the 2000s, it

       7      was pretty on track with the U.S.

       8             And it's actually fairly rare that you see --

       9      because of the fact that it is a mature economy,

      10      that we do have slower population growth, it's

      11      fairly rare that you see New York State or

      12      New York City outperform the U.S.

      13             And, so, I guess the point I'm trying to make

      14      here:  Recently, we've been a little bit below the

      15      national average, but that's -- I would consider

      16      that more of a normal thing.

      17             It's kind of what saw in the 2000s.

      18             This graph doesn't go back that far.  It's

      19      what we saw in the '90s.

      20             And, it's actually much better, or, less bad,

      21      than what we saw in the 1970s, when New York State

      22      was, you know, on a very un- -- much underperforming

      23      the national average.

      24             And then you see a similar situation; for

      25      example -- oh, I'm sorry, here we -- we have,







                                                                   88
       1      Rochester and Buffalo, just to give you an idea.

       2             This -- basically, the purpose of this is to

       3      show you how the areas have done -- the individual

       4      areas have done across the last few cycles, and how

       5      they've done specifically relative to the U.S.

       6             And you can see that

       7      Western New York State -- I'm counting Rochester.

       8             From a New York City perspective, I guess

       9      Rochester is Western New York State.  Kind of the

      10      same way New Yorkers consider -- some New Yorkers

      11      consider Bronx upstate, but, we won't go there.

      12             But, anyway, Rochester and Buffalo have --

      13      admittedly, they've seen a weaker recovery than the

      14      nation, for sure.  But, again, they weren't hit as

      15      hard by the recession.

      16             And then, you know, basically, they,

      17      typically, during booms, they haven't been seeing

      18      that much job growth, but they've been more mildly

      19      affected during the last couple of recessions.

      20             And this is sort of consistent with long-term

      21      trends.

      22             Now, keep in mind, this is employment.

      23             I'm gonna get to some graphs on housing in a

      24      minute, that paint a very different picture of

      25      western New York State.







                                                                   89
       1             Chart 9, we have job growth in the -- some of

       2      the Southern Tier.  We've sort of grouped that as

       3      central New York State, I guess.

       4             And what really jumps out here, again, is

       5      Binghamton, and to some extent, Utica, have been

       6      lagging the rest of the state and the nation.

       7             And, in particular, Binghamton.

       8             We don't have it here; Elmira is kind of

       9      similar to Binghamton.

      10             Those areas are really still kind of

      11      depressed.

      12             Albany, on the other hand, you know, has seen

      13      a reasonably good rebound, though not quite in line

      14      with the nation.

      15             On Chart 10, we have kind of what we call the

      16      "downstate areas."

      17             And here you can see that New York City and

      18      Long Island have really led the state, and have

      19      exceeded the nation in job growth during this

      20      recovery expansion.

      21             Poughkeepsie has had, you know, mid -- it's

      22      Mid-Hudson Valley, Kingston is the same sort of

      23      thing, has been somewhat of a laggard.

      24             I should add that the recent drop, I'm not

      25      really quite sure, a little -- it looks a little







                                                                   90
       1      disconcerting, but keep in mind that these data are

       2      preliminary and they're subject to revision.

       3             So, when we see a big drop like that, and

       4      find it hard to explain, we like to usually wait, to

       5      see what the revised data look like.

       6             But, certainly, the Mid-Hudson Valley is not

       7      one of the -- a strongest part of the state.

       8             Now, switching our focus to New York City,

       9      because I know that, when you're looking at revenue,

      10      New York City, and particularly New York City's

      11      securities industry, is a very important component

      12      of that.

      13             And this goes back, I probably have shown

      14      this every time I've been here, but, there's always

      15      new data to add; so, just very briefly:

      16             I think the point of this chart, is it shows

      17      securities-industry employment in New York City, and

      18      employment in the rest of, basically, New York City.

      19             Any -- what -- what -- what to take away from

      20      in this is, pretty much, that every downturn in

      21      New York City's economy has been preceded by a

      22      downturn in the securities industry, in terms of

      23      employment.

      24             And, similarly, every upturn in

      25      New York City's economy has been preceded by an







                                                                   91
       1      upturn in the securities-industry employment.

       2             So, it's kind of like a leading indicator of

       3      New York City employment.  Or, you can think of it

       4      as almost a driver.  You know, this is a very

       5      important.  It's widely considered New York City's

       6      key driving sector of the economy.

       7             And, so, every upturn has been preceded,

       8      except for the last one.

       9             And if you look around 2010, when

      10      New York City employment started to turn up,

      11      securities employment turned up a little bit, and it

      12      did so after the fact.

      13             So, this was the first time, really, that the

      14      securities industry hasn't led, at least by a little

      15      bit, an upturn in New York employment.

      16             And, you can see that we've had this fairly

      17      sizable expansion in New York City's employment,

      18      really, without any help from Wall Street.  And that

      19      is unprecedented, at least in the last, what is

      20      this, 40? 50? -- 50 years.

      21             So, it's an unusual situation.

      22             And, you know -- well, let's get to the next

      23      chart, because this is where it becomes relevant.

      24             This is year-over-year percent change in wage

      25      and salary -- aggregate wage and salary, which Jim







                                                                   92
       1      just referred to.

       2             And you can see that the -- what we saw in

       3      kind of, 2008-2009, was the biggest, really,

       4      year-over-year decline on record, in both

       5      New York State and New York City -- New York City

       6      being a big component of New York State, of

       7      course -- and far exceeding the nationwide drop.

       8             And, you've seen that the rebound, although

       9      there has been -- you know, it's gone above zero,

      10      the rebound has been slower than usual.

      11             So, typically, for example, in the '90s, and

      12      even in, to some extent, the early 2000s, you see

      13      some pretty big jumps in wage and salary income

      14      coming out of, you know, at least during the later

      15      stages of recovery, to a large extent, led by

      16      Wall Street.  But, to some extent, broad-based.

      17             And these are a little bit more muted this

      18      time.

      19             And so this, of course, is a big challenge,

      20      you know, for revenue, and something that everyone

      21      has pretty much focused on here.

      22             And then, coming into the final part, it's

      23      important here to look at the housing -- the housing

      24      prices.

      25             And the price index that we tend to focus on







                                                                   93
       1      is from the -- an organization, CoreLogic.

       2             They do, it's called, a "repeat sales index,"

       3      so that it accounts for kind of the changes in the

       4      mix.

       5             So if, in one-quarter, or in one year,

       6      suddenly, all the nice homes are selling, it doesn't

       7      look like there's this huge price pickup.  It's

       8      based on comparable home sales.

       9             And what you see, first of all, what jumps

      10      out, is the United States had a much deeper drop

      11      than any parts of New York State.

      12             Upstate New York really did not -- didn't

      13      have a big boom, but, didn't really have a bust

      14      either, the way that, you know, parts of

      15      New York State, and certainly places like Florida

      16      and Nevada, did.

      17             So Upstate New York is sort of a -- has

      18      been -- I guess the word I would use is "stability."

      19             You know, when prices weren't going up that

      20      much, it was considered a bad thing, because people

      21      in Upstate New York were saying, Why aren't -- you

      22      know, Why aren't we seeing some, you know, decent

      23      appreciation?

      24             But, things have been stable.

      25             And as you see more recently, they've picked







                                                                   94
       1      up more so than downstate, in fact, as a whole.

       2             And to get a little more geography in here,

       3      you can see New York City, Long Island, Dutchess,

       4      the downstate areas, kind of -- New York -- aside

       5      from New York City, a little bit lagging the

       6      rebound.

       7             This is on -- I'm sorry, we're on Chart 14.

       8             And then on Chart 15, you can see some of

       9      the -- we picked a few upstate areas.

      10             And you can see that Buffalo has seen,

      11      really, no downturn, and, has seen prices -- prices

      12      have kept going up.

      13             So looking just at housing markets, Buffalo

      14      looks very strong.

      15             Now, keep in mind, as I know that, you know,

      16      we have some economists at the New York Fed that are

      17      stationed in Buffalo.  And whenever we have a

      18      conversation about home prices, it's like we're on

      19      two different planets, because, what a house goes

      20      for in Buffalo is what a parking space goes for in

      21      parts of Manhattan.

      22             Having said that, so, housing affordability,

      23      of course, is an issue.  You don't have the same

      24      kind of pressure on population growth.

      25             But, uhm -- anyway, it's important to focus







                                                                   95
       1      on, you know, some of the positives of

       2      Upstate New York, to give a more balanced view of

       3      the economy.

       4             Another issue that we've looked at is -- that

       5      we track, again, from CoreLogic, loan performance,

       6      and some other organizations that we follow, track

       7      the -- both -- well, we look at the flow in to

       8      foreclosure, we look at the inventory of foreclosed

       9      homes, distressed homes, delinquent, and so forth.

      10             But I think the backlog of foreclosures tends

      11      to be a good summary measure of what's going on,

      12      and, this is a factor, of course, affecting the

      13      housing market.

      14             And what you see is that, whereas, this

      15      backlog has come down nationally, it has -- it

      16      remains somewhat stubbornly high throughout

      17      New York State, particularly in some of the

      18      downstate areas.

      19             Part of the reason for this is that homes

      20      stay in foreclosure longer.

      21             But one way to think of this is, that, to

      22      have -- for housing markets to get back to normal,

      23      this backlog of foreclosures has to get down to, if

      24      not where it was in the mid-2000s, at least a

      25      lower level than it is now, to -- to not be kind of







                                                                   96
       1      a drag on the market.

       2             Anyway.

       3             And, finally, the last two charts I'm going

       4      to show you, on Chart 17 and 18:

       5             On Chart 17, the Federal Reserve Bank of

       6      New York does two surveys.

       7             We do a survey of manufacturers across

       8      New York State: the Empire State Manufacturing

       9      Survey.

      10             And we've also been doing a survey of

      11      service-sector firms across the district, at least

      12      the continental part of the district, which is

      13      New York, New Jersey -- Newark, New Jersey, and part

      14      of Connecticut.  But, a large majority of these

      15      firms are in New York, so, it's largely a

      16      New York State survey.

      17             So you have, the blue line is the

      18      manufacturers, the brownish rust-colored line is the

      19      service-sector firms.

      20             And one of the -- one of the things that we

      21      like about this, is that it gives you -- we do the

      22      survey, release it very quickly, so it gives you a

      23      fairly timely read, at least on what businesses are

      24      saying and thinking.

      25             And as you can see, the surveys, both the







                                                                   97
       1      manufacturing, but especially our service-sector

       2      survey, sort of presaged the, uhm -- or at least

       3      signaled the downturn in 2008.

       4             And it's a diffusion index, which means --

       5      well, basically, it's actually -- the index is

       6      really a very simple thing.

       7             It's simply the number of business -- the

       8      percentage of businesses saying things have gotten

       9      better in the last month, versus the percentage

      10      saying things have gotten worse.

      11             And when it's above zero, you know, the

      12      balance is positive.

      13             And, you can see a, little disconcertingly at

      14      first, you might say, the service-sector index has

      15      dropped below zero early this year.

      16             However, what we saw the last -- I'm sorry,

      17      in November of 2012, was a similar drop.  That was

      18      after "Sandy," which I'm sure everyone in this room

      19      remembers well.

      20             And, there is some evidence that we found,

      21      anecdotally, that this recent drop is largely due to

      22      the weather, that, I think you had said -- one of

      23      you said, shaved a few tenths off GDP.

      24             And in this region, it probably shaved quite

      25      a bit more off economic growth, because it kind







                                                                   98
       1      of -- we're at the -- we were a big part of -- of --

       2      as the nation goes, we were hit harder than most of

       3      the nation.

       4             So -- and then the second chart here is our

       5      forward-looking index, which didn't -- really,

       6      those -- those have been really quite positive.

       7             And so, I guess -- and these data are through

       8      mid-February, so this is very current data.  This

       9      is, the latest readings are from early February.

      10             And, in a nutshell, I think what I'd say is

      11      that:  I think -- again, this is -- this is sort of

      12      a judgment call, but, we've been hearing an awful

      13      lot about business being inhibited by the weather

      14      in -- to some extent, January, but more in January

      15      and early February.

      16             And, right now, it's still cold.  It's not --

      17      you don't have the snow and ice problems.

      18             But, my sense is that this is having quite --

      19      has had quite a substantial but short-term effect on

      20      economic activity.

      21             And when the weather gets warmer, you could

      22      see some pickup in demand.

      23             And, I have -- the last slide I have is a

      24      recap, and I don't think I need to read through

      25      that.  You guys can read them and look at them, but,







                                                                   99
       1      it's pretty much a recap of what I've talked about

       2      for the last few minutes.

       3             And, I should close off by saying what

       4      I should have said at the beginning, which is:

       5      These views are mine, and not those of the

       6      Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the

       7      Federal Reserve system.

       8             Thank you very much.

       9             ROBERT B. WARD:  Thank you.

      10             Thank you very much.

      11             Any questions for Mr. Bram?

      12             All right.

      13             Last, but not least, Ms. Lowenstein.

      14             RONNIE LOWENSTEIN:  Okay, thank you.

      15             And I will try to be brief, to get us all out

      16      of here.

      17             And I think that's not going to be too hard,

      18      first of all, because Jason's covered some of what

      19      I was going to cover; but, also, because my chart

      20      package is largely self-descriptive.

      21             So, you know, if you read through it, you'll

      22      get to the same place.

      23             The first chart, what I'm mainly talking

      24      about is economic conditions in the city; and,

      25      particularly, employment and real estate.







                                                                   100
       1             I'm going to end with some comments on the

       2      city's fiscal outlook.

       3             We'll be putting out our complete forecast

       4      next week.

       5             We've pinned the economics numbers, but,

       6      definitely not the tax revenues; and, so, you know,

       7      that will be just conjecture.

       8             So starting off looking at city employment,

       9      what you've got here is a long series, going from

      10      '69 to the fourth quarter of '13.

      11             We're starting at '69 because that's when the

      12      reliable data starts.

      13             And, it's seasonally-adjusted quarterly data

      14      for the U.S., in green; and New York City, in red.

      15             The shaded bars are the "U.S. recession"

      16      shading.

      17             And what you can see is basically what Jason

      18      just said.

      19             We hit an all-time peak, at least based on

      20      reliable numbers.  4 million jobs in December, which

      21      was great.

      22             If you look closely at the downturns, and

      23      Jason said a lot about all of the other downturns,

      24      but, most recent downturn, if you look at

      25      New York City's decline, you can see that city has







                                                                   101
       1      regained, roughly, twice as many jobs as it lost in

       2      the downturn, which is a much better performance

       3      than for the U.S., which, at this point, has

       4      regained about 90 percent.

       5             We, too, are looking at labor force

       6      participation issues.

       7             I think there are real issues about why, even

       8      though New York City is gaining lots of jobs, the

       9      unemployment rate has remained stubbornly high,

      10      particularly contrasted with the U.S., where they

      11      haven't gained nearly as many jobs, but the

      12      unemployment rate has declined.

      13             Some of that's labor-force-participation

      14      conundrums.  Some of that, I think, is the data

      15      itself; and, particularly, the household-survey-data

      16      problems.

      17             And, we're looking more closely at the

      18      demographics of it, and publishing on that in the

      19      coming months.

      20             Turning to where the jobs came from, and

      21      where we expect them to come from, the -- there are

      22      two pie charts on this page.

      23             They both look at shares of New York City

      24      employment growth.  Not just employment, but

      25      employment growth.







                                                                   102
       1             The left-hand pie shows what happened during

       2      the expansion from 2003 to 2008.

       3             The right-hand pie is our forecast for where

       4      employment growth is coming from, from

       5      2013 through '18, which is our forecast period.

       6             The bottom line here is, we're still

       7      expecting the biggest chunks of employment growth to

       8      come from the four sectors that we got it from last

       9      time, which is to say:  Education and health care,

      10      which grew even during the downturn; professional

      11      and business services, leisure and hospitality, and

      12      trade.

      13             This time around, we're expecting a bigger

      14      chunk of the jobs to come from the information

      15      sector.

      16             It's still pretty small, but it's growing

      17      robustly.

      18             But the big difference on the two charts is

      19      securities, where, in the previous expansion, what

      20      we got was, 9 percent of the employment gains were

      21      coming from securities; while we're only expecting a

      22      third of that, 3 percent of employment gains, going

      23      forward, to come from securities.

      24             Actually, we had that as a lower number, and

      25      we ratcheted it up a little.







                                                                   103
       1             It's still, you know, just a third of the job

       2      gains that we had seen before.  But, of course, it's

       3      not just jobs that count; it's the wages that come

       4      attached to those jobs that matter, in terms of the

       5      city revenues.

       6             And there are big differences in wages across

       7      sectors, which I'm sure all of us understand.

       8             So, if you look at the next chart, on

       9      employment-change forecast and average wage, you can

      10      see that the four sectors that are contributing the

      11      most jobs in our forecast, and they contributed the

      12      most in the recent upturn, three out of four of them

      13      are -- you know, have wages that are certainly below

      14      the average for the city.

      15             The exception to that is professional and

      16      business services, where average wage is 107,000 per

      17      year.

      18             I should explain that, this is not -- this is

      19      the wage that we're forecasting.  We forecast

      20      employment by subsectors.

      21             And, professional and business services is a

      22      really broad sector.  You've got administrative and

      23      support services on the low end, and you've got

      24      professional and technical on the high end.

      25             In our forecast, the split is pretty much







                                                                   104
       1      even between the two groups, which is giving us --

       2      producing the $107,000-a-year forecast for average

       3      salaries that we've got.

       4             If you go down a little further on the chart,

       5      you can see that the information jobs we're

       6      expecting to add also pay well.  Roughly, $120,000 a

       7      year, in 2013.

       8             But then if you go down just a little

       9      further, you see that, of course, by far, the

      10      highest wages are coming -- wages and salaries are

      11      coming out of the securities sector.

      12             Those average wages and salaries include

      13      bonuses -- cash bonuses.

      14             They're are high.

      15             They're much higher than other sectors; and,

      16      so, every job you add in the securities adds a lot

      17      more than multiple jobs in the others.

      18             I should also note that, this number, this

      19      343,000 we're forecasting -- well, which we've got

      20      for 2013, is more than a fifth below what the

      21      '07 peak was in real terms.

      22             I don't expect collections or anything for

      23      these people, but, yeah, they're certainly earning

      24      less than they were.

      25             And you can see that in Jason's charts.







                                                                   105
       1             Okay, so, wages are important.

       2             So, the next set of pie charts shows you

       3      what -- where the sources of wage growth are going

       4      to be, going forward.

       5             And, the bottom line on this is:  Look at the

       6      securities sector.

       7             In the expansion of '03 to '08, the

       8      securities sector accounted for 56 percent of all of

       9      the increase in aggregate wages and salaries over

      10      the period.

      11             It's all the additional monies that were

      12      earned in New York City.  56 percent of that amount

      13      came out of this particular sector, that employs

      14      about 5 percent of city employees -- city

      15      employment.

      16             If you go to the forecast, we're now

      17      anticipating the securities sector will be

      18      responsible for 13 percent of the increase in wages

      19      and salaries over the period.

      20             That's a huge difference.

      21             I think it leads to one of the big questions

      22      on our fiscal forecast, which is:  Can the city of

      23      New York continue to add jobs the way it's added?

      24             And we've added jobs nicely, as Jason pointed

      25      out, without a booming securities sector.







                                                                   106
       1             Okay, a closer look at the securities

       2      industry is on the next page.

       3             Without going into all the details:

       4             The top panel looks at New York Stock

       5      Exchange member firms' revenues.

       6             The bottom panel is their expenses.

       7             The difference between the two is, of course,

       8      profits.

       9             There, you can -- if you look closely, at

      10      your leisure, you'll see there are humungous

      11      changes, you know, really volatile changes, in both

      12      revenues and expenses.

      13             We swung from huge losses in '07 -- 2007 and

      14      '8, on the order of $63 billion.

      15             And this is just for Stock Exchange member

      16      firms.  It's a subset of the securities industry.

      17      It's not all of it, but it's a good proxy for the

      18      industry as a whole.

      19             Lost 63 billion, from '07 -- in '07 and '08.

      20      Then swung to profits of 61 billion in '09.

      21             Since that rough ride, what we see is that,

      22      on the bottom panel, expenses are remaining low.

      23             That's primarily because interest rates have

      24      been very low.

      25             But revenue is, looking at the top panel,







                                                                   107
       1      roughly, half of what they were during the boom.

       2             It's not at all clear that those revenues

       3      will rise again.

       4             For one thing, interest rates are going to be

       5      going up.

       6             And although the industry earns something on

       7      this -- when interest rates goes up, it costs them a

       8      lot more in terms of borrowing.

       9             The other reason, is that -- let's see,

      10      interest rates.

      11             Oh, and the other reason is, of course,

      12      tighter regulation.

      13             So the combination of higher interest rates

      14      and tighter regulations suggests to us that it's

      15      gonna squeeze the profits' forecast.

      16             So far this year, the New York Stock Exchange

      17      member firms have earned $13 1/2 billion.

      18             Our forecast for the year, as a whole, is

      19      something on the order of 18 billion.

      20             But going forward, we're looking at profits

      21      more in the 14 billion -- 13, 14 billion dollar

      22      range.

      23             Turning to real estate, the tentative

      24      property tax roll was just released last week for

      25      the city.  It shows that market values are up







                                                                   108
       1      6.6 percent.

       2             Now, that's gonna come down a little as

       3      people challenge their assessments, but it's still a

       4      very strong growth.

       5             And, the growth was strongest in the

       6      commercial area, and less so in residential.

       7             What you've got are pictures -- words on the

       8      left side and pictures on the right side.

       9             The two graphs on the right-hand side of the

      10      page show Manhattan condos and co-ops.

      11             Condos are in blue, co-ops are in red.

      12             And the top panel shows sale price.

      13             The bottom shows volume.

      14             And what you can see is, that the median

      15      sales price of condos rebounded to $1.1 million in

      16      2013.

      17             And, that the -- in the bottom panel, you can

      18      see that the sales volume has also been rising since

      19      2009.

      20             And both sales price and volume are at or

      21      below -- well, at or above, sorry, their

      22      prerecession peaks.

      23             Turning to co-ops:

      24             Manhattan co-ops' prices have been, roughly,

      25      flat over the last four years.  Since these are in







                                                                   109
       1      nominal terms, they've been drifting down in real

       2      terms.

       3             And, median prices hit two hundred --

       4      $650,000 in 2013.

       5             But, sales volume has been increasing over

       6      the past few years; although, it remains more than a

       7      fifth below the 2004 peak.

       8             Here's the same story in terms of outer

       9      boroughs.

      10             Given the mortgage problems and the mortgage

      11      crisis, and the role of mortgages in the financial

      12      crisis, it's not surprising that the biggest

      13      difficulties were in the one-, two-, and

      14      three-family home sector, and they continue to

      15      struggle more than any other category.

      16             So, the top panel again shows prices.

      17             The bottom panel shows volume.

      18             And one-, two-, and three-family homes are in

      19      green on the top panel.

      20             And what you can see here is, that median

      21      sale prices rose to 470,000 -- 475,000 in 2013, but

      22      remained more than 10 percent below their 2007 peak.

      23             Then if you look at the bottom panel, the

      24      volume of sales in two thousand -- in 2013 was only

      25      about half that in 2004.







                                                                   110
       1             So, that's where the real weakness remains.

       2             And, the numbers of these units is huge,

       3      swamp -- far swamping what you're seeing in

       4      Manhattan, and far swamping the number of co-ops and

       5      condos in the outer boroughs.

       6             So, it's really something that's hugely

       7      important, and, is a major factor in our forecast.

       8             Let me skip forward to commercial real

       9      estate.  It's on the next page.

      10             Commercial has rebounded -- well, commercial

      11      hurt more than residential in the downturn, and has

      12      rebounded more than residential in the upswing.

      13             What you see on the left-hand side of the

      14      chart, this -- it -- the chart is

      15      commercial-property sales.

      16             Well, I'm showing both taxable sales in

      17      billions, and the total number of transactions on

      18      the same left-hand scale.

      19             And it just so happens that they both work

      20      together.

      21             The taxable commercial sales, in dollars, are

      22      in the -- are the line.  And the bars are the number

      23      of transactions.

      24             And so what you can see, just looking

      25      quickly, the number of transactions tanked, as did







                                                                   111
       1      the value of transactions during the downturn, but,

       2      they've skyrocketed since then.

       3             So the -- in the rebound, they've reached

       4      55 billion in 2013.

       5             And, if you look across, that's not so far

       6      from the peak.

       7             And there were 80 large commercial sales in

       8      2013.  And by "large" I mean, valued at over

       9      $100 million, which is nearly as many as there were

      10      in 2006.

      11             Now, given that most of us would characterize

      12      the expansion as a speculative bubble in

      13      real estate, you know, this is good news, but also

      14      cause for concern.

      15             Let me end up with just some observations on

      16      the City's fiscal outlook.

      17             First of all, the biggest heed to the City's

      18      fiscal outlook is the labor settlements.

      19             Every City union is now working without a

      20      contract, some of them as far back as 2009.

      21             That's an issue.

      22             And, there's talk, there's a lot of, you

      23      know, discussion of, Well, it's gonna cost

      24      $7 billion to deal with the problem.

      25             And, I'd like to just debunk that right away.







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       1             First of all, we were the people who first

       2      put out that scenario.  And, we were sitting around

       3      the conference table, saying:  Well, what would have

       4      happened if the teachers who didn't settle in the

       5      prior round of negotiations got the 4 percent and

       6      4 percent increases that the other unions got at

       7      that point, and, then, the teachers and everybody

       8      else got 2 percent a year since then?

       9             And that adds up to something in the

      10      vicinity, a little over $7 billion.

      11             But that was a scenario, one scenario, out

      12      of, effectively, an infinite number of scenarios

      13      that I could sketch for you.

      14             And what this page does is sketch a bunch of

      15      them.

      16             There's gonna be some -- you know, it could

      17      be anything.

      18             It could be wage increases.

      19             It could be retroactive pay.

      20             It could be bonus payments.

      21             There's a lot of room for negotiation here.

      22             And, how much it's ultimately going to cost

      23      the City depends upon where they wind up.

      24             So, you know, just take a look at the

      25      various -- you know, I just picked a bunch of







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       1      scenarios at random.

       2             We'll be putting more information out on

       3      this.

       4             But the key here is, we don't know how much

       5      it's gonna cost yet, and I'm sure the administration

       6      doesn't either.

       7             And, finally, that's not the only question in

       8      the city's outlook.  And, you know, I can go on, at

       9      length, in this, but, I just put what I thought were

      10      the four biggest issues that the city is facing.

      11             Obviously, the labor settlements are

      12      number one.

      13             But, more fundamentally, can the city

      14      continue to grow jobs the way it's been growing,

      15      given that we're looking at expecting a smaller,

      16      less lucrative financial sector, going forward?

      17             The City has got real problems with its

      18      health and hospitals corporation, and its housing

      19      authority.

      20             Those were -- you know, it's likely that

      21      those are gonna weigh more heavily on the new

      22      administration than it did on its predecessor.

      23             And, that's going to be an issue for the

      24      City, fiscally, going forward.

      25             And, then, nobody's even talking about the







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       1      cost of sustainability investments, where there's a

       2      lot of discussion about, Are we getting our

       3      reimbursement for "Sandy"?

       4             But that's federal reimbursement.

       5             The question is:  Going forward, how much

       6      we're going to have to be spending to deal with the

       7      next one.

       8             So let me leave it at that.

       9             Thank you.

      10             ROBERT L. MEGNA:  Thank you very much.

      11             Any questions?

      12             Okay, I think that concludes our session for

      13      today.

      14             Staffs will be meeting, I believe, beginning

      15      tomorrow, to hopefully come up with a consensus

      16      revenue forecast.

      17             The work that you've done will certainly help

      18      inform that.

      19             So, I want to thank you for coming, and for

      20      your guidance.

      21                  (Whereupon, at approximately 3:32 p.m.,

      22        the New York State 2014 Economic and Revenue

      23        Consensus Forecasting Conference concluded, and

      24        adjourned.)

      25                            ---oOo---