speeches · March 15, 1995
Regional President Speech
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. · President
Reflections on Monetary Policy
March 16, 1995
J. Alfred Broaddus
President
The Virginia Association of Economists
Richmond, Va.
Mr. Broaddus wishes to thank his long-time colleague, Timothy Cook, for substantial assistance
in preparing the address. The address also draws on several published and unpublished articles
by other members of the Bank's staff. The views expressed are those of the author and not
necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System.
It is a pleasure and indeed an honor to be with you this evening. I must confess that when I recall
the long line of distinguished economists who have delivered the Sandridge lecture, I wonder
whether I am really worthy of this opportunity. But in any case I am grateful for it and will strive
to make the most of it.
I have worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond for just about a quarter of a century,
and for virtually all of that time I have been involved in one way or another in the formation of
monetary policy. For most of that period I was an advisor to the president of the Richmond Fed,
and for the last two years I have served as president myself. Given this background, I believe the
most useful thing I can probably do this evening is to make a few remarks about monetary policy
and some of the major issues the Fed is facing in conducting policy currently, in the context of
my experience with the policymaking process over the years.
The last 25 years have been extraordinarily eventful ones for monetary policy in many ways. In
this period there were fundamental changes in attitudes among policymakers, financial market
participants, and the public regarding the appropriate role of monetary policy and also about
some of the procedures used by the Fed in implementing policy decisions. The major factor
triggering this reevaluation without any doubt was the inflation that began at the end of the 1960s
and peaked at about 13 percent at the beginning of the 1980s. This rise in inflation was
unprecedented in recent peacetime American history; it was largely unexpected by the public and
the Fed; and it severely challenged widely held assumptions about the economy and inflation
prevailing at the time.
The inflation in the 1970s was followed by a severe recession in the early 1980s and,
subsequently, a sharp deceleration in the rate of inflation to approximately 4 to 5 percent. Most
recently, as you know, inflation has been running at about a 3 percent rate, which is the lowest
rate since I began my career at the Fed. If the 1970s taught us the necessity of containing
inflation, I would say that the major lesson of the 1980s was the importance of (1) having a long-
run strategy to achieve that goal and (2) maintaining the public's confidence in that strategy or, to
use the currently popular jargon, maintaining the credibility of the strategy.
Tonight I want to look back over my years at the Fed, explain to you how developments over this
period have influenced thinking about monetary policy and how it should be conducted, and
share some of my own views with you. My purpose is not so much to convince you of the
wisdom of my views, although I certainly hope you find at least some of them persuasive, but to
give you perhaps a fuller appreciation of the fundamental issues facing monetary policy today.
1. The Origin of the Federal Reserve and its Mandate
Let me begin with just a few introductory comments about the Fed. Most if not all of you are
probably familiar with the Fed; nonetheless, a brief review may increase your appreciation of
some of the points I will be making.
The Federal Reserve was established by Congress in 1914. Initially, the Fed's main purpose or
'mandate' was to cushion short-term interest rates from liquidity disturbances arising from
banking panics or from seasonal changes in the demand for credit. In later years, however, the
Fed's mandate was broadened to include a wide range of macroeconomic goals. Currently,
Section 2A of the Federal Reserve Act instructs the Fed to 'maintain long-run growth of the
monetary aggregates commensurate with the economy's long-run potential to increase
production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and
moderate long-term interest rates. 'Moreover, in carrying out monetary policy, the Fed is to
'[take] account of past and prospective developments in employment, unemployment,
production, investment, real income, productivity, international trade and payments, and prices.'
The Fed has a measure of independence within the government in that it makes its month-to-
month policy decisions without the direct involvement of Congress, but it is fully accountable to
Congress. Accordingly, the Fed reports formally to Congress on monetary policy every six
months, and the chairman of the Fed's Board of Governors and other System officials testify
before congressional committees on monetary policy issues as well as other matters throughout
the year. The body within the Fed that actually formulates and carries out monetary policy is
called the Federal Open Market Committee. It is made up of the seven members of the Board of
Governors located in Washington and, at any particular time, five of the twelve regional Federal
Reserve Bank presidents. I am a voting member of this committee every third year. I voted last
year and will vote again in 1997.
A final point I would make is that the Fed's policy instrument—the particular variable it controls
on a week-to-week basis to achieve its ultimate policy objectives—is the interest rate on reserves
that private banks lend to one another, generally referred to in financial markets as the 'federal
funds rate. 'Changes in this rate trigger adjustments in other interest rates, in money and credit
flows, and ultimately in broad macroeconomic variables—particularly the aggregate level of
prices in the economy.
So the key points about the Fed are (1) that it is a creature of Congress, which has ultimate
authority over it; (2) that, as such, it receives its 'mandate' from Congress, regarding what it
should try to achieve with monetary policy; (3) that the policymaking Federal Open Market
Committee has some degree of independence in making its short-run policy decisions, although
over time these decisions are subject to congressional review; and (4) that the Fed's policy
instrument is the federal funds rate.
2. Prevailing Views Regarding Monetary Policy in the 1960s
With these points about the Fed in mind, let me review policy over the last 25 years, obviously in
a very summary fashion. When I began my career at the Fed in 1970, there were three widely
held views about the economy that strongly influenced monetary policy and the procedures used
to implement it. First, most economists believed that there was a Phillips Curve trade-off
between unemployment and inflation in the long run as well as the short run. As you all know,
this famous curve summarizes the inverse empirical correlation between unemployment and
inflation especially evident in the 1950s and 1960s. The implication for monetary policy, in the
eyes of many, was that the Fed could exploit the trade-off the curve seemed to indicate: that is, it
could seek a lower level of inflation at the cost of higher unemployment; conversely—and
perhaps more to the point—it could seek lower unemployment at the cost of higher inflation.
The second widely held assumption was that economists knew enough about the structure of the
economy and the way businesses and consumers behave to permit the Fed to make policy
decisions that would eliminate, or at least greatly diminish, the amplitudes of business cycles.
This confidence had been fostered by the relatively steady economic growth that had
characterized the 1960s and by the neo-Keynesian macroeconomic theories dominant at the time.
The third important idea commonly held in the 1960s was that the welfare costs of inflation were
small and that, in any case, they were pretty much limited to the 'shoe-leather costs'' associated
with economizing on money balances in moderately inflationary periods. Of course, there had
not been much inflation since the Korean War in the early 1950s, so this belief that inflation was
a relatively benign phenomenon probably reflected the absence of any significant recent
experience with inflation.
3. Inflation in the 1970s and its Effects
Each of these three views fell victim—largely, if not completely—to developments in the 1970s.
During this period there were three major cycles of rising inflation, each more severe than the
one before. Each of these accelerations of inflation, in turn, was followed by a sharp tightening
in monetary policy and a recession. The most memorable episode occurred in 1979 and 1980,
when the Consumer Price Index rose at an annual rate exceeding 12 percent. Confronted with
this situation, the Fed took actions that raised short-term interest rates to unprecedented levels,
and the worst recession in the postwar period followed, lasting fully six quarters between mid-
1981 and the end of 1982.
Sharp increases in oil prices in the mid- and late 1970s no doubt contributed to inflation, but in
the long run we know that monetary policy determines the rate of inflation; consequently,
inflation could not have risen so sharply over this period without the Fed's acquiescence. There
are a number of explanations for the Fed's loss of control over inflation in this period, but in
retrospect the breakdown is not terribly surprising. If one combines the notions (1) that the Fed
can trade off higher inflation for lower unemployment, (2) that the costs of inflation are small
and, moreover, (3) that the Fed has sufficient knowledge about the economy's structure to fine-
tune economic activity, it is not difficult to see how the Fed could be led to make monetary
policy decisions that had an inflationary bias.
In any case, our experience in the 1970s had a profound impact on conventional thinking about
inflation and monetary policy. Most obviously it provided much new data that was, to put it
mildly, inconsistent with the Phillips Curve relationship observed in the 1960s. It was in the
1970s, of course, that the term 'stagflation'' arose to describe a combination of high inflation and
low growth. In recent years substantial research has been done on the long-run relationship
between growth and inflation—much of it based on cross-country data—and I think it is fair to
say that on balance there is no compelling evidence that higher inflation is associated with higher
growth. Indeed, the research suggests that the relationship may be inverse. The implication, of
course, is that inflationary monetary policy is not conducive to economic growth; indeed, the
opposite may be true.
The 1970s inflation also made people realize that the costs of inflation are much greater and
more varied than had been thought earlier. We now understand much better than we did before
that inflation creates arbitrary and unfair redistributions of income and wealth that cause social
tensions and weaken the fabric of society. Inflation also distorts the signals that prices send in
our market economy, which produces serious inefficiencies in the allocation of resources and
reduces economic growth. Further, inflation needlessly causes people to spend additional time
and energy managing their personal finances. Finally, the 1970s experience illustrated all too
well that the public distress caused by rising inflation is inevitably followed by corrective
monetary policy actions that depress economic activity, often—as in the early 1980s—severely.
The third consequence of our experience with inflation in the 1970s was a healthy diminution in
our confidence that we knew enough about the structure of the economy and the way it functions
to fine-tune economic activity and eliminate recessions. As you know, this diminished
confidence in our ability to guide economic activity has been mirrored by important
developments in monetary theory over the last two decades. I cannot review these developments
here in any detail, but most monetary economists now believe that the economy will inevitably
be buffeted by various unexpected 'shocks'' from a variety of directions—such as the energy
sector or the stock market—and that it simply is not feasible, and probably not desirable, for the
Fed to try systematically to offset the effects of these shocks on the economy. Indeed, we have to
be very careful that our efforts to cushion the effects of such shocks do not create rising inflation
and thereby exacerbate the economy's problems. As in the practice of medicine, our first
responsibility is to do no harm.
I hasten to add that this recognition of the limitations of monetary policy does not relieve the Fed
from making short-run policy decisions. And inevitably these decisions will be affected by
current developments in the economy. My main point here is that we now realize that these
short-run decisions must be consistent with a feasible and credible longer-term policy strategy
and that we should not compromise this strategy in a futile attempt to fine-tune the economy.
4. The Impact of the 1970s Experience on Policy Procedures
The 1970s inflation pointed to two fundamental weaknesses in the Fed's overall conduct of
monetary policy—weaknesses that to some extent are still present today. First, the System did
not have a clear and unambiguous longer-run objective. As inflation accelerated in the mid- and
late 1970s, it became apparent that to contain inflation the Fed needed to set targets for some
nominal variable that it could control over time and that was clearly linked to inflation over time.
It was in this period that the Federal Open Market Committee first began to set numerical targets
for growth rates of the money supply. Initially, the committee set short-run targets for internal
use only. Subsequently, in response to a congressional resolution in 1975, the committee began
voluntarily to announce quarterly targets for the growth rates of several definitions of the money
supply. Finally, the Humphrey-Hawkins Act of 1978 required the Fed to set money-growth
targets on a fourth-quarter-to-fourth-quarter basis and to present them formally to Congress.
Unfortunately, there was a major flaw in the targeting procedure—commonly referred to as 'base
drift''—which in fact remains to this day. Base drift occurs because the base level of the money
supply used in calculating each new annual target is not the target level set for the fourth quarter
of the preceding year, but the actual level achieved in that period. Therefore, target misses are
forgiven when new targets are set, which allows the base level to drift, either upward or
downward. In the late 1970s persistent upward base drift led to a prolonged period of
unacceptably rapid growth in the monetary aggregates, which in my judgment was a major factor
contributing to the subsequent double-digit inflation.
The second weakness in the conduct of policy highlighted by the inflation of the 1970s was the
tenuous link between the Fed's month-to-month policy decisions and the emerging longer-run
money supply objectives. Under the procedure in place through much of the decade, the Fed was
supposed to tighten policy if money growth exceeded the annual target ranges, but the response
in any instance was entirely at the Open Market Committee's discretion and, in practice,
responses were uncertain and unpredictable. Many economists would agree that the Fed did not
react aggressively enough to the persistent above-target growth registered in the latter years of
the decade. To deal with this problem, in October 1979 the Fed instituted a new, so-called
nonborrowed reserve operating procedure. This procedure was quite complicated in its actual
implementation, and I will not try to explain it in any detail tonight. Suffice it to say that the
innovation was a monetary policy milestone because for the first time in the Fed's history, its
operating procedure caused short-term interest rates to rise automatically in response to
excessive money growth.
The nonborrowed reserve procedure was abandoned in October 1982, mainly because of
increasingly significant practical problems in defining the money supply accurately in a period of
rapid technological and institutional change and financial innovation—a problem that has
continued to this day. Since then, month-to-month operating decisions have become once again
entirely discretionary. I am uncomfortable with this procedure, needless to say, and I will return
to this point in a few minutes.
5. Disinflation in the 1980s: The Importance of Credibility
The prolonged recession in the early 1980s was followed by a pronounced disinflation, and by
the end of 1983 the inflation rate had fallen to approximately 4 percent, where it remained for the
next ten years. In recent years the rate has fallen further to approximately 3 percent. Against the
background of these developments, one can say that the decade of the 1980s was a relatively
tranquil period for monetary policy—certainly by comparison to the preceding decade. But the
more recent period was not without its own lessons for policy. If the 1970s taught the Fed that
the costs of inflation are significant and that it must commit itself clearly and fully to a low-
inflation policy, the years since have underlined the necessity of maintaining the credibility of
this policy—by which I mean maintaining the public's confidence that controlling inflation is not
a sometime thing but a permanent feature of the Fed's overall longer-term monetary strategy.
We now understand more clearly than before the vital role credibility plays in minimizing the
cost of reducing inflation and eventually stabilizing the price level. In practical terms,
maintaining credibility means the Fed must react promptly to rising inflation expectations. If the
Fed's policy actions suggest an indifference to higher expected inflation, the public will lose
confidence in its strategy, and workers and firms will demand higher wages and charge higher
prices in a perfectly natural effort to protect wages and profits from inflationary erosion. The
longer the Fed waits to respond to deteriorating inflation expectations, the more likely it will
need eventually to raise real short-term interest rates sharply with potentially depressing effects
on business activity. In a nutshell, low credibility makes it more costly from an economic
perspective to pursue an anti-inflation strategy.
A few years ago one of my colleagues at the Richmond Fed, Marvin Goodfriend, wrote a widely
read article1 in which he referred to episodes of sharply rising inflation expectations as 'inflation
scares,'' and use of that term has now become rather general. Inflation scares can be captured by
a variety of financial market indicators, but in my view the most reliable is the long-term bond
rate, and this is the indicator I watch most closely to gauge the credibility of our anti-inflation
strategy. A sharp rise in long-term rates—as occurred, for example, in the first half of 1994—is a
strong signal that inflation expectations have risen and the credibility of our policy has declined,
and it is a sign that demands a response from the Fed. The Fed has, in fact, reacted to inflation
scares more promptly in recent years than earlier, and I believe that this has been one of the
hallmarks of recent monetary policy.
6. Principles for Monetary Policy
This completes my review of monetary policy over the last quarter century. I hope it has helped
you appreciate why I believe so strongly that the Fed can make its maximum contribution to the
economy's growth and productivity by providing a stable price environment in which private
individuals, households, and business firms can thrive. For me, the broadest lesson of our
experience in the seventies and the eighties is that the overriding goal of monetary policy should
be the elimination of inflation, and by that I mean achieving a condition where changes in the
general price level are no longer a significant factor in the economic decisions of individuals and
businesses.
In this regard, it seems clear that we should not be satisfied with the current 3 to 4 percent
inflation rate. One frequently hears the argument that the benefits of achieving price-level
stability do not justify the costs. I disagree strongly with this assertion, because I do not believe
that a 3 to 4 percent inflation rate could ever be a credible monetary policy objective in the way
that price-level stability could. A Fed commitment to aim for 3 or 4 percent inflation—despite its
relatively moderate level by recent historical standards—would lack credibility because financial
markets and the public quite understandably would fear that eventually the Fed would tolerate
higher inflation to achieve some short-term objective. In technical terms, the 'time inconsistency''
problem in conducting monetary policy, which is one of the most important elements in the
recent professional literature on policy, would be much more compelling in a policy regime with
a 3 to 4 percent inflation objective than in a regime firmly committed to price stability. This
suspicion, in turn, would create uncertainty regarding future inflation, and the attendant increase
in risk obviously could harm the economy in a variety of ways.
So my first core belief about monetary policy is that the Fed should remain committed to a
policy of eventually achieving true price-level stability and strengthen that commitment in any
way it can. My second core belief is that the System needs to maintain the credibility of this
policy, which implies—among other things—that its policy procedures and short-run policy
actions must be consistent, to the greatest extent possible, with its long-term price stability
objective. (I will make some specific points in this regard in a minute.) As I have already noted,
by maintaining credibility the Fed can make its anti-inflationary strategy less costly in the
transition to price stability and therefore more likely to be successful.
If I have been persuasive this evening, you may think that the two monetary policy principles I
have put forward—a policy of price stability and maintenance of the credibility of that policy—
are obvious and that there is little left to say. Unfortunately, we still have a substantial distance to
go in putting these principles fully into practice. To see that our price stability objective lacks
full credibility, one has only to open the newspaper and look at the current level of the long-term
U.S. Treasury bond rate, which is still well over 7 percent. Since it is doubtful that real long-term
bond rates ever rise above 4 percent, this means that market participants, on average, currently
expect a long-run inflation rate of at least 3 percent.
What are the reasons for this lack of credibility? I think there are a number, and I would like to
close my remarks tonight by identifying some of them and sharing some ideas about what might
be done to deal with them.
As I have indicated before, I believe the most pressing problem the Fed faces in conducting
monetary policy currently is the lack of a clear policy mandate from Congress. As I explained
earlier, the current mandate contained in the 1978 Humphrey-Hawkins law makes the Fed
responsible for a laundry list of economic outcomes having to do with employment, productivity,
international trade, and so forth, in addition to the price level. A revised mandate instructing the
Fed to focus squarely on achieving price stability almost certainly would enhance the
contribution of monetary policy to the nation's long-run economic growth and productivity—
indeed, because it would do so, it would increase, not reduce, the likelihood that the laudable
objectives of the Humphrey-Hawkins law will be achieved.
Five years ago Congressman Steve Neal of North Carolina introduced in Congress an
amendment to the Federal Reserve Act proposing just such a mandate. This resolution would
have instructed the Federal Open Market Committee to pursue a policy strategy that would
'reduce inflation gradually in order to eliminate inflation by not later than 5 years from the date
of enactment of [the] legislation and [to] then adopt and pursue monetary policies to maintain
price stability.'' We at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond wholeheartedly supported the Neal
amendment, as did many others in the Federal Reserve System, as an operationally feasible
means of increasing the credibility of the Fed's anti-inflationary strategy. Unfortunately, the
amendment did not pass.
Since Congress has not seen fit to pass the amendment, my personal view—and I need to
emphasize here that I am speaking strictly for myself—is that the Fed should explicitly and
publicly announce that it is adopting the language of the amendment as its longer-term strategic
policy goal. In my judgment this step would put the Fed's reputation clearly on the line, which
would directly increase the credibility of our strategy. Moreover, as I have already suggested,
such a step would be fully consistent with the present Humphrey-Hawkins mandate since price
stability would permit the economy to achieve maximum growth in output and employment over
time. In this regard, I might note that the value of price stability as a primary monetary policy
objective is increasingly recognized around the world. In recent years the central banks in
Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom have actually specified explicit numerical
inflation targets. Since the Neal amendment does not specify numerical targets, its adoption by
the Fed would be a step short of these actions abroad. Nonetheless, the amendment's language is
sufficiently clear to commit the Fed firmly to attaining price stability in a specific time frame and
hence contains all the ingredients necessary to enhance the System's credibility. Moreover—and
this is an especially important point—adoption of the amendment language as its long-term
objective would increase the Fed's flexibility in dealing with short-term economic disturbances
since appropriate short-term actions could be taken without (or with much less) concern about
the potential loss of long-term credibility.
A second area requiring attention is our operating procedures. As I mentioned in my earlier
historical review, only in the three-year period from October 1979 to October 1982 has the Fed
used an operating procedure that automatically linked movements in our policy instrument—
namely the federal funds rate—to a longer-term policy goal, in this case growth rates of the
monetary aggregates. As I noted earlier, that procedure was abandoned, largely because of the
technical difficulties that arose in defining an operationally reliable measure of the money supply
in a period of rapid technological and institutional change—difficulties that unfortunately still
confront us. Currently, we still set annual targets for the money supply, but these targets have
little effect on our month-to-month policy decisions, which are made pretty much in the same
discretionary fashion that characterized the pre-1979 period. This is another important reason
why, in my judgment, our credibility is not as full as it could be and should be.
What the Fed needs, in my view, is an operating procedure that clearly links our short-run policy
actions directly to our longer-run inflation goals or to some other nominal variable such as
nominal gross domestic product. Regrettably, at this point no such procedure exists that
commands sufficient confidence to be used in practice. Many economists both inside and outside
the Fed are working actively on this problem, however, and I have confidence that somewhere
down the road we will come up with an acceptable operating procedure that more systematically
and efficiently links our instrument to our goals. In the meantime, the Fed must retain the
independence to take the short-run policy actions that it believes are most likely to be consistent
with its long-run objectives—recognizing, of course, that it is responsible for and accountable for
the consequences of these decisions.
A final and very important point I would make is that the Fed has a strong obligation to educate
the public about the cost of inflation and the limitations of activist short-term monetary policies.
In my review, I explained how the inflation of the 1970s led me and many others to conclude
that some of the views regarding inflation and monetary policy in the 1960s were not valid.
Unfortunately, in my opinion, many people still believe that a long-run as well as a short-run
trade-off between inflation and unemployment exists, that the costs of inflation are small, and
that the Fed can fine-tune economic activity. The persistence of these views—particularly when
they are held by people with political power—naturally diminishes the credibility of our anti-
inflation strategy, especially given that our mandate is so imprecise. It would be a tragedy if the
lessons of the last 25 years were forgotten and the nation needlessly experienced another
devastating boom-bust cycle like the one in the 1979—82 period. So I think we in the Fed have
an obligation to speak out on these issues. My remarks here tonight have been an effort in that
direction, and I hope that I have added at least a bit to your appreciation of some of the
fundamental issues facing monetary policymakers today.
1
Marvin Goodfriend, 'Interest Rate Policy and the Inflation Scare problem: 1979-1992,' Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, vol. 79 (Winter 1993), pp. 1-24.
Cite this document
APA
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. (1995, March 15). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19950316_j_alfred_broaddus_jr
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19950316_j_alfred_broaddus_jr,
author = {J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1995},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19950316_j_alfred_broaddus_jr},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}