speeches · December 1, 2010
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard: The U.S. Economic Situation and Recent
Monetary Policy Developments
12/2/2010
WASHINGTON, D.C. - In remarks Thursday at a meeting of the National Economists
Club, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard discussed his perspective on the recent
Federal Open Market Committee policy decision to pursue additional quantitative
easing.
In his presentation, “The U.S. Economic Situation and Recent Monetary Policy
Developments,” Bullard also addressed some of the risks and criticisms of the FOMC
policy decision. Bullard said that while this policy carries both risks and rewards, he
believes the bene ts outweigh the risks.
On November 3, the FOMC announced it would purchase Treasury securities at a pace
of about $75 billion per month through the rst half of 2011. The Committee will review
the pace of its securities purchases and the overall size of the asset-purchase program
on a regular basis, in light of incoming information, adjusting the program as needed to
best foster maximum employment and price stability.
Bullard stressed the importance of the program’s regular review clause. “When the
FOMC targets interest rates, a typical move is 25 basis points, and forward guidance is
limited,” he said. “This allows the Committee to adjust the policy rate in response to a
changing outlook for the economy. The regular review clause allows the QE program to
be adjusted in response to incoming data in the same way.”
Bullard described his view of the FOMC decision in ve parts:
1. Disin ationary Trend
Bullard said that while in ation was close to the implicit FOMC target during the rst
part of the year, “during 2010, a clear disin ation trend developed.”
2. Lessons from Japan
“Japanese experience indicates that a near-zero nominal interest rate, mildly
de ationary equilibrium exists and is di cult to escape,” Bullard said. “The Japanese
experience has generally been regarded as disappointing. U.S. policy should strive to
avoid this possibility.”
In his paper published earlier this year, Bullard argued it may not be prudent to rely on a
near-zero policy rate alone to keep the U.S. out of the de ationary outcome; he
recommended that current interest rate policy be supplemented with additional
quantitative easing.
3. Monetary Policy Should Be Directed at Avoiding a Japanese-style De ationary
Outcome
Bullard outlined a policy strategy given the slower recovery and disin ationary trend
currently faced by the U.S.
First, he said the FOMC must avoid further disin ation. “Further disin ation with
short-term nominal interest rates at zero would mean rising real interest rates in
the face of a slowing pace of recovery,” Bullard said.
Second, the unintended steady state must be pre-empted. “It would be di cult to
escape the low nominal interest rate, mildly de ationary equilibrium that Japan
has experienced,” Bullard said.
Third, Bullard said the FOMC must defend its implicit in ation target from the low
side, which helps maintain longer-run in ation expectations.
4. Asset Purchases Can Substitute for Ordinary Monetary Policy
“While asset purchases are sometimes viewed as unconventional,” Bullard said, “the
nancial market effects have been entirely conventional: real interest rates declined,
in ation expectations rose, the dollar depreciated, and equity prices rose.”
Bullard said that asset purchases of Treasury securities at longer maturities can
substitute for ordinary monetary policy by putting downward pressure on nominal
interest rates further out the yield curve and upward pressure on expected in ation,
thus, putting downward pressure on real interest rates.
5. Maximum Effects on the Real Economy Should Also Be Conventional
An easing of monetary policy produces its maximum impact on real economic
variables, including output, consumption, and investment, six to 12 months after
implementation. As with interest-rate targeting policy, disentangling the real effects of
quantitative easing from other in uences will be di cult, as economic performance will
be in uenced by other developments during this period. “Most likely,” Bullard said, “the
real effects will be just as conventional as the nancial market effects.”
Bullard also addressed some of the risks and criticisms raised about QE2:
On criticisms that the program may not be effective, Bullard said that the nancial
market effects of the program have been about what one would expect from an
easing of monetary policy.
On concerns that QE2 depreciates the dollar, Bullard noted that dollar
depreciation is a normal by-product of an easier monetary policy, provided all else
is held constant in the rest of the world, and that the U.S. has long maintained an
independent monetary policy, a exible exchange rate, and open capital markets.
He stated that other countries need to have systems in place that can adjust to
modest changes in U.S. monetary policy.
Regarding the rise in nominal interest rates, Bullard said that QE2 puts downward
pressure on nominal rates through securities purchases but that the effects of
successful policy would put upward pressure on nominal rates. Therefore, Bullard
argued, looking at the level of nominal rates alone is insu cient to judge the
success of QE2.
On in ationary concerns, Bullard said that while too much in ation is a legitimate
concern, the 2010 disin ationary trend is worrisome right now. He emphasized
that keeping in ation near the implicit in ation target is very important for
maintaining the FOMC’s credibility.
Regarding arguments for using a commodity money standard, Bullard stated that
although this approach was widely discussed in previous decades when in ation
was high and variable, the volatility of commodity prices in recent years has made
this approach problematic. He argued that in ation targeting can be seen as the
intellectual descendant of commodity money standards. “In ation targeting
forces accountability for in ation outcomes onto the central bank,” he said.
On fears that the Fed is monetizing the debt, Bullard said the FOMC has often
stated its intention to return the Fed balance sheet to pre-crisis levels over time.
Once the FOMC returns the Fed balance sheet to its normal size, Bullard noted,
the Treasury will be left with just as much debt held by the public as before the
Fed took any of these actions.
On claims that QE mitigates scal problems, Bullard argued that QE has no
impact on the longer-run U.S. scal outlook and that this outlook remains very
poor no matter what the Fed does.
Bullard also highlighted the imperative need for the Congress and the President to
attack the long-run budget problems the nation faces. He said that Europe has given
the U.S. an important wake-up call on how devastating it can be to leave long-run
structural de cit problems unaddressed.
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2010, December 1). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20101202_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20101202_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20101202_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}