speeches · April 4, 2012

Regional President Speech

James Bullard · President
Search Site Home > Newsroom > St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Monetary Policy, U.S. Economy, Output Gap and Housing 4/5/2012 ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed “The U.S. Monetary Policy Outlook” on Thursday during the 13th Annual InvestMidwest Venture Capital Forum. Bullard said that brighter prospects for the U.S. economy provide the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) with the opportunity to pause in its aggressive easing campaign. “An appropriate approach at this juncture may be to continue to pause to assess developments in the economy,” he stated. Concerning the FOMC’s communications tool, the “late 2014” language describing the length of the near-zero rate policy may be counterproductive, he said. “The Committee’s practice of including distant dates in the statement sends an unwarranted pessimistic signal concerning the future of the U.S. economy.” Regarding the output gap and housing markets, “the U.S. output gap may be smaller than typical estimates suggest,” Bullard said, adding that typical estimates count the “housing bubble” as part of the normal level of output. However, he said, “It is neither feasible nor desirable to attempt to re-in ate the U.S. housing bubble of the mid2000s.” Monetary Policy on Pause At the March 2012 meeting, the FOMC updated its assessment of the economy, but otherwise left the policy statement largely unchanged, Bullard noted. Given that incoming data have generally indicated somewhat better-than-expected macroeconomic performance so far in 2012, “past behavior of the Committee suggests a ‘wait-and-see’ strategy at this juncture,” he said. Bullard discussed some of the policy actions that the FOMC has taken in recent years to ease nancial conditions. “The ultra-easy policy has been appropriate until now, but it will not always be appropriate,” he said. Many of the further policy actions the FOMC might consider at this juncture would have effects that extend out for several years, Bullard stated. “As the U.S. economy continues to rebound and repair, additional policy actions may create an over-commitment to ultra-easy monetary policy.” 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 directly address unemployment instead of taking further risks with monetary policy.” Brighter Prospects for the U.S. Bullard noted that last August, forecasters marked up the probability of a U.S. recession occurring in the second half of 2011. He attributed much of this to the July 29 gross domestic product (GDP) report, which included downward revisions to GDP data. In addition, he noted that the European sovereign debt crisis worsened then. However, he said, “Since last fall, the outlook has improved.” Regarding Europe, Bullard noted that the European Central Bank (ECB) offered threeyear re nancing at low rates on broadened collateral in December and offered a second tranche in February. “At least for now, this has calmed European markets relative to last fall,” he stated, adding that the ECB policy does not address longer-term problems. Output Gaps and 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 may not be 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. “The crisis has likely scared off a cohort of potential homeowners, who now see home ownership as a much riskier proposition than renting,” he said. 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.” Recent Monetary Policy While the FOMC could use the promised date of the rst interest rate increase – the communications tool – as a policy tool should further monetary accommodation be necessary, Bullard said this tool has an important downside. Although the 2014 language in effect names a date far in the future at which macroeconomic conditions are still expected to be exceptionally poor, “neither the Fed nor any other forecaster has a clear idea of what macroeconomic conditions will be like at that time,” he said. “This is an unwarranted pessimistic signal for the FOMC to send,” he added. 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 (2012, April 4). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120405_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120405_james_bullard,
  author = {James Bullard},
  title = {Regional President Speech},
  year = {2012},
  month = {Apr},
  howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
  url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120405_james_bullard},
  note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}