speeches · March 26, 2013
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
∗
Improving the Outlook with Better Monetary Policy
Bloomington, Eden Prairie, Edina and Richfield Chambers of Commerce
Edina, Minnesota
March 27, 2013
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
∗ I thank Dave Fettig, Terry Fitzgerald, Rob Grunewald, Brian Holtemeyer and Kei-Mu Yi for their help with these
remarks.
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Thank you for that generous introduction. Good afternoon everyone, and thank you for the
invitation to join you here today. It’s a pleasure to be here and to share my thoughts on the
prospects for the economy and the role of monetary policy going forward. But as you will hear in
a minute, I am also interested in your thoughts on the state of the economy and on your questions
about Federal Reserve policy. So I look forward to our discussion following my talk.
In my remarks today, I’ll first provide some background about the Federal Reserve. I’ll
then describe the current stance of monetary policy. I’ll discuss the macroeconomic outlook for
the next couple of years implied by that monetary policy stance. Finally, I’ll offer my assessment
of the appropriateness of monetary policy in light of that outlook.
But first—a disclaimer. As you will hear shortly, I’m one of the 19 people who have the
privilege and honor to participate in the meetings of what’s called the Federal Open Market
Committee. FOMC meetings shape the course of monetary policy in the United States. But it’s
very important to understand that my remarks today are only my views and not necessarily those
of any other FOMC participant.
Federal Reserve Structure
Let me begin with some basics about the Federal Reserve System. I like to tell people that the
Fed is a uniquely American institution. What do I mean by that? Well, relative to its counterparts
around the world, the U.S. central bank is highly decentralized. The Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis is one of 12 regional Reserve banks that, along with the Board of Governors in
Washington, D.C., make up the Federal Reserve System. Our bank represents the ninth of the 12
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Federal Reserve districts and includes Montana, the Dakotas, Minnesota, northwestern
Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
Eight times per year, the Federal Open Market Committee—the FOMC—meets to set the
path of short-term interest rates over the next six to seven weeks. All 12 presidents of the various
regional Federal Reserve banks—including me—and the seven governors of the Federal Reserve
Board contribute to these deliberations. However, the Committee itself consists only of the
governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and a rotating group of four
other presidents. I won’t be on the Committee in 2013, but will be next year. In this way, the
structure of the FOMC mirrors the federalist structure of our government, because
representatives from different regions of the country—the various presidents—have input into
FOMC deliberations.
Congress requires the FOMC to make monetary policy so as to fulfill two mandates:
promote price stability and promote maximum employment. It should be clear that these are both
Main Street objectives. Promoting maximum employment means that the Fed is charged with
doing what it can to ensure that Americans who want to work can do so. Promoting price
stability means that the Federal Reserve is charged with keeping inflation close to a pre-specified
target. Price stability ensures that, when people write contracts in terms of dollars like student
loans or annuities, they can have certainty about what those dollars will be able to buy in the
future.
Now, in describing price stability, I’ve made reference to a pre-specified target for
inflation. I haven’t said what the pre-specified inflation target is. In choosing its inflation target,
the FOMC weighed the costs of overly high inflation against the need to guard against
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potentially destructive deflationary spirals. This assessment has led the FOMC to choose an
inflation target of 2 percent. Similarly, most central banks around the world have opted for a low
but still positive inflation target.
The FOMC acts to achieve its two mandates—maximum employment and price
stability—by influencing interest rates through the purchase and sale of financial assets. When
the FOMC raises interest rates, households and firms tend to spend less and save more. The fall
in spending puts downward pressure on both employment and prices. Similarly, when the FOMC
lowers interest rates, households and firms tend to spend more and save less. This puts upward
pressure on employment and prices.
However, these pressures on employment and prices from lower interest rates are not felt
immediately. Instead, it typically takes a year or two for the effects of monetary policy
adjustments to manifest themselves in inflation and unemployment. Hence, the FOMC’s
decisions about appropriate monetary policy necessarily hinge on the members’ forecasts of the
evolution of prices and employment over the next year or two—what we typically call our
medium-term outlooks for inflation and unemployment. I’ll discuss the interaction between my
outlook and appropriate policy later in my remarks.
Current Stance of Monetary Policy
With that as background, let me move on to describe the current stance of monetary policy. The
change in monetary policy over the past five years has been dramatic. At the end of 2007, the
Federal Reserve had less than $900 billion of assets, mostly in the form of short-term Treasuries.
It was targeting a fed funds rate—the short-term interbank lending rate—above 4 percent. As of
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now, the Federal Reserve owns over $3 trillion of assets, mostly in the form of long-term
government-issued or government-backed securities. The Fed is currently targeting a fed funds
rate of under a quarter percent.
Both of these changes in the stance of policy are designed to put upward pressure on
employment and prices. In particular, the near-zero fed funds rate pushes downward on the
interest rate that businesses and households can earn by saving money and downward on the
interest rate to borrow money. These low interest rates encourage households to consume today
rather than saving to consume in the future. Similarly, firms are encouraged to engage in capital
expenditure rather than saving. This higher demand for consumption and investment pushes
upward on both prices and employment.
Similarly, the Fed’s holdings of long-term assets mean that the private sector as a whole
is less exposed to the interest rate risk that’s embedded in long-term investments. As a result,
some private investors will demand a lower premium for holding other bonds that are exposed to
interest rate risk, which puts downward pressure on other long-term yields. Again, faced with
these lower yields, households and businesses should be more willing to spend now rather than
later.
I’ve described the Fed’s current policy actions. But the impact of monetary policy on the
macroeconomy also depends critically on the private sector’s beliefs about the Fed’s future
actions. To take an obviously hypothetical extreme: Suppose the private sector believed today
that the Fed would return permanently to its 2007 policy stance at its June meeting. Then, the
macroeconomic impact of the Fed’s highly accommodative stance over the next couple of
months would be negligible.
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For this reason, the Federal Open Market Committee has gone to great lengths to provide
what’s called “forward guidance”—communication to the public about the likely future
evolution of its monetary policy decisions. Thus, the Committee is currently buying $85 billion
of long-term assets each month. It has provided forward guidance about its future plans for asset
purchases by saying that it intends to continue these asset purchases until there is substantial
improvement in the labor market outlook. As Chairman Bernanke indicated in his recent press
conference, the rate of these purchases may well vary in response to information about economic
conditions.
The Committee has provided even more precision to the public about the likely future
path of the fed funds rate. In its December statement, the FOMC announced that it anticipated
keeping the fed funds rate at its current extraordinarily low level at least until the unemployment
rate fell below a threshold of 6.5 percent, as long as the medium-term inflation outlook remained
below 2.5 percent and longer-term inflation expectations remained well-anchored. The
unemployment rate is currently 7.7 percent, and most private sector forecasters see the
unemployment rate staying above 6.5 percent well into 2015. The FOMC’s communication tells
the public that it should expect the fed funds rate to stay extraordinarily low over that same time
frame, and possibly longer.
I was delighted by the FOMC’s decision to offer this degree of precision about its
forward guidance. I think that one important benefit of this kind of language is that it tells the
public how the stance of monetary policy will evolve in response to changes in economic
conditions. Thus, if the unemployment rate falls more slowly than expected, and the inflation
outlook remains subdued, the fed funds rate will be extraordinarily low for a longer period of
time. If the unemployment rate falls more rapidly than expected, the fed funds rate will be
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extraordinarily low for a shorter period of time. In this way, the FOMC has assured the public
that the stance of monetary policy will automatically adjust in an appropriate fashion to the
evolution of macroeconomic conditions. This automatic adjustment is an important benefit of the
Fed’s thresholds.
I should be clear about a couple of aspects of the thresholds. First, the unemployment rate
threshold is not a trigger for FOMC action. Thus, the FOMC may choose not to raise interest
rates when the unemployment rate falls below 6.5 percent. Second, I see the FOMC’s guidance
as providing a great deal of protection against undue inflationary pressures. In particular, the
commitment to keep interest rates extraordinarily low is off the table if the medium-term
inflation outlook ever rises above 2.5 percent. I’ll have more to say about this inflation protection
later in my remarks.
My Two-Year Outlook
I’ve described the Fed’s current monetary policy stance in some detail, and I’ve emphasized that
the Fed’s stance is much more accommodative than it was five years ago. That observation alone
might suggest that the Fed’s policy is too accommodative. But there have been big changes in
the economy since 2007. Over the past five years, Americans have lost jobs and a great deal of
wealth. Relative to 2007, people remain uncertain about future employment and income.
Businesses, too, are less certain about future demand for their goods. These changes and
uncertainties make firms and households less willing to spend than in 2007, and so push
downward on both employment and prices. This means that, in order to fulfill its dual mandate of
promoting price stability and maximum employment, it is appropriate for the FOMC to adopt a
more accommodative monetary policy than in 2007. So, the right question is a more subtle one:
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Is the FOMC overresponding to the changes in the economy since 2007 by providing too much
accommodation?
As I noted earlier, the impact of monetary policy on the macroeconomy unfolds only
slowly, over the course of a year or two. Hence, my answer to this question about whether the
FOMC is providing too much accommodation depends on my outlook for the economy over the
next year or two. With that in mind, I’ll turn now to describing that outlook, placed in the context
of the evolution of the macroeconomy over the past five years. Let’s start by looking back at the
evolution of national output—as measured by gross domestic product adjusted for inflation (real
GDP). As you can see in this chart, national output fell dramatically during 2008 and the first
half of 2009. Since the middle of 2009, the national economy has recovered, but only at a
moderate rate.
Given the sluggish recovery in national output, it is not surprising that labor markets are
also healing slowly. This next chart shows the behavior of the unemployment rate over the past
five years. The unemployment rate, which was 5 percent in December 2007, reached 10 percent
in the second half of 2009 (October). As of February 2013, the national unemployment rate is at
7.7 percent.
Finally, this next chart shows that inflation has also run below the Federal Reserve’s 2
percent target. Over the past five years, the personal consumption expenditure (PCE) price index
has grown at an average annual rate of 1.6 percent. Here, I should emphasize that the PCE price
index is an index that includes all goods and services, including food and energy. So, I’m not
talking about so-called core inflation—I’m talking about what’s called headline inflation.
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That’s a brief review of the past five years. Real output has recovered only slowly from
the depths of the 2007-09 recession. Unemployment remains well above 2007 levels. Inflation
has averaged below the Fed’s target.
With that review as background, let me turn to my macroeconomic outlook for the next
couple of years. That outlook is predicated on the assumption that the FOMC’s monetary policy
choices over the next few years will be consistent with the forward guidance about asset
purchases and the fed funds rate that the FOMC provided in its March statement. With that
assumption about policy, my outlook for the next two years can be summarized as being an
ongoing modest recovery. Let me quickly go through the charts again, only this time I will add
my forecasts. I see output continuing to grow slowly—at around 2.5 percent in 2013 and around
3 percent in 2014. I expect unemployment to continue to fall only slowly, down to around 7.5
percent in late 2013 and around 7 percent in late 2014. This level of unemployment will continue
to constrain wage growth. Consequently, inflation pressures will remain subdued, as I expect
PCE inflation to be only 1.6 percent in 2013 and 1.9 percent in 2014.
Using the Macroeconomic Outlook to Assess the Appropriateness of Monetary Policy
I’ve described my macroeconomic outlook for 2013 and 2014. Let me turn now to discussing
how that outlook informs my judgment about monetary policy. As you will hear, my main
conclusion is that my outlook implies that monetary policy is currently not accommodative
enough.
Recall that the FOMC has a 2 percent inflation target. I do see inflation eventually
returning to that 2 percent target under the FOMC’s current forward guidance. But I expect a
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slow rate of progress. As I’ve said, I anticipate that, conditional on the FOMC’s current forward
guidance, the PCE inflation rate will be only 1.6 percent in 2013 and 1.9 percent in 2014. The
FOMC could facilitate a faster return of the PCE inflation rate to the 2 percent target—that is,
better promote price stability as mandated by Congress—by adopting a more accommodative
monetary policy that puts more upward pressure on prices.
In reaching this conclusion that monetary policy should be more accommodative, I’ve
only made reference to the price stability mandate. As I described earlier, the FOMC has a
second mandate: to promote maximum employment. In March, most of the 19 FOMC
participants believed that the unemployment rate will converge to a level between 5.2 percent
and 6 percent within five to six years. But, under the current formulation of monetary policy, I
see the rate of convergence to this long-run rate as likely to be slow. In particular, I expect that
the unemployment rate will still be close to 7 percent by the end of 2014. The FOMC could
facilitate a faster return of the unemployment rate to its lower long-run level by adopting a more
accommodative monetary policy that puts more upward pressure on employment. Thus, I would
say that my outlook for unemployment and my outlook for inflation both point to a need for
more accommodation than is currently being provided by the FOMC.
One Way to Provide More Monetary Accommodation
Based on my outlook for the next two years, I’ve concluded that the FOMC would better fulfill
both of its congressional mandates by adding more monetary policy accommodation. How could
it do so? I think that there are several possible approaches available to the Committee. For
example, the FOMC could reduce the public’s level of policy uncertainty by clarifying the nature
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of the economic conditions that would lead the Committee to reduce or stop its current asset
purchases. Alternatively, the Committee could communicate to the public that, once the removal
of monetary accommodation eventually commences, the rate of withdrawal will be slower than is
currently anticipated.
Both of these kinds of changes in communication could potentially provide needed
monetary accommodation. However, they would require the FOMC to make relatively complex
changes to the language of its current communications. My own preferred approach is
considerably simpler. In its current forward guidance, the FOMC has stated that it expects the
fed funds rate to remain extraordinarily low at least until the unemployment rate falls below 6.5
percent. The FOMC could provide additional needed stimulus by lowering the threshold
unemployment rate from 6.5 percent to 5.5 percent—that is, by changing one number in the
existing statement.
To see why I say so, consider two possible scenarios. In the first, the public believes that
the FOMC will begin raising the fed funds rate once the unemployment rate hits 6.5 percent. (To
be clear: This belief is consistent with, but not necessarily implied by, the FOMC’s current
forward guidance.) In the second, the public believes that the FOMC will defer the initial
increase in the fed funds rate until the unemployment rate hits 5.5 percent. The higher
unemployment rate in the first scenario means that monetary policy will be tightened sooner,
which, in turn, will lead to the unemployment rate being higher for longer. Foreseeing that,
people will save more in the first scenario than in the second, to protect themselves against these
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higher unemployment risks. Because they save more, they spend less, and there is less economic
activity.1
Thus, lowering the unemployment rate threshold to 5.5 percent would increase the
demand for goods and thereby push upward on both employment and prices. Would this extra
monetary stimulus result in an undue amount of inflation at some point in the future? Here, I find
the recent historical evidence to be comforting. The following chart documents that the medium-
term inflation outlook has not risen above 2¼ percent in the past 15 years, even though the
unemployment rate was at times below 5 percent.2 To me, this historical evidence suggests that,
as long as the unemployment rate remains above 5.5 percent, the medium-term inflation outlook
will stay close to 2 percent.
The past is never a perfect guide to the future, of course. But I see the Committee’s
estimates of future long-run unemployment as also being consistent with this historical evidence.
Most FOMC participants expect that, over the long run, an unemployment rate of between 5.2
percent and 6 percent is consistent with an inflation rate of 2 percent. These estimates suggest
that, as long as the unemployment rate remains above 5.5 percent, wage pressures will not be
sufficiently strong to generate a medium-term inflation outlook much in excess of 2 percent.
Of course, these are estimates based on what we know now about current labor market
conditions. The FOMC’s estimates of the unemployment rate consistent with maximum
employment could evolve over time, in response to new information and new analyses. This is
1 See Werning (2012, sections 4.2 and 5) for an extensive discussion of this mechanism.
2For the period 1997-2006, the chart depicts the medium-term outlook for PCE inflation prepared for December
FOMC meetings by Federal Reserve staff (Greenbook). Beginning in 2007, FOMC participants released summary
information about their projections for inflation conditioned on their individual assessments of appropriate policy.
The chart depicts the midpoint of the central tendency of those medium-term outlooks (summary of economic
projections, or SEP) for inflation from the fourth quarter of each calendar year.
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why the FOMC’s current forward guidance contains what I see as strong protection against
undue inflation. As I described earlier, that guidance clearly states that the Committee’s
commitment to a low fed funds rate is off the table if the medium-term inflation outlook ever
rises above 2.5 percent.
I’ve said that I see it as unlikely that this inflation threshold would be breached, even if
the Committee were to lower the unemployment threshold to 5.5 percent. Conversely, I would
see a breach of this threshold as being a cause for significant concern. We have not seen a
medium-term outlook for inflation as high as 2.25 percent over the past 15 years. In that context,
a medium-term outlook of 2.5 percent or more should be seen as being highly unusual. In my
view, such an unusually high inflation outlook should lead the FOMC to strongly consider an
aggressive response.
To sum up: My outlook for both inflation and unemployment means that the FOMC
should provide more monetary accommodation. In March, the FOMC said that it anticipates
keeping the fed funds rate extraordinarily low at least until the unemployment rate falls below
6.5 percent. In my view, it would be appropriate for the Committee to increase the level of
monetary accommodation by lowering the unemployment rate threshold to 5.5 percent. Some
might be concerned that this move would give rise to undue inflationary pressures. I see that
possibility as unlikely—and, even if I’m wrong in my assessment, the Committee’s forward
guidance provides tight inflation safeguards.
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Conclusions
Monetary policy affects the economy with a lag of one or two years. Hence, a policymaker’s
views about the appropriate level of monetary policy accommodation depend on his or her
forecast for how the economy will evolve over the next year or two. My own outlook is that
growth will remain moderate over the next two years. As a result, under current policy, my
outlook for inflation is that it will run below the Fed’s target of 2 percent over the next two years
and that the unemployment rate will be above 7 percent over that same period. That outlook
suggests that the FOMC can better promote price stability and promote maximum employment,
as mandated by Congress, by adopting a more accommodative policy stance. The FOMC could
provide that additional accommodation in several different ways. In my remarks today, I’ve
described one particularly simple approach: lowering the unemployment rate threshold in its
forward guidance to 5.5 percent from the current setting of 6.5 percent.
Thanks for listening and I look forward to taking your questions.
Reference
Werning, Iván. 2012. “Managing a Liquidity Trap: Monetary and Fiscal Policy.” Working paper.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2013, March 26). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130327_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20130327_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2013},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130327_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}