speeches · September 28, 2011
Regional President Speech
Charles I. Plosser · President
Economic Outlook
Business Leaders Forum
Villanova School of Business
September 29, 2011
Charles I. Plosser
President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Economic Outlook
Business Leaders Forum
Villanova School of Business
September 29, 2011
Charles I. Plosser
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good morning. Thank you for the opportunity to be here at the Villanova School of Business to
address this second annual Business Leaders Forum.
As leaders engaged in our business community, you are all aware of the painfully protracted
pace of our economic recovery. I have been saying for quite some time that this was going to be
a long, slow recovery. Moreover, this frustrating state of affairs continues despite
extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy.
In my remarks today, I will discuss my outlook for the U.S. economy, as well as my views on the
appropriate current and future monetary policy. As always, my remarks reflect my own views
and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Board or my colleagues on
the Federal Open Market Committee.
Economic Outlook
Let me begin with an update on the U.S. economy. Clearly, this year has not played out as
almost anyone forecasted. Indeed, from the revisions to the government’s economic data in
July, we now know that the recession was deeper and the recovery was weaker than we had
previously thought. Some of this year’s weakness is understandable. We began the year with
severe snowstorms in the East, then the earthquake and ensuing disasters in Japan, followed by
the unrest in the Middle East and North Africa and the run-up in oil prices, and a lingering
concern about sovereign debt in Europe. And all of that occurred before May.
With the arrival of summer, we faced another round of problems with the worsening of the
European sovereign debt crisis, as well as our own fracas on fiscal policy and the debt ceiling
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debates in Washington. These events all weighed heavily on business and consumer
confidence.
While many of these factors are transitory, and each will wane eventually, the cumulative effect
has served to feed uncertainty and inhibit growth.
Indeed, growth in the first half of 2011 was much weaker than anticipated. In light of this
performance most forecasters have revised down their forecasts for overall growth in 2011.
Indeed, at the beginning of the year, I was expecting GDP growth in 2011 to be 3 to 3.5 percent.
Now, I expect GDP growth to be less than 2 percent in 2011, but to gradually accelerate to
around 3 percent in 2012.
Although the downside risks around this forecast are significant, I do not believe the current
data signal that we are on the precipice of a so-called double-dip recession. Indeed, many of my
business contacts suggest that while growth is very sluggish and uneven, they do not see the
precipitous declines that the news headlines suggest.
Instead, their stories are consistent with a slow recovery due to the very nature of the recession
from which we have emerged. The financial crisis was a severe shock that impacted many
economies around the world and led to a recession of great depth and structural imbalances.
Some sectors, such as financial services and construction, may never return to their pre-
recession shares of our economy. The aftermath of the financial stress and the weak housing
sector will weigh on the pace of recovery for some time to come.
Consumer and Business Spending
One of the more striking aspects of this recession is the continued weakness in consumer
spending. While there were modest increases last year, spending decelerated notably over the
first half of the year. Partly this reflects the effect of higher oil prices we saw earlier in the year.
Partly it reflects the continued deleveraging of the household balance sheet, as consumers pay
down debt and work to rebuild their net worth. Most observers agree that weak income growth
and falling house prices are restraining spending and we are unlikely to see strong consumer
spending as long as we face a depressed housing market and a weak labor market.
Another way to view weak consumption is to note that households are continuing to restructure
their balance sheets – saving more and consuming less. This is a perfectly natural and rational
reaction to events. Until these households perceive that they have restored a balance to their
long-run consumption and saving patterns commensurate with their earnings profile, they will
not increase spending. Moreover, the more uncertain they are about their own earning power,
the more reluctant households will be to increase spending and the more they will feel the need
to build up their savings.
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A brighter spot has been business investment spending, which has been supported by solid
growth in corporate earnings. Looking through the month-to-month volatility, spending on
equipment and software has continued to expand.
Indicators from business surveys, including the Philadelphia Fed’s Business Outlook Survey of
manufacturers, suggest some weakening in conditions, although it is too soon to tell whether
this will be persistent.
Many have taken note of the weakness in our monthly survey, since it has proven to be a useful
gauge for national trends in manufacturing. In August and September, the measures of current
activity were negative. But our polling in August coincided with market volatility in the
aftermath of Standard & Poor’s downgrade of U.S. debt. Measures of future activity have
remained positive, and September was stronger than August, suggesting that firms expect
activity to pick up over the next six months.
Recent volatility in financial markets has contributed to sharp declines in business and consumer
sentiment. But with a high degree of uncertainty over future taxes, regulations, and the
financial ramifications of the European sovereign debt situation, it is no wonder that sentiment
is flagging and this decline poses added risk to the growth forecast.
Labor Markets
Conditions in labor markets remain a serious challenge. Given the weak growth so far this year,
we have not made even the modest progress on reducing unemployment rates that forecasters
anticipated. Most recently, nonfarm payroll employment was flat in August, and the
unemployment rate remained at 9.1 percent. Private payrolls added just 17,000 jobs, far below
what we will need to see just to keep pace with changes in the labor force. Ongoing budget
pressures faced by state and local governments have led to cuts in public payrolls.
These numbers are troubling, especially when more than 40 percent of the unemployed, or
some 6 million people, have been out of work for 27 weeks or longer. This underscores that we
should not expect any easy solution. Millions of unemployed workers may take longer to find
jobs because their skills have depreciated or they may need to seek employment in other
sectors. These structural issues will take time to resolve. Jobs and workers will need to be
reallocated across the economy, which is a long and slow process.
Thus, while I expect a moderate recovery to continue and to strengthen over time, I expect to
see only modest declines in the unemployment rate, with probably little change over the rest of
this year, and then falling to a range of 8 to 8½ percent by the end of 2012.
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Inflation
Let me now turn to my outlook for inflation. Just as growth has been weaker this year than
many forecasters had anticipated, inflation has been higher than expected. Monthly changes in
inflation have moderated slightly from those seen earlier in the year when the prices of many
commodities, including oil, were rising sharply. However, measured on a year-over-year basis,
both total inflation and core inflation continue to advance. I do anticipate that with many
commodity prices now leveling off or falling, and inflation expectations relatively stable,
inflation will moderate in the near term.
However, we must continue to monitor this situation, particularly in this environment of very
accommodative monetary policy. Indeed, it is good to remember that the current inflationary
environment is quite different from the one we faced a year ago when we embarked on the so-
called QE2 policy to purchase $600 billion of long-term U.S. Treasuries. At the time, there were
concerns about deflation, whereas now inflation is running above our long-run goal. I would
also note that unemployment was higher last fall than it is today. Thus, with inflation higher and
unemployment lower, it is appropriate to ask what criteria we are using to justify further
accommodation. In this environment, I think it is very important that we refrain from actions
that risk fueling a steady rise in inflation or inflation expectations over the medium term. We
must not become too sanguine that high unemployment will lead to low inflation. The lesson of
the 1970s is clear – high unemployment or low resource utilization is not sufficient to prevent
high rates of inflation. The current environment in the U.K. should also be a warning. The
unemployment rate in Britain is near 8 percent, having risen sharply during its recession, yet
inflation is now approaching 5 percent and has been steadily rising for nearly two years.
Monetary Policy
This brings me to a discussion of the recent policy actions the Fed has taken, why I dissented
from these actions in August and September, and what I believe should be the long-term view of
monetary policy.
As I noted at the beginning of my remarks, the economic conditions of the past few years have
led to extraordinary monetary policy accommodation. To date, our actions have led to a level of
the federal funds rate — the traditional instrument of monetary policy — that has been near
zero for almost three years. The Fed’s balance sheet has grown more than threefold, from
nearly $900 billion before the crisis to about $2.9 trillion today, and its asset composition has
shifted significantly from mostly short- to medium-term Treasuries to longer-term Treasuries,
mortgage-backed securities, and agency debt. This extraordinary degree of monetary
accommodation has played a role in supporting the recovery thus far, and it continues to do so.
In August, the FOMC changed its guidance about its expectations for the future path of the
federal funds rate. In particular, it stated that economic conditions were “likely to warrant
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exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.” At its meeting
last week, the FOMC announced additional accommodative action. In an effort to reduce long-
term Treasury yields from already historically low levels, the FOMC intends to purchase $400
billion of longer-term Treasury securities and to sell an equal amount of shorter-term Treasuries
by the end of June 2012. This action will not increase the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, but it
will lengthen the maturity of the Fed’s holdings. In addition, the FOMC will be reinvesting
principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in
mortgage-backed securities rather than Treasuries. This action was intended to help support
mortgage markets.
I dissented from these decisions because I believe that they will do little to improve the near-
term prospects for economic growth or employment and they do pose risks. Policy actions
should never be considered free and should be evaluated based on the costs and benefits.
Based on our experience with Operation Twist in the 1960s and with last year’s QE2, the
reduction in long-term rates is likely to be less than 20 basis points for the 10-year Treasury
yield, which is currently only 2 percent. The pass-through to the rates at which consumers and
businesses actually borrow is likely to be much less. Thus, I am skeptical that this will do much
to spur businesses to hire or consumers to spend, given the ongoing structural adjustments
occurring in the economy and the uncertainties posed by the fiscal challenges both here and
abroad.
In addition to having little effect, the actions come with significant potential costs. We have
provided a great deal of monetary accommodation to the economy, and given the stubbornness
of the unemployment rate in responding to these efforts, we should be cautious and vigilant
that our previous accommodative policies do not translate into a steady rise in inflation over the
medium term even while the unemployment rate remains elevated. Creating an environment
of stagflation, reminiscent of the 1970s, will not help businesses, the unemployed, or the
consumer. It is an outcome we must carefully guard against.
We also need to ensure that Fed policy remains credible. In my view, the actions taken in
August and September tend to undermine the Fed’s credibility by giving the impression that we
think such policies can have a major impact on the speed of the recovery. It is my assessment
that they will not. We should not take certain actions simply because we can. To address our
economic ills we must apply the appropriate remedies. A doctor who misdiagnoses a disease
and prescribes the wrong medicine can make the patient worse. The ills we currently face are
not readily resolved through ever more accommodative monetary policy. If we act as if the Fed
has the ability to solve all our economic problems, the credibility of the institution is
undermined. The loss of that credibility and confidence could be costly to the economy because
it will make it much harder for the Fed to implement effective monetary policy in the future.
Credibility was also at the center of my opposition to changing the forward policy guidance in
August. I was concerned that tying monetary policy to calendar time could be misinterpreted by
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the public as suggesting that monetary policy is no longer contingent on how the economic
outlook evolves. This could also lead to a loss of credibility should economic conditions develop
in a way that requires the federal funds rate to be adjusted prior to mid-2013. And in my view,
given the outlook, economic conditions will likely warrant that the Fed begin to raise rates
before that time.
Finally, the actions taken at our last meeting will make our exit from this period of extraordinary
accommodation more complicated. We will have more long-term Treasury securities and more
mortgage-backed securities in our portfolio, which may extend the time it will take to withdraw
from allocating credit to particular sectors of the economy and return to our stated goal of an
all-Treasuries portfolio.
This does not mean that I see no circumstances in which further monetary policy action should
be taken. Should the developments in the euro area lead to significant financial market
disruptions, the Fed would need to respond in its role of lender of last resort to support financial
stability and the payments system. Or if deflationary fears were to become a real threat again
and we saw signs that the economy was moving to a sustained disinflation with declining
inflation rates and inflation expectations, then we would need to consider further action to
stabilize inflation expectations. I do not see either of these scenarios in my forecast, so I do not
anticipate that further accommodative monetary policy actions will need to be taken.
An Explicit Numerical Objective for Inflation
The past three years have proven to be challenging times for monetary policymakers. We
entered unprecedented territory as we employed new policy tools to stem the financial crisis
and limit the damage to the economy from the severe economic recession. There was no
established framework for making policy decisions in such an environment, and that added to
the difficulties in determining appropriate policy. It also created difficulties for the Fed’s
communications. In my view, a high priority for the Fed must be to strengthen our monetary
policy framework and articulate that framework to the public so that they will better
understand the basis for our decisions and be better able to formulate expectations of future
policy actions.
An important first step in that direction is for the Federal Reserve to adopt an explicit numerical
objective for inflation. The explicit inflation goal would help to anchor inflation expectations,
raise policy transparency, and increase the central bank’s accountability for its actions. There is
considerable evidence that countries that have adopted such an objective as a cornerstone of
their monetary policy decision-making have had more success at achieving price stability
without any deterioration in the stability of real activity. In the United States, Congress has
given the Fed a mandate to promote the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and
moderate long-term interest rates. Price stability is the most effective way for monetary policy
to promote the other two goals. Thus, by helping the Fed achieve and maintain price stability,
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an explicit inflation objective would help the Fed promote all three of the goals set forth by
Congress.
For nearly 20 years, I have advocated that the Fed make explicit its commitment to a numerical
inflation objective in support of its full mandate. I believe that now is an opportune time to do
so.
First, it will increase the credibility of our commitment to keeping prices stable even as we
employ new, less familiar policy tools.
Second, we are confronting an environment where some may be questioning the ability or
resolve of the government to address our long-run fiscal problems. In such an atmosphere of
uncertainty, being explicit about our inflation goal will underscore the Fed’s commitment not to
succumb to external pressures to use inflation as a solution to the country’s long-run deficit
problem. This will help anchor inflation expectations, which is critical because an undesirable
rise or fall in inflationary expectations can generate a self-fulfilling mechanism. Should inflation
expectations become unhinged, it would be difficult and costly for the monetary authority to re-
establish price stability.
Third, communicating an explicit inflation objective will clarify the Fed’s intentions regarding the
level of inflation it considers consistent with its mandate. Some economists have suggested that
raising our inflation goal above 2 percent would be an effective tool for lowering real interest
rates. I am very wary of such a strategy because I don’t believe we can control inflation
expectations that precisely. It is at least questionable whether we could credibly raise inflation
expectations. And were we able to do so, how easily would we be able to bring them back
down? Trying to manipulate the public’s expectations may risk undermining the Fed’s credibility
and the public’s confidence in the institution.
Fourth, we eventually will need to normalize our monetary policy and exit this period of
extraordinary accommodation. Having an explicit inflation objective will help us maintain our
commitment to price stability while we do that and increase the credibility of that commitment
in the eyes of the public.
As business leaders, you understand the importance of credibility in your own institutions. An
institution's reputation is built on its credibility for fulfilling its commitments. Once that
foundation is compromised, it is very difficult to rebuild. The Fed must do all it can to preserve
its hard-earned credibility. I believe an explicit inflation goal can help us do that.
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Conclusion
In summary, the U.S. economic recovery will continue and gradually strengthen over time. I
expect annual growth of less than 2 percent this year to gradually accelerate to around 3
percent next year. As the economy strengthens, prospects for labor markets will continue to
improve and the unemployment rate will gradually decline.
As we move forward in this time of change, the Federal Reserve remains committed to its long-
run statutory goals of price stability and maximum employment. We remain vigilant on inflation
and committed to clear communication of our monetary policy. I believe that this
communication, and our accountability to the public, could be greatly enhanced were the Fed to
adopt an explicit numerical inflation goal. Having such an objective in place would prove
particularly useful in the current environment in which the Fed is providing monetary stimulus
using new tools that are not as familiar to the public and the markets. It will also help at a time
when some may view the fiscal situation as threatening the independence of monetary policy.
And it will help in the future, during the eventual exit from these extraordinarily accommodative
measures.
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Cite this document
APA
Charles I. Plosser (2011, September 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110929_charles_i_plosser
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110929_charles_i_plosser,
author = {Charles I. Plosser},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110929_charles_i_plosser},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}