speeches · November 26, 2012
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
Monetary Policy in Challenging Times
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
C. D. Howe Institute
Toronto, Canada
November 27, 2012
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
Those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Monetary Policy in Challenging Times
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Thank you for that kind introduction. I’m delighted to be here in Toronto tonight to offer
my perspective on the state of the U.S. economy. This is my first official visit to Canada
as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and I am most appreciative of
this opportunity presented by the C.D. Howe Institute. I hope to be able to offer some
insight into U.S. monetary policy and I look forward to hearing from you during our
question and answer period.
Before I begin, let me say that the views I express here are my own and do not
necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) or within the Federal Reserve System.
At the conclusion of last September’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
meeting, we announced two important policy actions that have been much talked about
since. The first was the initiation of a new open-ended program to buy mortgage-backed
securities that will continue until the outlook for the labor market improves substantially.
The second was a clear statement that we expect to maintain a highly accommodative
policy stance for a considerable time after the recovery strengthens. In particular, the
Committee expects that short-term interest rates near zero will be appropriate at least
through mid-2015.1
Tonight, I’d like to discuss these innovative actions in some detail, especially in terms of
how they might inform future policy actions and in light of the growing concern over a
variety of long-run issues facing the U.S. and other advanced economies.
Long-Run Issues Facing the U.S. and other Advanced Economies
The recent global downturn began in the United States in late 2007, and accelerated
sharply following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. The U.S.
economy bottomed in the summer of 2009. However, the following economic recovery
has been modest by any standard. The near-term obstacles to growth are numerous
and much discussed; but looking forward, I see even more complex challenges
confronting the United States over the next three to four years and beyond.
Some of these issues also affect other major industrial economies in the world, and
many of these challenges imply difficult decisions for fiscal policymakers. Tonight, I will
touch on a few of these issues.
1 See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2012).
Let me be very clear about something at the outset: As a monetary policymaker in the
United States, my only responsibility regarding fiscal policy is to have an understanding
of how alternative fiscal choices influence the trajectories of economic growth and
inflationary pressures and thus what these choices may imply for monetary policy—our
job at the Federal Reserve.
At the risk of oversimplifying the long-term challenges for the U.S., it seems to me to be
characterized by two important features. First, the current level of debt-to-GDP (gross
domestic product) of about 70 percent is high by historical standards; and in the
absence of changes in taxes or spending, the projections are that it will continue to
climb. Second, a critical long-term driver of higher future debt is the need to fund and
deliver large benefits to an increasingly aging population. Baby boomers are beginning
to retire, and it is imperative to ask whether old-age pensions and safety nets are
adequate. With the added responsibilities of caring for the elderly being borne by fewer
people, will we be able to finance the pension and health care demands that come with
aging?
The U.S. long-run fiscal imbalance is quite significant, and it is important that we soon
develop plans for controlling the long-run increase in our debt. Of course, there are
several policy levers the U.S. government might use to return to a more sustainable
fiscal path. None of these choices are painless. For example, future beneficiaries may
be forced to pay higher out-of-pocket expenses or face greater limits on available care
(that is, lower benefits). Another possibility is to ask younger workers to pay more during
their working lifetimes to finance programs for their retirements. Other strategies would
increase general taxes and/or lower a variety of public expenditures today in order to
save resources to pay for obligations tomorrow.
When the United States settles on effective policies to close the fiscal financing gap,
these policies will result in an increase in either current or prospective government
saving—which is the same as reducing government fiscal deficits. Moreover, with most
people expecting to receive lower future benefits or pay higher future taxes, it is likely
that current workers will want to save more for their retirements. Regardless of how
these matters are resolved, national saving must rise.
Four Messages to Emphasize Regarding Long-Run Challenges
An aging population places obvious strains on fiscal finances over the long run. At the
same time, the recent financial downturn and a prolonged period of high unemployment
have complicated the process that would allow us to adjust to a new sustainable fiscal
path. In this context, I want to emphasize four important messages that I think are
implied by trends in the U.S. and global economies.
First, the U.S consumer is no longer in a position to be the engine of world growth. It
should be evident that long-term demographic changes of the sort we face require
increases in personal or government saving. Furthermore, over the near term, many
U.S. households continue to be challenged by a debt overhang and large losses of
wealth that were incurred during the financial crisis. All of these factors point to lower
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rates of personal consumption in the United States. Moreover, many advanced
economies face their own fiscal challenges and unfavorable demographics that also will
likely weigh on total world consumption. Some of the resulting drop in global aggregate
demand could be taken up by consumers in emerging market economies. In many
cases, past growth in such economies has been largely export driven. With reduced
aggregate demand expected from their trading partners, emerging market economies
will need to endorse policies that encourage domestic consumption and demand.
Making that transition will be challenging.
The second point I want to emphasize is that the United States must consolidate its
finances gradually over time if we are to avoid further economic turmoil or another
downturn. Of immediate concern is the looming fiscal cliff, which some have labeled
“the austerity bomb.” Under current law, many tax and spending provisions enacted in
various past stimulus packages are scheduled to expire on January 1, 2013. In addition,
in the absence of a budget deal, automatic sequestration of spending goes into effect. If
not quickly reversed, the effects on the economy could be huge. The Congressional
Budget Office recently estimated that the full suite of scheduled budget actions could
shrink real GDP in 2013 by 2-1/4 percent. It would also raise the unemployment rate by
about a percentage point relative to the less draconian scenario in which only the
payroll tax cut and extended unemployment insurance benefits were allowed to expire2.
More generally, economic growth is already weak in many advanced economies
throughout the world. Indeed, Europe is in a recession. And fiscal policy in several
European countries is currently restrictive. Certainly, progress needs to be made on
reducing outsized deficits. But too much austerity too soon could be very damaging to
near- and medium-term growth. Economic theory tells us that in times when central
banks have lowered short-term nominal interest rates to essentially zero, fiscal
multipliers are likely quite high.3 This means that overly abrupt moves to increase taxes
or reduce government spending could have an amplified effect on reducing real growth.
Furthermore, such fiscal moves could cause longer lasting damage to already fragile
economies—by reducing the growth in productive capital stock and by keeping the long-
term unemployed out of jobs, resulting in the erosion of their job skills.
With so much hanging in the balance, one way to reduce the impact of an austerity
bomb would be for policymakers to delay the strongest negative effects of fiscal
consolidation today, but still credibly commit to reducing deficits later as their economies
recover more robustly. This is no easy task.
As a central banker, I am always careful in assessing the interest rate environment that
will influence the short- and longer-run growth prospects for the economy. This is a key
aspect of calibrating monetary policy. Let me state the third message very frankly: The
longer-term implications for market interest rates are complex and ambiguous. If
policymakers punt on making tough fiscal choices or choose too little fiscal
consolidation with continued high fiscal deficits, it is likely that the overall demand for
2 See Congressional Budget Office (2012).
3 See Christiano, Eichenbaum and Rebelo (2011) and Batini, Callegari and Melina (2012).
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so-called loanable funds will be very high relative to the supply. This will be especially
evident once the United States is past the worst of our current liquidity trap conditions.
In this setting, large increases in real interest rates would discourage capital investment
and dampen long-run growth. However, a large fiscal consolidation could lead to higher
private precautionary saving, along with higher national saving. This scenario could also
dampen growth; but it would be associated with lower real interest rates, reminiscent of
deeper liquidity trap conditions. Where market interest rates end up is not obvious.
Central bankers and monetary policymakers will need to be attentive to assessing the
market’s implication for real interest rates in deciding the appropriate benchmark for
nominal policy interest rates.
My fourth message may be obvious, but it is still worth highlighting: All of the long-term
challenges we face become easier to meet if we can increase the underlying growth
potential of our economies. Many public policy choices are relevant here, and so I offer
only a few modest suggestions. In the United States, we can improve our educational
system, leading to a more productive work force. In peripheral Europe, economic
liberalization, particularly of labor markets, can produce a more efficient allocation of
resources and increased potential. And in all countries, smart regulation, efficient tax
codes and support for free international trade can increase our productive capacities.
The payoff here can be quite large. Increasing long-run average rates of output growth,
even by a few tenths of a percent, can make the budget calculus much easier. In the
United States, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that if growth of real GDP
each year were only 0.1 percentage point higher for the next ten years than is assumed
in its baseline projections, the cumulative deficit for 2012 through 2022 would fall by
over $300 billion. Permit me to adapt a saying attributed to the late Senator Everett
Dirksen from Illinois: When it comes to growth, a tenth here and a tenth there, and
pretty soon, you’re talking about real money! Having said this, we need real, bona fide
growth policies — not simply fanciful budget assumptions that tomorrow will bring a
better future.
Economic Outlook: A Modest Recovery and Contained Inflation
In the United States, the fiscal and economic strains due to our aging population will
occur over a long time horizon. That said, monetary policymakers must formulate policy
for today. In the United States, forecasts by both private analysts and FOMC
participants see real GDP growth in 2012 coming in at a bit under 2 percent. Growth is
expected to move moderately higher in 2013, but only to a pace that is just somewhat
above potential. Such growth would likely generate only a small decline in the
unemployment rate. For example, the latest Survey of Professional Forecasters
projection had the unemployment rate at 7.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013—just
0.3 percentage points below where it is today. Against this backdrop of modest growth
and still elevated unemployment, inflation is expected to run at or a bit under the
FOMC’s stated goal of 2 percent.
The reasons for sluggish U.S. growth are well known. The 2008 financial crisis
destroyed trillions of dollars of wealth, forcing consumers and businesses to deleverage.
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This process has not yet been completed. Fiscal policy is probably a slight drag on
growth now; and as I just discussed, further consolidation could be coming soon. And
as I also just noted, global growth has been disappointing. There is no shortage of
uncertainty as I look at the economic situation in the United States and around the
world, and the insecurity it creates is weighing heavily on the spending decisions of
businesses and households.
Having said all that, most forecasters are predicting that the pace of growth will pick up
as we move through next year and into 2014. Underlying these projections is an
assumption that fiscal disaster will be avoided—and with this, that some important
uncertainties restraining growth should come off the table. Also, deleveraging will run its
course, and as it does, the economy’s more-typical cyclical recovery dynamics will take
over. As the FOMC indicated in its policy moves last September, the current highly
accommodative stance for monetary policy will be kept in place for some time to come.
Recent Monetary Policy Actions
At the September meeting, faced with evidence that the recovery was not proceeding
fast enough, the FOMC decided to provide additional policy accommodation in order to
make more rapid progress toward our dual mandate goals of maximum employment
and price stability. There were two important parts of this additional policy
accommodation that bear closer examination.
First, we announced a new open-ended round of large-scale purchases of agency
mortgage-backed securities. This was on top of our existing program of extending the
maturity of our Treasury security holdings. As with previous large scale asset purchases
(LSAPs), these purchases are aimed at putting downward pressure on longer-term
interest rates and helping to make broader financial conditions more accommodative,
thereby stimulating business and household spending.
An important new aspect of current round of purchases was to tie its length to economic
outcomes, rather than announcing a fixed amount of purchases over a predetermined
period as we have done in the past. In particular, the FOMC said that the purchases will
continue until there is substantial improvement in labor markets. This is subject, of
course, to a continued environment of price stability. Tying the length of time over which
our purchases will be made to economic conditions is an important step. Because it
clarifies how our policy decisions are conditional on progress made toward our dual
mandate goals, markets can be more confident that we will provide the monetary
accommodation necessary to close the large resource gaps that currently exist;
additionally, markets can be more certain that we will not wait too long to tighten if
inflation were to become an important concern.
The natural question at this point is to ask: What constitutes substantial improvement in
labor markets? Personally, I think we would need to see several things. The first would
be increases in payrolls of at least 200,000 per month for a period of around six months.
We also would need to see a faster pace of GDP growth than we have now —
something noticeably above the economy’s potential rate of growth. Such concurrent
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gains should be enough to produce sustainable downward momentum in the
unemployment rate and to make us more confident that the improvements are
sustainable. Once we established that there has been this substantial improvement in
labor markets, we would stop adding to our balance sheet. But we would keep the funds
rate near zero for some time longer.
The second major policy action at the FOMC meeting in September was to make it clear
that the highly accommodative stance of monetary policy would remain in place for a
considerable time after the economic recovery strengthens. According to our statement,
the funds rate would likely stay near its current level until mid-2015.
Why should policy remain accommodative even after we have a stronger recovery? The
delay is a feature of what modern macroeconomic theory tells us is the optimal policy
response to the extraordinary circumstances we have faced over the past four years.4
As you know, in response to the severe recession and weak recovery, the Fed brought
down the federal funds rate to near zero in 2008 and has kept it there since then.
Economic conditions have been bad enough that if we could have, we would have
lowered the fed funds rate to below zero. But we cannot do that. So instead, modern
theory tells us that we should promise that once economic activity recovers, for a time
we will hold rates below what they typically would be. This makes up for the period
when we were constrained from taking rates negative. In other words, the average path
is right over time.
Some people claim we are trying to lower real rates by purposely boosting inflation
above the central bank’s target. While it is certainly true that we are trying to stimulate
activity by lowering long-term real interest rates, higher inflation isn’t necessarily part of
the story.
For illustrative purposes, suppose inflation was constant at our target of 2 percent. Now
consider two paths for short-term rates: one in which they are zero for a year and then
rise and another in which they are zero for two years and then rise. Obviously, the
second scenario implies a lower average path for short-term rates. So, given that long-
term rates tend to move with average expected short-term rates, the second scenario
implies lower current long-term rates. Such lower long-term rates would provide a boost
to real economic activity today and bring unemployment down more rapidly. Yet, by
assumption, under both paths, inflation would be the same, so the channel for these
beneficial effects comes from lower long-term nominal interest rates, not higher inflation.
In addition, there is another way for policy to influence long-term real rates. If the
extended period of low policy rates is well communicated, then uncertainty regarding
future interest rate movements can be reduced. And lower uncertainty will result in
lower risk premium being built into longer-term rates.
Of course, we will not maintain low rates indefinitely. For some time, I have advocated
the use of specific, numerical thresholds to describe the economic conditions that would
4See, for instance, Eggertsson and Woodford (2003 and Werning (2011).
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have to occur before it might be appropriate to begin raising rates. I am not alone in this
view. As the minutes of our FOMC meetings have indicated, we had a vigorous
discussion about numerical thresholds at our October meeting, and many participants
said they saw important benefits in adopting them. My colleagues on the Committee,
Narayana Kocherlakota, Eric Rosengren and Janet Yellen have all said in public that
they support adopting such markers.
In the past, I have said we should hold the fed funds rate near zero at least as long as
the unemployment rate is above 7 percent and as long as inflation is below 3 percent. I
now think the 7 percent threshold is too conservative. Our latest actions put us on a
better policy path than we had when I first proposed the 7/3 markers a year ago. At the
same time, there still are few signs of substantial inflationary pressures. If we continue
to have few concerns about inflation along the path to a stronger recovery there would
be no reason to undo the positive effects of these policy actions prematurely just
because the unemployment rate hits 6.9 percent — a level that is still notably above the
rate we associate with maximum employment.
This logic is supported by a number of macro model simulations I have seen, which
indicate that we can keep the funds rate near zero until the unemployment rate hits at
least 6-1/2 percent and still generate only minimal inflation risks. Even a 6 percent
threshold doesn’t look threatening in many of these scenarios. But for now, I am ready
to say that 6-1/2 percent looks like a better unemployment marker than the 7 percent
rate I had called for earlier.
With regard to the inflation safeguard, I have previously discussed how the 3 percent
threshold is a symmetric and reasonable treatment of our 2 percent target5 This is
consistent with the usual fluctuations in inflation and the range of uncertainty over its
forecasts. But I am aware that the 3 percent threshold makes many people anxious.
The simulations I mentioned earlier suggest that setting a lower inflation safeguard is
not likely to impinge too much on the policy stimulus generated by a 6-1/2 percent
unemployment rate threshold. Indeed, we’re much more likely to reach the 6-1/2
percent unemployment threshold before inflation begins to approach even a modest
number like 2-1/2 percent.6
So, given the recent policy actions and analyses I mentioned, I have reassessed my
previous 7/3 proposal. I now think a threshold of 6-1/2 percent for the unemployment
rate and an inflation safeguard of 2-1/2 percent, measured in terms of the outlook for
total PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index) inflation over the next two
to three years, would be appropriate.
The fact that this inflation safeguard is in terms of a forecast is important. A threshold
based on the forecast for inflation would avoid triggering a policy reaction in response to
transitory movements in prices — say, to some temporary swing in energy prices. It
5See, for example, Evans (2012).
6Yellen (2012).
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would also take into account everything we are seeing in the economy in terms of cost
pressures and inflationary expectations — factors that influence the inflation outlook
before they show up in actual inflation data. The forecast therefore provides a better
safeguard than a backward-looking measure.
Conclusion
To conclude, I believe that the U.S. and other advanced economies are facing
significant long-term challenges in credibly controlling future debt levels. At the same
time, we are also confronting the immediate challenge of not imposing too much
austerity on our fragile economies. Clearly our fiscal authorities must find the
appropriate balance between meeting these two challenges. As most everyone agrees,
this implies putting in place policies that slowly but surely bring the prospects of future
revenues into balance with future spending.
Under this scenario, monetary policy also has an important contribution to make. In my
mind, this contribution should provide financial conditions that help produce the most
robust demand growth we reasonably can achieve, with appropriate measures in place
to safeguard price stability. As I’ve explained, the FOMC has recently taken important
steps in this direction. And I believe we have the ability to go even further in reassuring
financial markets and the general public that policy will stay appropriately
accommodative and that such steps would provide the stimulus to growth that can
benefit our future well-being in the United States and around the world.
Thank you.
References
Batini, Nicoletta, Giovanni Callegari and Giovanni Melina, 2012, Successful Austerity in
the United States, Europe and Japan, International Monetary Fund, working paper, July.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2012, press release, September
13, available at www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20120913a.htm.
Congressional Budget Office, 2012, An Update to the Budget and Economic Outlook:
Fiscal Years 2012 to 2022, Washington, DC, August, available at
www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/08-22-2012-
Update_to_Outlook.pdf.
Christiano, Lawrence, Martin Eichenbaum and Sergio Rebelo, 2011, "When is the
government spending multiplier large?,” Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 119, No. 1,
February, pp. 78–121.
Eggertsson, Gauti B., and Michael Woodford, 2003, “The zero bound on interest rates
and optimal monetary policy,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Vol. 34, No. 1,
pp. 139–211.
9
Evans, Charles L., 2012, “Some thoughts on global risks and monetary policy,” speech,
Market News International seminar, Hong Kong, China, August 27, available at
http://www.chicagofed.org/webpages/publications/speeches/2012/08_27_12_hongkong.
cfm.
Werning, Ivan, 2011, “Managing a liquidity trap: Monetary and fiscal policy,” National
Bureau of Economic Research, working paper, No. 17344, August.
Janet L. Yellen, 2012, “Revolution and evolution in central bank communications,”
speech, University of California, Berkeley, Haas School of Business, November 13,
available at www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20121113a.htm
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2012, November 26). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20121127_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20121127_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20121127_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}