speeches · March 28, 2007
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
“Inflation and Unemployment”
Virginia Association of Economists
Richmond, Virginia
March 29, 2007
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
I recently had the opportunity to guest-teach a couple of business school economics
classes. It was great to be back in the classroom. Don’t get me wrong – I like my current
job. But it was nice not to have to vote on anything.
I opened my discussions with a pair of questions, asking students to put themselves in the
place of a monetary policymaker choosing a target for the federal funds rate. First I gave
them a set of hypothetical facts about the state of the economy – a slowdown in housing
in the wake of multi-year housing boom; rising mortgage default rates; preliminary
indicators of a possible slowing in business investment. And then I asked them: “What
are you going to do?” The students dutifully responded that this situation could call for a
reduction in the funds rate. They’d obviously been doing their homework.
Next, I gave them a set of hypothetical facts about inflation – core PCE inflation, on a
year-over-year basis, has been above 2 percent for nearly three straight years; after some
signs of moderation, recent months’ inflation numbers have moved higher; energy prices
have been fluctuating around historically elevated levels and futures markets predict
further increases to come; and labor compensation is rising after a relatively flat period.
Same question: “What are you going to do?” Once again, their response came right out of
the textbook – an increase in the funds rate is needed to counter rising inflation, other
things equal.
The trick of course is that both sets of hypothetical facts are drawn from the same period
– basically right now. My objective was to underscore the fact that sometimes monetary
policy decisions are not obvious, and that figuring out the appropriate policy action
requires as complete a picture as possible of the state of the economy. Interpreting that
picture can be a challenging task.
The situation I presented to the students represents a policy-making dilemma. The actions
needed to bring down inflation could work against our desire to see the real outlook
solidify. The facts appear to present the policymaker with a tradeoff. You can address one
– inflation or real growth – but that puts the other at risk.
There is an element of truth to characterizing this situation as a tradeoff. But that
characterization is also, I think, an extreme over-simplification and can be highly
misleading. Monetary policy actions today are capable of affecting inflation and
unemployment both now and in the future. Consequently, it is a mistake to view policy
decision-making as a sequence of one-shot trade-offs. Some understanding of how
inflation and unemployment interrelate over time is essential. I’d like to devote my
remarks tonight to the relationship between inflation and the real side of the economy and
to what I think that relationship implies for policy-making.
The relationship between inflation and the real economy can be described in terms of a
number of alternative measures of real activity. Perhaps the most popular is the
unemployment rate, because it captures the extent to which the expansion in employment
generated by growth in real output is rapid enough to absorb additions to the labor force.
As an indicator of the economy’s use of its resources, the unemployment rate is
commonly used as rough measure of the extent to which real activity is giving rise to
“inflation pressures,” but I will have much more to say about this later on.
Unemployment and inflation have, together, been at the center of macroeconomics for at
least as long as there has been a field called macroeconomics. The relationship between
these two variables is usually summarized by the Phillips curve, named for A. W.
Phillips, the economist who in 1957 documented an inverse relationship between
unemployment and wage inflation in nearly 100 years of data for the United Kingdom. 1
But the notion that rising inflation might at times be associated with rising real growth
and falling unemployment had been recognized and discussed by early economists, a fact
that has been emphasized by many scholars, including Robert Lucas in his Nobel lecture
and by my long-time Richmond Fed colleague, Thomas Humphrey, who retired in 2005. 2
Since Phillips’ original paper, his curve has played a critical role in the evolution of
thinking about macroeconomics and monetary policy. It captures the notable correlations
between inflation and unemployment, although those correlations vary over time in
important ways. But more importantly, it embodies compactly a theoretical understanding
of the interplay between inflation and real economic forces. Because of its importance,
and because the modern version of the Phillips curve is in some respects starkly different
from the early edition, I think it will be worth our time to briefly review some of the
Phillips curve’s history, before examining the role it plays today in thinking about
monetary policy. As always, the views expressed are my own, and not necessarily the
same as others in the Federal Reserve.
A.W. Phillips’ curve
The Phillips curve began as an atheoretical relationship drawn to fit the data. The form
with which people are most familiar – linking unemployment to price inflation – was first
set down in 1960 by Paul Samuelson and Robert Solow for U.S. data. Following
Samuelson and Solow, the Phillips curve was interpreted as describing a set of choices
available to society each time period. According to this view, if the data suggested that
price stability tended to coexist, on average, with 5 percent unemployment, we would
have to live with higher inflation to enjoy persistently lower unemployment. This
thinking led to descriptions of policy as either stimulating real activity at the cost of
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rising inflation, or fighting inflation by restraining the real economy. This understanding
of the Phillips curve seems to have contributed to a political sentiment that, at least when
inflation was relatively low, the costs of a little more inflation were worth the return in
reduced unemployment.
But an alternative understanding of the Phillips curve was emerging in the 1960s. Milton
Friedman and Edmund Phelps, separately, focused on the role of expectations in the
relationship between inflation and unemployment. 3 Specifically, they argued that while
inflationary policy actions that were not anticipated by the public could have a temporary
stimulative effect on the economy, fully anticipated inflation would not affect real
activity. Similarly, surprise disinflation could have a temporary contractionary effect but
fully anticipated disinflation would not. This meant that the observed correlation in the
data between inflation and unemployment must have come largely from episodes in
which changes in the inflation rate were not expected by the public.
According to the expectation-augmented Phillips curve developed by Friedman and
Phelps, changes in inflation, and by implication monetary policy, could not have
persistent, lasting effects on real economic activity. Over the long run, economic growth
and unemployment would tend to return to rates that were determined by productivity
growth, population dynamics, and other characteristics of the markets for goods and
labor.
To illustrate, suppose a policymaker consults a Phillips curve estimated from historical
data that tells him that 3 percent unemployment can be achieved at 5 percent inflation. If
the policymaker then eased interest rates in order to bring unemployment down, the
policy might initially have the intended effect, provided the public continues to expect the
lower previously prevailing inflation rate. But, the Friedman-Phelps framework argues, a
sustained effort to maintain inflation at 5 percent would ultimately lead the public to
adjust their expectations for inflation. In the long run, unemployment would rise again to
its “natural” level given by the real structure of the economy.
In retrospect, many observers have labeled the Friedman-Phelps analysis prescient. They
point to the 1970s as a confirmation of the implications of the expectations-augmented
Phillips curve, because the period of high and volatile inflation in the 1970s brought no
sustained improvement in real economic activity. In fact, not coincidentally, the general
performance of the real economy during that period was poor.
The analysis of Friedman and Phelps focused attention on the critical macroeconomic
role of expectations. They assumed adaptive expectations, meaning that households and
firms based their expectations of future inflation on their observations of recent past
inflation. This made it very natural to think of an increase in the rate of inflation as
necessarily catching people by surprise; only over time would they learn about the altered
policy stance. But why wouldn’t people try to foresee how the central bank would behave
rather than rely on the mechanical adaptive-expectations forecasting formula? For
example, why wouldn’t they expect the central bank to try to exploit a short-run Phillips
curve, even before inflation rises? Such anticipation could rob inflationary policy of even
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its short-run stimulative effects. In 1972, Robert Lucas provided an alternative, rational
expectations analysis of the relationship between inflation and real activity. Under
rational expectations, people’s expectations are based not just on their past observations,
but also on their knowledge of how the economy is likely to behave, including their
knowledge of the process driving policymakers’ choices.
The rational expectations analysis retained the Friedman-Phelps implication that only
unexpected inflation would be associated with falling unemployment. But under rational
expectations, the policymaker lacked the ability to systematically exploit even a short-run
tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
In separate work, Lucas also showed how rational expectations presented a challenge to
making policy choices based on statistical estimates of such relationships as the Phillips
curve. In what has famously become known as the Lucas Critique, he showed that shifts
in the pattern of policy behavior would cause such relationships like the Phillips curve to
shift as well, so that statistical estimates from historical data would no longer be relevant
for predicting the economy’s response to changing policy.
Rational expectations imply that the public’s reaction to policy is more forward-looking
than in the case of adaptive expectations. Also in the 1970s, Finn Kydland and Edward
Prescott analyzed the problem faced by a policymaker when the public is forwardlooking. 4 They dissect the temptation faced by a policymaker choosing inflation periodby-period. They study a setting that features a natural rate of unemployment and in which
the best possible policy is one that achieves price stability. In any given period, what the
public expected the central bank to do has already been determined. Given those beliefs,
the policymaker can pull down unemployment with a little more inflation. But people
understand that the policymaker will be so tempted, and thus they don’t believe prices
will be stable. The result is higher inflation with no gain in real activity. What the
policymaker would like to do is find a way to commit to price stability. The work of
Kydland and Prescott highlighted to role of a central bank’s credibility; that is, the extent
to which the public believes their commitment to price stability. Their work highlights
the extent to which establishing credibility requires, indeed is virtually identical to,
sacrificing future flexibility.
So the linchpin of the link between inflation, unemployment and monetary policy is the
public’s expectations for inflation. If a run-up in inflation has been correctly anticipated,
then it up will have little or no effect on unemployment. Similarly, if people expect
falling inflation, then unemployment will not increase as much as it would if the
disinflation were unanticipated. Thomas Sargent demonstrated this dramatically in his
analysis of the ends of hyperinflations in a number of countries. 5 When part of a
comprehensive monetary and fiscal reform, very large reductions in inflation were
achieved at much less cost than would be predicted by a standard Phillips curve.
The role of expectations figured prominently in the disinflation that took place in the
early 1980s under Fed Chairman Paul Volcker. The Fed had delayed taking strong
enough action against inflation before Volcker took office in 1979, in part out of a belief
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that the slope of the Phillips curve was such that a fairly large increase in unemployment
would be required to reduce inflation. The cost of the Volcker disinflation turned out to
be substantially less than predicted however. The recent release of the FOMC transcripts
from that era reveals that the public’s inflation expectations were prominent in the
Committee’s discussions. 6
The Modern Phillips Curve
Prior to the 1970s and 1980s, a significant methodological divide separated
macroeconomics and microeconomics. That divide broke down when economists learned
how to study models of the aggregate economy that were built on sound microeconomic
foundations – general equilibrium models, in other words – but were also capable of
addressing macroeconomic issues. The latter required models that were dynamic, because
investment and interest are central to macroeconomics, and stochastic as well, because
business cycle fluctuations seem to be to some extent unanticipated. 7 The first generation
of such models had no substantive interaction between inflation and real economic
activity, and they displayed business cycles that were driven entirely by real
phenomenon. The challenge was to build models that captured the inflationunemployment link in a compelling way.
The modern Phillips curve emerged out of one approach to understanding monetary nonneutrality in (otherwise) general equilibrium settings. The approach involves specifying
price-setting frictions that make a firm’s choice of the price of its goods a dynamic
decision that depends on expectations of future inflation. In addition, a monopolistic
competition feature provides firms with the scope for meaningful price setting decisions.
Under common forms of this friction, only a fraction of sellers reset their prices each
period. Anticipating a length of time before the next opportunity to adjust their price,
sellers will choose a price depending on what they think will happen to the overall level
of prices during that interval. Aggregating across sellers, one finds that current prices
(and thus current inflation) depend on expected future inflation. 8
In this class of models, current inflation also depends on real economic variables,
particularly the real marginal cost of production, since prices are set as markups over
marginal costs. Under certain heroic assumptions, a one-for-one relationship emerges
between the real marginal cost of production and a measure of the scale of aggregate
economic activity, like output or the unemployment rate. That case results in an equation
one could describe as a Phillips curve, relating current inflation to current real activity
and expected future inflation. 9
Although this approach has broad acceptance, I should note that it is not without its
critics. Many economists view the price-setting frictions that are at the core of this
approach as ad hoc and unpersuasive. Moreover, there are alternative frictions, such as
spatial separation and limited information, that can also rationalize monetary nonneutrality. Nonetheless, a Phillips curve derived from price-setting frictions has become
the workhorse for applied central bank policy analysis.
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This modern form of the Phillips curve closely resembles the expectations-augmented
Phillips curve of Friedman and Phelps, and thus shares many of the same properties. For
example, a marked movement in inflation will be associated with a move in
unemployment only if the inflation is different from what the public expects to prevail in
the near future. Furthermore, inflation expectations in these models are forward-looking,
so expected inflation, just like inflation itself and unemployment, is an endogenous
variable determined by the interaction of the conduct of monetary policy with private
sector decisions and shocks to the economy.
When economists take this new Phillips curve to the data, they often find that past
inflation helps explain inflation dynamics, even after attempting to control for expected
inflation. This finding has led some to formulate versions of the Phillips curve in which
both forward-looking and backward-looking price-setting behavior play a role. 10
Backward-looking price-setters are assumed to form expectations as a weighted average
of past inflation, consistent with the adaptive expectations assumption in Friedman and
Phelps, or else set prices using a simple rule of thumb based on recent inflation.
This so-called “hybrid” Phillips curve implies an intrinsic persistence to inflation, beyond
that implied by the persistence of external shocks, the effect of expected inflation on
current inflation, or the conduct of policy. Moreover, in the presence of significant
backward-looking price-setting behavior, inflation would be prone to respond more
slowly to changes in policy. Consequently, a backward-looking component implies that
the real economic costs of bringing down inflation may be higher than would the case
with a purely forward-looking Phillips curve. For the same reasons, backward-looking
features would mean that inflation does not respond as rapidly to a change in policy as it
otherwise might, even if that change itself is well explained by the policymaker and well
anticipated and understood by the public.
A small cottage industry of economists is now devoted to estimating hybrid Phillips
curves to try to find the appropriate weight to put on backward-looking price-setting.
Common estimates are that around 25 percent of agents form expectations in a backwardlooking fashion, although estimates of up to 60 percent have been obtained. Many such
estimates assume that the conduct of monetary policy has been constant over this period,
in the sense that it was guided by a single pattern of behavior. If instead one allows for
shifts in monetary policy, then the estimated weight on a backward-looking component in
the Phillips curve is far lower – in fact, often zero. By not allowing persistent swings in
monetary policy, the standard approach can mistakenly attribute inflation persistence to
backward-looking expectations. The observed persistence of inflation thus might arise
from forward-looking behavior combined with uncertainty in the public’s mind about
policy trends. If people are uncertain about the policymaker’s objectives or strategy, then
their expectations will adjust more slowly as they learn about these features of policy by
observing actual policy outcomes.
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Policy
While there is reasonably strong statistical evidence of shifts in monetary policy, the
premise that inflation expectations are forward-looking and that the conduct of monetary
policy has evolved over time is also broadly consistent with the postwar history of U.S.
monetary policy. Moreover, that history is intimately intertwined with the evolution of
scientific understanding of the relationships embodied in the Phillips curve. 11 Widely
held views about the Phillips curve in the 1960s suggested that tolerating a small amount
of inflation would allow permanently lower unemployment. As trend inflation steadily
rose into the early 1970s, the public came to expect higher inflation to persist and the
Phillips curve shifted out. Policymakers had overlooked the endogeneity of inflation
expectations, and their influence on future inflation outcomes. In the 1970s, policymakers
were reluctant to attack inflation aggressively out of a belief, based on the estimated
slope of the Phillips curve, that high sustained unemployment would be required to
reduce inflation. Belief in backward-looking expectations led policymakers to
underestimate the extent to which they could influence the evolution of expectations and
thereby reduce the cost of disinflation. Unemployment did increase during the
disinflation that Chairman Volcker initiated in 1979, but by substantially less than had
been predicted by backward-looking Phillips curves. On several occasions after that,
identified as “inflation scares” by my former colleague Marvin Goodfriend, inflation
expectations rose and the Fed responded aggressively by raising real interest rates above
what otherwise would have been warranted. 12 These episodes helped gain credibility for
the Fed’s commitment to low inflation.
As realized inflation fell in the 1990s, available measures of expected inflation fell as
well, and since then they have been fairly low and stable. But this apparent stability,
relative to the wide swings they displayed in prior decades, should not be cause for
complacency, particularly with inflation currently running uncomfortably high. Some
observers, for example, have noted that the decline in the persistence of inflation in recent
decades makes it more likely that inflation will soon decline toward its recent trend. This
much is unobjectionable, but they go on to argue that policymakers can be more patient
as a result, relying on the “gravitational pull” of inflation expectations rather that interest
rate increases that might push unemployment up. But the decline in persistence is most
likely a consequence of the way policy has generally responded when inflation rises. If
so, then failing to respond is inconsistent with the expectations underlying the recent
tendency for inflation to return to trend. This takes current expectations for granted, and
runs the risk of eroding credibility.
The nature of the Phillips curve is particularly relevant to evaluating alternative policy
strategies for restoring price stability. Would reducing inflation require large increases in
unemployment? Again, the key is the behavior of inflation expectations, which now seem
to hover between 2 and 2 ½ percent, a bit below inflation itself. If expectations are
backward-looking, tied to past experience, one might favor a very gradual decline in
inflation so as to minimize the effect on unemployment. Forward-looking expectations,
however, suggest a strategy of attempting to influence expectations directly through clear
and forceful communications. If such a communication strategy were successful, a more
7
rapid return to price stability would be feasible and would require less policy tightening
than would otherwise be the case.
How responsive to policymaker influence are inflation expectations? General
prescriptions are unlikely, because results will depend on the nature of central bank
actions and communication, and the context in which they are received. There are many
examples of significant shifts in expectations induced by convincing people of a break
from past practice. Examples include the fiscal reforms accompanying the ends of
hyperinflations, the governance changes accompanying the adoption of explicit inflation
objectives, and the operational regime shift adopted by the Volcker FOMC in 1979. In
many recent instances, FOMC actions or statements have induced short run movements
in market participants’ expectations regarding the path of the federal funds rate and
inflation. Although there may be no precise historical analogs for potential
communications and actions to restore price stability in circumstances like the present
day, these examples suggest that significant shifts in inflation expectations are possible.
In any case, the centrality of inflation expectations in the modern Phillips curve
reinforces the importance of consistency and credibility in monetary policy making, since
these are traits that reduce people’s uncertainty about future policy and stabilize expected
inflation. It suggests that central banks should not take inflation expectations for granted
by acting in ways that are inconsistent with expectations but assuming expectations will
not change. Moreover, central banks should guard against underestimating the degree to
which they are capable of influencing the evolution of inflation expectations. To
paraphrase the late Milton Friedman, inflation is always and everywhere an expectational
phenomenon. 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.
John Weinberg contributed to these remarks.
1
Phillips, A.W. 1958. “The Relationship Between Unemployment and the Rate of
Price Change of Money Wage Rates in the United Kingdom, 1862–1957,” Economica, vol. 25 (November),
pp. 283–99.
2
Lucas, Robert E, Jr, 1996. "Nobel Lecture: Monetary Neutrality," Journal of Political Economy,
University of Chicago Press, vol. 104(4) (August), pages 661-82.
Humphrey, Thomas M. 1985, “The Early History of the Phillips Curve,” Sep/Oct Vol. 71 No. 5
3
Friedman, Milton 1968. “The Role of Monetary Policy”, The American Economic Review Vol. 58, No. 1
(March), pp. 1-17
Phelps, E. S. 1968. “Money-Wage Dynamics and Labor-Market Equilibrium,” Journal of Political
Economy, Vol. 76, 678-711.
4
Kydland, F. and E. Prescott 1977., “Rules rather than discretion: The inconsistency of
optimal plans”, Journal of Political Economy, 85, 473-490.
5
Sargent, Thomas J. 1982. ‘The Ends of Four Big Inflations”, in Inflation. Causes and Effects ed. Robert
E. Hall, NBER, The University of Chicago Press.
6
Goodfriend, Marvin and King, Robert G. 2005., "The Incredible Volcker Disinflation" (August). NBER
Working Paper No. W11562
7
Kydland, Finn E & Prescott, Edward C, 1982. "Time to Build and Aggregate Fluctuations,"
Econometrica, vol. 50(6) (November), pages 1345-70.
8
8
King, Robert G. 2000. “The New IS-LM Model: Language, Logic and Limits”, Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond, Economic Quarterly, Vol. 86 No. 3
9
Some in the literature refer to this as the “New Keynesian Phillips Curve,” and to the underlying model as
the “New Neoclassical Economics.”
10
Gali, Jordi & Gertler, Mark, 1999. "Inflation dynamics: A structural econometric analysis," Journal of
Monetary Economics, Elsevier, vol. 44(2) (October), pages 195-222.
11
Thomas Sargent and others have argued that it was changes in understanding of the Phillips curve that
drove swings in Fed policy over this period. Sargent, Thomas J., The Conquest of American Inflation,
Princeton University Press. 2001.
12
Goodfriend, Marvin. 1993. “Interest Rate Policy and the Inflation Scare Problem: 1979-1992” Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly Volume 79/1 (Winter).
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Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2007, March 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070329_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070329_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_20070329_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}