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Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
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James Bullard Discusses Nominal GDP Targeting
April 19, 2019
This 15-minute podcast was released April 19, 2019.
TIMELY TOPICS
30 00:00:00/ 00:15:08 30
James Bullard Discusses Nominal GDP Targeting
How does nominal GDP targeting differ from
in�ation targeting? And what would be some of
the advantages and disadvantages of using
nominal GDP targeting? St. Louis Fed President
James Bullard says: “The biggest advantage is
this idea that you would really cement in�ation
expectations around the target. This would give
investors and �nancial market participants,
households, businesses, the con�dence that the
central bank really was going to deliver on what
it said.”
Transcript
Karen Mracek: Welcome to the Timely Topics podcast series from the St. Louis Fed. I’m
Karen Mracek, your host for this podcast. With me today is St. Louis Fed President Jim
Bullard, and we will be discussing nominal GDP targeting. President Bullard, thank you for
being here.
James Bullard: Thanks for having me.
Mracek: Before we jump into speci�cs of nominal GDP targeting, can you tell us a bit about
how the Fed maintains price stability now, and why we are talking today about a different
approach?
Bullard: My view of this is that, beginning in the 1990s, there was a coming together of the
academic literature and practitioners in central banking around the concept of in�ation
targeting, which, roughly speaking, meant that central banks named an in�ation target and
conducted monetary policy in such a way as to hit that in�ation target over the medium
term. And this is commonplace today, but at the time was a big shift compared to the ’70s
and ’80s where there weren’t any in�ation targets, and it wasn’t at all clear, relatively
speaking, what the various central banks were doing.
I have to say, in the big picture, that in�ation targeting has been crazy successful. In�ation
has been much lower and much closer to these in�ation targets across the countries that
adopted them. In�ation’s been much less variable than it was in the ’70s and ’80s. The
in�ation expectations in these various countries have become much less volatile and much
more clustered around the in�ation targets. So, in�ation targeting has been a great success
story, and the question now would be, can you improve on that?
Mracek: Can you explain, then, what nominal GDP targeting is, and how is it different from
in�ation targeting?
Bullard: In in�ation targeting, we would name the in�ation target, but if we missed the
in�ation target, either on the high side or the low side, you wouldn’t be too worried about it.
You’d say, “Well, OK, we’ll try to hit it again next year or over the medium term, and we
won’t worry about the fact that we’ve missed it this year or maybe several years in a row.”
With price-level targeting or its close cousin nominal income targeting, you would worry
about past misses, and you would try to make up for past misses in such a way that you
would stay on a path for the price level or a path for nominal GDP, depending on which route
you went. But they’re closely related.
So the main difference is that private-sector investors would understand that you were
going to make up for past losses, and they would understand that if you missed to the low
side in the past, this would mean that future policy would likely miss to the high side for a
little while. And, vice versa, if you missed on the high side for a while, then you would
probably miss on the low side in the future for a little while.
And, in so doing, at least in theory, this would further cement in�ation expectations—even
more than they’ve already been controlled by the in�ation targeting regime that’s been in
place the last 25 years. You would further pin down in�ation expectations, and therefore,
get even better monetary policy than what we’ve had over that period of time.
Mracek: To clarify, when you talk about nominal GDP targeting, are you referring to
targeting the level of GDP or the growth rate?
Bullard: At least in the simplest examples, it would be the level of nominal GDP. You’d have
a projected path for that level, and you would be right on that path all the time, every year. I
mean, practically speaking, that’s not what would happen, but ideally that’s what would
happen.
Mracek: How would nominal GDP targeting work in theory?
Bullard: I do have this paper called “Optimal Monetary Policy Masses,” which is only one
out of a sea of papers on this issue. In that paper, there are big private credit markets as
there are in the real world. But in the model, those credit markets don’t quite work the way
they should because all the trading takes place in nominal terms and it is non-state
contingent.
And because of that, the monetary policy can follow this nominal GDP targeting rule, and
that �xes the problem that would otherwise exist in credit markets, and therefore gets a
more smoothly operating credit market than you would otherwise have.
So, this would be an improvement to the equilibrium of the economy and everyone in the
economy would be much happier than if you didn’t do this. And so that provides one
rationale for nominal GDP targeting in a theoretical setting.
That’s just one possible way you could talk about this issue inside of a model, but I think it’s
an interesting one.
Mracek: Can you give us an example of when the monetary policy response under nominal
GDP targeting might be different from in�ation targeting?
Bullard: Yeah, even right now, when the Fed looks back on the in�ation outcomes since
2012, we’ve generally missed to the low side of our in�ation target. And, as I was saying
earlier, under in�ation targeting, that’s just treated as a bygone, and you don’t worry about
that, which means that the way the Fed is treating it right now is that, yes, we’ve missed in
the past, but we’re just going to promise to hit the target in the future, and then that will be
that.
But under nominal GDP targeting, you wouldn’t be satis�ed with that. You would say, “I want
to make up for the fact that I missed to the low side over several years,” and therefore it’d be
OK if you allowed in�ation to be higher for several years in order to have it average out over
a longer period of time to hit your 2% in�ation target.
In some ways, at a very simple level, there’s just more commitment to the idea that you’re
actually going to hit the 2% target instead of saying that, “Well, we’ll try to hit it, but if we
miss it, then there’s no guarantee.”
This nominal income targeting idea would be a way to make sure that you hit the target over
longer periods of time.
Mracek: What would be the advantages of using nominal GDP targeting?
Bullard: The biggest advantage is this idea that you would really cement in�ation
expectations around the target. This would give investors and �nancial market participants,
households, businesses, the con�dence that the central bank really was going to deliver on
what it said. It was going to deliver this 2% in�ation rate. They could use that in their
planning, and they could be reasonably con�dent that that was going to be the actual
outcome in the economy over longer periods of time. This would help with getting the best
allocation of real resources that we can get. So, that would be the principal advantage.
I think the question about both nominal GDP targeting and price-level targeting is whether
the additional gains that you would get are going to be that big compared to what you
already are getting from in�ation targeting. I started this off by saying in�ation targeting
has been crazy successful, and I think that’s the right view of the last 25 years in the
countries that have adopted in�ation targeting. I said it’s been a way better experience than
the ’70s and ’80s where you had in�ation expectations bouncing all over the place and a lot
more volatility. You got both nominal volatility, but also more recessions and more frequent
recessions.
Most of that has smoothed out, the �nancial crisis notwithstanding. We’ve managed to have
more moderation in real variables and nominal variables in the in�ation targeting era, even
though we had the big �nancial crisis. But that’s only one part of the last 25 years.
Mracek: And are there any disadvantages to nominal GDP targeting?
Bullard: Some people say it hasn’t been tried, and it would be hard to communicate. And I
think one way to convey that idea is that it really relies on private-sector expectations
understanding the policy, and because they understand the policy, they expect in�ation to
be right around 2%. And because of that, you get good things to happen in the economy.
It’s the kind of thing where you might say, “OK, we switched to nominal GDP targeting.”
Nobody notices in the entire economy. No one pays any attention whatsoever, and you don’t
get any of these effects at all. I think that would be the kind of thing that is very practical and
could possibly happen, because private-sector people might say, “Well, I don’t understand
it,” or, “I don’t see what the difference is between this and in�ation targeting. It’s all too
subtle.”
The theories are relying on these things being really tight and really affecting these
expectations a lot. But the reality might be a lot more distant than that.
Mracek: One common criticism is that stag�ation is consistent with nominal GDP targeting.
What is your thought on that?
Bullard: Stag�ation is a term from the ’70s when both unemployment and in�ation were
high—at one point both in double-digit ranges in the early 1980s—and this came to be called
stag�ation. It was considered a bad outcome.
There is an aspect of this with price-level targeting and nominal GDP targeting because
good times are the times when in�ation would run below target, and bad times are the
times when in�ation would run above target. And that’s different than what we’re used to.
But when you think about it, bad times are times when you want the somewhat higher
in�ation because that’s supposed to drive the real interest rate lower, and that is what is
supposed to get you out of the recession and help you during recessionary times. So it does
have a certain logic to it, even though we had this sour experience from the ’70s.
I don’t think anybody’s talking about that kind of in�ation or that kind of volatility that we
had at that time. That’s not something you’d want. You’d want sort of mildly higher in�ation
in bad times, and mildly softer in�ation during good times. So I think it’s more contained
than anything that happened during the ’70s, which was quite volatile.
Mracek: I think you touched on this, but have any central banks used nominal GDP
targeting?
Bullard: No, not to my knowledge. And one of the criticisms is that we barely got everybody
converted over to in�ation targeting, and now you’d be switching again. The U.S., in
particular, only named its in�ation target in 2012. Japan’s another country that didn’t come
around to in�ation targeting until relatively recently.
And so it’s not clear that you want to, then, make another change. Although I would say, if
you’re going to make a change, you should make it during good times, not try to improvise
when it’s a very volatile area or high recession risk or something like that. If you wanted to
make the change during calm, successful times for the economy, that’s probably the time to
do it.
I do think that one of the advantages of in�ation targeting was that smaller countries took it
on �rst and experimented with it, showed how it could be done, and then you had,
eventually, the founding of the ECB [European Central Bank] coming on in the late ’90s, and
then the Fed following through later. And so you kind of tested it out in other places before
you had the world’s leading economies adopting it.
If the U.S. moved �rst and went with price-level targeting or nominal GDP targeting, that
would be a different kettle of �sh, and that would be something that has to be thought about
carefully, I think. You’d be setting a trend in a global environment, and other countries
would likely follow.
Mracek: That make sense. Would the average consumer notice a difference if a central bank
switched from in�ation targeting to nominal GDP targeting?
Bullard: I don’t really think so. I think the person on the street would regard everything as
being about the same. But again, this is really more about cementing expectations in
�nancial markets and the way bond markets, in particular, would operate under this kind of
a regime as opposed to the one we’re using now. And so I don’t think a typical person would
see much difference.
Mracek: Theoretically, if the Fed were to adopt nominal GDP targeting, would it capture
both sides of the dual mandate—that is, stable prices and maximum sustainable
employment?
Bullard: It would, because—at least in theory, if this was the true optimal policy—this would
mean you’d get the best allocation of resources, which would include labor resources so that
labor would be supplied exactly at the rate that households would desire. And this would be
the best employment outcomes that you could get for the economy. So it’s all supposed to
work at least on paper. Whether that actually works in the real world is certainly an area
that people like to debate.
Mracek: Got it. Is there anything else you want our listeners to know about this topic or how
the Fed thinks about maintaining price stability?
Bullard: Well, I think it’s under review in 2019, and it’s something the Fed will consider, I
think, as part of its review. I think it’s good to be thinking about possible innovation in
monetary policy frameworks as time goes on. Surely, the framework we’re using today will
not be the same one we’re using 50 years from now. And, in order to be able to evolve at the
right moments, we have to have regular reviews and think about these issues. And I think
that’s the purpose of this framework review in 2019.
Mracek: Great. Well, President Bullard, thank you for joining us today and sharing your
views on nominal GDP targeting.
For more of his remarks on this topic and others, you can visit our website, stlouisfed.org,
and click on “From the President.” To listen to more of our podcasts, go to Timely Topics.
Related Topics
Federal Reserve Monetary Policy In�ation Output
Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2019, April 18). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190419_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20190419_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2019},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190419_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}