speeches · June 30, 2016
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
The U.S. Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
The European Economics and Financial Centre
Distinguished Speakers Seminar
London, U.K.
July 1, 2016
1
Introduction
I thank the European Economics and Financial Centre for the invitation to speak to this distinguished
audience, in this venerable venue, at this historically significant time. I will focus my remarks today on
the other side of the pond – in particular, the U.S. economy and monetary policy. But as you know, we
live in a global world, and so we are monitoring very closely what is happening on this side of the pond
and assessing the implications for the economic outlook and monetary policy on my side of the pond.
Before I begin, I should note that the views I’ll present today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
The Economic Outlook
The consequences of last week’s decision by U.K. voters to exit the European Union are on everyone’s
mind. This is a developing story, and how it plays out will ultimately determine its implications for the
global economy and monetary policy. For the U.S. economy, while the risks and uncertainty surrounding
the outlook have increased, it is too early to judge whether conditions in the aftermath of the decision will
necessitate a material change in the modal outlook. In structuring my remarks today, I think it would be
helpful to first discuss my views on the U.S. economy prior to the vote. These were the views I carried
into the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting two weeks ago and that helped inform the
economic projections I submitted as part of the FOMC’s latest Summary of Economic Projections (SEP).
I will then discuss the potential ramifications of the U.K.’s exit decision for the U.S. economic outlook.
In thinking about the economic outlook, I try to stay focused on underlying fundamentals because they
determine the outlook for the economy over the medium run, the time horizon over which monetary
policy can affect the economy. In my view, the underlying fundamentals supporting the U.S. economic
expansion remain sound. These include accommodative monetary policy, household balance sheets that
have improved greatly since the recession, continued progress in the labor market, a more resilient
banking system, and low oil prices. There are risks around all forecasts, but my modal forecast has been
2
that over the next two years the U.S. economy will continue to expand at a pace slightly above its longer-
run trend, which I estimate to be about 2 percent; that the unemployment rate will remain slightly under
its longer-run level, which I estimate to be about 5 percent; and that inflation will continue to gradually
return to the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target. Of course, even in the best of times, without the
increased uncertainty of our current situation, there is some variation in growth and other economic
indicators over time. The trick is to extract the signal about where the economy is headed from economic
and financial market information that can often be quite noisy.
Economic growth
We’ve seen this kind of variability in the quarterly measures of U.S. GDP growth. Growth in the first
quarter of the year slowed, although less so than originally estimated. Incoming information suggests that
we are seeing a rebound of growth in the second quarter. This is very similar to the pattern we saw in
2014 and 2015. Consumer spending, which makes up about two-thirds of output in the U.S., has
accelerated in recent months. The continued improvement in household balance sheets, growth in
personal income, low borrowing rates, and relatively low oil prices have all buoyed consumer spending.
In the U.S., the drop in gasoline prices by almost $1 per gallon between 2014 and 2015 saved the average
household about $700. Although gasoline prices have moved up in the past couple of months, the U.S.
Energy Information Administration now forecasts that the average price of gasoline will be down again
this year, resulting in another $200 in cost savings for the average household. Some of those savings
have been spent. For example, we’ve seen high levels of auto sales for the past two years. Some
households likely saved part of the windfall instead of spending it, or used it to pay down debt. Either
way, stronger household balance sheets will help support future consumption spending.
The U.S. housing sector has been gradually recovering for some time. In the aftermath of the housing
crash, house prices in the U.S. began rising again in mid-2011, and for the past two years, they have been
increasing at a 5 to 6 percent annual rate. At the aggregate level, homeowners lost an unprecedented $7
3
trillion in real estate equity during the housing crash, but the increases in house prices have allowed
homeowners to recover nearly all of that. Sales of existing homes, which make up the bulk of home sales
in the U.S., are now back near the levels seen before the housing bubble run-up in the early to mid-2000s.
I am using the pre-bubble level as my benchmark because we shouldn’t want to see the housing market
return to bubble proportions. Other parts of the housing sector haven’t yet fully recovered. Construction
and sales of new homes have been rising at a gradual pace, but they are not back up to their pre-bubble
levels. Starts remain below the levels consistent with projections of household formation over the longer
run, and in some markets, the supply of housing hasn’t kept up with demand. In addition, the type of
housing being built has shifted. Over the past five years, increases in multifamily housing starts have
significantly outpaced increases in single-family starts. This may reflect a shift in preferences toward
more urban living, but it likely also reflects the desire on the part of some people who lived through the
crisis to rent rather than own. Mortgage rates are low but households are being careful in not taking on
more mortgage debt than they can handle, and banks are lending to those with good credit quality. My
assessment of conditions is that the recovery in housing should continue at a moderate pace.
In contrast to housing, business fixed investment remains weak. While the sharp drop in oil prices since
mid-2014 benefited consumers and many businesses, firms in the drilling and mining sector, their
suppliers, and regions whose economies depend on the energy sector have been hurt. We have seen the
effects in parts of the Cleveland Fed District where steel production has been down and firms tied to
energy have had to cut jobs and reduce investment. Business contacts in the steel industry have told us
they’ve been encouraged by the firming in oil and other commodity prices since the start of the year, but
they remain uncertain about the sustainability of those increases. Other contacts in the energy sector have
told us that the price increases have spurred moving forward on some investment projects that had been
put on hold. But even outside of the energy sector, business investment has been soft despite generally
accommodative financial conditions. Manufacturers have been investing but mainly to maintain current
operations rather than to expand. Some manufacturers in the Cleveland District have told us that
4
businesses’ reluctance to expand capacity reflects concern about the overall longer-run direction of the
economy rather than concerns about the economy in the near term or their own firms’ performance. Part
of the softness in investment reflects weakness in demand outside of the U.S., which has hurt U.S.
exports.
Indeed, firms exposed to U.S. trade have had to operate in a very challenging environment. From mid-
2014 until last week, the nominal value of the U.S. dollar has appreciated about 18 percent on a broad
trade-weighted basis. This has placed a significant drag on manufacturing output and export growth. But
the slowdown in the rate of appreciation in recent months was starting to diminish the drag on growth
from net exports. In the first quarter, net exports made a slightly positive contribution to U.S. output
growth; in contrast, they subtracted about a half of a percentage point from growth last year.
Of course, global growth, commodity price changes, and currency fluctuations are not necessarily
independent events. For example, a portion of the more than 50 percent decline in oil prices since mid-
2014 likely reflects expectations of weaker growth in China and other countries, although supply factors
have likely played a greater role. The appreciation of the U.S. dollar since mid-2014 has reflected
expectations that real growth in the U.S. will continue to be stronger than growth abroad, as well as
projected real interest rate differentials between the U.S. and other economies. We have to be careful not
to think of these shocks as independent events and merely sum their effects. We live in an interconnected
global economy. Changes in prices and currency values are one way economies reach a new equilibrium
after a shock.
While I would expect investment to begin to pick up as overall economic growth expands, the weakness
in investment and the associated slow pace of productivity growth pose a risk for the longer-run growth of
the U.S. economy. Structural productivity growth is a key determinant of the longer-run growth of output
and increases in living standards. And investment in capital, including human capital, is a key
5
determinant of productivity growth. Labor productivity growth has risen at only a half of a percent
annual rate over the past five years. Part of this weakness is cyclical: weak investment during the
recession and early part of the expansion contributed to slow productivity growth over this period. But
the weakness in investment and productivity has persisted. Productivity growth is very difficult to
forecast, so the softness may reverse itself, or it may be longer lasting and reflect a structural issue. If it’s
the latter, then the longer-run growth rate of the U.S. economy may be lower than the 2 percent growth
I’ve been assuming.
As this overview suggests, some parts of the U.S. economy have fared better than others. But overall,
economic growth has proven to be resilient and at a pace slightly above trend. The pace has been
sufficient to generate significant progress in labor markets.
Labor markets
Since the trough in early 2010, the U.S. labor market has added more than 14 million jobs, which is about
10 percent of employment, and the unemployment rate has fallen more than 5 percentage points from its
peak of 10 percent in late 2009. Over the past two years, there have also been significant improvements
in other gauges of the under-utilization of labor, such as measures tracking the number of part-time
workers who would rather work full-time and the number of people who have only been looking for work
sporadically or have been discouraged from looking at all because they don’t think they will find a job.
Increasingly, we are hearing from businesses that they are having trouble finding qualified workers.
Early on, such reports were concentrated in high-skilled occupations in information technology, health
care, and specialized construction. Now, the reports are expanding to include lower-skilled jobs and less-
specialized occupations in a broader set of industries.
So when the U.S. labor market report for May was released early last month, it garnered considerable
attention. Just when we were beginning to see signs of a pickup in growth in the second quarter, we
6
received news that firms added just 38,000 jobs to their payrolls in May. Part of the weakness reflected
the effects of a strike by workers at Verizon Communications. But even adjusting for that, which
accounted for about 35,000 jobs, the pace was a considerable step down from the 200,000-plus jobs per
month the U.S. economy was adding last year and early this year. The question is: was this the start of a
reversal from the considerable progress that’s been made in labor markets, or was this the type of
transitory change we typically see during expansions?
My read of the available data puts me in the second camp: I believe the U.S. labor market remains sound
and that we’ll continue to see further improvements in the job market, although the pace of improvement
will necessarily slow given the progress that’s already been made. It’s important to put the May jobs
report into context. One thing we have learned is that we shouldn’t take too much signal from one or two
monthly reports. Payroll growth has slowed several times during this expansion, only to pick up again.
We will see how payrolls behaved in June when the report is released next Friday.
In addition, we should expect to see some slowdown in the pace of job growth as the economy nears full
employment. The bigger surprise may have been the very strong job numbers early this year. Adjusting
for the Verizon strike, over the past three months firms added an average of 127,000 jobs per month.
That pace exceeds the 75,000 to 120,000 per month range of trend employment growth estimates from
various models that take into account the aging of the population and other demographic factors affecting
labor force participation. So it is enough to put further downward pressure on the unemployment rate.
Other incoming data remain consistent with an improving labor market. Claims for unemployment
insurance are low. The rates of job openings and hiring are high. The quit rate is also high, suggesting
that workers are confident enough to be looking for better jobs. The unemployment rate is low. Of
course, just as I discount taking a strong signal from weak May payrolls, I don’t read May’s sharp drop in
the unemployment rate to 4.7 percent as indicating a significant tightening in labor market conditions.
7
The drop reflected not only a decline in the number of unemployed people but also an outsized decline in
the labor force participation rate. The participation rate varies from month to month, but averaging over
the past several months, the level of the participation rate is consistent with estimates of its longer-run
downward trend. Another positive is that there are signs in the data and from anecdotal reports that
wages may be accelerating.
All of this suggests to me that labor market progress will continue. At the same time, I do not want to
underestimate the difficulty that many people have had finding work during the recession and slow
recovery and that many continue to have, or the persistent differences in the employment situation faced
by different demographic groups in the U.S. There are serious longer-run workforce development issues
affecting U.S. labor markets, and the deep recession and slow recovery have exposed and exacerbated
these problems. Technological advances and globalization are changing the nature of available jobs and
the skill sets needed to perform those jobs. As a country, the U.S. needs to ensure that people can enter
and remain productive members of the modern labor force. This will raise our shared standard of living
and make us more competitive in the global economy. I believe that government programs and private-
public partnerships, including educational assistance, retraining programs, and apprenticeships, can be
effective in addressing these long-run labor force challenges and should be brought to bear. On the other
hand, I do not believe that monetary policy would be effective in addressing these longer-run problems.
So from the standpoint of what monetary policy can do, I believe the economy is basically at maximum
employment, one part of the Fed’s dual mandate.
Inflation
The other part of the Fed’s dual mandate is price stability. Inflation has been running below the Fed’s
goal of 2 percent for quite some time. Low inflation partly reflects the effects of earlier declines in the
price of oil and other commodities, which began in mid-2014, as well as the appreciation of the dollar,
which has held down the prices of nonpetroleum imports into the U.S. According to dynamic simulations
8
of the Federal Reserve Board staff’s SIGMA model, a 10 percent rise in the real value of the dollar affects
core inflation via import prices fairly quickly, resulting in a drop of about 0.5 percent in core inflation a
year after the shock, which partially reverses over the subsequent year. A shock to the value of the dollar
also tends to reduce GDP with a lag, and the model indicates that this would put additional downward
pressure on inflation.1
The most recent inflation data have been encouraging and in accord with the pattern anticipated by the
FOMC. Inflation measures have gradually risen as the effects of previous declines in oil prices and dollar
appreciation have begun to fade. Headline PCE and CPI inflation, as measured by the year-over-year
changes in the underlying indices, have moved up from the very low levels recorded last year and have
been stable at a little more than 1 percent in recent months. The core inflation measures, which omit food
and energy prices because they tend to be volatile, have also been moving up and are above the headline
numbers. Another gauge of underlying inflation, the Cleveland Fed’s median CPI inflation rate, rose to
over 2.5 percent in May, its highest level in over seven years.2
Stable inflation expectations are an important component of inflation dynamics. Even in the face of
sizable declines in energy prices, inflation expectations have been relatively stable in my view. At this
point I expect them to remain reasonably well anchored, but I am monitoring readings carefully. There
are various measures of inflation expectations. Survey-based measures have tended to be more stable
than those based on market data. Inflation compensation, as distinct from expectations, is the difference
in yields between nominal U.S. Treasury securities and Treasury inflation-protected securities. Inflation
compensation has fallen by more than the survey measures of expectations, but various models suggest
1 See Chart 5 in Stanley Fischer, “U.S. Inflation Developments,” remarks at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
City Economic Policy Symposium, Jackson Hole, WY, August 29, 2015.
2 The Cleveland Fed’s median CPI inflation rate is available at https://clevelandfed.org/our-research/indicators-and-
data/median-cpi.aspx.
9
that the movement more likely reflects changes in liquidity premia and inflation risk premia rather than
changes in inflation expectations. Over a period of heightened market volatility and safe-haven flows into
U.S. Treasury securities, I take less of a signal about inflation expectations from the market-based
measure of inflation compensation than from the survey measures. The Cleveland Fed’s model of
inflation expectations provides somewhat of a compromise by incorporating survey measures, as well as
market data on nominal Treasury yields and inflation swaps. Its measure of 5-year inflation, 5 years from
now has been stable, at about 1.9 percent, in recent months.3
Given these readings on inflation and inflation expectations, so long as the real side of the economy
continues to perform as expected, I anticipate that inflation will continue to gradually move back to our
goal of 2 percent over the next couple of years.
Monetary Policy
In setting monetary policy, the FOMC assesses both realized and expected progress on our statutory
longer-run goals of price stability and maximum employment. That assessment encompasses a wide
range of economic information – the official economic statistical releases and financial market indicators,
as well as the information FOMC participants garner by speaking with contacts in our regions.
At its June meeting two weeks ago, the FOMC decided to maintain the target range of the federal funds
rate at ¼ to ½ percent. The FOMC indicated that with gradual adjustments in the stance of monetary
policy, it anticipates further improvements in the economy. This was reflected in the Summary of
Economic Projections also released at the June meeting. The median projection among the FOMC
participants shows growth at about 2 percent over the next three years, consistent with the median
3 The Cleveland Fed’s inflation expectations measure is available at https://clevelandfed.org/our-research/indicators-
and-data/inflation-expectations.aspx.
10
estimate of longer-run trend growth; the unemployment rate coming down a bit from current levels and
remaining under the median longer-run estimate of 4.8 percent through 2018; and inflation gradually
moving up to 2 percent by the end of 2018.
In June, the FOMC also indicated that economic developments will likely warrant only gradual increases
in the fed funds rate. Of course, the timing of those rate increases and the overall slope of that gradual
path will depend on how the economy, the economic outlook, and the risks evolve.
Indeed, in the June projections, the median fed funds rate path of appropriate policy was somewhat
shallower than in the last set of projections in March – partly reflecting somewhat slower growth
projected for this year, and partly reflecting a lower estimate of the fed funds rate over the longer run.
I supported the decision not to change rates in June. My reason did not reflect a fundamental change to
my outlook. The progress being made on our policy goals and the outlook suggest that a gradual upward
path of interest rates continued to be appropriate. A gradual path means that monetary policy will remain
accommodative for some time to come, providing support to the economy and insurance against
downside risks. As I said, I do not think we are at the start of a significant reversal in labor markets, and I
view the inflation data as supportive of a gradual return to target. Now, some might argue that in an
abundance of caution, we should wait for clarity on these issues, and I agree that there are risks to acting
too soon. But there are also risks to forestalling rate increases for too long when we are continuing to
make cumulative progress on our policy goals. Waiting too long increases risks to financial stability and
raises the chance that we would have to move more aggressively in the future, which poses its own set of
risks to the outlook. I believe waiting too long also jeopardizes our future ability to use the nontraditional
monetary policy tools that the Fed developed to deal with the effects of the global financial crisis and
deep recession. If we fail to gracefully navigate back toward a more normal policy stance at the
appropriate time, then I believe there is a non-negligible chance that these tools will essentially be off the
11
table because the public will have deemed them as ultimately ineffective. This is a risk to the outlook
should we ever find ourselves in a situation of needing such tools in the future. Of course, such a risk is
hard to measure and is not one we typically consider. But we live in atypical times, and we need to take
the whole set of risks into account when assessing appropriate policy.
So why, then, did I think it appropriate not to raise rates in June? The reason was timing. There was
considerable uncertainty about the outcome of the upcoming U.K. referendum on membership in the
European Union. The vote was being held a week after the June FOMC meeting. It was clear there was
going to be volatility in financial markets surrounding the vote. If the vote favored exit, there was the
potential for disruption in markets. Given that I do not think U.S. monetary policy is behind the curve
yet, I saw little cost in waiting to take the next step.
After the U.K. Referendum
It is an understatement to say that market volatility increased on the outcome of the U.K. referendum. We
are now in a world of heightened economic and political uncertainty, and I expect we will be living with
uncertainty for a while as the U.K. and Europe establish the terms of their new relationship.
When a shock like this hits financial markets, the first task of central bankers is to ensure that there is
sufficient liquidity and funding to allow markets to continue to function in an orderly way in the midst of
extreme volatility, and to assure the public that we are prepared to act as necessary. The Bank of
England, the finance ministers and central bank governors of the G7 countries, and several other
individual central banks including the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, and the Federal
Reserve, put out statements last Friday indicating that they stand ready to use established liquidity tools to
12
support market functioning.4 Central banks are monitoring the situation for possible contagion across
financial markets. Despite the volatility, markets have been functioning in an orderly manner. The
considerable efforts undertaken in the U.K., Europe, the U.S., and other countries in response to the
global financial crisis to increase the resiliency of the financial system, including higher capital and
liquidity requirements, mean financial institutions are now in considerably better shape to withstand
short-run volatility while continuing to extend credit to households and businesses.
Ultimately, global economies will adjust to the new trading and labor relationships negotiated between
the U.K. and Europe. It is too early to judge what the magnitude of the effects on the global economy
will be and, for the U.S. economy, whether there will be a material change in the medium-run outlook. It
will depend on how the situation evolves, so the assessment will take some time to fully develop. While
the U.K. represents about 4 percent of world output and global trade, London is one of the major financial
centers of the world. About 4 percent of U.S. exports go to the U.K., which is a relatively small share, but
the financial ties between our two countries are larger. Barring any major disruption in financial and
banking markets, one of the main mechanisms through which the exit decision could affect the U.S.
economy is through dollar appreciation, which, depending on its persistence and magnitude, could
dampen U.S. export growth and cause a delay in the return of inflation to 2 percent. Slower growth
outside of the U.S. would also lower demand for U.S. exports. But it is important to remember that
exports make up only about 12 percent of U.S. output, so whatever the reduction in export growth, it
would mean a smaller reduction in overall GDP growth.
4 See the following statements released on June 24, 2016: Statement from the Bank of England; Statement from the
Governor of the Bank of England Following the E.U. Referendum Result; Statement of G-7 Finance Ministers and
Central Bank Governors; ECB is Closely Monitoring Financial Markets; Statement by Minister Aso and Governor
Kuroda on the U.K.’s Decision to Leave the E.U.; and The Federal Reserve is Carefully Monitoring Developments
in Global Financial Markets.
13
Heightened and persistent uncertainty is another factor that can affect the economy. When the exit
decision was announced, investors moved away from risk assets. Higher credit spreads and lower equity
prices, coupled with continued uncertainty, could put firms and households in a wait-and-see mode,
reducing economic activity for a time. In his speech yesterday, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney
highlighted the dampening effect uncertainty could have on economic performance in the U.K. and
indicated possible responses to it.5
As I said, it is too soon to judge the full magnitude of such effects. At this point, we need to continue to
monitor developments. For example, some of the tightening in financial conditions after the
announcement of the vote’s outcome has been reversed in recent days. As we see how things play out,
we will have a better sense of whether the medium-run U.S. economic outlook has been meaningfully
affected and whether that changes our assessment of appropriate U.S. monetary policy going forward.
Monetary policymakers cannot let the lack of economic clarity distract us from our important mission.
We must continue to use the best available models, analysis, and judgment to assess the situation. As an
FOMC member, I will remain focused on and committed to setting monetary policy to promote the
Federal Reserve’s longer-run goals of price stability and maximum employment for the benefit of the
public.
5 Mark Carney, “Uncertainty, the Economy and Policy,” Bank of England, June 30, 2016.
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2016, June 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160701_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20160701_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2016},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160701_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}