speeches · September 29, 2011
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses U.S Monetary Policy at a
Crossroads
9/30/2011
SAN DIEGO, Calif. – On Friday, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James
Bullard delivered remarks titled “U.S. Monetary Policy at Another Crossroads” at the
2011 “Dealmakers of the Year” Business Breakfast, hosted by Point Loma Nazarene
University’s Fermanian Business & Economic Institute.
Bullard talked about the weaker-than-expected recovery, noting that U.S. economic
growth is sluggish and that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has warned
about “substantial downside risks.” He said that monetary policy will respond should
economic performance deteriorate, adding that “the Fed has potent tools at its disposal
and is not now, or ever, ‘out of ammunition’.”
Bullard offered three guidelines for conducting an effective, systematic, countercyclical
monetary policy during this period of near-zero nominal interest rates. First, he said,
“Going forward, policy should strive to be more rules-based and less discretionary than
it has been in the last three years.” Second, he said that monetary policy can affect the
economy through in ation and expected in ation, which would affect real interest
rates. The FOMC could in uence expected in ation via outright asset purchases, he
explained, adding that a “meeting-by-meeting approach would allow the Committee to
carefully monitor and adjust any program.” Third, he said the FOMC should remain
aware of the Japanese example, whereby relying solely on promises of low policy rates
for longer and longer periods of time may be a path to a Japanese-style outcome, and
thus, may be counterproductive. In addition, he said that tying a promise of low policy
rates to unemployment outcomes, for example, could pull monetary policy off course
for decades.
Sluggish Economic Growth
Bullard noted that while the pace of economic recovery has been disappointing, most
components of real GDP, such as real consumption expenditures, have recovered to or
beyond their levels in the fourth quarter of 2007. Investment, however, remains about
16 percent below its 2007 Q4 level, in large part because of weakness in residential
investment and investment in nonresidential structures. “This looks like a collapsed
real estate bubble,” Bullard said. He added that if the investment component of GDP
had recovered to the extent that consumption has recovered, GDP would be an
estimated 4.2 percent higher. However, 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.”
Bullard said that he still expects modest and improving economic growth over the next
year, although the current sluggish growth does leave the U.S. economy vulnerable to
further negative shocks. He stated that monetary policy would need to respond
appropriately should further weakness in the economy develop. He stressed that
although the FOMC cannot currently operate through its preferred channel—that is,
short-term nominal interest rates—the Committee still has tools that it can use should
further monetary policy action be warranted. He then discussed some guidelines
concerning monetary policy going forward in this period of near-zero interest rates.
Embrace Rule-Like Behavior
Bullard said that most of the monetary policy actions pursued during the period of nearzero nominal interest rates have not been consistent with notions of optimal policy
developed over the past several decades. Instead, he noted, recent actions have been
characterized by one-time policy announcements with xed end dates. To be sure,
most of the economic literature from the past 30 years has emphasized that “a policy is
not a one-time action but a rule mapping economic circumstances into changes in the
policy instrument both today and in the future,” he said.
“The Committee in the past did not contemplate announcing several hundred basis
point interest rate moves with a xed end date. Yet that is how the Committee behaves
today,” Bullard said. He further explained that instead, the Committee adjusted the
policy rate meeting-by-meeting in reaction to economic events and also announced a
continuation value, or bias, concerning future policy announcements—an approach that
he said served the FOMC well for decades.
In today’s environment, Bullard said that “the Committee can still control in ation
through an appropriate balance sheet policy,” and the principle of adjusting policy
meeting-by-meeting applies here as well. “A meeting-by-meeting balance sheet policy
constitutes a rules-based policy because the Committee would make adjustments in
response to economic events, just as in the interest rate targeting world,” Bullard said.
In contrast, the policy approach in recent years—announcing large dollar amounts, xed
end dates and rapidly changing tactics—seems fairly discretionary, he stated.
“Returning to a more rules-based approach may provide needed stability to the U.S.
macroeconomy.”
Monetary Policy Transmission
With nominal interest rates so close to zero, Bullard said that monetary policy can be
transmitted through in ation and expected in ation. When the policy rate is near zero,
higher expected in ation leads to lower real interest rates. He noted that a monetary
authority’s outright purchases of government debt are considered in ationary, and this
is supported by international evidence throughout history. “This channel can be used to
help keep in ation near target during the current unusual circumstance, and to help
provide some support to the nation’s economic recovery,” he said.
Bullard stressed that “outright 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. (For evidence of the effectiveness of the FOMC’s second large-scale asset
purchases program, see Bullard’s recent commentary.) Thus, for this policy, he said
that “the Committee still has to judge tradeoffs between in ation and support for the
recovery.”
Some Alternative Approaches
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. Despite clear support for
this possibility in both the theoretical literature and the Japanese data, Bullard stated
that it continues to be ignored too often in policy discussions.
Another option to the communications tool would be for the FOMC to tie a promise of
near-zero policy rates to actual economic outcomes, such as the unemployment rate,
Bullard said. However, he noted that some advanced economies have experienced the
situation where unemployment rose and stayed high; this has occurred in Europe during
the past 30 years, for example. “If such an outcome happened in the U.S., and
monetary policy was explicitly tied to unemployment outcomes, monetary policy could
be pulled off course for a generation,” he stated.
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2011, September 29). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110930_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110930_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110930_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}