speeches · November 14, 2011
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
Search Site
Home > Newsroom >
St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses U.S. Economy and Monetary
Policy
11/15/2011
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard delivered
remarks titled “The U.S. Macroeconomic Situation and Monetary Policy” on Tuesday at
an event sponsored by the CFA Society of St. Louis.
Regarding the macroeconomic outlook, Bullard said the U.S. economy has avoided the
“recession scare” of August. “Despite drops in con dence, hard data on the U.S.
economy continues to show moderate growth,” he said. Bullard noted that the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC) in recent months has warned about “substantial
downside risks,” mostly coming from Europe. If the European situation worsens, he
said, the Fed can re-open some of the liquidity facilities used during 2008-2009.
During his discussion on monetary policy, Bullard said that “outright asset purchases
are a potent tool and must be employed carefully.” He also talked about the Fed’s
communications tool and the idea of tying a promise of near-zero policy rates to a
numerical unemployment outcome. “Tying monetary policy directly to the level of
unemployment is unwise,” he concluded.
The Recession Scare
Bullard noted that in August 2011, forecasters marked up the probability of a U.S.
recession occurring in the second half of the year. He attributed most of this to the
July 29 gross domestic product (GDP) report, which included downward revisions to
recent GDP data.
While the debt ceiling debate and the European sovereign debt crisis have lowered
consumer and business con dence, Bullard said that household and business behavior
did not change enough to validate the recession predictions. He explained that Europe
is generally viewed as too distant to force a major change in households’ behavior, and
large businesses tend to have growth strategies in Asia rather than Europe.
The European Situation
In regard to the European situation, Bullard said that “events in Europe pit a slowmoving political process against a fast-moving nancial crisis.” While “results are
unpredictable at this point,” he said, “European leaders tend to be very supportive of
keeping the ‘European Project’ of ever-greater European integration moving forward.”
Recent Monetary Policy
While outright asset purchases are a potent monetary policy tool, Bullard said they
must be used carefully because “increases in the size of the balance sheet entail
additional in ationary risks if accommodation is not removed at an appropriate pace.”
He noted that in ation and in ation expectations rose during the past year, despite
many measures of economic performance indicating a relatively weak economy. “With
the policy rate at zero, this means real short-term rates have declined,” he said. (For
evidence of the effectiveness of the FOMC’s second large-scale asset purchases
program, see Bullard’s recent commentary.)
Bullard said that “a meeting-by-meeting balance sheet policy constitutes a rules-based
approach because the Committee would make adjustments in response to economic
events, just as in the interest rate targeting world.” In contrast, he said, “the policy
approach of the last several years, with announcements of large dollar amounts, xed
end dates, and rapidly changing tactics, seems fairly discretionary.”
Alternative Approaches
Should further monetary accommodation be necessary, 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 nearzero policy rates. He noted that while shifting the promised date in order to in uence
nancial market conditions may work inside some models, this tool has some
important caveats for the application of policy.
For example, Bullard said it is not clear how credible the announcements would be.
Non-credible announcements would simply “fall at,” he added. “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 also discussed two possible alternatives to in ation targeting—targeting the
price level and targeting the level of nominal income. He said that according to some
literature, price-level targeting would provide better outcomes than in ation targeting.
Targeting the level of nominal income is an older idea, he stated. Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke has said the FOMC would continue using its exible in ation targeting
framework, Bullard noted.
Another policy option would be for the FOMC to tie a promise of near-zero policy rates
to actual economic outcomes, such as a numerical unemployment outcome, Bullard
said. However, he noted that most proposals for using this tool tie monetary policy to
an actual unemployment rate but an anticipated in ation rate. “This asymmetry is hard
to justify,” Bullard explained.
Furthermore, “unemployment rates have a checkered history in advanced economies
over the last several decades,” Bullard said. He cited the example of Europe, where
unemployment rose and has simply remained high during the past 30 years. “If such an
outcome happened in the U.S. and monetary policy was tied to a numerical
unemployment outcome, monetary policy could be pulled off course for a generation,”
he said.
Bullard noted that labor market policies (e.g., unemployment insurance, worker
retraining) have direct effects on the unemployed. In contrast, he said, “monetary policy
is a blunt instrument which affects the decision-making of everyone in the economy.”
In particular, low interest rates hurt savers, he stated. “It may be better to focus on
labor market policies to address unemployment instead of monetary policy.”
GENERAL
Home
About Us
Bank Supervision
Careers
Community Development
Economic Education
Events
Inside the Economy Museum
Newsroom
On the Economy Blog
Open Vault Blog
OUR DISTRICT
Little Rock Branch
Louisville Branch
Memphis Branch
Agricultural Finance Monitor
Housing Market Conditions
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Bridges
Economic Synopses
Housing Market Perspectives
In the Balance
Page One Economics
The Quarterly Debt Monitor
Review
Regional Economist
ST. LOUIS FED PRESIDENT
James Bullard's Website
INITIATIVES
Center for Household Financial Stability
Dialogue with the Fed
Federal Banking Regulations
FOMC Speak
In Plain English - Making Sense of the Federal Reserve
Timely Topics Podcasts and Videos
DATA AND INFORMATION SERVICES
CASSIDI®
FRASER®
FRED®
FRED® Blog
GeoFRED®
IDEAS
FOLLOW THE FED
Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Google Plus
Email Subscriptions
RSS
CONTACT US
|
LEGAL INFORMATION
|
PRIVACY NOTICE & POLICY
|
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ONLINE
Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2011, November 14). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20111115_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20111115_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20111115_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}