speeches · October 2, 2018
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
Monetary Policy 2.0?
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
OMFIF City Lecture
U.S. Economic Outlook
London, UK
October 3, 2018
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Monetary Policy 2.0?
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
Today, I would like to briefly share with you my outlook for the U.S. economy before
turning to my views on some of the key factors that will likely influence U.S. monetary
policy in the future. Naturally, my comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect
the views of the Federal Reserve System or the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC).
This is not a mystery novel, so let me preview some of my comments.
The U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders: Growth is strong, unemployment is
low, and inflation is approaching our 2 percent symmetric target on a sustained
basis.1 Like my colleagues on the FOMC, I expect this good performance to
continue over the next few years. While there are some risks to the outlook, I see
them as being balanced.
Given the strong near-term growth fundamentals and positive inflation outlook, it
is time for the Fed to return to something akin to the conventional monetary
policymaking of yesteryear. Such policy will rely on gradual adjustments in
interest rates to meet our mandated objectives of maximum employment and 2
percent inflation, rather than the unconventional tools we had to use in response
to the financial crisis and ensuing Great Recession.
There is, however, an important way this policymaking regime will differ from that
in the past. I am not talking about over the immediate future. I am talking about
when, at some inevitable time down the road, the next economic downturn
occurs. As I will discuss in a moment, it is all too likely that policymakers would
then again face a difficult monetary policy environment in which our traditional
interest rate tool will prove inadequate and financial instability issues could be
germane. So, with the economy close to both our goals of maximum employment
and price stability, now is a good time to take a hard look at whether—and how—
the Fed’s strategic monetary policy framework might be modified to better deal
with these potential challenges.
1 In January 2012, the FOMC set 2 percent inflation—measured by the annual change in the Price Index for
Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE)—as the explicit symmetric inflation target consistent with our price
stability mandate (Federal Open Market Committee, 2012). For more on the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate, see
our dual mandate webpage, https://www.chicagofed.org/research/dual-mandate/dual-mandate.
2
Currently, economists are discussing a number of alternative monetary policy
frameworks that might do so.
o These frameworks all share the feature that during meaningful economic
downturns, they would likely entail extended periods with short-term policy
rates at the effective lower bound (ELB) and the aggressive use of
nonconventional policies. In the U.S., this means forward guidance about
future policy rates and large-scale purchases of financial assets. And as the
economy recovers, these frameworks also likely would require an extended
period of inflation above 2 percent—perhaps substantially so for some time.
o How will policymakers communicate the use of these tools and these
inflationary outcomes to the public? How will the public react, and how will
this reaction in turn influence the efficacy of the policy? How should we
assess the interplay in any particular alternative framework between
aggressive monetary accommodation, financial instability risks, and the
stance of financial regulatory oversight and supervision? These are all
important questions that I will talk about in more detail today.
o Now, even if no sweeping changes are made to our monetary policy
framework, there are opportunities to improve our existing strategy. My
personal view is that we should concentrate more explicitly and publicly on
outcome-based policy settings aimed at delivering maximum employment and
2 percent inflation on average through the business cycle. Bolstering the
credibility that the FOMC will deliver on its policy mandates makes those
goals more readily achievable—whether operating in something like our
current framework or when executing any of the alternative frameworks under
consideration.
The current economic situation and outlook
With that preview, let me briefly discuss my economic outlook. As we approach the
tenth year of the expansion, the fundamentals for growth in the U.S. are solid. We’re
moving through 2018 with a good deal of momentum, with real gross domestic product
(GDP) increasing at a very robust 3.2 percent annual rate in the first half of the year.
Consumer spending and business investment have been key drivers of growth. This
dynamism reflects healthy labor markets, asset price increases, favorable credit
conditions, fiscal policy impetus, and relatively accommodative monetary policy.
Forward-looking indicators of both consumer and business spending point to continued
strength, but there are concerns that ongoing uncertainty over the international trade
situation may impinge on some firms’ investment plans. The one sector where activity
has been a bit soft is housing, where higher mortgage rates and supply constraints have
held back activity.
3
The Fed has a dual mandate to generate economic conditions consistent with maximum
employment and low and stable inflation. So, what about inflation? I am more
comfortable with the inflation outlook today than I have been for the past several years.
Core consumer inflation averaged only 1.6 percent between 2010 and 2017—well
below our symmetric 2 percent target.2 However, core inflation picked up earlier this
year and has been running close to 2 percent since last March.
My economic outlook is generally in line with those of my colleagues on the FOMC—as
indicated by the median of the projections we all submitted during our regular quarterly
forecasting exercise last week.3 Most FOMC participants estimated that the economy’s
long-run potential growth rate is somewhere between 1-3/4 and 2 percent. The median
participant expects GDP to expand more quickly than that over the next two years, and
then sees growth slowing close to potential in 2020 and 2021. The unemployment rate
is projected to average a little over 3-1/2 percent over the next three years, so nearly a
full percentage point below the median assumption for its long-run normal rate of 4-1/2
percent. Inflation is expected to edge up to 2.1 percent over the next three years—
which is consistent with our symmetric 2 percent target.
Implications for monetary policy
What does this outlook imply for monetary policy? As the FOMC’s policy statement has
said for some time, we expect that gradual increases in the federal funds rate target will
be consistent with achieving our policy mandates. Last week we increased the target
range 25 basis points, to between 2 and 2-1/4 percent. The median FOMC participant
expects one more 25 basis point rate hike this year and then a slow rise in the funds
rate to 3.4 percent by the end of 2020. At the same time, in the background we have a
gradual reduction in the Fed’s balance sheet as securities acquired during our asset
purchase programs mature.
Note that most FOMC participants see the long-run neutral fed funds rate—that is,
where the rate should settle at when policy is neither expansionary nor contractionary—
somewhere in the range of 2-3/4 to 3 percent. Putting aside the uncertainties regarding
the estimates of the neutral rate, this means that policy is expected to become mildly
restrictive later in the projection period. Given an unemployment rate forecast below the
natural rate,4 such a policy stance would be quite normal and consistent with some
moderation in growth and a gradual return of employment to its longer-run sustainable
level.
2 While our objective is stated in terms of overall PCE inflation, core inflation—which strips out the volatile food
and energy sectors—is a better gauge of sustained inflationary pressures and where inflation is headed in the
future.
3 Four times a year the FOMC releases its Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), which presents FOMC
participants’ forecasts of key economic variables over the next three years and for the longer run. Participants also
provide their assessments of the appropriate monetary policy that supports those forecasts. For the most recent
SEP, see Federal Open Market Committee (2018).
4 The natural rate of unemployment is the unemployment rate that would prevail in an economy making full use of
its productive resources. Consequently, it is the rate of unemployment that would predominate over the longer
run in the absence of shocks to the economy.
4
Of course, these are just forecasts. In the end, we may need to tighten somewhat more
if unexpected tailwinds emerge that push the economy too far beyond sustainable
growth and cause inflation to rise too far above our symmetric 2 percent objective.
Alternatively, we could face unexpected headwinds that threaten growth or inhibit
inflation expectations from firmly centering around our 2 percent inflation target. In such
a case we may need to take a more accommodative policy path.
The FOMC’s stated intention of gradual increases in the federal funds rate target
sounds pretty much like the more conventional, mainstream monetary policy that
characterized the Fed’s actions in the 20 years prior to the financial crisis. Considering
the potential headwind or tailwind risks that might emerge, a gradual path gives us the
flexibility to make appropriate risk-management adjustments to policy should they be
called for.
A basic tenet of such good conventional monetary policy is that it is a supporting actor:
The lead roles in the economy are played by households and competitive private
businesses making their best saving, investment, and employment decisions, along with
governments at all levels (federal, state, and local) doing their best to design and
execute effective public policy programs.
As a supporting actor, monetary policy focuses on 1) assessing the various headwinds
and tailwinds influencing the economy and 2) moving policy into a modestly
accommodative or modestly restrictive stance, when appropriate, to help the main
actors achieve maximum sustainable employment and price stability.
Obviously, from 2008 to 2014, the Fed did much more than this. These other actions
were controversial and provoked criticism. However, financial turmoil, fiscal restraint,
and the international situation required us to take such a course. We are now happily
returning to our supporting actor role.
There is, however, an important difference between the conventional monetary policy of
today and conventional policy prior to the Great Recession. Specifically, the potential
growth rate of the economy and the neutral interest rate are a good deal lower than they
used to be.
My colleagues and I have talked extensively in public about the factors that are driving
neutral interest rates lower: slower population growth; a falling trend labor force
participation rate; lower labor productivity growth; higher demand for safe assets by
investors around the world; and lower inflation.5 As you know, the U.S. isn’t alone here;
most advanced economies are facing similar situations.
This new reality has important implications for monetary policy. Between the mid-1980s
and early 2000s, the Federal Reserve typically cut short-term policy rates something in
the neighborhood of 5 percentage points when mitigating economic downturns. And at
5 A partial list of my speeches highlighting this point include Evans (2016a, 2016b, 2017, 2018a). Other colleagues
have made this point as well. See, for example, Brainard (2016) and Williams (2017).
5
times we cut by even more: Between 1990 and 1992, we dropped rates by 6-3/4
percentage points, from 9-3/4 to 3 percent. Today, given a neutral federal funds rate in
the range of, say, 2-1/2 to 3 percent, we simply do not have that kind of rate-cutting
capacity.
So, unfortunately, the risks of returning to the ELB are higher than we would like.
Although it’s very hard to estimate, nearly 20 years ago one well-known study put these
risks at about 15 percent; work done in 2017 put the odds today closer to 40 percent.6
This represents a very high risk of experiencing a costly economic event that could
compel the Fed to fall back on remedies policymakers often find difficult, if not downright
distasteful, to implement.
This problem has led economists to think more about alternative frameworks that might
improve the performance of monetary policy in a world with higher risks of returning to
the ELB. Ideas include an explicitly higher inflation target (say, 4 percent); nominal-GDP
targeting; temporary, state-contingent price-level targeting; and unconditional price-level
targeting.7
It is not my intention today to offer any endorsements or critiques of these proposals.
However, I would like to highlight some of the important issues to consider when
evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of the various frameworks.
The implications of alternative frameworks for inflation
Let me begin with inflation. When the Federal Reserve started discussing an explicit
inflation target in the 1990s, it certainly recognized that many factors play a role in
determining the best inflation objective. I don’t have time to go into them in any detail,
but they included things like how inflation may influence labor market behavior,
especially as downwardly rigid nominal wages can throw sand in the gears of labor
markets and boost unemployment.8 And, of course, another key consideration in target
choice was how often we might encounter the effective lower bound. In the end, the
Fed, like many other central banks around the world, ultimately settled on a 2 percent
target.
The alternative monetary frameworks being discussed often allow for inflation much
higher than 2 percent. Clearly, one way of reducing the ELB odds would be for inflation
to average 3 or 4 percent over the long run, boosting the nominal neutral funds rate to 4
or 5 percent and providing more room to cut rates in a downturn. For this reason, a
permanently higher inflation objective is on the list of possible alternative frameworks.
The various level-targeting frameworks would produce temporary—though potentially
protracted—periods of inflation above 2 percent. The reasoning is simple. Think about a
price-level target. A period of subpar performance would open up a shortfall in the price
level from its trend line target. To close the gap, policymakers would need to generate a
period of above-trend-line inflation. Closing big gaps would require some big increases
6 See Reifschneider and Williams (2000) and Kiley and Roberts (2017).
7 See Evans (2018b) for remarks on alternative monetary policy frameworks.
8 See Akerlof, Dickens, and Perry (1996).
6
in inflation.
What would be the public’s reaction to such higher inflation rates? Would they believe
the Fed would bring inflation back to 2 percent in the long run? Or would they figure that
higher inflation was here to stay? Would they tolerate this change?
Naturally, a related set of issues would arise following a protracted period of
overshooting a level target. Would the public support the monetary restraint required to
deflate a large positive price-level or nominal-income gap? The experiences from
applying such restraint in the 1980s were quite painful. But, because of the asymmetries
inherent with the ELB and the ability of the Fed to confidently tighten monetary
conditions by simply increasing short-term policy rates, I see such a scenario as less
likely than a protracted undershooting of targets. Yet, it’s still an important
consideration.
In sum, these alternative monetary frameworks might be attractive in theory, but as a
policymaker I must also consider how practical they would be to implement. I don’t know
the answer to that question yet.
Interactions between monetary and regulatory frameworks
Let’s now turn to the interactions of monetary policy with financial markets and
regulatory policies. Achieving our maximum employment and inflation mandates might
require some long periods of strong monetary policy accommodation. Is the financial
market system and regulatory environment robust enough to limit financial instability
risks in those circumstances? Can the Fed conduct an effective and independent
monetary policy strategy irrespective of the state of financial markets and regulatory
policies?
Financial stability is an important goal of the Federal Reserve. As was all too apparent
during the crisis, a breakdown in financial intermediation can have severe
consequences for the real economy. So we must ask if some alternative monetary
policy frameworks might be more (or less) prone to generating financial instability risks.
A robust financial market culture—in which excessive risk-taking is punished by market
discipline first and regulatory restrictions second—would allow for stronger monetary
strategies to be pursued. But a weak self-regulating market culture without adequate
compensating public sector guardrails could prevent using the otherwise most effective
monetary framework.
Of course, given the spectrum of competing incentives, these financial regulatory
challenges are quite difficult to manage. And I should note that a robust macroprudential
structure is relevant for any monetary policy structure, including our current one. But—
and this is my point here—when designing strategies, we must understand the
interactions between the monetary and regulatory frameworks. And we must recognize
that these will change over time and over the business cycle.
7
Will strongly accommodative policies induce financial instability risks that require
enhanced financial regulation? Or will market discipline alone be sufficient—regardless
of the monetary framework we choose? The ultimate effectiveness of any strategy will
depend on the answers to these questions. For example, suppose macroeconomic
conditions called for an aggressive commitment to low policy rates and quantitative
easing. If the regulatory regime was weak and financial instability risks were rising, then
the public might doubt our will to carry through with these commitments. This loss of
credibility would greatly diminish the efficacy of these policies. This quandary is not
merely hypothetical. During the financial crisis, some opposed taking aggressive
monetary policy actions over concerns about financial instability risks.
So policymakers will need to address the financial stability implications for each
suggested alternative monetary framework. I certainly acknowledge that we have much
important work to do on this front.
Conclusion: The need for outcome-based policies
I want to reiterate that I am not prejudging any alternative framework today. That being
said, within the mix of possible outcomes, the Fed needs to give strong consideration to
staying with our current monetary policy strategy. If we do so, we must ensure that it is
as robust as possible. I believe an important way of achieving this is to emphasize
outcome-based policy. One example of such policy is the threshold-based forward
guidance we undertook in December 2012. Former Chair Yellen’s lower-for-longer
policy proposal to deal with ELB episodes can also be seen as falling into this
category.9
Over the past several years most of my monetary policy commentary has emphasized
the need for policy setting aimed at achieving our maximum employment and price
stability objectives as quickly as possible—with an eye toward insuring against costly
risk scenarios. Importantly, I think outcome-based policy actions should take
precedence over faithful adherence to time-invariant instrument-based decision rules.
One example of such a rule is the well-known Taylor rule, which uses fixed parameters
to mechanically link the setting of the policy interest rate to deviations in inflation and
employment from their long-run targets.10
But changes in the economic environment may reduce the effectiveness of such strict
instrument-setting rules or, at times, even make them counterproductive. For instance, it
clearly would be a mistake to insist on a 2 percent intercept in a Taylor rule when we
think the neutral real federal funds rate is really closer to zero. Furthermore, such rules
also do not allow for adjusting policy in one direction or the other as insurance against
costly downside risks that might be evident to policymakers.11 Focusing on hitting
mandated outcomes with risk management against adverse scenarios can avoid such
missteps.
9 Yellen (2018).
10 Taylor (1993).
11 See Evans et al. (2015) for a description of FOMC risk-management behavior.
8
To summarize, after many years, we finally are close to achieving our dual mandate
objectives and are finally returning to a more conventional policy approach. This is
good. But the economy has fundamentally changed, and there will be less headroom to
cut policy rates when the next downturn occurs. We need to plan ahead. And when
judging whether we stay with our current framework or move to an alternative, we need
to remember that the key criterion is the ability to deliver on the central bank’s
mandated policy goals. Regardless of the policy framework, the goals of maximum
employment and price stability remain unchanged—as does the Federal Reserve’s
mandate to meet them as best as it can.
Thank you.
References
Akerlof, George A., William T. Dickens, and George L. Perry, 1996, “The
macroeconomics of low inflation,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Vol. 27, No.
1, pp. 1–59, available online, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-
content/uploads/1996/01/1996a_bpea_akerlof_dickens_perry_gordon_mankiw.pdf.
Brainard, Lael, 2016, “The economic outlook and implications for monetary policy,”
remarks by Federal Reserve Governor at the Council of Foreign Relations, Washington,
DC, June 3, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/files/brainard20160603a.pdf.
Evans, Charles L., 2018a, “Back to the future of monetary policy,” speech prepared for
the Central Bank of Argentina Money and Banking Conference, Dealing with Monetary
Policy Normalization, Buenos Aires, Argentina, September 3, available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2018/09-03-2018-back-to-the-future-
monetary-policy-argentina.
Evans, Charles L., 2018b, “Some practical considerations for monetary policy
frameworks,” speech at the Shadow Open Market Committee meeting, Manhattan
Institute, New York City, March 9, available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2018/03-09-2018-some-practical-
considerations-monetary-policy-frameworks-shadow-open-market-committee.
Evans, Charles L., 2017, “The times they are a-changin’,” speech at the DZ Bank–
OMFIF International Capital Markets Conference, Frankfurt, Germany, March 29,
available online, https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2017/03-29-2017-
times-are-a-changin-charles-evans-frankfurt.
Evans, Charles L., 2016a, “Monetary policy in a lower interest rate environment,”
speech at the CFA Society, Auckland, New Zealand, October 5, available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2016/10-05-2016-monetary-policy-in-
a-lower-interest-rate-environment-auckland.
Evans, Charles L., 2016b, “The implications of slow growth for monetary policy,” speech
9
at the Credit Suisse Asian Investment Conference, Hong Kong, China, April 5, available
online, https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2016/04-05-implications-slow-
growth-monetary-policy-charles-evans-hong-kong.
Evans, Charles L., Jonas D. M. Fisher, François Gourio, and Spencer Krane, 2015,
“Risk-management for monetary policy near the zero lower bound,” Brookings Papers
on Economic Activity, Vol. 46, No. 1, Spring, pp. 141–196, available online,
https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/2015a_evans.pdf.
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Federal Open Market Committee, 2012, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement of
longer-run goals and policy strategy,” press release, Washington, DC, January 25,
available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20120125c.htm.
Kiley, Michael T., and John M. Roberts, 2017, “Monetary policy in a low interest rate
world,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Vol. 48, No. 1, Spring, pp. 317–372,
available online, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-
content/uploads/2017/08/kileytextsp17bpea.pdf.
Reifschneider, David, and John C. Williams, 2000, “Three lessons for monetary policy in
a low-inflation era,” Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Vol. 32, No. 4, part 2,
November, pp. 936–966.
Taylor, John B., 1993, “Discretion versus policy rules in practice,” Carnegie-Rochester
Conference Series on Public Policy, Vol. 39, No. 1, December, pp. 195–214, available
online, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/016722319390009L.
Williams, John C., 2017, “The global growth slump: Causes & consequences,” public
lecture by San Francisco Fed president and CEO at Macquarie University, Sydney,
Australia, June 27, available online, https://www.frbsf.org/our-district/press/presidents-
speeches/williams-speeches/2017/june/global-growth-slump-causes-consequences/.
Yellen, Janet L., 2018, “Comments on monetary policy at the effective lower bound,”
remarks at the Fall 2018 conference of the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity,
Washington, DC, September 14, available online, https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-
front/2018/09/14/comments-on-monetary-policy-at-the-effective-lower-bound/.
10
Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2018, October 2). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20181003_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20181003_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2018},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20181003_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}