speeches · May 27, 2015
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
Room for Improvement1
Community Leaders Lunch
Helena, Montana
May 28, 2015
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
1 Thanks to Cristina Arellano, David Fettig, Terry Fitzgerald, Rob Grunewald, Claire Hou, Luanne Pedersen, Jenni
Schoppers, Sam Schulhofer-Wohl and Niel Willardson for their assistance with these remarks.
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Thank you for that generous introduction, and thank you for the opportunity to speak to you
today. It’s a delight to be back in Helena. As you heard, I’m the president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Minneapolis. The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis has only one Branch office—and
it’s in Helena! As a result, Helena has been a regional center for the Minneapolis Bank’s
operations since the Branch opened in 1921. Personally, I’ve benefited greatly from this
arrangement, since it’s provided me with an excuse to visit the “Queen City of the Rockies” on
many occasions over the past few years. I’ll have more to say about the Helena Branch, and
especially its board of directors, later in my remarks.
My speech today focuses on the behavior of the labor market over the past eight years. At the
end of 2013, many observers were concerned that the Great Recession of 2007-09 had created
a new downgraded baseline for U.S. labor markets. But, as I will show you, the United States
experienced rapid improvement in labor market performance in 2014. There is no longer
evidence that the American labor market is trapped in some kind of dismal “new normal” in the
wake of the Great Recession.
In the absence of such evidence, I believe that policymakers should strive to facilitate ongoing
improvement in labor market outcomes until they more closely resemble those that prevailed
before the Great Recession. I use a series of charts to show that the process of improvement is
likely to take some time. By some key metrics, the labor market improved more in 2014 than it
had in almost 20 years. Yet, by these same metrics, we would need to see at least three more
years like 2014 for labor market conditions to return to their 2006 levels. It follows that
monetary policymakers should be extraordinarily patient about reducing the level of monetary
accommodation.
I look forward to taking your questions at the end of my prepared remarks. For me, those
questions are a highlight of these speaking engagements. As I will discuss, two-way
communication between policymakers and citizens is a core function of the Federal Reserve
System. Your questions are a key part of that two-way communication.
The views that I express today are my own and are not necessarily those of others in the
Federal Reserve System.
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Federal Reserve System basics
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 serves as the
headquarters for Federal Reserve operations in the ninth of the 12 Federal Reserve districts,
which 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 monetary stimulus over the next six to seven weeks. All 12 presidents of the various regional
Federal Reserve banks—including me—and the governors of the Federal Reserve Board
contribute to these deliberations. However, the voting members of the Committee itself consist
only of the governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and a rotating
group of four other presidents. In this way, the structure of the FOMC mirrors the structure of
our government, because representatives from different regions of the country—the various
presidents—have input into FOMC deliberations.
This decentralized system has many desirable attributes. I believe that one of the most
important is that it facilitates two-way communication between the nation’s central bank and
the nation’s citizens. We’re engaging in one direction of this communication right now, as I tell
you about key considerations regarding monetary policy. In the other direction, the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis gathers valuable economic information from local contacts in a
variety of ways. I then take that information forward to the FOMC as part of my contributions
to that deliberative process.
Our Bank’s board of directors, and the board of directors of the Branch office here in Helena,
are especially important sources of information to my staff and me. I’d like to spend the next
few minutes explaining the role that they play. Let me start with the Minneapolis Fed’s board of
directors. It has nine members and meets eight times per year, a couple of weeks before each
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FOMC meeting. In a lot of ways, these meetings are like those of any other board, as our board
fulfills its oversight responsibilities for the operations of the Bank. But the central part of each
of our board’s meetings consists of the members’ sharing and discussing economic intelligence
gathered from their customers and other business contacts. My staff and I follow these
conversations closely, and they are a basis for what I communicate later to the FOMC.
Of course, this conversation would not be all that valuable if our board members were all
denizens of downtown Minneapolis who were engaged in the financial industry. What makes
the process of gathering and sharing information effective is the diversity of perspectives on
our board. We get valuable information from leaders of large multinational corporations like
Pentair and General Mills, philanthropic organizations such as the Wilder Foundation, as well as
community banks and small businesses from across the district. In this way, the board features
economic diversity. It also features gender diversity—there are four women on the board.
Perhaps not surprisingly, it also features geographical diversity—it includes residents of the
Dakotas, Wisconsin, Minnesota and—last but not least!—Larry Simkins, CEO and president of
the Washington Companies, from Montana. This diversity of perspectives means that my staff
and I are hearing about the complex Ninth District economy from a wide range of viewpoints—
and that can only be a good thing. We continue to seek to strengthen our economic
intelligence-gathering by enhancing the relatively limited racial/ethnic diversity of the board.
The information-gathering done by our Minneapolis board of directors is constrained by the
fact that it has only nine people. Fortunately, our Bank has a number of other ways to gather
economic information from the district, including through four advisory councils. Our most
important way to gather information about the economy of Montana is through the board of
directors of the Helena Branch, whom Sue Woodrow introduced to you earlier. Like the
Minneapolis Fed board, the Helena board’s information-gathering is effective because of the
board’s basic diversity. There are three women on the Branch board. It has representatives
from a number of sectors in the economy, including education, nonprofits and community
banking. Geographically, the Helena Branch board includes representatives from all over the
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state, including Wolf Point, up in the northeast corner of the state, and Missoula in the
southwest.
The newest director on our Helena Branch board is, a little unusually, from Helena! Sarah Walsh
is the chief operating officer with PayneWest Financial. During the course of her tenure on the
board, Sarah may be contacting some or many of you, seeking perspectives on the economic
conditions of your particular industry sectors and your communities. Your input regarding what
you are seeing and experiencing is important information that Sarah will be reporting on at
Branch board meetings. I thank you ahead of time for your public service in assisting Sarah with
this part of her role as a Branch board director. More generally, I want to give a shout-out to all
of our Minneapolis board directors, our Helena Branch board directors and all of their contacts.
Your hard work is a key part of the decentralized process of monetary policymaking here in the
United States, and I thank you, on behalf of the Minneapolis Fed, for your dedicated public
service.
As I mentioned earlier, this gathering of local economic intelligence is an essential input into my
contributions at the FOMC meetings in Washington. At those meetings, we decide on an
appropriate stance of monetary policy for the economy. What is the FOMC seeking to achieve
by varying monetary policy? Congress has charged the FOMC with making monetary policy to
promote maximum employment and to promote price stability. The FOMC has interpreted the
second goal, price stability, to mean keeping inflation close to 2 percent.
Employment over the past eight years
I now turn to the FOMC’s performance with respect to its employment mandate over the past
eight years—from December 2006 through December 2014. Many metrics are used to measure
labor market performance. I will concentrate on what I see as the most basic of these metrics:
the fraction of people who have a job.
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I begin with the three-year period from December 2006 through December 2009. This was a
period of relatively rapid deterioration in labor market performance. The fraction of the
population over the age of 16 who had a job fell from over 63 percent to just over 58 percent.
These people did not suddenly become disabled. Nor did they suddenly decide that they could
have more fun playing video games than working. Rather, there was a large group of people
with talents and skills who would have been employed in 2006, but were not being utilized by
the U.S. economy three years later. In this sense, the 5-percentage-point decline in the
employment-to-population ratio represents a dramatic and disturbing waste of America’s
valuable human resources.
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I next show you the four-year period from the end of 2009 through December 2013. At the
beginning of this period, 58.3 percent of the population over the age of 16 had a job. At the end
of this four-year period, 58.6 percent of the population over the age of 16 had a job. The
employment-population ratio remained essentially unchanged for four years.
There is a reason to be cautious about viewing this constancy as a sign of stagnation. More and
more of the baby boom birth cohort—born between 1946 and 1964—are reaching an age at
which we would generally expect them to retire from working. Many think that it would be
natural for this demographic force to exert downward pressure on the FOMC’s maximum
employment goal.
One way to strip out this demographic effect is to look at the behavior of the fraction of those
aged 25 to 54 who have a job. Here, we’ve plotted that statistic from December 2006 to
December 2013. Its behavior is qualitatively similar to what we see for those aged 16 and over.
The fraction of those aged 25 to 54 who had a job fell rapidly from the end of 2006 to the end
of 2009. This fraction did grow slightly from 2009 to 2013—but the pace of recovery was
sluggish at best.
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These kinds of data on employment led more than a few observers to be concerned at the end
of 2013 that the U.S. labor market was stuck in some kind of adverse “new normal.”
Fortunately, we see in the next chart that 2014 showed that this kind of pessimism was
unwarranted. In 2014, the fraction of people over the age of 16 who have a job grew by 0.6
percentage points. Although this increase looks modest in the chart, it is equivalent to about
1.4 million jobs (beyond what is required to match population growth) and is tied for the largest
December-to-December increase in 17 years.
In a similar vein, the fraction of people between the ages of 25 and 54 who had a job rose by
0.9 percentage points—the largest December-to-December increase in over a quarter century.
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I have emphasized the changes in the labor market during the course of last year, 2014. We
have now received four months of labor market data from 2015. Economic activity was
subdued in the first quarter of 2015; indeed, my own estimate is that economic output,
measured in terms of real gross domestic product, may well have contracted during that period
of time. Despite this sluggishness, though, key labor market metrics continued to improve,
although at a slightly slower rate than what we observed in 2014. The message from 2015 labor
market data is the same as from 2014: There is no reason to think of the Great Recession as
leading to some kind of “new normal” with weak labor market outcomes.
Promoting maximum employment and extraordinary patience
As I mentioned earlier, the FOMC has been charged by Congress with making monetary policy
so as to promote maximum employment. In my view, the performance of the labor market in
2014 has large consequences for how the FOMC should interpret this congressional mandate.
At the end of 2013, the fraction of the population over the age of 16 with a job had remained
essentially unchanged for four years. It was plausible—although depressing—to think that labor
market performance had been permanently degraded by the Great Recession of 2007-09.
Under this pessimistic “new normal” perspective, the FOMC could have been seen as being
close to fulfilling its maximum employment mandate.
But 2014 blew up that possibility. As I noted earlier, last year featured the largest improvement
in labor market performance in many years. This dramatic change is not consistent with an
economy stuck in a post-recession “new normal.” The pessimists were wrong—and so the
FOMC should be aiming to facilitate a continuation of the 2014 improvement in the labor
market.
How close then is the FOMC to its maximum employment goal? At any point in time, there are
large uncertainties about the long-run level of employment in the economy. But the remarkable
improvement that we saw in 2014 is strong evidence against the hypothesis that the Great
Recession or slow recovery has permanently damaged the U.S. labor force. Without clear signs
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of such damage, I believe that it is natural for the FOMC to treat the pre-recession year of 2006
as a key guidepost in formulating its employment objectives.2
This raises a natural question: If we think of 2006 as representing maximum employment, how
long will it take for the U.S. economy to get back to maximum employment? I now want to
show you, via some simple calculations, that we will need at least three more years as good as
2014.
Here’s what I mean. This is a graph of the employment-population ratio from December 2006
through December 2014. We can see that the fraction of people over the age of 16 who have a
job in December 2014 remains well below what it was eight years earlier.
2The fraction of those aged 25 to 54 with a job declined slightly from 1999 to 2006. Some have argued that this
seven-year statistical pattern is evidence of an ongoing long-term trend decline in employment that monetary
stimulus cannot offset without generating undue inflation. However, I am unaware of any economic research that
explains the sources of this decline in the 2000s and then documents that these underlying factors have continued
to evolve in the same way since 2006. See also footnote 3.
10
Now, we extend the graph by assuming that the next six years were as good as 2014. The
employment-population ratio in December 2020 would still be below that in December 2006.
As I noted earlier, we should be cautious about using this measure of labor market health in
light of the aging of the baby boom birth cohort.3 In this next chart, I’ve done a similar
extrapolation using the employment-to-population ratio for those aged 25 to 54.
3 Of course, the demographic trends associated with the baby boom birth cohort have been well-understood for
years. In November 2007, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its forecast for the evolution of employment from
2006 to 2016. (See Franklin 2007.) This outlook took full and careful account of a wide variety of demographic
trends. It projected that, by 2016, 62.2 percent of those aged 16 and over would have a job. The employment-to-
population ratio at the end of 2014 was still about 3 percentage points short of this forecast for 2016.
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Here, we assume that we had four more years in a row like 2014—that is, 2015, 2016, 2017 and
2018 were all as good as 2014. Then, the fraction of those aged 25 to 54 with a job will be
slightly above its level in early 2007.
My discussion has emphasized the employment mandate of the FOMC. However, you will recall
that the FOMC is also charged with a second goal: promoting price stability. Accommodative
monetary policy pushes upward on prices. In principle, keeping policy sufficiently
accommodative to achieve maximum employment could lead inflation to be too high. Along
those lines, some observers have suggested that it’s necessary to raise the target for the fed
funds rate soon in order to keep inflation under control.
This suggestion is theoretically plausible, but has little support in the data. The FOMC has
translated price stability to mean a personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation rate of 2
percent. Here’s what inflation has looked like since the start of the Great Recession, more than
seven years ago. Over that period, it has averaged 1.3 percent. As of this March, it was 0.3
percent. It has been below 2 percent for nearly three years.
Of course, these data tell us where inflation has been in the past. Monetary policy affects future
prices and employment, with a lag that is generally thought to be about 18 to 24 months. Both
private sector and public sector forecasters are currently forecasting PCE inflation to remain
below the FOMC’s target over that horizon and beyond. In terms of the private sector, the
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median projection in the May Survey of Professional Forecasters is that PCE inflation will be
below 2 percent in 2015, 2016 and 2017. In terms of the public sector, the minutes from the
April FOMC meeting specifically state that the board staff’s outlook is that PCE inflation will
remain below 2 percent through 2017. These forecasts correspond to my own—as I have been
saying for some time, I don’t expect PCE inflation to return to target until 2018.
What do we conclude from this discussion of inflation and employment? I’ve suggested that,
given the absence of clear evidence of post-recession damage, the strong labor market
conditions of 2006 are a natural benchmark characterization for the FOMC’s goal of maximum
employment. Under this perspective, the Committee needs to make policy choices that will
lead to more great years like 2014—not one more year like 2014, not two more years like 2014,
but at least three more years like 2014. At the same time, my current outlook for inflation is
that it will not return to target for three years. Consequently, my assessment is that the
Committee will be able to achieve desirable employment or price outcomes only if it is
extraordinarily patient about reducing the level of existing monetary accommodation. In
particular, I don’t see raising the target range for the fed funds rate above its current low level
in 2015 as being consistent with the pursuit of the kind of labor market outcomes that we are
charged with delivering.
Conclusions
I am an economist, and economics is often, with good reason, called the “dismal” science. But
my message to you today is one of hope and optimism.
From 2006 to 2009, we saw a marked deterioration in labor market performance. As recently as
a year ago, it seemed like this loss of human resources might prove to be permanent. But the
rapid growth in employment that we saw in 2014 shattered this hypothesis. The lesson of 2014
is clear: We can do better. The FOMC is charged with promoting maximum employment. In the
wake of 2014, I see no reason why the Committee should not aim to facilitate continued
improvement in labor market conditions. Indeed, I see no reason why we should not aim for
the kind of strong labor market conditions that prevailed at the end of 2006.
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But we will only get there if we make the right choices. The FOMC can only achieve its
congressionally mandated price and employment goals by being extraordinarily patient in
reducing the level of monetary accommodation. Under my current outlook, I continue to
believe that it would be a mistake to raise the target range for the fed funds rate in 2015.
I have spent some time discussing the important role of Federal Reserve Bank board and Branch
board directors in the monetary policy process. I want to conclude by, once again, thanking all
of them for their dedicated public service.
Thank you for listening. I look forward to taking your questions.
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Reference
Franklin, James C. 2007. “An Overview of BLS Projections to 2016.” Monthly Labor Review.
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2015, May 27). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150528_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20150528_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2015},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150528_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}