speeches · March 28, 2011
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Recent Developments in U.S.
Monetary Policy
3/29/2011
PRAGUE, Czech Republic – On Tuesday, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President
James Bullard delivered remarks titled “U.S. Monetary Policy: Recent Developments” as
part of a central bankers panel discussion at the 19th European Banking and Financial
Forum in Prague.
During his discussion, Bullard explained how the Fed’s second round of quantitative
easing was “a classic easing of monetary policy” and “an effective tool, even while the
policy rate is near zero.” He also discussed the situation in early 2011, stating that “U.S.
growth prospects remain reasonably good for 2011.” He added that recent global and
domestic events “present considerable uncertainty, but can be resolved in benign
ways.” Finally, Bullard talked about the path to normalization. “Discussion of the
normalization of U.S. policy will likely return as the key issue in 2011,” he concluded.
Quantitative Easing as Classic Monetary Policy
Last November, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announced that the Fed
would purchase Treasury securities at a pace of about $75 billion per month through
the rst half of 2011—the program commonly known as “QE2.” The Committee also
stated that it would regularly review the program in light of incoming information and
would adjust the program as needed.
Bullard said that even before the November decision, monetary policy was ultraaccommodative. He noted that the policy rate had been near zero for an “extended
period” and that the Fed’s balance sheet was much larger than it had been before the
crisis. Regarding the motivation for QE2, Bullard noted last summer’s “disin ation and
declining in ation expectations,” adding that the “Japanese experience with mild
de ation and a near-zero nominal interest rate has been poor.” Given the near-zero
policy rate environment, Bullard said, “asset purchases can substitute for ordinary
(interest-rate targeting) monetary policy.”
Bullard stated that the policy change had been largely priced into markets ahead of the
November FOMC meeting, and the nancial market effects were conventional. “In
particular, real interest rates declined, in ation expectations rose, the dollar
depreciated, and equity prices rose,” he said. “These are the ‘classic’ nancial market
effects one might observe when the Fed eases monetary policy in ordinary times.”
“This experience shows that monetary policy can be eased aggressively even when the
policy rate is near zero,” Bullard said.
Bullard noted that the effects of monetary policy on the real economy lag from six to 12
months. “Real effects are di cult to disentangle because other shocks hit the
economy in the meantime,” which, he added, is a standard problem in evaluating
monetary policy.
The Situation in 2011
Bullard stated that, relative to last summer, U.S. growth prospects improved by early
2011. “Private sector forecasters and the FOMC all marked up their forecasts,” he said.
“Anecdotal reports were more bullish,” showing “pro table businesses with
considerable cash and an improving outlook.” He added, “An improving economy 18
months post-recession is generally a strong positive.”
Noting the improved economic outlook since QE2 was implemented, “the natural
debate is how and when the exit should begin,” Bullard said. “However, additional
uncertainty has clouded this picture.”
“In recent weeks, macroeconomic uncertainty has been on the rise from four key
sources,” Bullard said. The four sources he discussed were:
1. turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa and the associated uncertainty
premium in oil prices;
2. the natural disaster and the damaged nuclear reactors in Japan;
3. the U.S. scal situation and the possibility of a government shutdown; and
4. continued uncertainty regarding resolution of the European sovereign debt crisis.
Bullard pointed out that all four situations have the potential to escalate. If escalation
occurs, he added, how and when to begin normalizing monetary policy would become
less clear. “Still, the most likely prospect is that all four are resolved without becoming
global macroeconomic shocks,” he said.
Normalization of U.S. Monetary Policy
Bullard said that U.S. monetary policy cannot remain ultra-accommodative inde nitely.
“The process of normalizing policy, even once it begins, will still leave unprecedented
policy accommodation on the table,” he stated. “The FOMC may not be willing or able
to wait until all global uncertainties are resolved to begin normalizing policy.”
Bullard noted that normal monetary policy has two parts: “QE accommodation is
removed by returning the balance sheet to an ordinary size over time,” and “the policy
rate begins to approach levels associated with moderate expansion.” Bullard said that
normalization will take time and added that it is the most di cult part of the business
cycle for a central bank.
“Exit strategy was widely discussed in 2010, and that debate will likely revive during
2011,” Bullard said.
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2011, March 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110329_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110329_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110329_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}