speeches · May 3, 2018
Regional President Speech
Esther L. George · President
Monetary Policy and Reform in Practice
Remarks by
Esther L. George
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
May 4, 2018
Monetary Policy and Reform in Practice
The Hoover Institution at Stanford University
Palo Alto, Calif.
The views expressed by the author are her own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal
Reserve System, its governors, officers or representatives.
Thank you for the opportunity to offer my views on monetary policy and reform in
practice. I appreciate the Hoover Institution bringing together leading academics and monetary
policymakers to share ideas about the practical issues facing central banks today. We have much
to learn from each other.
My comments this afternoon focus on some of the practical issues I think about as I
formulate my own policy views. As I do so, you’ll hear me describe these issues with more
questions than answers, reflecting the nature of the policy landscape today.
Before I continue, however, I want to note that these are my own views and are not
necessarily representative of others in the Federal Reserve System.
Today’s policy landscape
Nine years after the financial crisis, the Fed has, at least for the moment, achieved its
objectives of maximum employment and price stability. Yet the legacy of the crisis—through the
response of the Fed and fiscal authorities—has left us in a very different place than before the
crisis in a number of ways. The equilibrium nominal policy rate is low by historical standards.
The current target for the federal funds rate is considerably lower than the Federal Open Market
Committee’s (FOMC) projection of its longer-run value. Our balance sheet is almost five times
its pre-crisis size. The Fed’s footprint in financial markets is considerably larger than before the
crisis. The banking sector is consolidating, and big banks have gotten even bigger. Federal
deficits and debt are high and projected to rise to unprecedented levels.
Despite this legacy, many of the structural developments that dominate our thinking
today were well underway before the onset of the financial crisis and Great Recession. An aging
population, slowing productivity growth, rising globalization and declining equilibrium interest
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rates all pre-date the crisis. In this sense, things have not changed. Moreover, since the mid-
1990s and through the financial crisis, Great Recession, and current expansion, core inflation—
as measured by the personal consumption expenditure price index—has fluctuated in a relatively
narrow range of roughly 1 percent to 2 ½ percent.
Given the structural changes that have been developing over the last several decades, it
may well be that we are in a low-growth, low-interest-rate environment. Yet, from a cyclical
perspective, the economy appears to be operating at or beyond full employment with inflation
expected to rise over the medium term, while the FOMC’s funds rate target of 1½ percent to 1¾
percent remains well below the FOMC’s projection of its longer-run level of about 3 percent.
The current gradual normalization of interest rates is geared toward removing accommodation at
a pace that is expected to sustain the expansion without generating undesired increases in
inflation on the one hand, or creating financial instability on the other. But there are clearly risks.
And there are still uncertainties about how the landscape will look once policy has
achieved a “new normal.” In particular, questions remain to be answered about the Fed’s future
operating framework, its strategic framework and its role in promoting financial stability. I’ll
discuss each of these issues in turn.
Determining a long-run operating framework
In 2016, the FOMC held lengthy discussions about potential long-run frameworks for
monetary policy implementation. The Committee discussed the merits of maintaining an
abundance of reserves in the banking system versus returning to a framework of reserve scarcity.
With an abundance of reserves, the Fed would rely on interest on reserves and the overnight
reverse repurchase agreement (ON RRP) to maintain control over short-term market rates. With
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a scarcity of reserves, the open market desk at the New York Fed would control market rates
through its control over the supply of reserves. The discussion ended with agreement that
“decisions regarding the long-run implementation framework were not necessary at this time.”1
Since that time, however, we have begun to normalize our balance sheet with an understanding
that the balance sheet will be smaller than it is today, but larger than it was in 2007. As the
balance sheet continues its steady decline, I would suggest that we again need to consider the
appropriate long-run size of the balance sheet and our related operating framework.
While it may simply be a case of nostalgia on my part, I found our minimalist pre-crisis
operating framework to have a number of features that served us well for many years. We
maintained a small balance sheet with liabilities that were comprised almost entirely of currency
in circulation with reserves averaging about $10 billion, compared with more than $2 trillion
today. We maintained a Treasuries-only balance sheet with duration-matching Treasury issuance
to maintain a neutral influence on financial markets. We had a small number of counterparties,
and we managed the supply of reserves to achieve the target federal funds rate. As a result, our
footprint in the financial markets was relatively small.
Relative to this pre-crisis framework, the current operating framework—made necessary
by a large balance sheet—has had a number of undesirable consequences, some of which were
unintended. The Fed now owns significant outstanding shares of Treasuries and mortgage-
backed securities (MBS) and is no longer a neutral influence on financial markets. We have a
large number of counterparties, including nonbanks, made necessary by the ON RRP facility.
Increases in the funds rate are achieved by raising an administered rate—the interest rate on
excess reserves (IOER). Some have expressed concern that as IOER goes up, payments to
banks—including to foreign banks—go up. Finally, the nature of unconventional policies has
1 Federal Open Market Committee Minutes, November 1-2, 2016.
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drawn both attention and criticism to the Federal Reserve’s large balance sheet with conequences
for central bank independence and fiscal discipline. Congress has begun to see the Federal
Reserve as a source for plugging spending gaps, drawing on the Fed to fund the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, finance highway spending, and more recently, to contribute $2.5
billion to the federal government from its capital surplus as part of the budget deal passed in
February after the brief government shutdown.
Given these developments, the current thrust of policy can become more difficult to
gauge. At the same time the funds rate is being normalized, we have embarked on a program to
gradually reduce the Fed’s security holdings by decreasing reinvestment of principal payments.
While I support this policy—with balance sheet normalization occurring largely on auto-pilot
and in the background—it does pose challenges as we try to understand the implications for the
stance of policy. Is policy tighter than we think because the balance sheet is shrinking? Or is the
still-large balance sheet putting downward pressure on longer-term rates making policy more
accommodative than we think?
Whether it is desirable or even possible to return to our pre-crisis operating framework
remains an open question for the FOMC. Can we return to the corridor-like framework with
scarce reserves, or will we need to retain the current floor system? If we maintain the current
system, by how much can we reduce the supply of reserves? And what is the eventual role of the
ON RRP facility? Can IOER guide the funds rate without reliance on the floor established by the
rate on ON RRPs? Answers to these questions will be shaped by the FOMC’s future discussions.
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Strategic framework
In addition to uncertainties about the longer-run operating framework, a number of
strategic challenges and uncertainties pose practical issues for policymakers. With little
countercyclical policy space available to respond to a future downturn, monetary policy options
must contemplate how interest rate and balance sheet policies will work before, during and after
a crisis. Aggressively purchasing assets in a downturn and only gradually allowing them to roll
off once the economy has fully recovered suggests the possibility of a balance sheet that grows
bigger and bigger over time.
This dynamic, combined with varying degrees of uncertainty about the efficacy of asset
purchases, has led to calls for a discussion about future policy strategies for the next encounter
with the zero lower bound. Ideas like price-level targeting, a higher inflation objective or
nominal GDP targeting all offer worthwhile and intellectually stimulating debate. And certainly
the time is right to consider the trade-offs around various strategies, but determining if these
ideas might work in practice is challenging.
Promoting Financial Stability
These uncertainties make it all the more important to ensure the current economic
expansion is sustained as interest rates rise and the balance sheet normalizes. We should take
every measure possible to prevent a crisis rather than hope that we can devise a monetary policy
cure after the fact.
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As the FOMC gradually moves away from the zero lower bound, with a slowly shrinking
but still-large balance sheet and growing federal debt, maintaining financial stability is
paramount.
Here I would like to make two key points.
First, in contemplating a future bout of financial instability, we should be realistic
about the robustness of macroprudential tools with a good dose of humility
around the necessary finesse to deploy them in a timely fashion.
Second, we should not waver in our aims to bolster resilience in our banking
system especially for the largest banks.2
There is little dispute that financial stability is a necessary condition for achieving the
FOMC’s employment and price stability mandates. It is recognized in the FOMC’s “Statement of
Longer-Run Goals and Strategies” as well as being the objective of macroprudential policies.
However, there remains a tension as to the trade-off between macroeconomic goals and financial
stability. The “lean or clean” debate is ongoing. Specifically, some argue that the output losses
associated with using monetary policy to lean against growing financial imbalances far outweigh
the possible benefits. Instead, they suggest that macroprudential policies are the appropriate
response to financial instability. In my view, this approach might be more effective in theory
than in practice.
A few years ago, I participated with some of my colleagues in a tabletop exercise
designed to assess the efficacy of certain macroprudential policy tools in responding to a
hypothetical financial crisis. In the exercise, we examined the use of capital-based, liquidity-
based, and credit-based tools, along with stress testing and supervisory guidance in mitigating
2 The eight U.S. global systemically important banks (GSIBs) held $11 trillion in total assets at the end of 2017, an
amount equal to 57 percent of U.S. gross domestic product.
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the effects of an overheating of the financial markets. What we discovered in conducting the
exercise was that the effectiveness of the tools varied because of realities like implementation
lags and/or limited scope. In addition, monetary policy looked to be a relatively more attractive
option than some might have expected before the exercise.3 Obviously this particular exercise is
not conclusive in all scenarios, but rather a caution about becoming overly confident in relying
on macroprudential tools to address growing financial imbalances.
In thinking about the role of financial stability in the conduct of monetary policy, I find
recent research from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) to be compelling. This
research sees financial market deregulation from the 1980s and 1990s as having increased the
likelihood of crises and posits a growing financial cycle in which monetary policy responds
asymmetrically over time to crises, easing rates aggressively during the crisis but raising rates
only gradually after the crisis has subsided. Their prescription is for policymakers to break this
cycle by making policy more attentive to financial imbalances and more symmetrical in the
response.4
We should take advantage of the current economic conditions to bolster resilience in the
financial system. Instead, the U.S. has yet to implement a countercyclical buffer and the banking
agencies contemplate steps in the direction of relaxing capital requirements. Recently issued for
comment is a proposal to modify the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio on global
systemically important banks (GSIBs) that would have the effect of lowering capital
requirements.5 With the U.S. economy in a sustained expansion and at risk of growing financial
3 Tobias Adrian, Patrick de Fontnouvelle, Emily Yang, and Andrei Zlate, “Macro-prudential Policy: A Case Study
from a Tabletop Exercise,” FRBNY Economic Policy Review, February 2017.
4 Claudio Borio, Piti Disyatat, Mikael Juselius, and Phurichai Rungcharoenkitkul, “Monetary Policy in the Grip of a
Pincer Movement,” BIS Working Paper No. 706.
5 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 2018. “Rule Proposed to Tailor 'Enhanced Supplementary
Leverage Ratio' Requirements.” Press release, April 11. Available at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20180411a.htm
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imbalances, this is a time in the credit cycle when GSIBs and other banking organizations should
be building capital instead of increasing leverage.
Conclusion
The financial crisis and Great Recession left a legacy of low interest rates, a big balance
sheet and large fiscal deficits. And a number of long-running structural trends have become
prominent considerations for understanding their implications for future growth. This landscape
is accompanied by an economy growing at or above trend with full employment, stable prices
and easy settings for monetary policy. Whatever the “new normal” is, monetary policy is not yet
there. When times are good, as they are now, it is an opportune time to resolve some of the
uncertainties around how we will implement monetary policy in the future, what strategies we
will employ in response to the next downturn, and how can we best promote resilience and
stability in our financial system. I hope we do so before we find ourselves cleaning up after the
next crisis.
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Cite this document
APA
Esther L. George (2018, May 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20180504_esther_l_george
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20180504_esther_l_george,
author = {Esther L. George},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2018},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20180504_esther_l_george},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}