speeches · September 3, 2014
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
The Economic Outlook, Monetary Policy, and Communications:
Progress on Multiple Journeys
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
The Economic Club of Pittsburgh, CFA Society Pittsburgh, and
the Pittsburgh Society of Investment Professionals
Pittsburgh, PA
September 4, 2014
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Introduction
It is a real pleasure to be here today and to address the Economic Club of Pittsburgh, the CFA Society
Pittsburgh, and the Pittsburgh Society of Investment Professionals. I have been on quite a journey during
my first three months on the job as the new president of the Cleveland Fed. Not only have I attended my
first two Federal Open Market Committee meetings in Washington as a voting member, but I have been
getting to know the Fourth Federal Reserve District, which includes Ohio, western Pennsylvania, the
northern panhandle of West Virginia, and eastern Kentucky. One of my first stops was to Pittsburgh, and
it is wonderful to be back here today for my first public speech since becoming president in June.
The economy and monetary policy have been on journeys of their own. Today, I want to share my views
on both. But before I continue, let me note that these are my own views and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
Economic Conditions and the Outlook
The economy is now in its sixth year of expansion. It has been a slow and difficult journey, with some
stops and starts along the way. And while the final destination has not yet been reached, the economy has
made significant progress on the road back toward fulfilling the Federal Reserve’s goals of price stability
and maximum employment.
Perhaps the clearest signals of that progress are in the labor market. Tomorrow all eyes, including my
own, will be on the Labor Department’s monthly jobs report for August. Because these statistics can vary
from month to month, rather than focus on one monthly number, I like to look at the underlying trend in
the data. Here, the news is good: We’ve seen steady improvement in labor market conditions. So far this
year, nonfarm payrolls have risen an average of about 230,000 jobs per month, which is somewhat
stronger than last year’s pace and represents significant progress since the start of the recovery. In
addition, there has been some consistency in those gains, with monthly increases of more than 200,000
jobs in each of the past six months. While the recovery in jobs has been much slower than anyone would
have liked, as of this May, the economy finally met the milestone of having added more jobs during the
expansion than the 8.7 million jobs lost during the Great Recession.
The unemployment rate is another important gauge of labor market conditions, and it, too, has shown
substantial improvement. It currently stands at 6.2 percent, down from a peak of 10 percent in October
2009, and more than a percentage point lower than a year ago. Of course, unemployment rates vary by
region, depending on a number of factors. The Pittsburgh metropolitan area’s unemployment rate was
near the nation’s before the recession. But it did not rise as high and has been running somewhat below
the national average over the expansion, reflecting the region’s concentration of faster-growing “meds
and eds” jobs.
Despite regional variation, overall, the fall in the national unemployment rate has been faster than many
economists and policymakers, including some on the FOMC, had anticipated. For example, last
September, according to the central tendency of their projections, FOMC participants were projecting that
the unemployment rate would be 6.4 to 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter of this year. But the
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unemployment rate is already lower than that. Other measures of unemployment or underemployment
have also shown improvement over time. These include measures that track people who are working part
time but would prefer a full-time job, and the long-term unemployed – people who have been out of work
for more than six months.
Yet the labor market’s journey is not yet complete – more progress needs to be made. My outlook is that
as the expansion continues, firms will continue to add to their payrolls and the unemployment rate will
continue to decline. I expect that by the end of next year, the unemployment rate will fall to around 5½
percent, which is what I view as the “natural rate,” or longer-run rate, of unemployment.
Unlike labor markets, economic growth needed some snow tires on its journey earlier this year. Real
output fell at a slightly more than 2 percent annual rate in the first quarter. I attribute most of this stall-out
to temporary factors, like the extremely bad winter weather, rather than a sign of weakening in the
underlying economy. In fact, during the second quarter, we saw a significant rebound in activity, and I
expect real GDP to expand at about a 3 percent annual pace in the second half of this year and next year.
That growth rate is consistent with continued improvement in labor markets, which will help support
income growth and keep consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of economic output,
expanding at a moderate pace.
Another important positive is the considerable progress that households have made in repairing their
balance sheets – but this has taken some time. The Great Recession destroyed a lot of wealth. At the
aggregate level, household net worth fell by more than $10 trillion in 2008. It took more than three years
to make that up. Last year, rising prices of equity, which many families hold in their pension and
retirement funds, and rising house values contributed to the increase in household wealth. The
improvement in real estate prices means fewer homeowners are holding negative equity in their homes
and delinquencies on mortgages are down significantly.
Currently, about one in 20 mortgages is seriously delinquent, meaning either 90 days or more past due or
in the process of foreclosure. Three years ago that ratio was one in 12. So things have improved, but
there is still a way to go before we return to the levels seen before the housing crisis, when only one in 50
mortgages was seriously delinquent.
And I do expect to see continued progress in the housing market. We won’t go back to the unsustainable
levels of construction and surging prices that we saw prior to the crisis – nor should we want to. And like
other sectors of the economy, housing won’t follow a linear path. In fact, we saw a fairly strong increase
in housing activity, including housing starts and sales, in 2012 and the first half of 2013. Then, as
mortgage rates rose in the second half of last year and cold weather set in, that pace of activity slowed
down. 1Looking through the swing caused by the severe weather, single-family housing starts this year
have been expanding at about the same pace as last year. The multifamily housing sector has shown more
strength, which may represent a longer-run shift from owning to renting in the aftermath of the bursting of
1 For an analysis of the factors that led to a slowdown in residential investment at the end of 2013 and beginning of
2014 see, Edward S. Knotek II and Saeed Zaman, “The Slowdown in Residential Investment and Future Prospects,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Economic Commentary, No. 2014-10, May 28, 2014,
www.clevelandfed.org/research/commentary/2014/2014-10.pdf.
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the housing bubble and tighter mortgage credit conditions. Overall, my outlook is for the moderate
improvement in housing to continue, supported by mortgage rates that are still very low by historical
standards and a level of affordability that is better than before the crisis.
Similar to households, businesses have also been repairing their balance sheets during the expansion.
Corporate profits are at high levels. Nonetheless, business investment has been somewhat slower than
one would have expected based on economic fundamentals. We heard from many businesses over the
past two years that they had the wherewithal to invest but wanted to wait a while longer until they were
more confident that the economic expansion was sustainable and some of the uncertainty about fiscal
policy was resolved. We are now seeing that happen. Fiscal policy is less of a drag this year than it has
been over the last couple of years, and business confidence has risen. Manufacturing surveys and
anecdotal reports indicate that firms are planning to increase capital spending, and we are seeing stronger
orders and shipments.
Putting all of this together, I expect growth over the next six quarters to be somewhat above my estimate
of trend growth, which I put at around 2.5 percent. Of course, there is always a good deal of uncertainty
around estimates of trend growth, perhaps even more so today in the aftermath of such a deep recession. I
am a bit more optimistic than some about longer-run growth because while productivity growth has been
running low, I think it is good to remember the experience of the 1990s. Back then, over a period of
several years, many forecasters revised down trend growth estimates only to subsequently revise them up
significantly in response to strong productivity growth.
Turning to inflation, the recent news has been encouraging. Inflation is moving back toward the Fed’s
goal of 2 percent, measured by the year-over-year change in the price index for personal consumption
expenditures, or PCE inflation. This measure of inflation hasincreased to 1.6 percent this year from 1.2
percent last year. This is encouraging because we wouldn’t want to see inflation run either persistently
above or persistently below our goal. Consistent with a pickup in economic growth, and expectations of
inflation remaining well anchored, my forecast is that inflation will move back toward 2 percent over
time.
One might ask whether that’s a reasonable inflation forecast given that we haven’t seen much acceleration
in wages yet. I believe it is. Cleveland Fed analysis, based on several measures of wages and broader
compensation, indicates that it is difficult to find a lead-lag relationship between wages and prices – the
strongest correlations are contemporaneous ones, especially since the mid-1980s.2 We should expect
wages to rise with prices, not necessarily lead prices. In my view, it would not be prudent for
policymakers to simply wait for wages to accelerate before assessing the implications of the stance of
monetary policy for future price inflation. Indeed, policymakers must always be forward looking. We
must continue to process incoming information on economic activity, labor market conditions, and prices,
and assess whether or not that information is consistent with or has changed our outlook. We also have to
keep in mind the risks that surround the forecast, including the geopolitical risks that have escalated in
2 Edward S. Knotek II and Saeed Zaman, “On the Relationship between Wages, Prices, and Economic Activity,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Economic Commentary, No. 2014-14, August 19, 2014,
www.clevelandfed.org/research/commentary/2014/2014-14.pdf.
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recent weeks. Despite these risks, my read of the data and the incoming information we collect from our
business contacts is that the economy is standing on firmer ground than it has been for some time. The
economy has made, and continues to make, substantial progress on its journey back to our dual-mandate
goals.
Monetary Policy
So that’s my travelogue of the economy’s journey. But in response to the financial crisis and deep
recession, monetary policy took a journey of its own – into uncharted waters. The depth and nature of the
recession required the Federal Reserve to run an extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy to
promote our goals of price stability and maximum employment. The FOMC has kept its policy rate – the
federal funds rate – at essentially zero since the end of 2008. To exert downward pressure on long-term
interest rates, it has purchased longer-term Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed securities,
expanding the Fed’s balance sheet from about $900 billion in 2007 to almost $4.5 trillion today. It has
also used forward guidance to communicate the anticipated future path of policy.
As the economy journeys back to more normal territory, monetary policy will also need to navigate back
to more normal seas – something you probably have heard referred to as “policy normalization.”
Eventually we will be able to move away from our extraordinary policy tools, like asset purchases, and
back toward implementing monetary policy by targeting short-term interest rates. In fact, already, based
on the cumulative progress the economy has made in labor markets, since the start of the year, the FOMC
has been scaling back the pace at which it has been buying assets. At our July meeting, the FOMC voted
to reduce the pace by another $10 billion, to $25 billion a month. If the economy continues on my
anticipated trajectory, then I expect the asset purchase program to end this fall.
Yet, even with the end of the purchase program, the Fed’s balance sheet will remain very large, with
assets of much longer maturity than usual, and this will complicate the normalization journey. The
FOMC has been developing tools to help during the trip. One of these tools, an overnight reverse
repurchase agreement facility, is currently being tested. Basically, with reverse repos, the Fed lends
securities from its large portfolio in return for liquidity, which is thereby drained from the market. The
Fed also is testing the use of term deposits to absorb some of the excess reserves in the banking system.
The FOMC has been discussing the design of these tools, which would be intended for limited use during
normalization. The Fed’s ability to pay interest on excess reserves, with these supplementary tools
providing backup if needed, will allow the Fed to move interest rates up to target when it is appropriate to
do so, despite the large size of our balance sheet.
In addition to taking another step to taper asset purchases, in July, the FOMC maintained its forward
guidance on interest rates. This guidance indicated that given our assessment of realized and expected
progress toward our dual-mandate objectives, it will likely be appropriate to maintain the current 0-to-¼
percentage point range for the federal funds rate for a considerable period after the asset purchase
program ends. With the end of the program nearing, I believe it is again time for the Committee to
reformulate its forward guidance. The forward guidance the FOMC has offered for the path of the policy
interest rate has undergone several changes along the way as we’ve moved from the extraordinary times
of financial crisis and deep recession to recovery and expansion. The guidance has tied the eventual
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liftoff of the fed funds rate from zero to a calendar date, to a numerical threshold for the unemployment
rate, and, more recently, to qualitative information rather than to quantitative measures.
While it might sound best to simply give a date about when liftoff is likely to occur, I believe using a
calendar date at this point would be poor communication. It could mislead the public into thinking that
policy is on a pre-set course. If the public doesn’t understand that policy is dynamic and based on the
economic outlook, then a change in the guidance can create its own disruption. Well-formulated forward
guidance also has to recognize that economic conditions can evolve differently than anticipated. For
example, over the past year the improvement in the unemployment rate has been faster than the FOMC
anticipated just a year ago. My preference is for forward guidance to convey that changes in the stance of
policy will be calibrated to the economy’s actual progress and anticipated progress toward our dual-
mandate goals, and to the speed with which that progress is being achieved. This latter piece recognizes
the importance of policy to be forward looking: A faster pace of progress toward our goals would argue
for a faster return to normal, while a more subdued pace would argue for a slower return.
Communication
Forward guidance is just one aspect of the communications that will be an important part of the journey
back toward normal monetary policy. The FOMC will need to do its best to communicate the rationale
for its policy decisions and to prepare the public for this unprecedented trip.
Of course, effective communication is not a trivial task. Yet the potential economic benefits have kept
the FOMC striving for increased transparency over time. It’s hard to believe that it was just 20 years ago,
in 1994, when the FOMC first began to issue a statement after it had changed policy. Since then the
FOMC has taken other steps, including expediting the release of the minutes of its meetings, publishing
economic projections four times a year followed by the Chair’s press conference, and releasing a
statement clarifying our longer-run goals and monetary policy strategy.
The FOMC is continuing its journey toward more effective communications. This summer, Chair Yellen
asked Governor Fischer to chair, and Governor Powell, President Williams of the San Francisco Fed, and
myself to serve on a subcommittee on communications to help the FOMC frame and organize the
discussion of a broad range of communications issues. I believe striving for clearer communication will
yield benefits, especially as we undertake normalization. As normalization nears and progresses, there is
likely to be increased volatility in financial markets; that is not necessarily a bad thing. Indeed, the goal
of communication is not to reduce all volatility – volatility is a necessary part of price discovery in
financial markets. But the better we can communicate our monetary policy framework and the basis for
policy decisions, the more likely we can avoid undesirable disruptions and turbulence that could result
from misunderstandings as we prepare for and progress on the journey to a more normal policymaking
framework and policy stance.
Conclusion
In summary, the economy has made considerable progress on its journey back to maximum employment
and price stability. Although there are risks around the forecast, including geopolitical ones, my
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expectation is for the economy to continue to make progress, with growth at about 3 percent over the
second half of this year and next year, the unemployment rate falling to 5½ percent – my estimate of the
natural rate – by the end of next year, and inflation returning to 2 percent over the next two years.
Monetary policy remains extraordinarily accommodative, but as labor markets have shown considerable
improvement, the FOMC is tapering the pace at which it is purchasing longer-term securities, and I
anticipate that program to end this fall.
Given the uncharted waters we are in, the journey back to a normal monetary policy stance and
framework for conducting policy is a challenging one, and the FOMC continues to plan for it. The
communication surrounding normalization is going to play an important part in how well the journey
goes. Explaining the factors that influence the changes in the outlook and FOMC policy decisions, as
well as how the FOMC plans to conduct policy, can help the public make informed expectations as the
economy evolves and monetary policy travels back to normal.
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2014, September 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140904_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140904_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140904_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}