speeches · February 28, 2005
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Inflation Targeting and the Conduct of Monetary Policy
University of Richmond
Richmond, Virginia
March 1, 2005
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
I am pleased to be here with you today to talk about inflation targeting and the
conduct of monetary policy. I would like to thank Dr. Coughlan, Dean Newman
and the University of Richmond for giving me an opportunity at this time to
express my views on this important subject. The timing is right for two reasons. It
has been just a little more than half a year since I became president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond. As bank president, I participate regularly in the
Federal Open Market Committee, the body that makes monetary policy in the
United States. And I welcome this as an opportunity to make the first
comprehensive presentation of my views on the conduct of monetary policy. As I
will explain in detail, I believe that the adoption and announcement of an explicit,
numerical, long-run inflation target by the Fed would enhance the effectiveness of
monetary policy.
The second reason the time is right to discuss inflation targeting is that the Federal
Open Market Committee, at its most recent meeting on Feb. 1 and 2, considered at
length the pros and cons of formulating and announcing an explicit, numerical
inflation objective. I should note that I am not divulging any great secrets here; the
minutes of that meeting were made public on Feb. 23, according to the newly
accelerated release schedule that began with the January meeting this year.
Preparing for that extensive discussion helped me to clarify my own views on
inflation targeting and related issues, and I would like to share my thinking on
these matters with you this afternoon.
Before I do, however, several stipulations are in order. The first is the usual
disclaimer that, as will become clear later on, the views I express do not
necessarily represent the views of my colleagues around the System. The second is
that nothing in my prepared text should be construed as implicit commentary on
current economic conditions or imminent interest rate decisions. I will be
discussing monetary policy principles, not this year’s tactics.
The third stipulation has to do with terminology. Some economists draw a sharp
distinction between an inflation objective and an inflation target. An objective, in
their usage, refers to a simple announcement, while targeting involves an
accompanying institutional apparatus, including formal requirements to submit
reports to a legislative body. In some contexts, these distinctions are important.
But for the issue before us in the United States, the distinction is less important
since, as I will argue later on, an announced objective will inevitably draw the Fed
into commenting on where inflation stands relative to the objective. And besides,
the Fed is already required to report to Congress twice a year about inflation and
the economy. For today’s discussion, therefore, I will use the terms “target” and
“objective” interchangeably. Moreover, I will use the terms to refer to an objective
that is explicit, long-run, and numerical.
My thinking on this subject is rooted in the rich history of contributions to the
theory and practice of monetary policy at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.
My predecessor, Al Broaddus, and his predecessor, Bob Black, were tireless
inflation fighters in the 1970s and early 1980s when high and variable inflation
was a serious problem. It was in those days that Bob and Al, who was then Bob’s
research director, earned their wings as inflation hawks by the strong stand they
took against inflation both inside and outside of the Federal Reserve. Their
practical work was buttressed by the research writings of Marvin Goodfriend, a
long-time Richmond Fed monetary economist, and his colleagues in the Richmond
research department.
Al exercised his hawk wings as Richmond Fed president and a voting member of
the FOMC in 1994, when he led the fight for preemptive action against inflation in
that year. That was when Al brought the idea of inflation targeting to the FOMC,
suggesting that some form of inflation objective might be helpful in securing the
Fed’s credibility for low inflation. Chairman Greenspan invited Al, together with
Janet Yellen, currently the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
and then a member of the Federal Reserve Board, to lead a discussion on inflation
targeting at the January 1995 meeting.
What happened in 1994 to precipitate the Committee’s initial interest in inflation
targeting is a good example of the experience that informs my own view of the
subject. Hence, I think it is useful to review that story in a little detail here.
To set the stage, the Fed had brought the inflation rate down from over 10 percent
in the early 1980s to around 3 percent by the mid-1990s; yet 1994 was a year of
heightened risk of rising inflation. There was an inflation scare in the bond market
that took the 30-year bond rate from below 6 percent in October 1993 to a peak of
over 8 percent in November 1994. That nearly 2.5 percentage point increase in the
bond rate indicated the Fed’s credibility for low inflation was far from secure.
The Fed fought the challenge to its credibility by raising the federal funds rate —
our monetary policy instrument — in seven steps from 3 percent to 6 percent
between February 1994 and February 1995. Incidentally, starting with its February
policy action that year, the Fed, for the first time in its history, began to announce
every federal funds rate target change immediately after the FOMC meeting; and
the country watched and debated each increase in the funds rate. With this series of
actions, the Fed held the line on inflation at 3 percent, marking only the second
time in its history (the first was in 1983-4) that the Fed successfully preempted a
cyclical rise in inflation. In spite of the policy tightening, real GDP grew by
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around 4 percent in 1994, up from around 2.5 percent in 1993, and the
unemployment rate actually fell from around 6.5 percent to 5.5 percent from
January to December 1994. The bond rate returned to around 6 percent by January
1996, and one began to hear talk of the “death of inflation.”
From this experience I draw three conclusions for monetary policy. First, a well-
timed preemptive increase in the federal funds rate is nothing to be feared. In
1994, it was necessary to take the real federal funds rate — the nominal rate
adjusted for expected inflation — from around zero up to around 3 percent in
order to avert the potential build-up of inflationary pressures. And yet real growth
picked up and the unemployment rate trended down.
Second, to keep inflation well-anchored, the Fed must be prepared to move the
federal funds rate around over the business cycle even though inflation remains
stable. There is a simple but underappreciated principle at work here: real,
inflation-adjusted interest rates must vary over time with shifts in economic
fundamentals, even if inflation is perfectly constant. Since our policy instrument is
a nominal interest rate, it has to vary over time as well, even without noticeable
deviations in inflation or inflation expectations.
Third, the anchoring of inflation expectations achieved by preemptive policy in
1994 has produced enormous benefits for monetary policy. The bond market
arguably has not exhibited a major inflation scare since 1994 — not during the
boom in the late 1990s and not during the period of very low federal funds rates in
the last few years. The successful stabilization of inflation expectations has been
the cornerstone for effective monetary policy ever since. The Fed’s credibility for
low inflation allowed it to act aggressively against the recession in 2001 and after
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The federal funds rate was dropped in 11 steps from
6.5 percent at the beginning of the year to 1.75 percent in December, without a
substantial rise in inflation expectations. Subsequently, credibility against
inflation enabled the Fed to fight potential deflation by lowering the funds rate
down to 1 percent between June 2003 and June 2004. In short, low and stable
inflation expectations have enhanced the ability of monetary policy to react
flexibly to both positive and negative shocks since the mid-1990s.
This was in sharp contrast to the 1970s and early 1980s when the failure to
stabilize inflation expectations subjected the economy to severe inflation scares
that at times forced the Fed to respond with aggressive interest rate policy actions.
When inflation accelerated, interest rates had to rise just to keep real interest rates
from falling — in other words, to keep the stance of monetary policy unaltered.
Further rate increases were required in order to raise real interest rates and reduce
inflation. The aggressive rate increases needed to contain inflation and inflation
expectations put the economy at risk of recession and at times actually precipitated
a recession, or prolonged a recession already in progress.
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I think it is fair to say that the experiences and lessons I just outlined are now
widely appreciated by central bankers and monetary economists alike, and account
for the fact that the Federal Reserve has made low inflation and the stabilization of
inflation expectations a priority as never before in our history.
My reading of the recent monetary history, especially the 1994 policy actions and
subsequent developments, leads me to favor the adoption of an inflation target.
Why would that enhance the effectiveness of monetary policy? I will organize my
discussion around the passage from the latest FOMC minutes that reports on the
Committee’s discussion of the issue, because it represents a succinct summary of
the viewpoints that have been articulated both within the Committee and among
economists at large.
The minutes start by reporting that “meeting participants uniformly agreed that
price stability provided the best environment for maximizing sustainable economic
growth in the long run…” In other words, the debate about inflation targeting is
not about whether actual inflation should be low and stable. The question is
whether the Fed should announce an explicit numerical objective.
The minutes cite three benefits of an explicit price-stability objective: (1) its
usefulness as an anchor for long-term inflation expectations, (2) its power to
enhance the clarity of Committee deliberations, and (3) its usefulness as a
communication tool. I agree wholeheartedly with the first point in light of the
critical importance of tying down inflation expectations as I discussed earlier. As
much as one can debate the usefulness of allowing short-run fluctuations in
realized inflation, I see no utility in tolerating unnecessary fluctuations in long-run
expectations of inflation.
I also agree completely with the second point about enhancing the clarity of
deliberations, because when it comes to internal policy analysis and discussion,
coherence demands that FOMC participants implicitly agree on a long-run
numerical objective for inflation. Accountability in a democratic society then
argues for making available to the public the numerical objective upon which our
internal discussions of monetary policy are based.
Finally, I believe that the Fed’s experience in May and June 2003 indicates that
references to inflationary or deflationary risks in the policy statements we now
release after every meeting cannot reliably substitute for an explicit inflation
target. The statement issued following the May 2003 FOMC meeting asserted that
a fall in inflation — then about 1 percent — would be “unwelcome.” This came as
a something of a surprise to markets and caused a sharp reaction in long-term
rates. If an inflation target range had been in place in 2003 with a lower bound of 1
percent, the public could have inferred the Fed’s growing concern about
disinflation as the inflation rate drifted down toward that bound. Expected future
federal funds rates and longer-term interest rates would have moved lower
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continuously, with less chance of overshooting or undershooting the Fed’s likely
policy path.
If the May 2003 statement is interpreted as the revelation of the lower bound of an
inflation target range, then half of an inflation target range has been announced.
And if revealing a dislike of inflation below 1 percent was useful in May 2003, is
it not likely that revealing an upper bound will prove useful in some future
circumstance?
In short, I strongly support each of the three reasons given in the minutes in favor
of an explicit long-run numerical objective for inflation. The minutes also cite
three drawbacks to the adoption of an explicit price-stability objective. I would
like to comment on these, because they also are widely mentioned outside the Fed
in discussions of inflation targeting. The first is that an inflation target might
appear to be inconsistent with the Committee’s so-called “dual mandate” of
fostering maximum employment as well as price stability. On the contrary, for the
reasons I gave earlier, I think both experience and economic theory strongly
suggest that the best contribution monetary policy can make to promoting
employment and growth is by tying down inflation and inflation expectations. That
is, in the long run, employment and growth are maximized by keeping inflation
low and stable. Moreover, there is widespread agreement among central bankers
and monetary economists that although, over the long run, it is feasible for the
central bank to control inflation, long-run growth and employment are
predominantly determined by forces independent of monetary policy. So it makes
little sense for the central bank to adopt a long-run objective for growth or
employment.
I would like to digress here for a moment to say a few words about this idea that
the Federal Reserve has a “dual mandate.” If you go back and look at the direction
Congress gave us — it appears in Section 2A of the Federal Reserve Act and was
most recently revised in 1977 — you find that they actually gave us three
mandates: “maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest
rates.” Nobody mentions the third mandate, moderate long-term interest rates, and
for good reason. It is widely understood that the best contribution monetary policy
can make to keeping long-term interest rates low is by keeping expected inflation
low, because this minimizes the inflation premium built into nominal long-term
rates. This is true despite the fact that keeping inflation low sometimes requires
pushing short-term rates up, which sometimes raises long-term rates for a time by
raising expected near-term real rates. Thus, there can be said to be a short-run
trade-off between keeping inflation low and keeping long-term interest rates down,
even though in the long-term there is no such trade-off.
Analytically, this is quite analogous to the relationship between our inflation and
employment mandates. In the long run, low inflation is best for employment
growth, but keeping inflation down can require actions that might reduce
employment growth in the short run. Admittedly, employment is a real quantity
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while interest rates are prices, so people might have a different sort of interest in
employment than they do in long-term interest rates. Presumably, this motivates
elevating the rhetorical status of employment over long-term interest rates by
speaking of a “dual mandate.” But that rhetoric should not obscure the economics
of the relationship between the two or the fundamental primacy of our price
stability goal.
The second point critics make is that the adoption of an inflation target might
inappropriately bias or constrain policy at times. An inflation target would be
aimed at anchoring expected inflation in the long-run. That will be successful over
time only if Fed actions keep actual inflation around its long-run target. These
critics argue that while we want the public to believe inflation will remain well-
anchored in the future, when the future finally rolls around, we might want the
flexibility to pursue policies that are inconsistent with the earlier promise implied
by an inflation target. In other words, we might find the commitment implied by
our announced inflation target constraining.
I would argue that this is a flexibility the Fed should be happy to do without. In the
process of establishing the credibility of our commitment to price stability, we
have already given up the flexibility to let expected inflation get out of control.
That is what a commitment is — a pledge to forego future flexibility. An
announced inflation objective is meant to guide policy actions over the long run. It
would not hinder the kinds of policy actions undertaken these days to stabilize
employment and output in the short run. And as I discussed earlier, there is
evidence that anchoring inflation expectations more securely with an explicit long-
run target would actually increase the flexibility of monetary policy to react to
shocks in the short run.
If the Fed adopts an explicit inflation target, we would inevitably feel compelled to
explain and work to unwind any substantial short-run departures from our long-run
target. More to the point, however, it would force the Fed to respond when
measures of expected inflation move much outside of the target range. There are
no circumstances, I would submit, in which expected inflation should be outside of
a narrow band around the target for very long. This is the narrow scope of
flexibility that’s at stake with an inflation target, and it is hard to see what good it
would do to retain it.
Finally, a third factor critics mention is that with inflation expectations well-
contained over recent years, the benefits of announcing a specific inflation
objective might be small in any case. In response, I would point out that no
credible observer believes there is any reason for inflation to be persistently higher
or lower than it is today. The benefits might not be large, but I fail to see the case
for encouraging fluctuations in the credibility of the Fed’s commitment to price
stability. In short, I disagree with each of these three arguments against an inflation
objective.
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Before concluding, I would like to say a few words about how establishing an
inflation objective would work in practice. First, I think it would be best if the
target were stated in terms of one of the consumer price indexes, because the
public is most familiar with such measures. In addition, economic theory tells us
that monetary policy should stabilize the value of money relative to the goods and
services that go into household consumption, as opposed to other conceivable
baskets of goods and services. There are several consumer price indexes to choose
from. In terms of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), I would want a 2 percent
midpoint for the target range. The CPI has some well-known methodological flaws
as a measure of purchasing power, however. Economists prefer the Price Index for
Personal Consumption Expenditures from the National Income and Product
Accounts — the so-called PCE price index. In terms of that index I would want a
1.5 percent midpoint for the target range.
I should say something about what reasoning led me to these values — 2 percent
for the CPI or 1.5 percent for the PCE index. First, 1 percent appears to be a good
target for actual inflation. One factor in selecting a target is that interest rates
ultimately build in compensation for expected inflation, so higher target inflation
ultimately means higher interest rates. Minimizing inflation therefore helps
minimize the inefficiencies that arise from the incentive to substitute away from
assets like currency or bank reserves that do not bear interest. Minimizing inflation
also reduces the distortions that arise in sectors where prices are sticky. A 1
percent target is preferable to zero or some negative number, however, because of
the value of building in a cushion against the possibility that interest rates bump up
against the zero lower bound. Real interest rates are what matters for monetary
policy, but it is nominal interest rates — which are just real rates plus expected
inflation — that cannot be driven below zero. Thus, an inflation rate a bit above
zero gives us a bit more leeway to lower real interest rates to prevent inflation
from falling below target.
Finally, given a target of 1 percent for actual inflation, we need to take into
account known measurement biases in our price indices. Our best current research
indicates that the CPI overstates actual inflation by about 1 percentage point, on
average, and the PCE price index overstates actual inflation by about a half of a
percentage point. Thus, I prefer 2 percent for the CPI and 1.5 percent for the PCE.
I have a preference for targeting a measure of core inflation — in other words
excluding food and energy — because it would be sufficient to anchor overall
inflation over time, but it would give us the latitude to allow relative energy and
food prices to fluctuate in the short run without necessarily requiring an immediate
monetary policy response. Not coincidentally, the core PCE price index is the one
favored by Fed staff and policymakers for internal analysis and discussions, and
thus its use as a target would enhance monetary policy transparency.
I favor a range around our target with a width of 1 percentage point, rather than a
simple point target. As I noted earlier, an announced target range would inevitably
draw the Fed into discussing inflation in relation to the range. If inflation moved
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outside the range we would feel compelled, I believe, to acknowledge that fact and
to state how inflation will be brought back within the range. A range rather than a
point target would give the Fed a reasonable “safe harbor” within which we would
not be pressed to explain fluctuations in inflation. The narrowness of a 1-
percentage-point range, however, would discipline us to explain any substantial
deviations of inflation from the target.
I would regard the Fed’s announced inflation objective as a long-run range, and
hence I would expect the Fed to revise its numerical inflation objective relatively
rarely, mainly for improvements in measurement.
How the Fed communicates about an inflation target is important. In some
countries, the adoption of inflation targeting has involved explicit action by the
legislature or the administration. In contrast, I believe that the Federal Reserve can
legitimately describe inflation targeting as a natural incremental step in the
evolution of our policy operations, a step we take because we believe it will
improve the ability of monetary policy to stabilize employment, growth, and
inflation by enhancing the effectiveness of short-run communications and tying
down inflation expectations. We also should emphasize, I believe, that that our
announced inflation objective is meant to guide monetary policy over the long run,
and that it should not prevent the Fed from taking the kinds of policy actions it
takes today to stabilize employment and output in the short run.
Admittedly, monetary policy has been working reasonably well of late. In
particular, the Fed already makes low inflation a priority, and inflation
expectations have been low and reasonably stable. So why take the additional step
of announcing an explicit inflation objective? At the risk of some repetition, let
me summarize the argument I have advanced here. First, the enormous costs of
failing to maintain price stability are now well understood, and there is no reason
for inflation to be much higher or lower on average than it is today. Second, by
announcing an inflation objective, the Fed would not be surrendering any
flexibility that it has not given up already, or should not be happy to give up. We
would be reducing extraneous fluctuations in expected inflation. And third, since
there are no circumstances in which the Fed would like to see inflation much
higher or lower than it is today, announcing an explicit long-run inflation objective
is mainly an incremental step in the direction of transparency. Ambiguity about the
Fed’s long-run inflation intentions has outlived its usefulness.
In addition to the operational benefits mentioned above, greater transparency is
important because it defuses the idea that secrecy has any role to play in the policy
process, and it opens the door to even greater transparency and a broader
comprehension of short-run policymaking on the part of the public. And the
understanding and support of our citizens is ultimately the only way to secure good
monetary policy in the future.
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Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2005, February 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20050301_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20050301_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2005},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20050301_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}