speeches · March 3, 2010
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
Search Site
Home > Newsroom >
St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses "The Fed at a Crossroads"
3/4/2010
ST. CLOUD, Minn. — Fallout from the nancial turmoil of 2008 and 2009 has placed the
Fed at a crossroads on three dimensions, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said in
remarks today at St. Cloud State University’s 48th annual Winter Institute. “First, the
political independence of the Fed is at risk. Second, regulatory reform legislation
threatens to hamstring the Fed’s ability to respond to a future crisis. Third, the Fed
adopted a near-zero interest rate policy and successfully carried out its stabilization
policy through quantitative easing,” he said.
Fed Independence at Risk
In his presentation, “The Fed at a Crossroads,” Bullard gave a brief history of the
founding of the Federal Reserve System and how its decentralized structure has
provided a strong checks-and-balances system against power being too concentrated
on Wall Street or in Washington, D.C.
In keeping with the fundamental principle that monetary policy should be at arm’s
length from the political process, the Federal Reserve System was designed with three
distinct but complementary parts: the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C.; a
Federal Reserve Bank in New York City, long regarded as the nation’s nancial capital;
and 11 regional Reserve banks to represent the voice of Main Street across the rest of
the country.
“This regional structure was designed to keep some power out of New York and
Washington,” Bullard said. “It allows for input on key policy questions from around the
U.S.A. As a result, this system has been very successful.”
“The current crisis has created a loud protest from the nation,” he added. “However, it
would be ironic indeed if the response to that protest were to further centralize power in
New York and Washington.”
The importance of maintaining the Fed’s independence from political in uence is
crucial to a stable economy, Bullard said, noting, “Politics ebbs and ows. If political
shifts get translated into monetary policy, the result is more and unnecessary volatility
in the U.S. economy.”
He warned, “In the U.S., erosion of Fed independence could result in a 1970s-style
period of volatility. The consequences for the U.S. and the global economy would be
large. No one would be served well by this outcome.”
Regulatory Reform Threatens To Hamstring the Fed
In the aftermath of the nancial crisis, some proposals have called for diminished Fed
regulatory authority. Instead, Bullard said, “The reform response should be to provide
the Fed with an appropriately broad regulatory authority so that the central bank is wellinformed about the entire nancial landscape.”
“A future Fed, with an appropriately broad regulatory responsibility, provides the U.S.
with the best chance to head off a future crisis,” he added.
Prior to the crisis of 2007, the Fed had primary regulatory authority for only about 12
percent of total U.S. banks, he said. In addition, banks and thrifts represented only a
fraction of the entire nancial landscape. “As the crisis began, 20 rms accounted for
about 80 percent of S&P 500 nancial sector assets in the U.S. About one-third of this
total was in banks. About two-thirds of this total was non-bank nancial rms such as
government-sponsored enterprises (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), investment banks,
insurance companies, and thrifts.”
“Non-bank nancial rms turned out to be the most troublesome entities in this crisis,
and the Fed had no supervisory authority over these entities,” he said. “The bottom line:
The Fed had a severely limited view of the nancial landscape as the crisis began.”
“The Fed had primary regulatory authority for only some of the banks, and none of the
troublesome non-bank nancials,” he added. Yet, as the crisis unfolded, “All eyes turned
to the Fed as the lender of last resort. This always happens in a crisis – only the central
bank can play the lender-of-last-resort role.”
More recently, some suggestions for reform seek to remove the Fed from the
supervision of smaller banks, Bullard noted. “Existing regulation works well for the
thousands of smaller banks in the U.S. Smaller banks did not cause the crisis and do
not need to be re-regulated.”
“The Fed should remain involved with smaller bank regulation so that it has a view of
the entire nancial landscape and does not become biased toward the large, mostly
New York-based institutions,” he added. “One critical role of regulation is to provide a
level, competitive playing eld for institutions of all sizes. Smaller banks tend to fund
smaller businesses, an important source of job growth for the economy.
Understanding this process helps the Fed make sound monetary policy decisions.”
Monetary Policy by Different Means: Successful Quantitative Easing
Bullard summarized the three components to the Fed’s current U.S. monetary policy
that have been used to alleviate the impact of the nancial crisis: the liquidity
programs (now mostly ended), a near-zero interest rate policy, and a quantitative easing
policy.
“Policy rates were reduced to near zero across the Group of Seven in late 2008 and
early 2009,” he said, reiterating that the FOMC has said it will keep the federal funds
target rate near zero for an extended period. “Any movement on the funds rate target is
contingent on both in ation and real economic developments.”
Calling it “the new face of stabilization policy,” Bullard discussed the Fed’s successful
implementation of its more than $1.7 trillion asset purchase program, which is set to be
completed by the end of this month. “The program has been regarded as successful in
further easing monetary conditions after the zero bound was encountered,” he said.
He added, “The Fed is very capable of conducting stabilization policy when policy rates
are near zero. The quantitative policy should be conducted in a manner analogous to
interest rate policy. This means adjusting the policy according to incoming information
on the economy.”
He further explained, “The asset purchases are being nanced by reserve creation, or
‘printing money.’ The monetary base has expanded rapidly,” he said. “In contrast to the
liquidity programs, the expansion of the monetary base associated with the asset
purchase program is likely to be very persistent. This has created a medium-term
in ation risk.”
###
GENERAL
Home
About Us
Bank Supervision
Careers
Community Development
Economic Education
Events
Inside the Economy Museum
Newsroom
On the Economy Blog
Open Vault Blog
OUR DISTRICT
Little Rock Branch
Louisville Branch
Memphis Branch
Agricultural Finance Monitor
Housing Market Conditions
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Bridges
Economic Synopses
Housing Market Perspectives
In the Balance
Page One Economics
The Quarterly Debt Monitor
Review
Regional Economist
ST. LOUIS FED PRESIDENT
James Bullard's Website
INITIATIVES
Center for Household Financial Stability
Dialogue with the Fed
Federal Banking Regulations
FOMC Speak
In Plain English - Making Sense of the Federal Reserve
Timely Topics Podcasts and Videos
DATA AND INFORMATION SERVICES
CASSIDI®
FRASER®
FRED®
FRED® Blog
GeoFRED®
IDEAS
FOLLOW THE FED
Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Google Plus
Email Subscriptions
RSS
CONTACT US
|
LEGAL INFORMATION
|
PRIVACY NOTICE & POLICY
|
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ONLINE
Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2010, March 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100304_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20100304_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100304_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}