speeches · March 1, 2012
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses In ation Targeting, U.S. Economy,
Housing and Monetary Policy
3/2/2012
VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James
Bullard discussed “The U.S. Economy in the Aftermath of the Financial Crisis” Friday
during the Simon Fraser University / BMO Bank of Montreal Lecture in Economics.
Bullard discussed the importance of the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC’s)
decision at the January 2012 meeting to name an explicit, numerical in ation target of
2 percent, as measured by the annual change in the personal consumption
expenditures (PCE) price index. “In ation targeting emphasizes control over in ation
as the key long-term goal of monetary policy,” he said, adding that with this move, the
Fed joins many other central banks around the world in adopting an in ation target.
Regarding the U.S. economic situation, Bullard said the economy has brighter
prospects in 2012, although housing markets have ongoing problems in the aftermath
of the collapsed real estate bubble. However, he said, “It is neither feasible nor
desirable to attempt to re-in ate the U.S. housing bubble of the mid-2000s.”
Concerning the Fed’s new monetary policy tools, Bullard said that “increases in the size
of the balance sheet entail additional in ationary risks if accommodation is not
removed at an appropriate pace.” He also discussed the Fed’s communications tool
and the idea of tying a promise of near-zero policy rates to a numerical unemployment
outcome. The communications tool may have credibility problems, he said, and “a noncredible announcement would simply be unhelpful.”
In ation Targeting in the U.S.
In a targeting context, in ation refers to headline (rather than core) in ation, Bullard
said. The headline PCE price index is targeted, he explained, because “it does not make
sense to ignore some inconveniently volatile prices, like those for gasoline and food”
(as is the case with core in ation). He noted that while headline PCE in ation
measured from one year ago is somewhat above the 2 percent target, it has been
declining recently.
While control over in ation is the key long-term monetary policy goal, “the actions of
the FOMC can also temporarily in uence the direction of the economy in the short run,”
Bullard said. The latter can help smooth macroeconomic uctuations and is called
monetary stabilization policy, he explained.
The FOMC has adopted a exible in ation targeting policy, which combines an in ation
target with a sensible stabilization policy, Bullard stated. “Flexible in ation targeting
enables a central bank to conduct stabilization policy without compromising the longerrun goal of keeping in ation low and stable,” he added. The lesson learned from the
1970s experience, when double-digit in ation was accompanied by poor
macroeconomic performance, was that “allowing high in ation just causes problems
and does nothing to address fundamental macroeconomic issues,” he said. 1
Brighter Prospects for the U.S. in 2012
Bullard noted that last August, forecasters marked up the probability of a U.S. recession
occurring in the second half of 2011. He attributed most of this to the July 29 gross
domestic product (GDP) report, which included downward revisions to GDP data. While
the debt ceiling debate and the European sovereign debt crisis lowered consumer and
business con dence, household and business behavior did not change enough to
validate the recession predictions, he said.
Bullard explained that while U.S. households remain nervous about the European
situation, Europe is generally viewed as too distant to force a major change in
households’ behavior. “So, despite drops in con dence last summer, hard data on the
U.S. economy continued to show moderate growth,” he said, adding that household
con dence has increased since then.
Regarding Europe, Bullard noted that the European Central Bank offered three-year
re nancing at low rates on broadened collateral in December and recently offered a
second tranche, worth about $713 billion. “At least for now, this has calmed European
markets relative to last fall,” he stated.
U.S. Housing Markets
In discussing the collapsed housing bubble, Bullard noted that most components of
U.S. GDP – except for the components of investment related to real estate – have
recovered to their levels in the fourth quarter of 2007. “It is therefore not reasonable to
claim that the ‘output gap’ is exceptionally large,” he said.
Bullard also stated that it is not feasible or desirable to attempt to re-in ate the bubble.
For instance, he said, “the crisis has likely scared off a cohort of potential homeowners,
who now see homeownership as a much riskier proposition than renting.” The crisis
has also left U.S. households with more debt than they had intended, he said, adding
that “this is the rst U.S. recession in which deleveraging has played a key role.”
On the topic of too much debt, he noted that U.S. homeowners have about $9.9 trillion
in mortgage debt outstanding against $712 billion of equity. According to Bullard,
households would have to pay down this debt by about $3.7 trillion to return to a
normal loan-to-value ratio of 58.4 percent, assuming a normal ratio based on the
average LTV ratio from 1970-2005. The amount is roughly equal to one-quarter of one
year’s GDP. “This will take a long time,” he said. “It is not a matter of business cycle
frequency adjustment.”
Monetary Policy Tools
Regarding asset purchases, Bullard said that increases in the size of the Fed’s 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 and a half, despite many measures of economic performance indicating a
relatively weak U.S. economy.
While the FOMC could use the promised date of the rst interest rate increase – the
communications tool – as the primary policy tool during the upcoming period of nearzero policy rates should further monetary accommodation be necessary, Bullard said
this tool has some important caveats. For example, he said it is not clear how credible
the actual announcements would be. “If the economy is performing 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.”
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 and an anticipated in ation rate. “This asymmetry is hard
to justify,” he stated.
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 added.
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.”
###
1
For more discussion, see Bullard’s Feb. 6, 2012, speech "In ation Targeting in the
USA."
###
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2012, March 1). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120302_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120302_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120302_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}