speeches · March 8, 2007
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
U. S. Monetary Policy Forum 2007
March 9, 2007
Understanding the Evolving Inflation Process
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
I have to admit that I was apprehensive when Steve and Anil asked me to participate in this
Forum and comment on a report on inflation dynamics, especially when I found out that one of
the authors was going to be an old friend, Mark Watson. Mark is a pre-eminent time-series
econometrician, so my first thought was that I was going to need to brush up on unit-root
asymptotics. When the report arrived, however, I was pleasantly surprised to find a wide-ranging
and insightful review of the historical behavior of inflation in the G-7 countries along with a
thoughtful examination of alternative explanations of those dynamics. I think the Report makes a
very useful contribution to applied monetary economics and illuminates well some of the key
challenges in monetary policy today. The usual disclaimer applies here, however; the views I
express are my own and not necessarily shared by my colleagues in the Federal Reserve System.
A glance at historical plots of G-7 inflation strongly suggests that the dynamics have changed
over time in consequential ways. Section 3 of the Report provides a clear and parsimonious way
of characterizing changes in the dynamic behavior of inflation. Estimating the standard time-
invariant autoregressive process clearly would leave little scope for understanding how inflation
dynamics might have evolved over time.
The usual method of stepping away from the standard time-invariant approach is to look for
shifts from one fixed regime to another at discrete points in time. The authors set off in a
different direction, however, one that allows more range of variation in the underlying dynamics
and is more agnostic about the timing of transitions. They decompose inflation into a time-
varying trend and a transitory component, where both components are allowed to have time-
varying volatilities. The results confirm in a very precise way our general sense of what's
happened with inflation over the last 40 years: There was a broad increase in trend inflation and
inflation volatility in the 1970s followed by a return to more stable behavior in the decades since.
The authors show that the rise and decline was sharp and synchronized across the G-7 countries.
Moreover, their technique attributes much of the observed rise in inflation volatility in the 1970s
to increased volatility in the inflation trend. Trend inflation, of course, is always and everywhere
a monetary phenomenon, so to me these results immediately imply that the conduct of monetary
policy has varied substantially over this period.
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The author's careful modeling of the time series behavior of inflation is, by itself, of limited use
in thinking about how alternative approaches to policy-making might alter inflation behavior. To
do this, a structural model is required — that is, a model in which the parameters do not vary
when one varies the conduct of monetary policy. The authors trot out a popular workhorse
macroeconomic model and use it to draw some lessons from their empirical work. They do not
fit the model to the full set of variables, which makes sense because the model has policy
following a fixed reaction function, and their empirical analysis indicates that inflation dynamics
have undergone significant shifts. Instead, they look for parameter values that allow the model to
best replicate the autocorrelation of the change in inflation.
The authors' focus on the autocorrelation properties of inflation is motivated by recent research
suggesting that inflation has become less persistent since the early 1980s. Some observers have
suggested that the decline in measured persistence implies that inflation will moderate more
rapidly in the next year or two than would otherwise be the case. The model calibrations reported
here, however, demonstrate the extent to which the autocorrelation properties of inflation depend
on how monetary policy is conducted. (See Figure 6.3, for example.) This implies that
policymakers should be quite wary of interpreting the fall in persistence since the 1980s as
something monetary policy can exploit. If persistence has declined because policy now responds
more strongly to inflation, for example, achieving a more rapid moderation in inflation may
require tighter policy.
The reported model calibrations strongly suggest that inflation expectations are forward-looking.
What does this mean? One of the equations of the workhorse model links current inflation to a
measure of real marginal cost (or real activity) and people's expectations of future inflation. This
is commonly referred to as a "Phillips Curve" and it was prominently featured last month in a
front-page article in the Wall Street Journal. A key question regarding the modern Phillips Curve
is how people form expectations regarding future inflation. The conventional approach to this
question is to assume that a fraction of prices in the economy are set by forward-looking agents
that make their best current estimate of future inflation, while other prices are set based on a
backward-looking moving average of recent inflation experience, and then to let the data tell you
the appropriate weight to put on backward-looking price-setting. Common estimates are that
around 25 percent of agents form expectations in a backward-looking fashion. The authors find
that their model fits the data much better if price-setters are nearly entirely forward-looking, in
the sense that the fraction of prices set by backward-looking agents must be quite low — close to
zero.
By itself, this evidence might not convince a skeptic. I say that because the stylized fact they
seek to match — the autocorrelation of changes in inflation, not the autocorrelation in inflation
— does not strike me as a sharply-drawn fact. It's just one correlation among many in the time
series, and one could expect more robust results by fitting the model to more dimensions of the
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data. Fortunately, there is a burgeoning literature that does just that. A series of recent papers
estimate full structural models of the type from which the reduced-form workhorse model is
derived, and they consistently point to less backward-looking behavior than is found in single-
equation estimates of the Phillips Curve. (Lubik and Schorfheide 2004, Rabanal and Rubio-
Ramirez 2005)
While it may be too soon to declare this research issue entirely settled, my sense is that the
preponderance of empirical evidence suggests that price setting is predominantly forward-
looking. Why does this matter? Common implementations of models with forward-looking price
setting endow people in addition with a great deal of information about prospective policy
setting. The typical assumption is that people see the central bank as following a policy
algorithm in which trend inflation is a fixed, time-invariant parameter. A "Taylor Rule" is a
popular example in which inflation is always expected to return to a target that is widely known
and constant. In contrast, I am persuaded that at times there are aspects of policy-making,
including trend inflation, about which the public is uncertain. This is consistent with the main
assumption underlying the authors' decomposition of inflation into trend and transitory
components; namely that the conduct of monetary policy evolves over time, and that the future
evolution of that conduct is, at times, subject to significant uncertainty.
The notion of uncertainty about the future conduct of monetary policy might seem strange in an
era in which inflation expectations are often characterized as "anchored." But there is uncertainty
and then there is uncertainty. I am fairly confident that the public places an extremely low
probability on the Federal Reserve allowing inflation to average 10 percent over the next decade.
(Presumably one could document this using financial market data, though I have not done so.)
On the other hand, I suspect that market participants place some probability on inflation
remaining at around where it is now — a 2 ¼ percent core PCE price index, for example —
rather than moderating to 1 ½ percent. In that sense, one might question whether inflation
expectations are anchored close enough to the price stability shore. Three-quarters of a percent
might seem like a relatively small difference in inflation rates, but sustained over a decade or
two, it would amount to a material difference in purchasing power.
Actual measures of inflation expectations can provide some evidence on this question. The
Report examines survey and other measures of inflation expectations and shows that they do a
poor job at predicting inflation trends in the period after the Inflation Moderation of the mid-
1980s. Unfortunately, the market for inflation-indexed U.S. Treasury securities is not old enough
to allow fruitful empirical tests using measures of the inflation compensation implied by nominal
Treasury yields. Casual inspection of fluctuations in implied inflation compensation, however,
suggests larger and more frequent movements in inflation expectations than displayed by survey-
based measures. Moreover, the observed volatility in implied inflation compensation many years
ahead seems inconsistent with a world in which the central bank's inflation objective is a fixed,
time-invariant parameter.
3
The inability to forecast trend inflation using available measures of inflation expectations leads
the authors to caution policymakers against relying too heavily on them. The Report does not say
that inflation expectations are unimportant to the determination of inflation — their calibration
exercise argues exactly the opposite, in fact — only that our available measures provide
imperfect indicators. The stability of expectations measures, the authors argue, might mask
potential instability in actual inflation expectations. With this I wholeheartedly agree; as I noted
a moment ago, one can see measures of inflation expectations as in some sense "anchored"
without being either satisfied with where they are anchored or sanguine about their stability.
The broader lesson to take away from this Report is that inflation dynamics have evolved
significantly over the last 50 years, and inflation expectations appear to be forward-looking. To
again paraphrase the late Milton Friedman, inflation is always and everywhere an expectational
phenomenon. The intuition should be clear: the current value of money depends on value people
expect it to have in the near future, and thus the current inflation rate depends critically on what
people expect inflation to be in the near future. To put it another way, inflation expectations are
an outcome of monetary policy, not an autonomous help or hindrance. Central banks are as
responsible for the behavior of inflation expectations as they are for the behavior of inflation.
The relevance of these lessons is well illustrated, I believe, by recent experience. On several
occasions in the last few years, market participants have shown some uncertainty about how the
Fed would respond to sharply higher energy prices. For example, following the heavy hurricane
season of 2005, energy prices surged, policy expectations initially softened and measures of
inflation expectations rose. Shortly thereafter core inflation also increased. Expectations were
subsequently realigned after a number speeches and statements by FOMC members, but similar
sequences occurred in early 2004 and the spring of 2006. Now there is no intrinsic reason why
energy price increases need to cause core prices to accelerate. Relative prices change all the time
in a healthy dynamic economy, and price stability means that the average price level is not
materially affected.
These recent examples of core inflation following movements in energy prices seem to reflect
fluctuations in the public's beliefs about the current and future conduct of monetary policy, and
thus about trend inflation. In a world where expectations are in play, the cost of bringing
inflation down depends on one's ability to move expectations, and thus it matters a great deal
whether inflation expectations are viewed as a policy outcome or an independent process. If
expectations are backward-looking, policymakers naturally will be less forceful about returning
inflation to a desired rate. If expectations are forward-looking, a central bank has the opportunity
to move expectations in the right direction through clear communication reinforced by
appropriate actions, and a more rapid return to price stability would be warranted. In my view,
this Report, along with abundant other recent research in monetary economics, clearly points in
the direction of forward-looking price setting. We should not, therefore, underestimate our
capacity to influence the public's understanding of the conduct of policy.
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Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2007, March 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070309_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070309_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2007},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070309_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}