speeches · June 28, 2012
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard: Current U.S. Monetary Policy Still
Appropriately Calibrated
6/29/2012
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard
discussed “U.S. Monetary Policy: Still Appropriate” on Friday as part of a Dialogue with
the Fed event sponsored by the Bank’s Little Rock Branch.
During his presentation, Bullard discussed some aspects of the current
macroeconomic situation. “The current stance of monetary policy is ultra-easy, and
remains appropriately calibrated given the macroeconomic situation in the U.S.,” he
said.
Bullard also discussed recent, and possibly additional, improvements to Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) communications. “FOMC communications could be
improved further by producing a quarterly monetary policy report (QMPR) similar to
those produced by other central banks,” he said. “This could potentially provide a more
fulsome discussion of the outlook for the U.S. economy and for policy than is currently
provided.”
The Current Macroeconomic Situation
Bullard described some of the actions the Fed has taken since 2008 to ease monetary
policy aggressively. “These Fed actions remain impactful today,” he said. In particular,
he noted that the policy rate remains near-zero, the large Fed balance sheet remains in
place, “Operation Twist” is still ongoing and will alter the balance sheet composition
through the end of this year, and the calendar-date guidance regarding the rst increase
in the policy rate remains in effect.
“In short, current monetary policy remains ultra-easy and is likely appropriately
calibrated to the current situation,” Bullard said.
He noted that “most analysis suggests Fed actions have helped produce very low
nominal and real interest rates across the yield curve.” Based on his own calculations,
Bullard estimated that yields would normally be considerably higher given current
macroeconomic conditions. Part of the explanation for the low rates, he stated, is that
continued turmoil in Europe has caused U.S. interest rates to fall due to a “ ight-tosafety” effect.
In further discussion regarding the European sovereign debt crisis, Bullard said that it
does not have easy solutions and noted that the crisis is fundamentally about countries
that have borrowed too heavily on international debt markets. “This is not a problem
that monetary policy can remedy,” he emphasized, adding that “attempts to use
monetary policy to x scal problems have historically ended with substantial
in ation.” Therefore, he stated, “Debt problems take a long time to work out, so we
should expect a drawn-out adjustment process in Europe.”
In discussing the effects of European turmoil on the U.S., Bullard said that recent
spillover has come mostly in the form of lower U.S. interest rates and that, so far,
nancial stress in the U.S. has increased only modestly. While U.S. nancial rms have
higher levels of capital now than they did in 2008, he said, “In the event of a severe
nancial shock, the Fed could re-open liquidity facilities pioneered during 2008-2009.”
Regarding U.S. labor markets, Bullard noted that they have improved over the last year,
despite relatively slow economic growth. In particular, the unemployment rate has
fallen by 0.8 percentage points (from 9 percent in May 2011 to 8.2 percent in May
2012). “This is relatively fast compared to U.S. macroeconomic history over the last 25
years,” he stated.
On U.S. in ation, Bullard noted that it is close to the FOMC’s 2 percent target by many
measures and that expected in ation is near target as well. Despite some claiming that
“price level targeting” would make a difference, Bullard pointed out that “the U.S. price
level appears to be quite close to an appropriate price level path.” Furthermore, the U.S.
price level has not strayed from an appropriate path as it did in Japan during the 1990s
and in the U.S. during the 1930s, he said.
Risks to Current Fed Policy
Bullard then discussed some of the possible risks to the FOMC’s current policy. “The
ultra-easy monetary policy has been appropriate so far, but could reignite a 1970s-type
experience globally if pursued too aggressively,” he said, noting that the 1970s era
included four recessions in 13 years, double-digit in ation and double-digit
unemployment. “The lesson was clear,” Bullard said. “Do not let the in ation genie out
of the bottle.”
Regarding other potential risks, including concerns that the FOMC has done too little,
Bullard said, “If anything, the Committee may be trying to do too much with monetary
policy, risking monetary instability for the U.S. and the global economy.” He added that
should the U.S. economy encounter further negative shocks, “the Committee can
respond as appropriate to a signi cant deterioration relative to the current forecast.”
Bullard then explained the risks inherent in considering changes in monetary policy to
improve the U.S. employment outlook, noting that it is important to remember that
“monetary policy is a blunt instrument which affects the decision making of everyone in
the economy.” Given that labor market policies (e.g., unemployment insurance, worker
retraining) have direct effects on the unemployed, “It may be better to focus on labor
market policies to directly address unemployment instead of taking further risks with
monetary policy,” he said.
Another potential risk is distortions in the economy, Bullard said, noting that the nearzero rate policy has been in place for more than three years now, and it is projected to
remain in place for several more. “The near-zero rates cause other distortions in the
economy, including punishing savers,” he said.
Fed Communications
“The FOMC has increased the degree of transparency surrounding monetary policy in a
variety of ways since the 1990s,” Bullard said. For example, in January 2012, the FOMC
began releasing participants’ forecasts of the future path for the policy rate.
Although the economy is described by many variables, Bullard noted that the Fed’s
current communication strategy operates with only a few variables. “The FOMC could
instead publish a quarterly document akin to the Bank of England’s ‘In ation Report,’” he
said.
“A report of this type could potentially lay down a benchmark ‘Fed view’ on the key
issues facing the U.S. economy,” Bullard said, adding that “FOMC participants could
point out where their views differ from the benchmark.” Furthermore, he said, the
release of the report could be coordinated with Chairman Bernanke’s quarterly press
brie ngs. Such a report could provide “a broader discussion of the U.S. outlook,”
Bullard said.
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2012, June 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120629_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120629_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120629_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}