speeches · September 28, 2014
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
Is It Time to Return to Business-As-Usual Monetary Policy?
A Case for Patience
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
56th National Association for Business Economics (NABE) Annual Meeting
Chicago, IL
September 29, 2014
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
Those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Is It Time to Return to Business-As-Usual Monetary Policy? A Case for Patience
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Thank you.
I would like to thank the National Association for Business Economics (NABE) for
inviting me to speak this morning. The organizers of this annual meeting were farsighted
in arranging the conference around the theme of long-term strategies. As the many
excellent speakers make clear, there is much to ponder as we contemplate the future of
monetary policy. And I welcome the opportunity to talk to you today about my views on
the appropriate strategy for determining the timing and pace of our eventual policy
normalization.
Before I begin, let me note that the views I express are my own and do not necessarily
represent those of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) or
within the Federal Reserve System.
Introduction and Summary
As you know, for almost six years, economic conditions have led the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) to keep its primary policy tool, the federal funds rate, at its
effective zero lower bound (ZLB). When will it be time to finally lift the funds rate from
the ZLB? Of course, the answer to that question depends on our progress toward our
mandated goals of maximum sustainable employment and price stability.
It has been a long time since the trough of the Great Recession. In the wake of the
recession, the unemployment rate reached at an astonishing peak of 10.0 percent.
Since then, we have made significant progress in moving the unemployment rate back
to a more normal number. Yet, at 6.1 percent, it remains too high. And, as I will discuss
shortly, some other measures suggest that the labor market is far from complete
recovery.
We have underperformed on the inflation front as well. Since 2008, year-over-year total
inflation as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE)
has averaged just 1.4 percent, well below its 2 percent target. Today, PCE inflation
stands at 1-1/2 percent and is expected to move up only slowly toward the FOMC’s
target.
Nonetheless, we have come a long way in healing the injuries the financial crisis
inflicted. Certainly monetary policy has been doing some heavy lifting. The Federal
Reserve responded quickly to the unfolding recession by cutting the fed funds rate to
near zero by December 2008. Once at the ZLB, we then turned to unconventional
measures, such as large-scale asset purchases and forward guidance about the federal
2
funds rate, to provide further accommodation. In the fall of 2012, with the unemployment
rate hovering stubbornly at around 8 percent and core inflation steadily drifting lower
than our 2 percent target, the Fed introduced open-ended asset purchases and, later,
forward guidance that related federal funds rate actions to thresholds explicitly
expressed in terms of our policy goals. These efforts have helped the economy make
impressive progress toward our employment mandate and appear to be moving us
closer to our 2 percent inflation target as well.
Given this progress, it is natural to ask if it is time to return to business as usual. Are we
close enough to our policy goals — and do we have enough confidence in our ability to
achieve those goals within the foreseeable future — that policy can return to operating
according to more traditional guidelines?
As I will discuss in more detail, I think the answer is no. First, inflation remains
stubbornly low. Second, I believe that substantial slack persists in labor markets and
that some remaining and slowly dissipating headwinds could weigh on our progress
toward full employment for some time. Chair Yellen pointed to a few of these headwinds
in her press conference after the September FOMC meeting: tight mortgage credit for
some borrowers; depressed household expectations for their income prospects; and
modest productivity growth.1 And, third, there is my weighing of risk-management
considerations.
To me, the risks imposed on an economy forced to operate at the ZLB on policy rates
are paramount. In an economy mired at the ZLB, interest rates cannot fall low enough to
equate the supply of saving with the demand for investment — a constraint that then
significantly impedes consumer spending, capital formation, and employment
expansion. Accordingly, before the Fed raises rates we should have a great deal of
confidence that we won’t be forced to backtrack on our moves and face another painful
period at the ZLB. And once we start, at least initially we should raise rates slowly to
make sure the economy can weather less accommodative financial conditions. In sum,
we should be exceptionally patient in adjusting the stance of U.S. monetary policy —
even to the point of allowing a modest overshooting of our inflation target to
appropriately balance the risks to our policy objectives.
Let me now explain how I get to this conclusion.
Conflicting Signs in the Labor Market
To judge the success of policy, you have to know when you’ve actually reached your
targets. Knowing when we hit our inflation target is straightforward. After all, a 2 percent
increase in PCE prices is an easily identifiable number. But full employment is a far
more nuanced concept. As the FOMC’s annual January “Statement on Longer-Run
Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy” recognizes, maximum employment can be
influenced by a large number of structural factors that can change over time and may
not be directly measureable. In light of this uncertainty, the Committee considers many
1 See Yellen (2014).
3
factors in gauging maximum employment. Judging the degree of slack along these
many dimensions is a difficult and complex task. But it is one that is critical for the
conduct of monetary policy — we must have a good idea of what constitutes
achievement of our full employment target.
Many economists, our Chicago Fed staff included, have been working long and hard on
research related to this topic. In my remarks today, I will briefly talk about some of our
results that touch on several of the most contested labor market issues on the table
today. These involve labor force participation, job openings and wages. To give you the
punch line, this research and work done by others in the field lead me to conclude that,
although we have made great strides, a good deal of slack remains in the labor market.
Labor Force Participation and Employment
As everyone in this room is aware, the labor force participation rate has fallen
throughout the recession and recovery and is now at a 35-year low.2 Much of that
decline is due to trends that far predate the Great Recession. The movement of baby
boomers into retirement age and the long-running declines in teenager and prime-age
male participation would have significantly reduced labor force participation rates
independently of the economic downturn.
Chicago Fed economists first did work on the prospects for a declining labor force
participation trend back in 2001 — near the time the rate peaked at just over 67
percent.3 Even after revisiting this topic numerous times and with multiple generations
of research assistants working on the programs, our economists’ views about the trends
that are consistent with the composition of the population and a labor market near
equilibrium have not changed much since then.4 Among the many robustness analyses
they performed, their models produce nearly the same trend for labor force participation
as they have since 2001.5
Depending on the details of the specification, the models show that at the end of the
second quarter of 2014, the labor force participation rate was between 1/2 and 1-1/4
percentage points below trend. Furthermore, the participation rate was as much as 3/4
of a percentage point below predictions based on its historical relationship with the
unemployment rate. This disparity suggests that there likely is an extra margin of slack
in labor markets beyond that indicated by the unemployment rate alone.
It is interesting to dig further into these “labor force participation gaps.” Virtually all the
gap during this cycle has been due to withdrawal from the labor market of workers
without a college degree. By contrast, a participation gap never materialized for college
2 The labor force participation rate is defined as the share of the population aged 16 and older who are
either employed or unemployed. To be unemployed, a person has to not have a job but be actively
looking for work in the prior four weeks and to be currently available to work. These data are collected by
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as part of its monthly Current Population Survey.
3 Aaronson and Sullivan (2001).
4 Aaronson et al. (2014).
5 Specifically, the trends generated by Chicago Fed economists’ preferred models are very close whether
they are estimated using data through 2002, 2007 or 2014.
4
graduates, even during the depths of the recession. There is no simple explanation for
this striking contrast. It could be yet another symptom of long-running but difficult-to-
model trends in the economy, such as structural change in the patterns of production,
job polarization, and changes in social programs, which particularly impact the lower-
skill work force.6 Regardless, the divergent work behavior across education groups
strikes me as an important fact and deserving of much further research attention.
The declining trend in labor force participation also influences how fast the economy
can produce new jobs in the long run. Our estimate of the trend in payroll employment
growth over the past 15 years averages roughly 100,000 jobs per month. Looking
ahead, we think that declines in the labor force participation rate and population growth
will bring the trend in payroll employment growth down to fewer than 50,000 jobs per
month by 2016. This new benchmark probably will only become apparent in the monthly
data once the economy closes the current 3.8 million employment gap. But barring
sizable changes in immigration policy, policymakers and the public will need to get
accustomed to a slower base of employment growth by the latter part of the decade.
Job Openings and Hiring
This brings me to the issue of hiring and job openings. The job openings rate, as
measured by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Job Openings and Labor Turnover
Survey (JOLTS) data, started climbing immediately after the recession and made it back
to its pre-recession high this summer.7 Yet, despite some improvement, the JOLTS
hiring rate remains disappointingly below where it stood before the recession began.8
Why might firms report many more openings but be slower to fill them? Posting a
vacancy is only part of the hiring process. Jason Faberman of the Chicago Fed, in
collaboration with Steve Davis of the University of Chicago and John Haltiwanger of the
University of Maryland, estimate that the overall effort that firms actually are putting into
filling a job vacancy fell by over 20 percent during the recession. It has been slow to
recover since and today still stands 8 percent below its 2006 peak and, for that matter,
below where it was anytime during the last expansion.9
Davis, Faberman and Haltiwanger argue that low recruiting intensity may reflect
employers’ increased hiring standards. That squares with anecdotes we hear that
employers are being very picky and waiting for the perfect applicant. It could be that
6 See, for example, Acemoglu and Autor (2011) and Charles, Hurst and Notowidigdo (2013). See
Shierholz, Mishel and Schmitt (2013) for a skeptical view. An alternative explanation is based on changes
in the use of social safety net programs, especially disability insurance (DI), that are partly cyclical in
nature. The DI rolls have been increasing throughout this business cycle, although they have been on the
rise, more or less uninterrupted, since the 1990s (Autor, 2011; and Burkhauser and Daly, 2011). The DI
program tends to be cyclical partly because eligibility standards ease amid deteriorating labor market
conditions (Mueller, Rothstein and von Wachter, 2013). That is, people with moderate disabilities are
more likely to qualify for the DI program when there are fewer suitable jobs available.
7 The job openings rate is the number of job openings on the last business day of the month as a percent
of total employment plus job openings.
8 The hiring rate stood at 4.0 percent at its 2006 peak and fell to as low as 2.8 percent in 2009. Today, it
is 3.5 percent.
9 See Dice Hiring Indicators (2014).
5
hiring standards become more stringent during an economic downturn. For example, if
there is an unusually high degree of downward nominal wage rigidity, as Mary Daly and
Bart Hobijn of the San Francisco Fed document has been the case over this cycle,10
then employers may respond by filling fewer openings. If this story is true, then the high
ratio of vacancies to hires is a further indication of slack in the labor market.
Alternatively, a low rate of vacancy filling might signal a persistent structural problem.
For years, I’ve been hearing business people complain of difficulty in finding sufficiently
qualified candidates. This phenomenon may be indicative of a skills mismatch between
jobs and workers. If this is the case, then it is possible that the steady-state level of the
vacancy rate has increased, which would help explain why the improvement in
vacancies we’ve seen over the past few years has been slow to translate into similar
progress on hiring.
Now, it’s unclear if these trends are widespread. For example, only about 20 percent of
the respondents to the July NABE business conditions survey indicated their firms face
shortages of skilled labor.11 And if skills mismatch was a large ongoing problem, we’d
expect to see wages rising much faster for those with the skills in excess demand. Here,
there is evidence of larger wage increases in some occupations, but the degree of
wage-growth dispersion does not appear to be unusual.
Wages
Indeed, wage growth in general continues to be very modest--at a bit over 2 percent per
year. That is a long way from the 3 to 4 percent benchmark implied by productivity
growth and our inflation objective. Indeed, over the past three years, the unemployment
rate has fallen by a percentage point per year; yet real wage growth has barely budged.
It’s hard for me to imagine a full labor market recovery without genuine improvement in
compensation growth. But am I wrong? Has the wage Phillips curve completely broken
down?
Some claim the answer is no — you just have to look at the right measure of
unemployment. Alan Krueger, Judd Cramer and David Cho, among others, have shown
that the relationship during this cycle between real wages and the short-term
unemployment rate — that is, those unemployed 26 weeks or less — has been in line
with historical norms, whereas the huge spike in long-term unemployment exerted
minimal pressure on real wage growth.12 Of course, the short-term unemployment rate
is now close to its pre-recession level. So their model implies nominal wage growth
should be returning to something close to the fundamentals implied by productivity
growth and inflation.
My staff’s research comes to a somewhat different conclusion. Using state-level data,
they show that if you further split short-term unemployment into those unemployed one
10 Daly and Hobijn (2014).
11 See National Association for Business Economics (2014b).
12 Krueger, Cramer, and Cho (2014). This same result appears for the price Phillips curve, as shown, for
example, by Gordon (2013).
6
month or less and those unemployed between one and six months, only the one-to-six
month rate has any predictive power for wage growth. This so-called medium-term
unemployment rate is still somewhat above its pre-recession mark. In addition, they find
that the rate of involuntary part-time employment, which is still very high, also has a
substantial influence on wage growth.13 Putting it all together, their estimates say that if
labor market conditions were at their 2005–07 levels, average real wage growth would
be roughly 1/2 to 1 percentage point higher over the past year — another sign of the
cyclical shortfall in labor market health.
To sum up, with many important measures of labor market activity still well short of our
estimates of cyclical norms, I believe it is a bit premature to say that we are close to our
full employment target — the labor market is not yet calling for business-as-usual
monetary policy.
That said, while it has taken longer than anyone would like, our progress has been
good. Indeed, there is good reason to anticipate that we will achieve full employment
and price stability within the FOMC’s current forecast horizon. Notably, in the
Committee’s Summary of Economic Projections released a week and a half ago, most
participants anticipated that the unemployment rate would return to its long-run neutral
level by the end of 2016 and that inflation then would be in the range of 1-3/4 to 2
percent.
A Balanced Approach to Monetary Policy
Now let me turn to my views on monetary policy.
I can’t speak to my FOMC colleagues’ forecasts and how they interact with their views
regarding appropriate policy. But, for my part, I think it is more likely that we will achieve
our employment mandate before inflation is clearly headed back to 2 percent.
Conceptually, this could raise a policy dilemma — achieving our inflation objective
would call for strong accommodation, while achieving our employment target usually
would call for earlier policy normalization. However, the story is even more complicated
than that because important risk factors also come into play. In some ways the insights
from Nobel laureates Lars Hansen and Tom Sargent regarding robust control
evaluations help form my assessment.14 I see two important and divergent ways my
forecast could go wrong. One is that I may be overestimating the underlying strength in
the real economy and its ability to exit from the ZLB. Guarding against this risk calls for
a more patient removal of accommodation. The second is that I may be wrong about the
13 Aaronson and Jordan (2014). The medium-term unemployed are those unemployed five to 26 weeks.
Persons involuntarily employed part time for economic reasons (such as slack work or unfavorable
business conditions) are those who want and are available for full-time work but have had to settle for a
part-time job. See also Kiley (2014).
14 The idea of robust control is that when making decisions, one should take into account that the models
being used to guide one’s decisions may be wrong. For discussions of robust control and what it might
imply about the conduct of macroeconomic policy in various scenarios, see Hansen and Sargent (2008,
2014).
7
inflation outlook, and we could be poised for a much stronger rise in inflation than I am
forecasting. This risk calls for more aggressive rate hikes.
How do I think policy should balance these divergent risks? How should these risks
affect my views about how to follow the FOMC strategy of pursuing a balanced
approach to achieving our policy goals?
In my mind, current circumstances and a weighing of alternative risks mean that a
balanced policy approach calls for being patient in reducing accommodation — that is,
being patient about when we first increase the federal funds rate and being patient
about setting the pace of rate increases once we have begun to move. I know from the
NABE Economic Policy Survey that many of you disagree with this view.15 So, let me
explain how I get there.
Proceed Cautiously in Normalizing Policy
To say the least, conducting monetary policy at the ZLB has been a difficult experience
that we all want to avoid repeating unnecessarily. In the winter of 2009, with the
unemployment rate soaring to double digits, the Fed would have very much liked to
lower the nominal federal funds rate an additional 300 basis points; but we couldn’t
because the rate was already at zero. Faced with a pressing need to provide additional
accommodation, we were forced to turn to innovative, but controversial, unconventional
monetary policies. These policies have been extremely helpful. But there is no denying
that they were second-best options; the ZLB had made lowering the fed funds rate,
which is our first-best interest rate tool, infeasible.
Everyone will welcome a return to more normal times and a reliance on the traditional
policy framework of adjustments to the federal funds rate. But the decision about when
to begin to raise rates shouldn’t be made prematurely. Rather, the decision for policy
liftoff has to be made for the right reasons — that is, it should be dictated by economic
conditions.
I have said many times that I agree with Minneapolis Fed President Narayana
Kocherlakota: Policy at all times must be goal-oriented.16 Our experiences since the
crisis began and current economic conditions are highly unusual. The FOMC should not
simply set its policy instruments by mechanically aligning them with historical norms if
those norms are not relevant harbingers for the attainment of both of our dual mandate
goals. Rather, our policy instruments should be set to achieve our ultimate goals as
efficaciously as possible given current and prospective economic conditions, all the
while with an eye on managing against important risks to the outlook.
What does that mean now? I believe that the biggest risk we face today is prematurely
engineering restrictive monetary conditions. In this scenario, the FOMC could misjudge
15 See National Association for Business Economics (2014a).
16 See, for example, Kocherlakota (2013).
8
the presence and magnitude of economic impediments and misread the recent progress
we have made as evidence of sounder economic trends. If we were to presume
prematurely that the U.S. economy has returned to a more business-as-usual position
and reduce monetary accommodation too soon, we could find ourselves in the very
uncomfortable position of falling back into the ZLB environment. Such an outcome could
be a serious setback to the timely attainment of our dual mandate policy objectives.
This risk consideration means that the decision to lift the funds rate from zero should be
made only when we have a great deal of confidence that growth has enough
momentum to reach full employment and that inflation will return to a sustainable 2
percent rate. We should also proceed cautiously and keep the path of rate increases
relatively shallow for some time after we begin to raise rates. This approach will allow us
time to assess how the economy is performing under less accommodative financial
conditions and reduce the odds of overaggressive rate hikes choking off progress
toward our policy goals.
History Shows That Premature Exit Is a Risk
Great Depression
Past experience with the ZLB also counsels patience. History has not looked kindly on
attempts to prematurely remove accommodation from economies that are in or near a
liquidity trap. The U.S. experience during the Great Depression — in particular, in 1937
— is a classic example for monetary historians: In response to the positive growth and
reinflation that occurred after the devaluation and suspension of gold convertibility, the
Fed raised reserve requirements, the Treasury sterilized gold inflows, and there was a
fiscal contraction. Subsequently, the economy dropped back into recession and
deflation. During this time, interest rates remained very low. The discount rate was
lower after 1937 than before, and Treasury bill rates were less than 1 percent. By many
economic accounts, it took the big fiscal expansion associated with World War II to exit
the Great Depression.
Japan over the Past 20 Years
We can also learn from the Japanese experience over the past 20 years. After
attempting to expand production and avoid deflationary prospects in the late 1990s,
monetary policy reversed course prematurely in the early 2000s as the inflation rate
inched above zero; deflationary pressures soon reemerged and policy rates returned to
zero by 2001.This experience was repeated again later in the decade. Indeed, it has
only been over the past year — following nearly 20 years of stagnation — that we see
the recent goal-oriented monetary expansion making significant headway in extracting
Japan from below-target inflation.
Recent European Experience
The recent European experience in 2011 is yet another example of premature
tightening. Despite the headwinds from continuing debt-overhang and recent financial
distress, European authorities in 2011 judged that the eurozone economy was emerging
from recession and headline inflation was at risk to rise persistently above target. The
European Central Bank (ECB) responded by raising policy rates in 2011. The ECB soon
9
had to backtrack as output in the eurozone fell again and inflation began to march down
below target. Today, the eurozone faces continued economic weakness and an inflation
rate that is just about 1/2 percent. As a result, the ECB recently lowered policy rates to
the ZLB, has started undertaking additional unconventional monetary policies, and is
now encouraging fiscal expansion among eurozone countries that are able to do so.
These lessons from monetary history strongly suggest that there are great risks to
premature liftoff from the ZLB or near-ZLB conditions. Unless economic conditions are
fundamentally strong and the previous impediments to growth have receded sufficiently,
the odds remain high that monetary authorities will need to retreat right back into the
ZLB.
And the costs of being mired in the ZLB are simply very large. The ZLB prevents using
our very best policy tools to address negative shocks. The ZLB means that interest
rates cannot fall low enough to equate the supply of saving with the demand for
investment, which, of course, significantly impedes capital formation, future economic
growth, and the health of labor markets. And the ZLB often comes hand in hand with
undesirably low inflation or even a falling price level, carrying with it the associated
costs of debt deflation on the real economy.
The Risk of Too-High Inflation
What about the other risk to our policy goals that I mentioned — the risk that the U.S.
economy could face pricing pressures that accelerate rapidly and ultimately leave
inflation far above our 2 percent target for an unacceptably long period?
At some point when the economy has clearly overcome the remaining impediments
from the largest economic and financial downturn since the Great Depression, the odds
of inflation rising noticeably above target could become palpable. But such a breakout is
just not at all very likely today. Indeed, many Fed critics have been voicing this concern
since 2009, and it hasn’t even come close to happening.
What if inflation just ran moderately above target for some time? Well, I see the costs of
this outcome as clearly being much smaller than the costs of falling back into the ZLB.
First, I believe the U.S. economy could weather the modest increases in interest rates
that would be needed to keep inflation in check. Such rate increases would be
manageable for the real economy; this is particularly true if industry and labor markets
have already made the most difficult reallocations of jobs and overcome other factors so
that productive resources are more efficiently and fully employed. Second, as I’ve noted
many times in the past, a symmetric inflation target means we should be averaging 2
percent inflation over time. We’ve averaged well under that 2 percent mark for the past
six and a half years. With a symmetric inflation target, one could imagine moderately-
above-target inflation for a limited period of time as simply the flip side of our recent
inflation experience — and hardly an event that would impose great costs on the
economy.
10
The murky state of inflation expectations is another factor that enters my risk-
management considerations. For inflation to take off rapidly, we would have to see a
jump in inflationary expectations. But inflationary expectations have been quite stable.
Indeed, we may be facing a quite different problem. Many forecasters — myself
included — assume that stable 2 percent inflation expectations will be an important
factor helping to pull actual inflation up. Over the past five years, professional
forecasters’ projections for long-run inflation have been at the 2 percent target and
Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) break-evens have been flat. Yet actual
inflation has only just recently made it back up to 1-1/2 percent. Moreover, we still have
not seen much at all in the way of higher inflation compensation being built into interest
rates or wages. So there is cause for concern that expectations might not produce as
strong a pull on inflation as we hope.
We can turn to the Japanese experience again to highlight this risk. Over the past 20
years, long-run inflation expectations in Japan have averaged a little over 1 percent. Yet
during that period, the only time inflation was palpably above zero — let alone not in
outright deflation — was when consumption taxes increased or oil prices spiked. So
inflation expectations may remain stable while inflation itself lags for a prolonged
period.17
Conclusion
As I think about the process of normalizing policy, I conclude that today’s risk-
management calculus says we should err on the side of patience in removing highly
accommodative policy. We need to solidify our confidence that our ultimate exit from the
ZLB will occur smoothly — and in a way that sustains our escape from it. A corollary to
this is we should not shy away from policy prescriptions that generate forecasts of
inflation that moderately overshoot our 2 percent target for a limited time.
Such a policy strategy more properly balances expected costs and benefits. And it
would leave me with much more confidence that inflation will not stall out below target
once we start raising rates.
I agree with Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart in thinking that we ought to be
“whites of their eyes” inflation fighters.18 The last thing we want to do is regress back
into the ZLB. Indeed, such a relapse would be a sign there was something else going
on that was preventing the economy from being as vibrant as we thought possible.
To summarize, I am very uncomfortable with calls to raise our policy rate sooner than
later. I favor delaying liftoff until I am more certain that we have sufficient momentum in
place toward our policy goals. And I think we should plan for our path of policy rate
increases to be shallow in order to be sure that the economy’s momentum is
sustainable in the presence of less accommodative financial conditions. I look forward
17 Consensus Economics, Inc. (1994-2014).
18 Lockhart (2014).
11
to the day when we can return to business-as-usual monetary policy, but that time has
not yet arrived.
12
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13
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2014, September 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140929_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140929_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140929_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}