speeches · November 7, 2012
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Shadow Interest Rates and the
Stance of U.S. Monetary Policy
11/8/2012
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard gave remarks
Thursday night on “Shadow Interest Rates and the Stance of U.S. Monetary Policy,” as
part of the Ninth Annual Corporate Finance Conference held at the Olin Business
School at Washington University in St. Louis.
Pinning down the stance of monetary policy in a zero lower bound environment is very
challenging. During his presentation, Bullard posed the question of whether current
U.S. monetary policy is “too easy.” He cited recent research by Leo Krippner, a nancial
market economist at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, which suggests that current
U.S. monetary policy may be considerably easier than commonly understood. “In
particular, the current U.S. policy stance may be substantially easier than the policy
stance recommended by commonly-used monetary policy feedback rules,” Bullard said.
A Shadow Policy Rate
The level of nominal short-term interest rates is conventionally taken to indicate the
stance of policy, Bullard said, noting that lower values are described as “easier” policy.
However, given that the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC’s) policy rate has
been near zero since December 2008, how should the monetary policy stance be
described? Bullard said that when the policy rate is near zero, a “shadow short-term
rate” can be understood as a metric for the stance of monetary policy.
Krippner calculates such a shadow rate, which is currently about -5 percent. It
averaged -5.12 percent from August 2010, when Chairman Ben Bernanke indicated that
additional asset purchases may be needed, to the end of October 2012. Krippner’s
calculation is a modi ed version of the approach by the late Fischer Black, who was a
leader in mathematical nance.
Implications for U.S. Monetary Policy
Bullard noted that in recent years, it has become popular to describe the desired level of
the policy rate by using versions of Taylor-type policy rules. One such rule is often
called the Taylor (1999) rule. These rules relate the current value of the policy rate to
macroeconomic variables (e.g., in ation and the output gap or unemployment gap).
“Most policy rules in this class currently recommend a negative policy rate,” he said.
Since the recommended short-term rate cannot be negative, he explained, one
interpretation is that unconventional policies have been needed to try to achieve the
recommended policy rate.
Using the Krippner calculation of a shadow short-term nominal interest rate as a
measure of actual policy, Bullard compared this shadow rate with the recommended
policy rate from a standard policy rule. “According to these estimates, the shadow
policy rate is currently more than 300 basis points lower than the rate recommended by
the Taylor (1999) rule,” he said. “This suggests that actual U.S. monetary policy may
currently be easier than the recommendations from that particular rule.”
Another implication, he said, is that policy may have been too tight relative to this
recommended policy rate in 2009, at which point the FOMC had not yet taken many of
its unconventional policy actions, such as forward guidance and QE2. “The actual
policy stance as measured by the shadow rate has recently been more volatile than
during the pre-2008 era,” Bullard added. “This may be because monetary policy has
been harder to interpret during the period of the zero lower bound.”
The Value of Unconventional Policy
According to Bullard, the Krippner study provides one way to evaluate the FOMC’s
recent unconventional policy actions. “Signi cant unconventional policy actions at
times seem to conform well with movements in the shadow policy rate,” Bullard said,
noting that times of less conformity may indicate an ineffective policy action.
He added, “The accumulation of policy actions since 2008 has generally been
associated with a continuing decline in the level of the shadow rate—that is, an easier
and easier policy stance.” He also noted that Krippner’s results are consistent with
other estimates (e.g., those of San Francisco Fed President John Williams in a 2011
Economic Letter).
“Current policy may be easier than often perceived,” Bullard said. “These ndings are
interesting and I encourage further and more detailed analysis in this area.”
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Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2012, November 7). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20121108_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20121108_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20121108_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}