speeches · October 10, 2016
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
Conducting Monetary Policy in an
Evolving Environment
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Australian Business Economists Luncheon
Sydney, Australia
October 11, 2016
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
Those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Conducting Monetary Policy in an Evolving Economy
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
I have been president of the Chicago Fed for nine years, after having transitioned from
research director in September 2007. Talk about impeccable timing! Almost
immediately, the U.S. experienced a financial crisis that led to the Great Recession, with
unemployment peaking at a horrendous 10 percent. And since mid-2009, the U.S. has
been in a slow recovery and a prolonged period of inflation running below our 2 percent
policy objective (as measured by the annual change in the Price Index for Personal
Consumption Expenditures, or PCE).1
The Federal Reserve’s response to these enormous challenges included a reduction in
our short-term policy interest rate, the federal funds rate, all the way to its zero lower
bound (ZLB) in December 2008. And to provide additional monetary accommodation,
the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) subsequently introduced unconventional
policies – such as large-scale asset purchases and forward guidance about the future
path for the fed funds rate.2
We’ve made great progress. Today, the unemployment rate is down to 5.0 percent, and
U.S. economic fundamentals appear good. As summarized in the Federal Reserve’s
quarterly Summary of Economic Projections, or SEPs, we expect 2 percent or so growth
in real gross domestic product (GDP) over the next few years, with further declines in
unemployment.3
However, the story on inflation is not satisfactory. Core PCE inflation, which strips out
the volatile food and energy components, appeared to have stalled at 1.6 percent
before edging up to 1.7 percent in August. The SEP forecasts have it taking another two
years to return to our 2 percent target. Moreover, I should note that the SEPs have been
predicting inflation would take at least two years to return to target for the last four
years.
1 This objective was first acknowledged in Federal Open Market Committee (2012). The 2 percent
inflation target was reaffirmed in the most recent statement of our longer-run goals; see Federal Open
Market Committee (2016c).
2 For more about the large-scale asset purchases (also referred to as the quantitative easing programs)
and the rationale behind them, see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2015a). For
details on the Federal Reserve’s use of forward guidance, see Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (2015b).
3 Federal Open Market Committee (2016a). The references to specific numbers in the SEPs refer to the
median of the forecasts of the FOMC participants.
2
What does this imply for monetary policy?
As you may know, the FOMC took a first step toward policy normalization last
December, increasing the target range for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to a
range of 1/4 to 1/2 percent. However, for a variety of reasons, the FOMC has refrained
from further increases since then. This may well be changing soon. The most recent
FOMC policy statement indicated that “the Committee judges that the case for an
increase in the federal funds rate has strengthened but decided, for the time being, to
wait for further evidence of continued progress toward its objectives.”4 Indeed, at our
September meeting, three FOMC members dissented in favor of immediately increasing
rates. Moreover, it is public knowledge that going into our July meeting, eight of 12
Reserve Banks had requested an increase in the discount rate, likely signaling a
preference for policy tightening.5
Within this context, today I will discuss the objectives of the Federal Reserve and my
thinking about the policy path ahead. There are three key issues that we need to
consider: First, the trend, or potential, rate of economic growth in the U.S. is now
recognized to be markedly lower than we assessed prior to 2007. Second, there
continues to be substantial uncertainty on how close we are to “full employment.” And,
third, we need to recognize that the predominant inflation risk facing monetary
policymakers has shifted from inflation being too high to inflation being too low. The
Great Inflation that so occupied policymakers in the 1970s and 1980s was first broken
by the Volcker Fed and then finished off under Greenspan.
We then got a glimpse of a new regime in May 2003, when the FOMC’s post-meeting
policy statement first explicitly mentioned the risk that inflation might be too low.6 And
this risk has been intense since the Great Recession, with inflation running persistently
below our 2 percent target for the past eight years.
With all of this in store for today’s discussion, I need to mention now that these are my
own views and do not necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues on the FOMC or
those in the Federal Reserve System.
Monetary Policy Goals and Strategies
This slide summarizes the long-run goals and strategy for U.S. monetary policy, which
the FOMC first explicitly laid out in January 2012. The U.S. Congress has given the
Fed a dual mandate — to set monetary conditions with the aim of achieving price
stability and maximum sustainable employment. The FOMC’s price stability target is an
inflation rate of 2 percent as measured by the Price Index for Personal Consumption
Expenditures, as I mentioned before. The strategy statement explicitly says this target is
symmetric, with the Committee being concerned if inflation persistently runs either
above or below 2 percent.
4 Federal Open Market Committee (2016b).
5 The discount rate is the rate banks pay to directly borrow from the Fed and recently has been set
formulaically 50 basis points above the federal funds rate.
6 Federal Open Market Committee (2003).
3
Because maximum employment is largely determined by nonmonetary factors that can
change over time, the FOMC does not have a fixed numerical target for our employment
mandate. However, one guide is the unemployment rate that FOMC participants see the
economy settling out at in the long run. The range of these forecasts currently is 4-1/2 to
5.0 percent, with the median at 4.8 percent.7 Finally, the goals and strategy statement
says that the FOMC will take a balanced approach to achieving our dual objectives.
Now let’s focus on slide 2. One simple way to depict our policy strategy is with the
standard quadratic loss function I’ve written down on this slide. It says that deviations
from our two goals are equally costly, with the costs rising with the square of the
deviation above or below each goal. The two panels show the history and current status
of progress towards our policy goals. The cross hairs in the bull’s-eyes are drawn at the
sweet spots for policy — our 2 percent inflation target and the FOMC’s current median
estimate of the long-run unemployment rate, 4.8 percent.8
7 Federal Open Market Committee (2016a).
8 The chart also shows the progress toward the dual mandate objectives over the next three years, as
projected by the median forecast of the FOMC participants.
4
During the recession and early recovery, when resource slack was enormous and
inflation was obviously too low, the direction of policy was clear: The U.S. economy
needed highly accommodative policies to ease financial strains, facilitate balance sheet
restructuring by households and businesses and stimulate growth and inflation. The
right-hand panel depicts what I’ve already noted — we have made great progress
toward our full employment mandate, but are still short of our inflation objective.
In spite of weak global conditions, the U.S. economy has come a long way back. So
isn’t the policy direction clear and obvious today? By old benchmarks, such as the
original Taylor rule, we should be increasing rates now. However, for me, the current
economic environment looks very different than it did during my first 16 years at the
Chicago Fed, before becoming president (1991–2007). That’s because the validity of
these old benchmarks depends on how we assess the three issues that I mentioned at
the start of my talk: trend growth; uncertainty about what constitutes full employment;
and the tilt of inflation risks. These assessments have important implications for how
much the Fed needs to adjust its previous tactics in order to address new
circumstances. Let’s turn to these issues now.
Three Issues Facing Monetary Policymakers
Issue number 1: Going forward, trend (or potential) output growth is expected to be only
about 1.8 percent — that’s the median projection from the FOMC’s September SEP 9
9 Federal Open Market Committee (2016a).
5
and it is our Chicago Fed assessment as well. This is quite a change from the past —
for example, between 1980 and 2007, U.S. real GDP growth averaged about 3.0
percent.
Many economists have been speaking at length on this subject for some time, so I will
just list the main reasons for this slowdown: 1) Growth in available labor input is
slowing, largely because of the retirement of the baby boomers and lower youth and
prime-age labor force participation (LFP) rates; 2) Total factor productivity (TFP)10
growth appears to have reverted to rates that prevailed during the slow growth years
between 1975 and 1995; and 3) capital deepening has been weak.11
The last two factors determine growth in labor productivity. And it is a matter of
arithmetic that trend growth in labor hours and labor productivity translate into trend
GDP growth. Thus, 1.8 percent is my current assessment for the sum of these two
factors.
One of the first reactions I often get to this statement is something like: “Well, shouldn’t
we all prefer something higher, like 4 percent trend growth?” Yes, I agree. But how does
the economy achieve trend growth in labor hours plus trend growth in labor productivity
that add up to 4 percent? That is the crucial public policy challenge, but it is beyond the
capacity of monetary policy.
Increasing trend growth is crucial. Just pushing growth up to 4 percent without affecting
potential won’t do. Growth well above potential year after year would generate
unsustainable imbalances that typically lead to large undesirable increases in inflation.
The pace of trend growth has another important implication. As standard economic
theory tells us, one consequence of slower trend growth is lower equilibrium real
interest rates (r*).12 And, with lower equilibrium real rates, any given level of a central
bank’s policy interest rate is less accommodative than it otherwise would be. So, clearly,
we need to rethink our old policy benchmarks with this new calibration in mind.
Furthermore, a lower equilibrium real interest rate reduces the buffer monetary policy
has to fight downside shocks before it is confronted with the zero lower bound. And
experiences from around the world have left us with all too great an appreciation for the
difficulties that the ZLB presents to policymakers.
Now for issue number 2: Is the U.S. economy now at full employment? We don’t really
know with certainty, but my guess is no. This isn’t really a new issue — it’s always been
a challenge to assess the maximum sustainable level of employment consistent with
10 TFP refers to the technologies and operational systems that businesses use to combine various inputs
into outputs. In other words, TFP captures the residual growth in total output of the national economy that
cannot be explained by the accumulation of measured inputs, such as labor and capital.
11 That is, increases in capital per worker have been weak.
12 Equilibrium real interest rates are the rates consistent with the full employment of the economy’s
productive resources. The equilibrium interest rate is sometimes called the “natural” or “neutral” interest
rate.
6
price stability. The FOMC’s statement on longer-run goals and monetary policy strategy
acknowledges this explicitly.13
Our view at the Chicago Fed is that the natural rate of unemployment14 currently is 4.7
percent and that for some time it will fall about 5 basis points a year, reaching 4-1/2
percent by 2020. This assessment reflects the increasing age and educational levels of
the labor force. My staff also thinks the labor force participation rate currently is below
where it should be based on long-run trends, which means there is additional slack
beyond what’s picked up by the unemployment rate alone. I put substantial weight on
my staff’s labor market views, and indeed, they have a good track record: Aaronson and
Sullivan identified downward trends for U.S. LFP back in the early 2000s before most
economists even contemplated them.15 So at the Chicago Fed, we see more slack than
most of my FOMC colleagues — as I mentioned earlier, the FOMC’s latest forecasts of
the long-run neutral unemployment rate range from 4-1/2 to 5 percent, with a median of
4.8 percent.
By the way, I don’t see the differences in the estimates as a problem — a strength of
our Federal Reserve System is the diverse expertise and perspectives that 12 regionally
dispersed Reserve Bank presidents plus five Federal Reserve Board Governors bring to
the FOMC discussion.
Now, the 50 basis point range of natural rate estimates may seem rather large at first
glance. But 95 percent error bands generated by statistical models of the natural rate
are typically at least 250 basis points wide.16 Our uncertainty over measures of “full
employment” is enormous. When unemployment in the U.S. was 10 percent or 8
percent or even 6 percent, this uncertainty wasn’t really critical to policy — we didn’t
know exactly how far we were from the natural rate, but we were quite certain we were
a fair ways above it. But with the unemployment rate at 5.0 percent and inflation closer
to but still below our 2 percent objective, this uncertainty becomes a very important
issue.
My FOMC colleagues and I have been quite vocal in saying we need to consider a wide
variety of risks when choosing appropriate monetary policy. Weighting these risks by
the size of their social costs should be a big part of this calculation. Full employment is
an enormously important, valuable economic outcome. And repairing damage incurred
from the Great Recession continues to be critical for improving labor force quality for
stronger, long-lasting growth. In this context, overestimating the natural rate; incorrectly
inferring that U.S. is at full employment; and prematurely tightening policy would carry
particularly high social costs.
13 Federal Open Market Committee (2016c).
14 The natural rate of unemployment is the unemployment rate that would prevail in an economy making
full use of its productive resources.
15 See, for instance, Aaronson and Sullivan (2002).
16 See, for instance, Staiger, Stock and Watson (1997).
7
Of course, we can’t just don rose-colored glasses either. We have to be cognizant of the
risks of underestimating the natural rate of unemployment as well. I will return to more
fully discuss how these various risks affect our policy calculus shortly.
This brings me to issue number 3: The change in the predominant inflation risk from
inflation being too high to it being too low. During most of my Fed career, going back to
the early 1990s, the problem with inflation was pretty clear: It was too high — above any
sensible inflation objective, and monetary policy needed to engineer a lower secular
level of inflation. I’m pretty confident that Fed policymakers from the Paul Volcker era
through 2002 would agree with this characterization — trend inflation needed to be
lower.
But the world has changed. The May 2003 FOMC meeting was an important one — as I
mentioned earlier, that’s when the FOMC’s policy statement first explicitly mentioned
the risk that inflation might be too low. Today, I will simply point out that the bull’s-eye
chart shows clearly that inflation has been too low for almost all of the past nine years.
Of course, some are still focused on the risk that Fed policy will overstimulate the
economy, pushing inflation above our 2 percent target in a way that would require a
sharply restraining policy response. But I would say that such fears currently are
exaggerated and are a bit like the problem of generals fighting the last war. Today,
looking at experiences from around the world, I think the bigger risk is that inflation in
the U.S. will not get back to our symmetric 2 percent objective within an acceptable
period of time.
Much of my perspective derives from how I view the symmetry of our inflation target. I
would say that the FOMC has been challenged to describe what is meant by symmetry
for our 2 percent inflation objective. I typically point out that a successful symmetric
approach would have inflation average 2 percent over long stretches of time. In order to
average 2 percent, some time will be spent above 2 percent and some time will be
spent below 2 percent.
So, in the current situation, after many years of very low inflation, one has to ask, Would
overshooting 2 percent be a failure or a virtue?
Current SEP forecasts from FOMC participants have inflation rising to 2 percent without
overshooting our target level. I call this threading the needle to get to 2 percent. This
might be consistent with a symmetric approach to inflation. But that can’t really be
known with much certainty until sometime in the future when inflation is shocked above
2 percent. At that juncture, we would be able to see whether or not the FOMC responds
by similarly trying to thread the needle with a shallow decline in inflation back down to 2
percent.
Given what I see today, I am skeptical that the public believes a future FOMC would act
in such a manner. Indeed, when I say in speeches or panel discussions that the FOMC
has a symmetric inflation target, I am often greeted with skepticism. To ensure more
8
public confidence that the Fed’s inflation objective is indeed symmetric, we need to
provide a substantial and credible example of symmetric behavior with regard to our
inflation target. And we need to do it sooner rather than later.
Determinants of Inflation
In today’s persistent low inflation environment with great uncertainties, credible inflation
targets are fundamental for central banks to hit their inflation objectives. Monetary
policymakers around the world are grappling with this issue.
To discuss this more fully, I find it helpful to describe the intuition underpinning my
inflation projections. My exposition is slightly simplified from the analysis that Chair
Yellen described in a speech last year.17 Our canonical inflation model is depicted on
this slide:
In this model, four things determine current inflation. The lagged terms in inflation
represent inertia in the inflation process due to “sticky” price setting and other such
factors. X refers to transitory factors, such as changes in food and energy prices and
the exchange value of the dollar, whose movements only have temporary influences on
inflation. The slack term represents the Phillips curve, in which underutilization of
resources pulls down inflation while overutilization generates inflationary pressure.
Long-run inflation expectations — the last term — anchor inflation when the effects of
17 Yellen (2015).
9
adjustment lags, transitory factors and resource utilization are all neutral.18 Of course, a
credible inflation target, in turn, anchors inflation expectations.
As I assess current conditions, my confidence that inflation will rise to 2 percent before
too much more time depends critically on a) whether the U.S. economy is at full
employment now or will be relatively soon and b) whether inflation expectations are
consistent with achieving a symmetric inflation objective of 2 percent.
If I had strong confidence that full employment was consistent with a 5 percent
unemployment rate and that there was a strong upward pull from inflation expectations
anchored at 2 percent, then I would have more confidence that core PCE inflation was
headed to 2 percent sooner rather than later. Unfortunately, I have doubts about both of
these conditions. First, as I noted, my staff’s research points to a natural rate of
unemployment moving closer to 4-1/2 than 5 percent. Moreover, there is a large body of
evidence that the slope of the Phillips curve is very flat, so even if the natural rate is 5
percent, it is hard to expect much upward influence on inflation from modestly
undershooting the natural rate — such as we see in the median SEP forecast.
This leaves inflation expectations to carry the remaining burden. Here, again, I have
worries, because looking at evidence from surveys of households and professional
forecasters, as well as various measures coming out of financial markets, I believe
expected inflation is not 2 percent, but something more like 1-3/4 percent. If these low
inflation expectations persist, even when the transitory factors and economic slack
settle back to zero, inflation will still not be back to target.
So when I account for all of the elements of the standard inflation model, I just don’t see
a reason to be very confident that we’re headed back to 2 percent within a reasonable
time frame. Instead, my projection, which differs from many of my Fed colleagues, is
that it will take until roughly 2020 to get inflation to target and even that rather slow pace
of progress will require a very shallow path for the federal funds rate.
Should Policy Allow Overshooting?
With this forecast taxonomy as background, let’s explore how best to deal with the new
era of inflation risks. Making good policy always requires weighing the benefits and
costs of various actions. Today, I think the big question is whether we should maintain
enough monetary policy accommodation to impart a significant probability of
overshooting 2 percent inflation.
Let’s start by thinking about the benefits of such an action. First, getting inflation to our
target sooner and with a likelihood of overshooting would avoid the substantial costs of
allowing inflation to linger below our objective for too long. Just consider the difficulties
18 Most sticky-price setting frameworks with “optimal” price resetting would suggest a shorter-term inflation
expectation should enter the model. But empirical analyses generally find that longer-term inflation expectations
provide better forecasts, most likely because of the importance of changes in trend inflation over the past 40 years.
10
the Japanese economy has faced during their decades of low inflation and the Bank of
Japan’s ZLB challenges. These costs are substantial.
Second, I see benefits to trying to engineer policy to allow for the strong possibility of
inflation overshooting its target. Because expected inflation currently is too low,
overshooting 2 percent would reinforce our symmetric objective and move expectations
up toward 2 percent. This in turn would increase the upward pull on actual inflation.
In a world with lower real r* and without increasing our inflation objective, as several
have advocated,19 firming up inflationary expectations to 2 percent from 1-3/4 would
slightly reduce the risk that future adverse developments would take us back to the ZLB.
Every little bit helps. Also, the risk will be lower that we will need to again employ
unconventional policies, including newer tools in use by foreign central banks, such as
negative short-term interest rates. Many in the public tell me that they would prefer to
avoid negative interest rates.
Now, if the Phillips curve is flat and inflation expectations currently anchor inflation
below 2 percent, how does a central bank engineer inflation overshooting its target? It
can do so by expressing a firm commitment to increasing inflation in order to boost
inflation expectations.
In the current situation, it would help to state clearly that monetary policy that leads to a
high probability of inflation exceeding 2 percent would be consistent with our symmetric
objective. I also think it would help to indicate that policymakers would be willing to
accept the increased inflationary risk that might accompany further declines in
unemployment. This inflation risk arises because we don’t really know what the level of
full employment is. Pushing harder to get inflation at least to 2 percent should provide
some better information about where this benchmark lies.
Now let’s turn to the other side of the ledger: What are the costs of overshooting our 2
percent inflation objective?
One risk often mentioned is that pushing too hard to lower unemployment might lead to
unsustainable outcomes and eventually bring the economic expansion to a premature
end. After all, when inflation risks are too great and inflation is above its objective, a
central bank brings inflation back down by tightening financial conditions, which usually
raises unemployment. Indeed, some think that if unemployment gets more than just a
small amount below its sustainable level, then its return to its natural rate might trigger a
counterproductive recession.
Interestingly, it is true that in the postwar U.S., there have not been increases in
quarterly unemployment of more than three- or four-tenths without a recession.
Nonetheless, to me it seems overly bold to extrapolate this experience forward. We
19 See, for instance, Williams (2016) and Rosengren (2015).
11
have a limited number of examples, and the economic setting today is quite different
than in the past.
To understand these differences, it’s useful to talk more about the history of Fed
inflation-fighting. We know from the careful work of Christina and David Romer that
there were many instances when the postwar Federal Reserve explicitly decided to
tighten monetary policy in order to bring inflation down.20 Take, for example, the actions
that began in April 1974. After OPEC’s increase in oil prices, the FOMC, fearing that
high inflation was becoming embedded in the public mindset, tightened monetary policy
dramatically. According to the simplified inflation model that I presented earlier, the
resulting increase in resource slack and reduction in inflation expectations ought to
bring inflation down. The 1974 FOMC stepped hard on the monetary brakes. And
resource slack did rise — and, indeed, a sharp recession ensued. Now the downturn
was made worse by nonmonetary challenges facing the U.S. economy, such as the
adjustment of production technologies to higher energy prices and labor market
rigidities.21 And many have argued that these structural issues were not well
appreciated by policymakers in the 1970s. Still, the monetary tightening itself did have a
strong effect on the real economy.
Of course, there are several other episodes in which the FOMC tried to rein in rising
inflation and inflation expectations. Indeed, during most of the period from the 1970s
into the early 2000s, the direction of monetary policy was always pretty clear: Inflation
was much too high, well above any sensible inflation objective, and monetary policy
tried to engineer lower inflation whenever it was opportune. The 1987–2003 period that
John Taylor identifies as exemplifying best-practice monetary policy is included in this
longer time period.22 Throughout Taylor’s sample, inflation was above the Fed’s
unstated inflation objective. Lower inflation was always better, and this was generally
achieved with higher interest rates.
As I mentioned earlier, higher rates had two tasks to perform — increase unemployment
(boost the slack term in inflation model) and reign in high inflation expectations ( ).
And in some cases, large tightenings were needed to reduce inflation, and large
tightenings typically led to recessions, as in 1973–75 and 1980–82.
But the 1989–90 and 1999 monetary policy tightenings were different; soft landings
were almost achieved during these episodes. Because they were aiming at relatively
small reductions in inflation, the Fed increased interest rates less. Recessions did
eventually ensue, but arguably, in both cases the economy would not have fallen into
recession if not for late-breaking external events — namely, the invasion of 1990 Kuwait
and the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack in New York. These two episodes suggest
that recessions may not be inevitable if we are talking about modest inflation
20 Romer and Romer (2002).
21 Bernanke, Gertler and Watson (1997).
22 Taylor (2007) and Taylor (2015).
12
adjustments and if we are not simultaneously facing other major economic challenges.
The current situation is very different. Unlike the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s, when the U.S.
was starting from a point where inflation and inflation expectations were too high, today
we are starting from a position where they are too low. This means that a mild
overshooting of 2 percent in actual inflation is unlikely to result in inflation expectations
rising enough that they would move very far above target. Accordingly, if it became
necessary, policy wouldn’t have to do much work to lower inflation expectations back
down to 2 percent.
In the past, higher interest rates had to first offset upward momentum in inflationary
expectations and, once that was done, continue to work to lower inflationary
expectations down to our target. Today, since inflation expectations are approaching
target from below, higher rates would most likely only be needed to offset upward
momentum. We wouldn’t need the second restraining dose to bring expectations down.
And if we did have to, the dosage most likely would be small.
This argument implies that it may be a mistake to extrapolate the postwar monetary
experience — even that of the more benign 1987–2003 period — to today. It also
suggests that more research should be done to investigate whether familiar interest rate
rules, such as the Taylor rule, are robust to structural changes related to lower values
for potential growth, equilibrium real interest rates and inflation expectations. The Lucas
critique suggests that policy rules that previously appeared useful and robust in an
earlier environment may not continue to be appropriate today.23 More evidence is
needed.24
Given this context and given the large uncertainties around our estimates of full
employment and the current low inflation risks, it seems reasonable to continue to take
stock of how much more room the economy has to grow without generating a
meaningful risk of inflation rising to levels that would threaten the credibility of our
symmetric 2 percent inflation objective.
Inflation Benchmarks
Finally, I would note that much attention has been placed on exactly when the next
increase in the federal funds rate might be. If core inflation was clearly on its way to 2
percent, then I would see the next readjustment of monetary policy toward its long-run
neutral level as an appropriate and easy decision. However, as you can tell from my
remarks today, I have yet to see clear and convincing evidence that inflation is headed
up to 2 percent.
What would convince me that inflation is clearly on its way to 2 percent? Well, I would
like to see evidence of positive movements in the terms in my inflation forecasting
taxonomy. So, here’s what I’m looking for: First, actual core inflation moving closer to 2
percent in a sustained fashion. Second, further reductions in unemployment and other
23 Lucas (1976).
24 Evans (2014).
13
indicators of labor market slack. And third, sustained increases in the various measures
of inflation compensation and surveys of inflation expectations.
Indeed, I would prefer that at the time we make our next move, FOMC communications
would also indicate that subsequent increases will be dependent on seeing further
positive developments in inflation indicators. I believe this would help assure the public
that the Committee is seeking economic and financial conditions to support inflation
attaining our 2 percent target sustainably, symmetrically and sooner rather than later.
Thank you.
14
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https://www.kansascityfed.org/publicat/sympos/2002/pdf/S02RomerandRomer.pdf.
15
Rosengren, Eric S., 2015, “Changing economic relationships: Implications for monetary
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2016, October 10). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20161011_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20161011_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2016},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20161011_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}