speeches · February 21, 2019
Regional President Speech
Mary C. Daly · President
Federal Reserve Bank
of San Francisco
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Prospects for Inflation in a High Pressure
Economy: Is the Phillips Curve Dead or is
it just Hibernating?
SPEECH INFO
Slides presented at the 2019 U.S. Monetary Policy Forum New York, New York By Mary C. Daly, President and Chief Executive Officer, Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco For delivery on February 22, 2019
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These slides were presented during a discussion by President Daly at the 2019 U.S. Monetary Policy Forum.
Prospects for Inflation in a High Pressure Economy:
Is the Phillips Curve Dead or is It Just Hibernating?
2019 US Monetary Policy Forum
Discussion
February 22, 2018
Mary Daly
President and CEO
The views expressed here are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect those of anyone else in the Federal Reserve System.
2
Paper Overview
•
Nice review of the empirical Phillips Curve literature
•
Concludes that the Phillips Curve is still breathing
•
Warns against complacency—no free lunch
•
But in an uncertain world how do we distinguish
complacency from appropriate policy?
•
Important to identify the wedges between theory and
data and be vigilant on both sides of the target
Wage and Price PCs Have Flattened
Slopes of Wage and Price Inflation Phillips Curves
Source: Hooper, Mishkin, and Sufi (2019).
4
Why?
•
Fundamental laws of supply and demand have
failed—tighter labor markets don’t drive wages,
prices?
or
•
There are various wedges clouding our view of the
underlying (structural) relationship?
Theory, Data, and Wedges
INTEREST SPENDING WAGE PRICE
EMPLOYMENT
RATES + OUTPUT INFLATION INFLATION
Reduced Form PCs May Not Tell the Story
INTEREST SPENDING WAGE PRICE
EMPLOYMENT
RATES + OUTPUT INFLATION INFLATION
• DNWR
• Composition
• Declining
bargaining
power
• Unmeasured
compensation
Reduced Form PCs May Not Tell the Story
INTEREST SPENDING WAGE PRICE
EMPLOYMENT
RATES + OUTPUT INFLATION INFLATION
• DNWR • Monetary policy
• Composition • Anchored
• Declining expectations
bargaining • Decline in COLAs
power • Concentration
• Unmeasured
compensation
The Regional Phillips Curves: Still Breathing
Cross-MSA Slope of Wage Phillips Curve Cross-MSA Slope of Price Phillips Curve
Note: Slack measured with unemployment gap. 8
Source: Leduc and Wilson (FRBSF Economic Letter, 2017) and authors’ calculations.
But Few Signs Wage Inflation is Running Away
Wage Growth
Percent
5.0
Pacific
Finance,
4.0
Manufacturing High Skill,
Overall Mid Skill
Education and
3.0 Low Skill
Health
West South
2.0
1.0
0.0
Region Industry Occupation
9
Source: Atlanta Federal Reserve Wage Growth Tracker.
Price PC: Housing Services Dominates
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. 10
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Cross-MSA Slope of the Price Phillips Curve
11
So if the PC is Alive, What’s Ahead?
Wage Growth Slowly Ratcheting Up …
Note: Wage growth is the twelve-month moving average of the percent change in average hourly earnings over the last twelve months. Full-time wage growth is the 12-month
12
moving average of median wage growth for usually full-time workers.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Atlanta Federal Reserve Wage Growth Tracker.
…Not Much Effect on Price Inflation
Cyclical Sectors Not Reacting to Hot Labor Markets
Percent
Core PCE Inflation and Contributions by Sector
Source: Mahedy and Shapiro (FRBSF Economic Letter, 2017), Cyclical and Acyclical Core PCE Inflation (FRBSF Indicator, 2019).
Healthcare Services Inflation: This Time is Different
Healthcare services inflation minus core PCE inflation
Percent
Inflation Expectations Matter More Now
Coefficient on Lagged Inflation and Inflation Expectations
16
Note: Specification uses headline CPI inflation. One-year ahead inflation expectations from the Survey of Professional Forecasters.
Source: Jordà, Marti, Nechio, and Tallman (FRBSF Economic Letter, 2019).
Inflation Has Been Low For A Long Time
17
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
18
Conclusion
•
The Phillips curve remains a useful guide
•
The effects of nonlinearities appear muted
•
Need to be vigilant about upside and downside risks
19
Supplementary Figures
Little Evidence of Nonlinearities in Hot Labor Markets
Cross-State Wage Phillips Curve Cross-MSA Price Phillips Curve
20
Note: Slack measured with unemployment gap. Inflation measure on y-axis excludes regional and time fixed effects
Source: Leduc, Marti, and Wilson (FRBSF Economic Letter, 2019) and authors’ calculations
Cite this document
APA
Mary C. Daly (2019, February 21). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190222_mary_c_daly
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20190222_mary_c_daly,
author = {Mary C. Daly},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2019},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190222_mary_c_daly},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}