speeches · February 28, 2012
Regional President Speech
Charles I. Plosser · President
A Progress Report on Our
Monetary Policy Framework
Forecasters Club
New York, New York
February 29, 2012
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.
A Progress Report on Our Monetary Policy Framework
Forecasters Club
New York, New York
February 29, 2012
Charles I. Plosser
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Introduction
I am pleased to be here today, and I will do my best to avoid all the hackneyed forecaster jokes. I am
sure you have heard them all anyway. I will simply note that I have often said that forecasting can be a
humbling experience in the best of times but I have learned some lessons along the way. For example,
one Thursday morning not long ago, a reporter asked me what I thought the monthly employment
numbers would show when they were released the next day. I responded that I had been around long
enough to learn never to predict anything about which I can be proven right or wrong within a week and
certainly not within 24 hours. It simply doesn’t pay.
So, in lieu of a typical forecasting speech today, I would like to discuss the recent steps taken by the
Federal Reserve to improve the transparency of monetary policy. These important initiatives are
intended to increase the effectiveness of monetary policy as well as the accountability of our central
bank.
Over the last few years, I have spoken frequently about the need to improve transparency and to bring
our monetary policy framework into the 21st century.1 In my view, there are four interrelated
dimensions to a stronger monetary policy framework. The first is to ensure that the central bank
commits to a set of clearly articulated objectives that can be feasibly achieved by monetary policy. The
second element requires the central bank to be transparent and clear in its communications. The third
element, related to the second, is for the central bank to conduct monetary policy in a systematic or
1 See Plosser (2010) and (2011), among others. As always, these views are my own and not necessarily those of
the Federal Reserve Board or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
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rule‐like manner.2 The fourth element, and arguably the most important, is for the central bank to set
monetary policy independently from the fiscal authorities.
As many of you know, last year Chairman Bernanke asked Governor Yellen, Governor Raskin, Chicago
Fed President Evans, and me to serve on a subcommittee whose task was to develop recommendations
to improve the Federal Open Market Committee’s communications. In January, the FOMC adopted two
initiatives brought forward by the subcommittee.
I want to review these initiatives today and how they relate to my broader views on a stronger
monetary policy framework. Of course, improving policy transparency will always be a work in progress.
So, I will also talk about additional steps I believe we could take to further improve our framework for
conducting policy.
Statement of Principles
The first communications initiative adopted by the FOMC was to issue a consensus statement of
principles about its long‐run policy goals and objectives. The statement makes four very significant
points in clarifying our policy objectives.
First, the statement reaffirms the Committee’s commitment to its congressional mandate to promote
“maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long‐term interest rates.”
More important, the statement gives texture to those objectives in a way never before articulated. In
particular, the statement’s second significant point stresses that inflation over the longer run is mainly
determined by monetary policy. In this sense, the FOMC acknowledges what every economist has
known for over two centuries: inflation is a monetary phenomenon. Therefore, it is both appropriate
and feasible for the monetary authority to set an inflation goal and be held accountable for achieving it.
The Committee, therefore, adopted a long‐term inflation goal of 2 percent, as measured by the annual
change in the price index for personal consumption expenditures. By establishing an explicit inflation
target, the Federal Reserve is adopting a practice used by most major central banks around the world
and one that is acknowledged as a best practice by academics and central bankers.
2 See Dotsey and Plosser (2012) and Plosser (2008).
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A third important point made in the statement is that it is not appropriate for the central bank to set an
explicit numerical goal for the maximum employment part of our mandate. Maximum employment is
mainly determined by nonmonetary factors, such as demographics, technological change and
productivity, the structure of the labor market, and governmental policies – for example, minimum
wage laws, unemployment benefits, retirement incentives, and taxes. Since these factors change over
time, the concept of maximum employment can also change over time. While policymakers consider a
wide range of indicators to assess employment, the value of such indicators is subject to considerable
uncertainty. Economists, for example, can, and often do, have very different assessments of what the
level of maximum employment is at any point in time. This arises because different models suggest
different conceptual definitions, most of which are not directly observable. So, monetary policy should
not seek to achieve an explicit objective for something it does not directly control and cannot accurately
measure.
Fourth, the statement notes that, in general, price stability and maximum employment are
complementary. Price stability promotes economic efficiency by giving individuals and businesses more
confidence that the purchasing power of the dollar will not erode. Conversely, the failure to maintain
price stability can often lead to greater instability in employment and output. When inflation rises to
unacceptable levels, as it did in the 1970s, monetary policy will be forced to react to restore price
stability. This, in turn, could lead to increased instability in employment and output, as it did in the
recession in the early 1980s. But the FOMC’s consensus statement of principles also acknowledges that
in the short run, the maximum employment and price stability parts of the Fed’s mandate could be in
conflict. In such circumstances, monetary policy will seek to follow a balanced approach in promoting its
statutory mandate.
The consensus statement does not provide answers for all the hard policy choices. How best to
implement this balanced approach requires judgment and may well differ across policymakers who may
have different models of the economy even as they work to promote the same long‐term goals for
monetary policy.
Improvements in the Summary of Economic Projections
The second important step the Committee took in January toward increased transparency involved the
economic projections that the FOMC releases four times a year. The Summary of Economic Projections,
or SEP for short, summarizes the individual FOMC policymakers’ views on the economy as reflected in
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several key economic variables, including output, inflation, and unemployment. Yet, these projections
are not forecasts in the usual sense. Each policymaker’s projections are conditioned on the
policymaker’s assessment of “appropriate policy,” that is, the policy path that he or she views as the
most likely to yield the best outcomes for the economy in the absence of further shocks.
This policy path isn’t necessarily the most likely path; instead, it is the path viewed as being the best
policy. Thus, the projections should not be compared with the forecasts of private‐sector forecasters
who try to predict what the Fed’s next move might be. Instead, each policymaker makes economic
projections based on an assessment of the best policy path to achieve the most desirable outcomes.
Until January, the SEP did not reveal any information about the appropriate paths assumed by the
participants. This lack of information about the underlying policy assumptions made it difficult to know
what the SEP represented. For example, two participants may be projecting the same long‐run inflation
rate, but they may believe it will take very different policy paths to achieve that outcome.
Other central banks, such as those of Norway, Sweden, and New Zealand, have provided information
about the assumed path of policy. In January, the Fed joined them and began releasing information on
the underlying policy paths assumed by the participants in their economic projections. These policy
paths are summarized in two charts. The most important chart displays the level of the federal funds
rate assumed by each participant at the end of each calendar year for three years out and for the longer
run. This information provides a useful picture of the range of views of future policy assumed by
policymakers. Note once again that these are assumptions, not forecasts in the usual sense. For
example, I might submit a very different projection of inflation rates if I were asked to use someone
else’s policy path or even the policy path implicitly assumed in the fed funds futures market.
It is also important to emphasize that these policy assessments do not constitute a commitment to
follow a particular path but will evolve as economic conditions evolve. In fact, I believe that changes in
this chart over time will prove to be a far better way to provide information about the path of policy
than using calendar dates, as we are currently doing in our FOMC statements. Policy should be
conditioned on the state of the economy, not the calendar. Observers watching how these policy paths
evolve as the economy improves are likely to learn more about the timing and magnitude of future
policy actions. This then will reveal more about the policymakers’ reaction function, on which I will have
more to say in a moment.
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From my perspective, our actions in January were important steps forward. We clarified our goals and
objectives, and we became more transparent about our views of future policy.
More to Do
Of course, as I mentioned at the outset, improving the transparency of our communications and
strengthening our policy framework is a work in progress. More can be done.
First, as a way to increase transparency, I believe the SEP should include more information about the
linkages among the economic variables and the associated policy paths. Even with the recent
improvements, the public cannot link a policy path to a particular set of projections for output, inflation,
and unemployment in the SEP. That is only possible when individual policymakers choose to reveal such
information in their speeches and other public communications. A natural next step would be to include
a matrix of output, inflation, and unemployment, and the associated policy path assumptions that each
policymaker submitted. This would make the information in the SEP easier to interpret and give a better
sense of the linkage between changes in economic conditions and policy.
Second, I believe the Federal Reserve should do a more comprehensive monetary policy report four
times a year. Currently, the Chairman testifies before Congress twice a year – in fact, he is doing so
today – and that testimony is accompanied by a written report. In addition, the Chairman holds press
briefings four times a year to summarize the SEP. I think there is an opportunity to combine these
efforts in a more comprehensive report on monetary policy. Most central banks that have adopted an
inflation target have also sought to improve communication and transparency through the publication
of a regular policy report. In the U.K., for example, the Bank of England issues a quarterly Inflation
Report. Other countries produce a Monetary Policy Report that discusses the central bank’s forecasts
and the longer‐term context of policy. These reports offer an opportunity to reinforce the underlying
framework the central bank has adopted for the conduct of policy. I think the Fed should consider
producing a similar report to elaborate and reinforce its policy framework and how it relates to
economic conditions. These reports will help improve the public’s understanding of policy, which will
help make policy more effective and the central bank more accountable.
Third, I believe the FOMC should adopt clearer guidelines on how policy evolves with economic
conditions. The better the public and the markets understand how policy is likely to be adjusted as the
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economy changes, the more predictable policy becomes, which promotes price stability and better
economic outcomes.
The history of U.S. monetary policy is filled with stops and starts and changes in direction, yet the Fed
has communicated little about what drives those decisions. Indeed, historically, central bankers have
tended not to reveal such information, since they preferred discretionary policy over systematic policy.
Of course, policymakers do not know with any degree of certainty how economic conditions will evolve.
So they cannot and should not say with any certainty what policy will be in the future. But policymakers
can provide information about the factors that will influence their policy decisions. Some call this a
policy rule. Milton Friedman advocated a rule in the form of a k‐percent growth rate of the money
supply. John Taylor devised a rule that depends on a measure of inflation relative to a target and some
measure of resource utilization. Other versions of the Taylor rule involve a degree of smoothing to
minimize sharp swings in the policy rate. A policy rule is also called a reaction function or response
function because it describes how policy will evolve as key economic conditions evolve.
I believe that the Fed should provide more information about its reaction function. The practice of using
systematic rules as guides to monetary policy imposes an important discipline on policymaking and
improves communication and transparency. This is because systematic rules make policy more
predictable and therefore helps the public and markets make better decisions. Moreover, if
policymakers choose to deviate from the guidelines, they are forced to explain why and how they
anticipate returning to normal operating practices. Systematic policy also reduces the temptation to
engage in discretionary policies.
I believe the Committee is still some way from agreeing on one systematic policy rule or reaction
function. Such choices will involve elaborate discussions and agreement on the appropriate class of
models and an agreed‐upon loss function. One way to move toward more systematic policy would be
to describe the variables that are important for our response function. The academic literature suggests
using rules that respond aggressively to deviations of inflation from the central bank’s target and less
aggressively to deviations of output from some concept of “potential output.” Research has found that
such rules perform fairly well in a variety of models and frameworks.3
3 See Orphanides and Williams (2002).
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Thus, it is reasonable and feasible for the Fed to describe policy in terms of the variables in a rule that is
robust across models. We would not have to articulate a precise mathematical rule but would provide
the key variables and then communicate policy decisions in terms of changes in these key variables. If
policy were changed, then we would explain that change based on how the variables in our response
function have changed. If we choose a consistent set of variables and systematically use them to
describe our policy choices, the public will have a greater ability to form judgments about the likely
course of policy. This would reduce uncertainty about policy and promote stability.
There is one more item on my list of things to do. At the beginning of my remarks, I stressed the
importance of maintaining the independence of the central bank. That independence is now under
attack. Last week, I gave a speech on the fraying boundaries between monetary and fiscal policy.4 I
noted that while monetary policy and fiscal policy are intertwined through the government’s budget
constraint, there are good reasons to maintain clear boundaries between the two. Specifically, in a
world where fiscal discipline is lacking, governments without the institutional or constitutional
guarantees of an independent central bank often resort to money creation as a solution to fiscal
problems. This, of course, is a recipe for high rates of inflation and, in the extreme, hyperinflation. For
this reason, countries throughout the world have moved over the last 60 years to strengthen the
independence of their central banks. It is simply good governance to keep a healthy degree of
separation between those responsible for tax and spending policies and those responsible for monetary
creation.
The pressure on independence stems, in part, from fiscal imbalances and the inability of governments to
develop credible and sustainable plans to finance public expenditures. In turn, the pressure can
manifest itself in calls for higher inflation or for central banks to act as lenders of last resort for failing
governments. Yet central banks have also contributed to the breakdown of the boundaries by engaging
in credit allocations to particular sectors, such as housing, and bailouts to particular firms, such as Bear
Sterns. Thus, the fiscal authorities and supposedly independent central banks have acted in ways that
undermine central bank independence. I believe this is a dangerous path and one that needs to be
changed. We need to restore the boundaries.
4 See Plosser (2012).
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Conclusions
To summarize, the FOMC has taken significant actions toward greater transparency, most recently with
the historic steps adopted in January. These steps in turn help to promote better public understanding
of the rationale behind the FOMC’s decisions. First, we released a statement clarifying the long‐run
goals of monetary policy and our policymaking strategy. Second, we began releasing information about
the policy paths that underlie our economic projections.
Yet, I believe there is more that can be done. We can and should provide more details about the
interplay between economic conditions and policy. We can also better define our reaction function, to
enable the public to better understand and anticipate future policy actions. Economic research has
shown that increased transparency can improve the effectiveness of monetary policy, as well as the
Fed’s accountability with the public. These benefits underscore the importance of our continued pursuit
of finding better ways to communicate our framework for monetary policy decisions.
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References
Dotsey, Michael, and Charles I. Plosser. “Designing Monetary Rules in an Uncertain Economic
Environment,” Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Business Review (First Quarter 2012).
Orphanides, Athanasios, and John C. Williams, "Robust Monetary Policy Rules with Unknown Natural
Rates," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity (2002), pp. 63‐118.
Plosser, Charles. “The Benefits of Systematic Monetary Policy,” speech to the National Association for
Business Economics, Washington Economic Policy Conference, March 3, 2008.
Plosser, Charles. “Credible Commitments and Monetary Policy After the Crisis,” speech to Swiss
National Bank Monetary Policy Conference, Zurich, Switzerland, September 24, 2010.
Plosser, Charles. “Strengthening Our Monetary Policy Framework Through Commitment, Credibility, and
Communication,” speech to Global Interdependence Center’s 2011 Global Citizen Award Luncheon,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 8, 2011.
Plosser, Charles. “Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy: Restoring the Boundaries,” speech to U.S.
Monetary Policy Forum, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, New York, New York, February
24, 2012.
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Cite this document
APA
Charles I. Plosser (2012, February 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120229_charles_i_plosser
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120229_charles_i_plosser,
author = {Charles I. Plosser},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120229_charles_i_plosser},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}