press conferences · September 16, 2014
FOMC Press Conference Transcript
Janet L. Yellen
September 17, 2014
Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
FINAL
Transcript of Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
September 17, 2014
CHAIR YELLEN. Good afternoon. The Federal Open Market Committee concluded its
meeting earlier today and, as usual, released its monetary policy statement. The Committee also
released a document describing the approach the Committee intends to take when, at some point
in the future, it becomes appropriate to begin normalizing the stance of policy. Let me
underscore that our release of this information is not meant to convey any change in the stance of
policy. As you know, the FOMC’s views on policy are conveyed in the policy statement, which
I will now discuss before coming back to our normalization plans.
As indicated in our policy statement, the FOMC decided to make another reduction in the
pace of its asset purchases. The Committee also maintained its forward guidance regarding the
federal funds rate target and reaffirmed its view that a highly accommodative stance of monetary
policy remains appropriate. Let me discuss the economic conditions that underpin these actions.
The economy is continuing to make progress toward the FOMC’s objective of maximum
sustainable employment. In the labor market, conditions have improved further in recent
months. Although the pace of job growth has slowed some recently, job gains have averaged
more than 200,000 per month over the past three months. The unemployment rate was
6.1 percent in August, two-tenths lower than the data available at the time of the June FOMC
meeting. Broader measures of labor market utilization, such as the U-6 measure, have shown
similar improvement, and the labor force participation rate has flattened out. These
developments continue the trend of gradual progress toward our employment objective. But the
labor market has yet to fully recover. There are still too many people who want jobs but cannot
find them, too many who are working part time but would prefer full-time work, and too many
who are not searching for a job but would be if the labor market were stronger. As noted in the
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FOMC statement, “a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant
underutilization of labor resources.”
The Committee continues to see sufficient underlying strength in the economy to support
ongoing improvement in the labor market. Although real GDP rose at an annual rate of only
about 1 percent in the first half of the year, that modest gain reflected, in part, transitory factors,
including a dip in net exports. Indeed, private domestic final demand—that is, spending by
domestic households and businesses—grew about twice as fast as GDP. Indicators of spending
and production for the third quarter suggest that economic activity is expanding at a moderate
pace, and the Committee continues to expect a moderate pace of growth going forward.
Inflation has been running below the Committee’s 2 percent objective, but with longerterm inflation expectations appearing to be well anchored and the economic recovery continuing,
the Committee expects inflation to move gradually back toward its objective. Moreover,
inflation has firmed some since earlier in the year, and the Committee believes that the likelihood
of inflation running persistently below 2 percent has diminished. As is always the case, the
Committee will continue to assess incoming data carefully to ensure that policy is consistent with
attaining the FOMC’s longer-run goals of maximum employment and inflation of 2 percent.
This outlook is reflected in the individual economic projections submitted in conjunction
with this meeting by the FOMC participants, which, for the first time, go through 2017. As
always, each participant’s projections are conditioned on his or her own view of appropriate
monetary policy. The central tendency of the unemployment rate projections is slightly lower
than in the June projections and now stands at 5.9 to 6.0 percent at the end of this year.
Committee participants generally see the unemployment rate declining to its longer-run normal
level over the course of 2016 and edging a bit below that level in 2017. The central tendency of
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the projections for real GDP growth is 2.0 to 2.2 percent for 2014, down slightly from the June
projections. Over the next three years, the projections for real GDP growth run somewhat above
the estimates of longer-run normal growth. Finally, FOMC participants continue to see inflation
moving gradually back toward 2 percent. The central tendency of the inflation projections is
1.5 to 1.7 percent in 2014, rising to 1.9 to 2 percent in 2017.
As I noted earlier, the Committee decided today to make another reduction in the pace of
asset purchases. Two years ago, when the FOMC began this purchase program, the
unemployment rate stood at 8.1 percent, and progress in lowering it was expected to be much
slower than desired without additional policy accommodation. The intent of the program was to
achieve a substantial improvement in the outlook for the labor market and to ensure that inflation
was moving back toward the Committee’s longer-run goal of 2 percent. In light of the
cumulative progress toward maximum employment and the improvement in the outlook for labor
market conditions since the inception of the program, and with the likelihood of inflation running
persistently below 2 percent having diminished somewhat, we have reduced our pace of asset
purchases again at this meeting. Starting next month, we will be purchasing $15 billion of
securities per month, down $10 billion per month from our current rate. If incoming information
broadly supports the Committee’s expectation of ongoing improvement in the labor market and
inflation moving back over time toward its 2 percent longer-run objective, the Committee will
end this program at our next meeting.
The Committee will continue its policy of reinvesting proceeds from maturing Treasury
securities and principal payments from holdings of agency debt and MBS. The Committee’s
sizable holdings of longer-term securities should help maintain accommodative financial
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conditions and promote further progress toward our objectives of maximum employment and
inflation of 2 percent.
Regarding interest rates, the Committee reaffirmed its forward guidance “that it likely
will be appropriate to maintain the current target range for the federal funds rate for a
considerable time after the asset purchase program ends, especially if projected inflation
continues to run below the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation
expectations remain well anchored.” This judgment is based on the Committee’s assessment of
realized and expected progress toward its objectives of maximum employment and 2 percent
inflation—an assessment that is based on a wide range of information, including measures of
labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings
on financial developments. Further, once we begin to remove policy accommodation, it is the
Committee’s current assessment that, even after employment and inflation are near mandateconsistent levels, economic conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal
funds rate below levels the Committee views as normal in the longer run.
This guidance is consistent with the paths for appropriate policy as reported in the
participants’ projections. As I will explain in a moment, the FOMC now anticipates that it will
continue to establish a target range, rather than a single point, for the federal funds rate when
normalization begins, and the dots in the chart I’ve distributed now show, for each participant,
the midpoint of this target range. Notably, although the central tendency of the unemployment
rate in late 2016 is slightly below its estimated longer-run value, and the central tendency for
inflation is close to our 2 percent objective, the median projection for the federal funds rate at the
end of 2016, at 2.9 percent, remains nearly a percentage point below the longer-run value of
3¾ percent or so projected by most participants. Although FOMC participants provide a number
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of explanations for the federal funds rate running below its longer-run normal level at that time,
many cite the residual effects of the financial crisis, which, although slowly diminishing, are
likely to continue to restrain household spending, constrain credit availability, and depress
expectations for future growth in output and incomes. As these factors dissipate further, most
participants expect the federal funds rate to move close to its longer-run normal level by the end
of 2017.
Let me reiterate, however, that the Committee’s expectations for the path of the federal
funds rate are contingent on the economic outlook. If the economy proves to be stronger than
anticipated by the Committee, resulting in a more rapid convergence of employment and
inflation to the FOMC’s objectives, then increases in the federal funds rate are likely to occur
sooner and to be more rapid than currently envisaged. Conversely, if economic performance
disappoints, increases in the federal funds rate are likely to take place later and to be more
gradual.
Let me now turn to our statement on “Policy Normalization Principles and Plans.” This
statement is intended to provide information to the public about the eventual normalization
process; it does not signal a change in the current or future stance of monetary policy. As is
always the case in setting policy, the FOMC will determine the timing and pace of policy
normalization so as to promote its statutory mandate of maximum employment and price
stability.
Since the crisis, the Federal Reserve has been providing extraordinary accommodation
using nontraditional tools of monetary policy. The FOMC’s intention has always been to return
to a more traditional approach, and throughout this period, the Committee has been preparing for
the normalization process. In June 2011, the Committee set out some broad principles and some
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more specific tactics for how it envisioned the normalization process to take place. In June 2013,
we noted that conditions had changed significantly in ways not anticipated in June of 2011,
including the size and composition of the Fed’s balance sheet, and that some revision of those
earlier plans was appropriate. The document released today reflects our updated plans, which,
readers of our minutes will know, have been under discussion for the last few FOMC meetings.
The new approach retains many broad objectives and principles from the original but also has
some new elements.
As was the case before the crisis, the Committee intends to adjust the stance of monetary
policy during normalization primarily through actions that influence the level of the federal
funds rate and other short-term interest rates, not through active management of the balance
sheet. The federal funds rate will serve as the key rate to communicate the stance of policy. To
begin normalization, the Committee will raise its target range for the federal funds rate. The
Committee expects that the effective federal funds rate may vary within the target range, and
could even move outside of that range on occasion, but such movements should have no material
effect on financial conditions or the broader economy.
The primary tool for moving the federal funds rate into the target range will be the rate of
interest paid on excess reserves, or IOER. The Committee expects that the federal funds rate will
trade below the IOER rate while reserves are so plentiful, as is the case at present. The
Committee also intends to use an overnight reverse repurchase agreement facility, which, by
transacting with a broad set of counterparties, will help ensure that the federal funds rate remains
in the target range. I would like to emphasize that the overnight RRP facility will only be used to
the extent necessary and will be phased out when no longer needed to help control the federal
funds rate. In addition, the Committee will adjust the particular settings of these tools as needed,
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and could deploy other supplementary tools as well, to ensure that we achieve our desired stance
of policy.
Turning now to our plans regarding the Fed’s balance sheet, the Committee intends to
reduce securities holdings in a gradual and predictable manner, primarily by ceasing to reinvest
repayments of principal on securities held in the System Open Market Account. Regarding the
timing for ceasing reinvestments, the Committee now expects this to occur after the initial
increase in the target range for the federal funds rate. The Committee currently does not
anticipate selling agency mortgage-backed securities as part of the normalization process,
although limited sales might be warranted in the longer run to reduce or eliminate residual
holdings. The timing and pace of such sales would be communicated to the public in advance.
It’s the Committee’s intention that the Federal Reserve will, in the longer run, hold no more
securities than necessary to implement monetary policy efficiently and effectively, and that these
securities will primarily consist of Treasury securities.
As I stated earlier, today’s release of the Committee’s updated normalization plans is in
no way intended to signal a change in the stance of monetary policy. Rather, it is meant simply
to provide information about how the Committee envisions the normalization process in light of
the changes in economic and financial circumstances that have occurred since we put forth our
original plans more than three years ago. That said, conditions could change further, and we will
learn about our tools during normalization. The Committee has agreed that it is prepared to
make additional adjustments to its normalization plans if warranted by economic and financial
developments.
Thank you. Let me stop there. I’ll be happy to take your questions.
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STEVE LIESMAN. Thank you. Chair Yellen, there was some debate going into this
meeting about the phrase “considerable time,” and whether it would remain in the statement. I
want to know if you could tell me just a couple things about it. First, was it debated at the
FOMC as to whether or not it should be included? And, I’m sorry, we’ve been over this before,
but what does it mean timewise? And that’s just two questions. I have just a couple more here.
Is the statement a form of forward guidance? And, finally, how do you square this idea of a date
when you and others on the FOMC have continuously said that you’re data dependent to the
point where, if the data were to turn, would it not necessarily be a considerable time until you
raise rates? Thank you.
CHAIR YELLEN. So, of course, the Committee discussed its forward guidance today,
and it discusses what the appropriate forward guidance is at every meeting. This is part of our
assessment of economic conditions and the appropriate stance of monetary policy. In terms of
what the term “considerable time” means, the Committee decided that, based on its assessment
of economic conditions, that characterization remains appropriate, and it was comfortable with it.
I think if you look, for example, at the projections of individual participants that are revealed in
the SEP—well, that’s the view of each participant, and, again, I’d emphasize, not a Committee
collective view—there is relatively little change in the assessment of the outlook by participants
between this meeting and the assessment in June. So the outlook is little changed—a slight
decline in the anticipated path of the unemployment rate and a very slight uptick in the inflation
projection, but really quite minimal. So, the outlook hasn’t changed that much from June, and
the Committee felt comfortable with this characterization.
Now, you said, “Isn’t this calendar-based guidance?” I want to emphasize that there is no
mechanical interpretation of what the term “considerable time” means. And, as I’ve said
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repeatedly, the decisions that the Committee makes about what is the appropriate time to begin to
raise its target for the federal funds rate will be data dependent. And in my opening comments
just now, I again emphasized something I’ve said previously, which is that if the pace of progress
in achieving our goals were to quicken, if it were to accelerate, it’s likely that the Committee
would begin raising its target for the federal funds rate sooner than is now anticipated and might
raise—might then raise the federal funds rate at a faster pace. And the opposite is also true, if
the projection were to change. So there is no fixed mechanical interpretation of a time period.
I think it would not be accurate to describe the Committee’s guidance about the timing of
the federal funds rate and when it will move above zero as being calendar based. The Committee
has started with a broad general statement of what determines how long it will keep the federal
funds rate target at zero. It has said that it will be looking at the actual and projected pace at
which the gaps between our employment and inflation, and our goals for those variables, are
closing. And then what the Committee does at each meeting is—after saying that the assessment
will take into account many different indicators and take into account inflation pressures and
other things—it goes on to provide at that meeting its assessment of the implications of its view
of the data at that time. And that assessment really hasn’t changed over the last several
meetings. The Committee, based on its assessment at each meeting, has felt comfortable saying
that, based on its assessment of those factors, it considers that it will be likely appropriate to
maintain the current target range for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends,
especially if inflation remains below the 2 percent objective. So I wouldn’t describe that as—I
know “considerable time” sounds like it’s a calendar concept, but it is highly conditional, and it’s
linked to the Committee’s assessment of the economy.
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HOWARD SCHNEIDER. Thank you. Howard Schneider with Reuters. Thank you. So
if you would help us, I mean, square the circle a little bit—because having kept the guidance the
same, having referred to significant underutilization of labor, having actually pushed GDP
projections down a little bit, yet the rate path gets steeper and seems to be consolidating higher—
so if it’s data dependent, what accounts for the faster projections on rate increases if the data
aren’t moving in that direction?
CHAIR YELLEN. Well, the growth projections for 2014 are down a little bit, but the
unemployment path is also marginally lower. So while the projected path of the labor market—
unemployment and other measures of the labor market—of course is partly dependent on the
growth outlook, it isn’t totally dependent on the growth outlook. And the Committee assesses
that the labor market is continuing to improve, and you see a small reduction in the path of the
unemployment this year and then over the rest of the projection period.
So, if you ask me—you asked me, “Why has the projected funds rate path moved up?”
Well, you know, each participant knows the reason they wrote down what they did. But, as a
guess, I would hazard—first, I would say, there is relatively little upward movement in the path,
and I would view it as broadly in line with what one would expect with a very small downward
reduction in the path for unemployment and a very slight upward change in the projection for
inflation. So, most participants, in deciding on the path, I think, look at, as our guidance says,
how large is the gap between performance of the labor market and that associated with our
maximum employment objective, how large is the gap between inflation and our 2 percent
objective, how fast will those gaps change. And you see in the projections very modest
reductions in the size of those gaps and modest—very small change of a slightly faster pace at
which those gaps would change. I would describe the change in the projections, both for the
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economy and the path of rates, as quite modest. But the fact that they move does illustrate the
data-dependence principle that I think is really so important for market participants to keep in
mind, that what we do will depend on how the data unfold. There is uncertainty about that. And
as expectations and the actual performance of the economy change, you should expect to see
movements in the dots.
I think it’s also notable that the further you go out in the projection period, the wider the
set of dots. You see a big range out in 2017, and that reflects, in part, different forecasts by
different members of the Committee about how rapid progress will be. What you don’t see in
the dot—so-called dot plot is also the uncertainty that each individual, each participant, sees
around their own projection. So things will depend on how the economy evolves. That will
change over time, and there’s a good deal of uncertainty associated with it.
CHRIS CONDON. Thank you, Madam Chair. Chris Condon, Bloomberg News.
Madam Chair, the economy has been growing now for five years, and some economists believe
the expansion will last another five years. Why, in your view, is economic growth not creating
more inflation in wages and in PCE? Is this all about remaining slack in the labor market, or are
there other forces at play?
CHAIR YELLEN. Well, to my mind, the very slow pace of wage increases does reflect
slack in the labor market. We had a very deep recession, as is perhaps to be expected in the
aftermath of a very significant financial crisis. We’ve faced headwinds in the economy
recovering, so the recovery has been slow. Growth has been positive, and it’s lasted for five
years. But it’s nevertheless been slow relative to past recoveries that have not been associated
with financial crises. And while unemployment has come way down from the slightly over
10 percent level it reached, at 6.1 percent, it remains significantly above the level that most
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FOMC participants would regard as consistent with normal in the longer run, 5.2 to 5.5 percent.
So there is significant underutilization of labor resources. We continue to discuss whether or not
the unemployment rate itself is an adequate measure of how much underutilization of labor
resources there really is. And, as I went into detail in Jackson Hole and won’t repeat all of that
there, there are other ways in which we see underutilization—high levels that have come down
only very marginally of part-time employment for economic—or involuntary part-time
employment, perhaps some remaining shortfall of labor force participation as a result of cyclical
factors. And so, I think there still is—and the statement says it—“significant underutilization of
labor resources” and a very modest pace of wage increases that’s picked up very little, I see as
essentially a reflection of that.
JON HILSENRATH. Jon Hilsenrath from the Wall Street Journal. Chair Yellen, I want
to come back to the interest rate projections that the Fed put out today. The public, I think,
would be enlightened by knowing a bit more about where you stand in relation to these
projections. And with that in mind, and in the name of transparency, I wonder if you could
describe to us whether you’re at the low end of those projections, within the central tendency, or
at the high end. I also want to ask you about a San Francisco Fed paper that came out recently,
which suggested that market expectations have been running below the Fed’s own projections.
So I wanted to ask you if you see that as well, and whether it’s at all troubling that market
expectations might not be aligned with the central—with what the Fed put out today.
CHAIR YELLEN. So, with respect to identifying myself, the Committee has had
discussions during the years that we have been providing these forecasts of the participants to the
public as to whether or not it’s desirable from the standpoint of Committee functioning to
identify who’s who in these pictures. And thus far, while occasionally an individual will indicate
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in a speech what their personal views are, we have not yet decided that it would be a desirable
thing for the point of view of our decisionmaking process to identify individuals. We have a
subcommittee on communications that’s now chaired by Vice Chair Fischer, and they will be
considering the SEP and whether or not some changes are appropriate. But until and unless there
is some change in the Committee stance on this, I don’t want to identify myself.
You asked, second, about the San Francisco Fed paper that did point to a notable
divergence between market views and the views of the Committee. I’d say that there have been
any number of different analyses of this topic, there are many different survey measures and
interpretations of what the market thinks. And I don’t frankly think it’s completely clear that
there is a gap. There are different views on whether or not such a gap exists. To the extent that
there is a gap, one reason for it could be that markets and participants have different views on the
evolution of economic conditions. For example, I think I’d note that when the Committee
participants write down their forecast for the federal funds rate, they are showing the funds rate
path that they consider most likely. Their economic forecasts are of the conditions that they
think are the most likely ones. You don’t see the full range of possibilities there. And the path
for the funds rate is the path that each individual thinks is most likely. Market participants,
understanding that there are a range of possible outcomes, with upside and downside
possibilities, are doing something slightly different, I think, when they’re determining market
prices. They are taking into account the possibility that there can be different economic
outcomes, including—even if they’re not very likely—ones in which outcomes will be
characterized by low inflation or low growth and the appropriate path of rates will be low.
So, differences in probabilities of different outcomes can explain part of that. We, you
know, want to learn, we—market participants may have different views on the economy than the
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Committee does, and that’s something we want to try to infer and learn market views, in part
from information of this type. What I can say is that it is important for market participants to
understand what our likely response or reaction function is to the data, and our job is to try to
communicate as clearly as we can the way in which our policy stance will depend on the data,
and I promise to try to do that.
YLAN MUI. Hi, Ylan Mui, Washington Post. My question is about the new exit
principles. You guys say that you don’t plan to end reinvestments until after the first rate hike.
Can you give us a little bit of a sense of what are the conditions you’re going to be looking for
when you eventually begin to end the reinvestments? It sounds like tapering the reinvestments is
also on the table. What might go into your decision on whether or not to end them altogether,
whether or not to taper them? And do you have a general timeline for how long you think it will
take to shrink the balance sheet once you actually start?
CHAIR YELLEN. Okay. All good questions. So, I think the Committee would—will
be focused on—we intend to use the path of short-term interest rates as our key tool of policy.
And, of course, market participants will be very focused, as we are, on what is the appropriate
timing and pace of interest rate increases when that time comes. And I think the Committee
would like to feel that it has successfully begun the normalization process and that we’re
successfully communicating with markets about how that process will be playing out over time.
And I think when the Committee is comfortable that that process is established, is working well,
and we’re comfortable with the outlook, that they will begin the process of ceasing—or possibly
tapering—but eventually ceasing reinvestments.
So, we say that it will depend on economic and financial conditions, but we want to make
sure normalization is successfully under way. If we were only to shrink our balance sheet by
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ceasing reinvestments, it would probably take—to get back to levels of reserve balances that we
had before the crisis—I’m not sure we will go that low, but we’ve said that we will try to shrink
our balance sheet to the lowest levels consistent with the efficient and effective implementation
of policy—it could take to the end of the decade to achieve those levels.
BINYAMIN APPELBAUM. You said a few moments ago that there is perhaps some
remaining shortfall of labor force participation as a result of cyclical factors. This seems
consistent with a recent paper by some members of your staff finding that labor force
participation is unlikely to recover. Is that now the “house” view that slack essentially consists
of unemployment plus part-time workers who want full-time work, and that labor force
participation is basically out of the equation?
And the second question—in the statement of exit principles, you said that the Committee
will act as soon as economic conditions warrant. There had been an idea in circulation at some
point that you might stay lower for longer as a means of compensating for some of the damage
done during the recession. Is this an indication that that debate has been settled, and that that
idea is off the table?
CHAIR YELLEN. I’m sorry. Just remind me, what was the first question? The first
question—
BINYAMIN APPELBAUM. The first question was—
CHAIR YELLEN. Please.
BINYAMIN APPELBAUM. The first question was, has the labor force participation—
CHAIR YELLEN. Ah, labor force participation—
BINYAMIN APPELBAUM. —been removed from the slack equation?
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CHAIR YELLEN. So the recent Brookings paper by the Fed economists clearly
indicates, and I said this at Jackson Hole, that there are structural reasons, particularly
demographics but not only demographics, why labor force participation should be expected to
decline over time. And I agree with that, and I believe that most of my colleagues would endorse
that as well. However, they did indicate that, in the paper, that they see some remaining cyclical
shortfall. By one technique that they used, they placed the estimate at ¼ percent, but by another
technique that they used it could be, I believe they said, as large as 1 percent. And so my own
personal view is that there is some cyclical shortfall, and something certainly—probably within
that range. But nevertheless, it’s a meaningful cyclical shortfall. It’s not completely—so I’m
giving my own personal view, not a Committee assessment—that, you know, I see the flat—and
given the underlying downward trend in labor force participation, we might interpret the
flattening out of labor force participation over the last year as showing that that cyclical
component has diminished somewhat. I think there is something that remains, but eventually I
would certainly agree with the authors, we should expect over time to see labor force
participation declining. And then, let’s see, the second piece was—
BINYAMIN APPELBAUM. Is the debate about lower-for-longer essentially over?
CHAIR YELLEN. Well, you know, we stayed low for a very long time. We have been
at zero for a very long time and below the levels that some common policy rules would now be
suggesting, given the level of unemployment and inflation. So the recovery has been very slow.
We’ve also been doing unconventional policies, of course, buying assets. And in a general
sense, I think we have been lower for longer than—if you complete that sentence—than many
standard policy rules would suggest. So, in a sense, that is a policy that we have had. And once
we decide it’s appropriate to begin to normalize policy and to raise the level of our target for
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short-term interest rates, it would still take some time for rates to get back to levels—you can see
in our projection that by the end of 2017, the participants are, on average, projecting that rates
will reach the levels they consider normal in the longer run. And, similarly, we could make a
similar statement with respect to where the funds rate would stand relative to the
recommendations of rules. So that would take some time to return to those kinds of levels.
MARTIN CRUTSINGER. Thank you. Marty Crutsinger with the Associated Press.
Madam Chair, there were two dissents from today’s decision. I’d kind of like to get your
thinking on how you treat dissents. I think in Chairman Bernanke’s eight years, the largest
number of dissents was three. Do you see two dissents as a yellow-warning flashing light that
policy may need to be moderated down the road? How should market participants read the
dissents?
CHAIR YELLEN. Well, I think it’s very natural that the Committee should have a range
of opinion about a decision as crucial as what is the right time to begin to normalize policy, and
we do have a range of views in the Committee. I don’t consider two dissents to be an
abnormally large number. Presidents Plosser and Fisher have been quite clear in all of their
speeches recently in stating that they think the time has come to begin normalizing policy. I
think they, perhaps, have some concerns that if we don’t begin to do so soon that inflation will
pick up above levels we—that they would consider desirable, or that they have some financial
stability concerns. But the Committee adopted today’s statement by an overwhelming majority,
and I don’t consider the level of dissent to be surprising or very abnormal.
GREG IP. Greg Ip of The Economist. There’s been another downgrade in your nearterm growth forecast and a downgrade in your unemployment rate path forecast. Does it appear
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that potential is much lower than you thought, and therefore slack is closing more quickly than
you thought? This seems to be a persistent pattern to your forecasts.
Secondarily, how concerned are you about events in Europe and especially the recent
decline in inflation expectations there?
CHAIR YELLEN. So there’s been a little bit of downgrading, I think, even this time in
the longer-run normal growth rates that Committee participants have written down. You are
certainly right in saying that over a number of years now, there’s been a pattern of forecast errors
in which either we’ve been on track with respect to unemployment or unemployment has come
down in some cases faster than we anticipated, and yet growth has pretty persistently been
surprising the Committee to the downside. And that is a statement about productivity growth,
which has been pretty disappointing. So we have had downward revisions in the level of
potential output and to some extent, at least for a time, in the projected pace of growth. So that
tension has been there.
There are a range of views about long-run growth. A lot of people are writing about this
topic. I think the Committee’s longer-run estimates are neither at the most pessimistic end nor
the most optimistic end.
GREG IP. I had a question about Europe.
CHAIR YELLEN. Oh, about Europe. Well, I mean, you know, certainly we have
discussed the outlook for Europe—the very low level of inflation that they have seen recently
and the decline that they saw in inflationary expectations, in the slow pace of growth. It is one of
a number of risks to the global economy, and we certainly hope that they will be successful in
seeing the pace of growth and inflation pick up, and I think that will be good for the global
economy and the United States.
Page 18 of 22
September 17, 2014
Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
FINAL
ROBIN HARDING. Robin Harding from the Financial Times. Madam Chair, I want to
come back to the forward guidance. Quite a large part of the Committee has recently criticized
the guidance as being calendar based. But if I understood your comments earlier, that’s not
correct. How should people understand it? And if it doesn’t have a defined meaning, what
purpose is it actually serving? And do you expect to have to revisit it in the near future? Thank
you.
CHAIR YELLEN. So we are constantly discussing forward guidance and thinking about
whether it’s appropriate and how to revise it. And we did do a major overhaul of our forward
guidance in March. I think the Committee participants who have spoken out on this topic
recently want to make sure that we have the flexibility—that the Committee has the flexibility to
respond to unfolding developments. They want to make sure that if progress really does turn out
to be faster than we have—we would expect, that the Committee will be in a position to start
sooner tightening monetary policy. They do not want to be locked into something that the
markets see as a calendar-based and firm commitment. And so they want to emphasize data
dependence of our policy and make sure that we have appropriate flexibility. But I agree with
that. And, as I said earlier, I think we do not have any mechanical interpretation that applies to
this. It, of course, gives an impression about what we think will be appropriate, but there is no
mechanical interpretation. And I’ve said repeatedly, and I want to say again, that if events
surprise us, and we’re moving more quickly toward our objectives, and the Committee sees a
need to move sooner or later depending on what the data is, that we do feel—I do feel we have
the flexibility to move. And it is important for markets to understand that there is uncertainty,
and this statement is not some sort of firm promise about a particular amount of time.
Page 19 of 22
September 17, 2014
Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
FINAL
STEVEN BECKNER. Good afternoon, Chair Yellen. Getting back to the one aspect of
the forward guidance is the statement, which you’ve reiterated about the funds rate probably
needing to stay below normal for some time after achieving mandate-consistent levels on
unemployment, inflation, and so forth. The SEP assessments of appropriate funds rate levels
show the funds rate getting up to that 3.75 percent normal level at the end of 2017. If you look at
the SEP projections of unemployment, inflation, and so forth, they seem to get back to those
mandate-consistent levels by the end of 2016, if not much sooner. So what is the justification for
waiting that much longer to get back to normal, particularly when you have such a large balance
sheet that you intend to reduce only gradually? Is there a danger of getting behind the curve?
And, secondly, can I just ask, can you envision a time when, to reduce reserve pressures,
you may have to resort to asset sales that you don’t anticipate doing now?
CHAIR YELLEN. So on the first question of “some time” before rates return to normal
levels, as I mentioned, you can see in the SEP that by the end of 2017, many participants are
anticipating that rates will return to what they think are normal longer-run levels, but the
economy, in their view, will have probably gotten back to normal levels of unemployment and
near-normal levels of inflation sometime in 2016. So that looks like a year or more in which
rates would be below normal longer-run levels.
We asked participants why they hold the views that they do about appropriate policy, and
there are a number of different explanations that participants give. But a common view on this is
that there have been a variety of headwinds resulting from the crisis that have slowed growth, led
to a sluggish recovery from the crisis, and that these headwinds will dissipate only slowly, that
they are dissipating—an example would be the fact that mortgage credit really is, at this point,
available really to those with pristine credit. Credit conditions there are abnormally tight.
Page 20 of 22
September 17, 2014
Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
FINAL
Another thing that we see is that households’ expectations about their likely income paths remain
quite depressed relative to pre-crisis levels. That’s something that may be holding back
consumer spending. So the view would be that those forces will dissipate over time, but only
very gradually. In addition, we have had slow productivity growth, and a slow pace of potential
output likely depresses the pace of investment spending. And so, those are some of the things
that participants mention as why it will take some time to get back.
So the story is, it’s not that the Fed is behind the curve in failing to return the funds rate
to normal levels when the economy is recovered. It is rather that, in order to achieve such a
recovery in 2016 or by the end, that it’s necessary and appropriate to have a somewhat more
accommodative policy than would be normal in the absence of those headwinds.
PETER BARNES. Peter Barnes of Fox Business, ma’am. I would like to follow up on
Greg’s question about Europe, because tomorrow Scotland is going to be voting on
independence from Great Britain, and there’s some concern that if it does vote to break from
Great Britain, that this could cause some turmoil in global financial markets and the global
economy. Are you concerned about that? Do you see any impact if Scotland does vote for
independence on the European economy and potentially on the American economy? And, if so,
is the Fed doing anything in preparation for that possibility? Thank you.
CHAIR YELLEN. Well, Scottish voters are about to go to the polls tomorrow, and
they’ve had a good debate about this topic. And in light of that, I really don’t want to weigh in
on this today.
PEDRO DA COSTA. Thank you. Pedro da Costa with Dow Jones Newswires. My
question is about your particular views about whether a gradual approach to tightening is better
than a more aggressive and less predictable one, because there was some discussion about—
Page 21 of 22
September 17, 2014
Chair Yellen’s Press Conference
FINAL
internally and externally, about whether it was the Fed’s predictability in the 2004-ish period that
kind of created the conditions of complacency that led to the housing bubble. So I wonder if
you’d be more inclined to be gradualist in your approach and more transparent in outlining future
moves or whether you think keeping the market guessing—there’s some value to that. Thanks.
CHAIR YELLEN. You know, this is something the Committee is going to have to
discuss when the time comes to normalize policy. Looking back on the period, the run-up to the
financial crisis, I don’t think, by any means, “measured pace” and the very predictable pace of
25 basis points per meeting explains why we had a financial crisis, but it may have diminished
volatility and been a small contributing factor, and the Committee will have to think about how
to do this. I think many people in the aftermath of that episode think that somewhat less of a
mechanical pace would perhaps be better, but this is a matter that we will, in due time, have to
discuss.
Page 22 of 22
Cite this document
APA
Janet L. Yellen (2014, September 16). FOMC Press Conference Transcript. Press Conferences, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/press_conference_20140917
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_press_conference_20140917,
author = {Janet L. Yellen},
title = {FOMC Press Conference Transcript},
year = {2014},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Press Conferences, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/press_conference_20140917},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}