speeches · September 25, 2011
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses America's Investment Problem
and Monetary Policy
9/26/2011
NEW YORK CITY - On Monday, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James
Bullard delivered remarks titled “America’s Investment Problem and Monetary Policy”
as part of a panel discussion on “Policy Making After the Crisis.”
Bullard talked about the recovery in U.S. GDP and noted that its components, except for
investment, have largely recovered to their 2007 peak. “This looks like the collapse of a
real estate bubble,” he stated. However, most analysis does not take the idea of a
collapsed bubble su ciently into account when discussing the nature of the U.S.
recovery, he said. “Taking the bubble view more seriously has implications for the
expected pace of the U.S. recovery and for the likely fundamental potential growth rate
of the U.S. economy.” This, in turn, has important implications for U.S. monetary policy,
Bullard noted. “The behavior of in ation over the last year supports the idea that the
fundamental output gap has been smaller than recognized, and that asset purchases
are a potent tool for in uencing in ation and in ation expectations,” he concluded.
Regarding the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC’s) options for conducting
countercyclical monetary policy in a near-zero policy rate environment, Bullard said that
“the Fed’s balance sheet policy—outright purchases and sales—is the most natural and
effective tool for this purpose.” He stated that the FOMC should decide on any future
asset purchases on a meeting-by-meeting basis and should also indicate the likelihood
that it will continue on its current path at the following meeting. The FOMC’s
communications tool—which is the main alternative to asset purchases—“has some
potential drawbacks,” he said.
The Recovery in GDP
Bullard noted that most of the main components of real GDP are at a higher level today
than they were in the fourth quarter of 2007, which marked the previous business cycle
peak. While consumption, government expenditures, imports and exports have all
recovered, investment remains about 16 percent below its level in the fourth quarter of
2007.
Bullard added that real investment in nonresidential structures and real private
residential investment are especially low compared to the business cycle peak. While
GDP would be an estimated 4.2 percent higher if the investment component had
recovered to the extent that consumption has, he said that “it is not reasonable to think
that these particular areas of investment should robustly expand in the aftermath of a
collapsed real estate bubble.”
Thus, Bullard said that the previous business cycle peak is not a good benchmark for
GDP growth. “It is not reasonable to expect the economy to climb rapidly back to the
2007 Q4 peak since part of that peak was due to arti cial growth driven by bubble
behavior,” he said. “A more reasonable interpretation is that fundamental potential
growth in the U.S. has been somewhat lower than previously thought.” He added that
the behavior of in ation during the past year provides some evidence for this.
Monetary Policy
“The FOMC’s asset purchase program clearly drove both in ation and in ation
expectations higher and closer to the Committee’s implicit target over the last year,”
Bullard said. Given that actual real economic performance was weaker than the FOMC
anticipated last fall, according to the July 29 GDP report, “this should have meant less
in ation, not more,” he stated.
“This suggests that the output gap may have been considerably smaller than previously
thought, and perhaps also that the output gap has considerably less in uence on
in ation than commonly thought,” Bullard said. “The larger in uence on actual in ation
comes from in ation expectations,” which have tended to be higher over the past year,
according to TIPS measures, he noted.
Bullard also shared his views on the FOMC’s policy tools going forward. “The
Committee needs to be able to conduct a systematic countercyclical monetary policy
during the period of near-zero policy rates,” he said. He noted that “asset purchases are
a potent tool and must be employed carefully” and cited the increase in in ation and
in ation expectations during the past year, despite many measures of economic
performance indicating a relatively weak economy. “The meeting-by-meeting approach
would allow the Committee to carefully monitor and adjust any program,” he stated.
Bullard said the FOMC could use the promised date of the rst interest rate increase,
which is the so-called communications tool, as the primary policy tool during the
upcoming period of near-zero policy rates. According to some models, he said, the
Committee could in uence nancial market conditions and provide monetary
accommodation by shifting the promised date. He noted that while the
communications tool may work inside models, it has some important caveats for the
application of policy. For example, he said it is not clear how credible the
announcements would be. “If the economy is actually performing quite well at the
point in the future where the promise begins to bite, then the Committee may simply
abandon the promise and return to normal policy,” he said. “But this behavior, if
understood by markets, would cancel out the initial effects of the promise, and so
nothing would be accomplished by making the initial promise.”
Bullard talked about another drawback to the communications tool, which he also
discussed in his paper, “Seven Faces of ‘The Peril,’” published in 2010. “Simply
promising to keep the policy rate near-zero for longer and longer periods of time may
encourage a Japanese-style outcome in which the policy rate simply remains near zero
and markets come to expect a mild rate of de ation,” he said. “This possibility has
clear support in the theoretical literature but is too often ignored in policy discussions.”
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2011, September 25). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110926_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110926_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110926_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}