speeches · May 9, 2012
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
Monetary Policy Transparency: Changes and Challenges
∗
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Economic Club of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota
May 10, 2012
∗ I thank Douglas Clement, David Fettig, Terry Fitzgerald, and Kei-Mu Yi for their contributions to these remarks.
Thank you very much for that generous introduction. It is certainly a great honor to return to
the Economic Club of Minnesota as a guest speaker to close out your 2011-2012 season—a
season begun so auspiciously by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. All of us here today,
and all of those across the state who come together for these events during the year, benefit
from the work that you do at the Economic Club. So, my deepest thanks to you all for those
efforts, and for inviting me here today.
I became president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in October 2009. One of
my main objectives since then has been to make both the Minneapolis Fed and the Federal
Reserve System more open and transparent. And I’ve been delighted to learn that I’m not at all
alone in this pursuit of greater openness. I see many positive developments along these lines
throughout the System, and especially on the part of the Federal Open Market Committee. The
FOMC, as you no doubt know, is the monetary policymaking arm of the Federal Reserve. It
meets every six to seven weeks to chart the course of monetary policy. The members of the
Board of Governors and the presidents of the 12 regional Feds, including me, all take part in
these meetings.
Today, I will talk about a significant improvement in the FOMC’s communication about
monetary policy: In January 2012, the FOMC released a consensus statement describing its
long-run framework. Congress has given the Federal Reserve a dual mandate: to promote
maximum employment and to promote price stability. The January framework statement is
important because it outlines the strategy that the FOMC follows in order to implement the
FOMC’s dual mandate.
As you will hear, the framework statement provides a quantitative definition for price
stability, through a numerical target for inflation. It does not do the same for maximum
employment. I will spend a considerable amount of time discussing this latter aspect of the
statement and its relevance for current policy.
Before proceeding, I’ll remind you that my remarks reflect my thoughts, and not
necessarily those of others in the Federal Reserve System.
A brief history of Fed transparency
I’ll begin with some historical context. Over the past 30 years, central banks all over the world
have become much more transparent about their objectives and how their current actions
allow them to achieve those objectives. This transparency is widely viewed—by both
policymakers and scholars—as an important means of enhancing the effectiveness of monetary
policy.
Most central banks aim to keep medium-term inflation low and stable—at around 2
percent annually. They have been quite successful in achieving that goal over the past 20 or 25
years. They view that success as being due in part to their communicating on an ongoing basis
how their current policy actions are consistent with that goal.
There are at least two benefits of transparency. The first is broadly appreciated: By
being clear about their objectives, central banks are better able to achieve those objectives. For
example, if the central bank’s announced inflation target is 2 percent per year, firms and
employees know that wages need to grow by 2 percent to keep up with the cost of living. That
knowledge helps prevent wages from growing so fast that firms have to raise prices by more
than 2 percent to cover their costs—and that in turn contributes to keeping inflation under
control. In brief, then, transparency helps anchor inflation expectations.
The second benefit of transparency is less appreciated, but no less important. A
transparent central bank is more accountable to the public because it is forced to be more
disciplined in ensuring that its policy actions are in fact consistent with its policy objectives. The
central bank knows the public will be able to track its performance. When performance
matches words, the public will have an even stronger belief in the central bank, which serves to
anchor inflation expectations more solidly.
So, there has been a trend toward central bank transparency internationally. What
about here in the United States? I think we can all take pride in the fact that under Chairman
Bernanke and his predecessor, Chairman Greenspan, the Fed has made enormous strides in
transparency. It is easy to forget that, as recently as 1993, the FOMC would act and not tell
anyone for 90 days! It was not until 2000 that the FOMC began issuing the statement that many
of us now take for granted. And it was a decade ago that the roll call vote of FOMC members
was added to the statement. Thus, there has been substantial progress in monetary policy
transparency over the past 15 or so years.
As of the beginning of 2011, the Committee had arrived at three main forms of
communication. First, immediately after every meeting, the Committee issues a carefully
worded, but brief, statement intended to describe the current state of the economy and the
current stance of monetary policy. Second, three weeks after each meeting, the Committee
issues a carefully worded set of minutes that provide a longer, but still relatively high-level,
description of interactions within the meeting. Third, after the January, April, June, and
October/November meetings, the FOMC releases a summary of economic projections. Among
other things, these quarterly releases contain information about FOMC meeting participants’
goals for medium-run inflation and unemployment (roughly, over the next five to six years).
The framework statement
There have been several changes in FOMC communications over the past year, including the
introduction of regular press conferences by the chairman and the regular release of FOMC
participants’ individual assessments of the appropriate path of short-term interest rates. But I
want to spend my time today discussing the change that I view as the most important: the
FOMC’s release in January 2012 of a five-paragraph statement describing its long-run
framework.
It is important to be clear that the statement does not represent any change in the
Committee’s approach to policy. However, it does represent a major step forward in the
Committee’s communication of that approach to the public. In particular, I think of this
statement as providing the basic principles of how the Committee implements its statutory dual
mandate that monetary policy should promote price stability and maximum employment. I
won’t go through the statement in any detail. Frankly, there is no need for me to do so: It is
short and remarkably well-worded, and it deliberately shies away from technical language. I
encourage all of you—indeed, all Americans—to read it when you have the opportunity.1
What I will do instead is describe four aspects of the framework statement that I view as
especially important. The first key aspect of the framework is that it specifically translates the
1 See the Jan. 25, 2012, press release at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20120125c.htm.
term “price stability” into a 2 percent target for inflation. The American public need guess no
longer about the Federal Reserve’s inflation intentions—either on the upside or on the
downside: 2 percent is our goal.
Second, the framework describes how the Committee weighs the two mandates—
promoting maximum employment and promoting price stability—against one another.
Importantly, it stresses that the two mandates are typically complementary, in the sense that
keeping unemployment from rising too high also keeps inflation from falling too low. I think
that this point is often under-emphasized in popular discussions of monetary policy.
Third, the framework enjoyed broad consensus support among meeting participants.
This suggests that any changes in the framework will require the same level of broad consensus
support. In this sense, one can think of the framework as being like a constitution.
I have moved quickly through the first three of these key elements of the framework
statement—inflation target of 2 percent, the typical complementarity of the two mandates, and
the quasi-constitutionality of the statement. This fourth key feature of the statement is that
while it provides a numerical target for inflation, it does not provide a similar explicit
quantitative interpretation of the second mandate: “maximum employment.” I want to spend
the rest of my time discussing why it does not do so.
Estimating maximum employment
I’ll start with a quote from the framework statement itself: “The maximum level of employment
is largely determined by nonmonetary factors that affect the structure and dynamics of the job
market.” What are these nonmonetary factors? There are many, including population trends,
the incentives built into the tax system, the incentives built into social insurance safety nets,
the returns to human capital accumulation for young people, and simply social norms. All of
these nonmonetary factors are hard to assess on a real-time basis, and they also change over
time. Nonetheless, as the statement goes on to say, “The Committee’s policy decisions must be
informed by assessments of the maximum level of employment, recognizing that such
assessments are necessarily uncertain and subject to revision.”
In what follows, I will spend some time explaining why estimating maximum
employment is particularly challenging right now. I’ll start by showing you graphs of four
measures of the recent adverse changes in U.S. labor market performance. To understand the
graphs, it’s helpful to recall that economists define the labor force to include all of those over
16 years of age who have a job or who have looked for a job in the past four weeks.
The first graph depicts the evolution of the unemployment rate over time—the fraction
of people in the labor force who have looked for a job in the past four weeks. The graph shows
that after rising sharply from 2007 to 2009 (the shaded area indicates the recession period), the
unemployment rate has been falling slowly.2
The next graph shows the evolution of the employment/population ratio over time—the
fraction of people who have a job. To eliminate some of the possible demographic shifts that
might otherwise influence this picture, the graph focuses on people between 25 and 54 years
old, the so-called prime age population for the job market. We can see a sharp decline in this
ratio from 2007 to 2009. And, in contrast to the unemployment rate, there has been no
noticeable recovery in this measure.
2 All U.S. data are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The vacancy rate data are the job openings rate data from
the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey.
The third graph is a depiction of the fraction of the population between ages 25 and 54
who are in the labor force—that is, they either have a job or have looked for one in the past
month. Economists refer to this as the labor force participation rate. An interesting aspect of
this graph is that this fraction has tended downward since the late 1990s. This downward path
has accelerated since 2008.
The final graph depicts the relationship of unfilled job openings and unemployment over
time. The horizontal axis shows the unemployment rate. The vertical axis is the job openings or
vacancy rate—the ratio of job openings to the sum of employment and job openings. Each
point on this graph corresponds to a different year, and represents the average unemployment
rate and the average vacancy rate in that year.
When the economy is doing well, firms usually hire more workers and they find it more
challenging to fill their available openings. Hence, the unemployment rate is low, and the
vacancy rate is high. So, typically, as the economy improves, the plotted points move toward
the upper left in this picture. Conversely, when economic times get worse, the plotted points
move to the southeast. This creates a curve that runs from the northwest to the southeast—a
curve that’s known as the Beveridge curve.
However, in the Great Recession and its aftermath, we have seen something different:
The Beveridge curve itself has shifted out toward the upper right. Economists see this kind of
outward shift as representing a decline in the ability of the labor market to form mutually
beneficial matches between workers and firms. In that sense, the labor market is less efficient.
The outward shift means that firms can’t fill their available job openings as readily as we would
have expected in light of the high unemployment rate.
To summarize: Labor market outcomes do remain notably worse than prior to the
recession. The good news is that the unemployment rate has been declining since the end of
the recession. But there is also countervailing evidence: The labor force participation rate has
been falling steadily, and the employment/population ratio remains near its low point. The
Beveridge curve shows considerable deterioration in labor market matching efficiency.
How persistent will these changes in U.S. labor markets prove to be? Economists hold at
least two views on this question. The first is guided by the patterns in post-World War II data
for the United States. These patterns suggest that the current deterioration in U.S. labor market
performance is indeed reversible under appropriate policy.
The second view is less sanguine. It says that the post-World War II data do not contain
an economic crisis of the kind or magnitude that hit the United States in 2008. Such a crisis
could well have a different kind of impact on labor markets than the earlier postwar recessions.
The Swedish experience
This latter view is also informed by data from other countries—not just the United States. My
staff and I have recently taken a close look at data from Sweden.3 Why Sweden? In the early
1990s, Sweden was hit by a financial, banking, and currency crisis—what one might term a
triple crisis. Of course, other industrialized countries—perhaps most notably Japan—have
experienced these kinds of crises. My staff and I have focused on Sweden because it is generally
viewed as having dealt with this triple crisis in a highly effective fashion. For example, in 2007,
3 My thanks to Terry Fitzgerald and Brian Holte for this research. Also, see “Reforming the Welfare State: Recovery
and Beyond in Sweden,” National Bureau of Economic Research (2010), and especially papers therein by Ljungqvist
and Sargent, Forslund and Krueger, and Davis and Henreksen. Available at http://www.nber.org/books/free05-1.
OECD economists wrote, “Sweden’s economy has made a remarkable recovery from the major
crisis of the early 1990s,” in emphasizing Sweden’s rapid productivity growth in the previous
two decades.4
Despite this success, the triple crisis had a profound and highly persistent effect on the
Swedish labor market. To see this, let’s look at graphs for the same four variables in Sweden
that I showed you earlier for the United States.5 I’ve shaded the period 1991-93 in these graphs
to indicate the heart of the triple crisis period in Sweden.
The first graph depicts the Swedish unemployment rate. From 1980 to 1990, the
unemployment rate had never been above 4 percent and was typically closer to 2 percent.
After 1993, the unemployment rate was never much below 6 percent.
The second graph depicts the Swedish employment/population ratio, again for those
between ages 25 and 54. From 1980 to 1990, the employment/population ratio grew steadily in
Sweden and peaked at over 91 percent. After 1993, the ratio trended upward slightly but
remained below 86 percent for most of the period.
Next, we see the evolution of the fraction of Swedes aged 25-54 years who are in the
labor force. From 1980 to 1990, this fraction rose to a high of over 92 percent. After 1993, it
was typically around 88 percent and never much above 90 percent.
Finally, we can look at the Beveridge curve—the joint evolution of unfilled job openings
and unemployment. The Swedish Beveridge curve shifted outward from 1990 to 1995—and
that shift has endured through at least 2010.
4 See the March 2007 OECD Policy Brief at http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/30/10/38315363.pdf.
5 All Sweden data, except the vacancy rate data, are from the Organisation for Economic C-operation and
Development. The harmonized unemployment rate is used. The vacancy rate is calculated using unfilled vacancies
data from Riksbank and total household employment from statistics Sweden.
To sum up: These four measures of Swedish labor market performance declined
markedly after the triple crisis of the early 1990s. At least up until now, this decline has proved
to be permanent. I should note too that these changes happened over a remarkably short span.
In its February 1995 inflation report, the Riksbank, the Swedish central bank, suggests that the
rate of unemployment that they viewed as sustainable over the long run had risen from 2-3
percent to 6 percent in less than five years.6 Their assessment—again, made in 1995—has
proven to be a remarkably accurate characterization of how Swedish labor markets functioned
over the next 15 years.
Of course, there are many institutional differences between Sweden and the United
States, especially in terms of tax systems and social safety nets. It would be a mistake to
conclude from the Swedish data alone that the recent decline in U.S. labor market measures is
inevitably a permanent one. But Sweden is not atypical. Cross-country research from Reinhart
and Reinhart (2010) has found that financial crises tend to be followed by sustained increases in
unemployment.7
Hence, I do think that the Swedish data—given that they come from a country generally
regarded as an exemplar of how to handle a financial crisis—have to be viewed as informative.
At a minimum, Sweden’s experience forces us to contemplate the possibility that the erosion in
labor market performance that we’ve seen in the United States over the past five years may be
highly persistent, even under appropriate monetary policy.
6 See the Riksbank February 1995 report, page 23, at
http://www.riksbank.se/Upload/Dokument_riksbank/Kat_publicerat/Rapporter/1995/inflforv95_feb_eng.pdf.
7 See “After the Fall” at http://www.nber.org/papers/w16334.
Policy implications
Over the past ten minutes or so, I have talked about the recent adverse changes in U.S. labor
market performance. I have discussed two sharply different perspectives about those changes:
first, that they are largely reversible under appropriate policy and, second, that they are likely
to be highly persistent. These two distinct perspectives imply that FOMC meeting participants
are confronted with an unusually wide range of possible quantitative interpretations of the
words “maximum employment.”
These different quantitative interpretations have immediate policy implications. In
particular, policymakers who see the deterioration in labor market performance as reversible
using monetary policy will typically favor more accommodative policy than those who view the
deterioration as more protracted.
For myself, I continue to pay close attention to the behavior of inflation. The term
“maximum employment” in the statutory dual mandate is often interpreted as referring to the
level of employment that is sustainable over the longer run without acceleration in inflation.
Inflation was distinctly higher in 2011 than in 2010 and continues to run above the FOMC’s
target of 2 percent.
Even core measures of inflation, which strip out energy goods and services, and food,
went up notably. I see these changes as a signal that our country’s current labor market
performance is much closer to “maximum employment” than the post-World War II U.S. data
alone would suggest. As I’ve argued in the past, appropriate policy should be responsive to such
signals.
Conclusions
We should all take great pride in the improvements in FOMC communication over the past 15
or so years. But there is still more that can be done (of course!). My own view is that we need
to do more to communicate the economic uncertainties that we face as policymakers and how
our policymaking will respond to new information about those uncertainties. Here, we can
learn much from the practices of other central banks. For example, in today’s talk, I spent a
great deal of time discussing the uncertainties associated with formulating a quantitative
measure of “maximum employment” for the FOMC. An interested Swedish citizen would have
been able to read many rich and detailed discussions of exactly this issue in the Swedish central
bank’s monetary policy reports in the mid-1990s.
Thanks for listening to my remarks. I’ll be happy to take your questions now on these or
any other topic that might occur to you.
Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2012, May 9). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120510_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120510_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120510_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}