speeches · September 30, 2019
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
______________________________________________________________________________
On Mid-Cycle Adjustments
______________________________________________________________________________
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Global Interdependence Center (GIC)
Central Banking Series Event
Monetary and Economic Policies on Both Sides of the Atlantic
Frankfurt, Germany
October 1, 2019
_____________________________________
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
On Mid-Cycle Adjustments
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
Thank you for the invitation to speak to you this morning. Before I begin my
remarks, let me remind you that my comments reflect my own views and not
necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System or the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
Today, I’d like to share with you my perspective on the evolution of U.S.
monetary policy over the past ten months—from a time when some further
gradual rate increases seemed to be in store to one in which cuts have been
made and rates are likely to remain low for some time. I also will talk about some
longer-run strategic monetary policy framework issues.
Before I go into detail about policy, for context, let me first provide a brief
summary of current macroeconomic conditions and my outlook for growth and
inflation.
Over the past year and a half, the U.S. economy has expanded at a solid 2-1/2
percent annual rate on average. One constant over this time has been strong
consumer expenditures. The incoming data suggest this vitality should carry
forward in the near term, reflecting healthy household balance sheets; elevated
consumer confidence; and, most notably, a vibrant labor market. At 3.7 percent,
2
the unemployment rate is near a 50-year low. Importantly, many who had been
left behind are gaining a welcome foothold into the job market—some for the first
time. As labor markets have tightened, wage growth—which had been anemic for
many years—finally picked up last year and has maintained a solid pace so far in
2019.
However, in contrast to the consumer sector, the business sector has seen some
unfavorable changes. After posting robust gains last year, business fixed
investment has lost considerable momentum over the past ten months.
Manufacturing output has declined, and business sentiment has deteriorated.
Some of this softness is a consequence of weaker foreign growth reducing the
demand for U.S. products. Growth in a number of advanced and emerging
economies has slowed over the past two years, and most analysts have revised
down their forecasts for future growth.1 Furthermore, higher tariffs, the ebb and
flow of trade tensions, heightened geopolitical risks, and concerns over an even
more pronounced and prolonged slowdown abroad have introduced a good deal
of uncertainty into business decision-making.2 A natural reaction to this
uncertainty is to pull back on expansion plans. An increasing number of my
business contacts—particularly those in the manufacturing sector or ones with a
large international footprint—are telling me about delayed or canceled investment
1 For instance, since late 2018, the International Monetary Fund has reduced its forecast of world growth
over the next three years by as much as 0.5 percentage points. See International Monetary Fund (2018,
2019).
2 Indeed, uncertainty indexes based on keyword searches of news accounts—such as the economic policy
uncertainty (EPU) index by Baker, Bloom, and Davis (2016) and the trade policy uncertainty (TPU) index by
Caldara et al. (2019)—at times reached historically high levels over the past year.
3
projects. In addition, I have heard reports of some firms downsizing workforce
plans.
Putting together all of these developments, I expect the U.S. economy to grow
about 2-1/4 percent this year, as continued strength in consumer spending
offsets weakness in business outlays and net exports. This is a solid number, as
it exceeds my view of the economy’s long-run potential growth rate, which is
slightly below 2 percent. Looking beyond this year, I expect growth to run roughly
in line with potential. In this environment, I anticipate the unemployment rate to
remain close to its current level for some time.
What about inflation? Well, inflation in the U.S. had been running below our
symmetric 2 percent objective throughout most of the recovery. Then, in 2018,
inflation rose back to 2 percent. This was quite a welcome but relatively short-
lived development, as inflation subsequently faltered over the first half of 2019,
falling to as low as 1-1/2 percent. Currently, core PCE inflation is 1.8 percent on
a 12-month basis.3 In 2018, I had been reluctant to declare victory and say that
our below-target inflation worries were behind us. But undeniably, the
environment at the time did seem much more favorable given the inflation
improvements we had seen and an expectation that they would continue amid a
solid outlook for growth. However, the disappointing inflation developments this
year suggest that more work is necessary. I do project that inflation will move up
3 While our inflation objective is stated in terms of overall inflation according to the Price Index for
Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), 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.
4
and then modestly overshoot our 2 percent target over the next few years; but
this requires aid from a more accommodative monetary policy path now than I
thought appropriate in December.
My rationale for mid-cycle adjustments
The forecasts for economic activity and inflation in my September submission to
the Fed’s quarterly Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) actually are very
close to those I made at the end of 2018.4 Given all the developments in the U.S.
and abroad over the past ten months, you might wonder why my projections
have not changed much; indeed, you might question whether I have been paying
any attention to the news!
Well, yes, I’ve been reading the news and crunching the data. (Well, at least I’ve
had my staff crunching the data.) The number one reason for this stability in my
outlook is that, overall, the economic fundamentals remain solid. Most of the
concerns over growth are about potential risks that could be costly, but also may
never occur. That said, those risks appear somewhat more pronounced today.
Furthermore, as I just noted, progress on inflation has been disappointing. Given
this assessment, I have altered my view for the appropriate path for policy rates
in order to support an outlook for continued solid growth and to boost inflation. In
other words, the adjustments were made in order to keep my baseline forecast
on a track to meet our dual mandate goals of maximum employment and
4 See, for instance, Evans (2019).
5
symmetric 2 percent inflation. This is a policy strategy I refer to as outcome-
based monetary policy.
As you know, my colleagues on the FOMC have made similar adjustments to
their projections for the economy and the appropriate path for policy. The
Committee has moved from 1) most participants in December 2018 expecting
continued gradual increases in the policy rates through 2019–20 to 2) holding
rates constant from January through June of this year in order to assess
developments and then, ultimately, to 3) the Committee cutting rates by 50 basis
points at the July and September meetings. Over this time the median path of the
federal funds rate projected forward by FOMC participants went from one of
gradual increases to an essentially flat funds rate through the end of next year.
Chair Powell characterized the July rate cut as a “mid-cycle adjustment” to
policy—similar to the adjustments the FOMC had made in 1995 and 1998—and
laid out three reasons for the policy move: to mitigate the depressing effects of
international developments on U.S. growth; to manage downside risks to the
economy; and to support the return of inflation to our 2 percent symmetric
target.5
To appreciate the changes in views about appropriate policy, I need to first take
you back to the end of 2018.
5 See Powell (2019).
6
After a series of very gradual rate increases in the previous three years, the
FOMC raised the federal funds rate to the range of 2-1/4 to 2-1/2 percent in
December 2018. I, along with most of my colleagues on the FOMC, thought at
the time that it would likely be appropriate to raise policy rates another two or
three times in 2019.6
I thought this path was consistent with the sustained achievement of our dual
mandate objectives of maximum employment and symmetric 2 percent inflation.
Indeed, I projected that inflation would eventually overshoot 2 percent by a
quarter of a percentage point or so, even with the federal funds rate target range
heading to 3 to 3-1/4 percent.
As I weighed the incoming data at that time, two themes came into focus. First,
we had the wind in our sails. The outlook for growth was good, aided in part by
fiscal stimulus that some were touting as quite strong. And, as I said, I expected
the inflation improvements of 2018 to continue. Recall these forecasts were
made in the context of a continued, long expansion, dating back to 2009. Labor
markets were vibrant, with the unemployment rate somewhat below our estimate
of its long-run neutral rate.7 Consumer spending was strong. Firms had invested
at healthy rates in 2018, and their optimism was high, in part because of changes
in the tax code and business deregulation. Foreign growth still looked relatively
6 Federal Open Market Committee (2018).
7 The long-run neutral rate of unemployment (or the “natural” rate of unemployment) is the
unemployment rate that would prevail in an economy making full use of its productive resources without
generating inflationary pressures. Consequently, it is the rate of unemployment that would predominate
over the longer run in the absence of shocks to the economy.
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good. True, financial market conditions had tightened some in the final few
months of the year as investors became more concerned about the slowdown in
growth abroad, trade tensions, and a prolonged government shutdown in the
U.S. But the effects on the U.S. economy weren’t seen to be that large.
Forecasts were for a modest deceleration in U.S. activity, with growth in 2019 to
be around to 2-1/4 percent—still above the economy’s underlying trend.
I’ve already mentioned the second theme—that the inflation outlook had
improved. This development requires emphasis. After underrunning our target for
what was then a nine-year recovery, core PCE inflation had risen and been close
to 2 percent since February 2018. With the outlook for solid growth, a continued
strong labor market, and low unemployment, there was even some potential for
inflation to rise persistently above 2 percent. But this modest possibility of
inflation above 2 percent needed to be balanced against the fact that inflation
expectations were still too low relative to target and past experiences in which
expected increases in inflation had failed to materialize. The likelihood that the
inflation gains would be sustained had definitely increased, but I was still quite
wary of the possibility the improvements would instead prove to be ephemeral.
Together, these two plotlines argued for a removal of policy accommodation, but
at a pace that was unusually gradual and would eventually leave rates only in a
modestly restrictive policy stance—about 50 basis points above a neutral setting.
In my view, this would have been sufficient to engineer a soft landing for the
economic cycle. Again, I note that this would have been a very modest tightening
8
by historical standards, as I felt moving too aggressively would have prevented
inflation expectations from firming symmetrically around 2 percent.
With this in mind, at the December 2018 meeting, I thought it made sense to
tighten a bit further. And the FOMC did increase the range for the federal funds
rate by 25 basis points to 2-1/4 to 2-1/2 percent.
As we moved into the new year, some domestic and international data came in a
bit softer. In addition, there were some sharp moves in equity and bond markets
and an appreciation of the dollar. Apparently, financial market participants
thought the risks were larger than most macroeconomic forecasters and the
FOMC were thinking in December. They also may have been disappointed in
Fed communications about balance sheet plans, often referred to as quantitative
tightening (QT) by Fed critics. Regardless of the reasons, financial conditions
tightened some in the U.S.
With the emergence of less uniformly strong economic data and rising risks, I
agreed that it made sense from a risk-management perspective for the
Committee to pause from the expected December 2018 (SEP) rate path and take
more time to see how the risks would evolve before making our next policy move.
Subsequently, as we went through 2019, the outlook for foreign growth
weakened substantially. As I noted earlier, investment spending in the U.S.
softened. And in a repeat of what has become a seemingly perennial source of
frustration, inflation fell back below 2 percent. Some of the softness was due to
what we thought were idiosyncratic transitory factors, which have since reversed.
9
But, more importantly, inflation expectations appeared to slip even further below
levels consistent with our goal.
By midyear, my assessments had changed. This takes me to my mid-cycle
adjustment. I concluded that the situation called for us to cut policy rates 50 to 75
basis points below the long-run neutral rate and then leave policy on hold for a
time. This was a notable change in what I judged to be appropriate policy: Within
six months, I went from thinking it appropriate to eventually take policy rates 50
basis points above neutral to one where 50 basis points below neutral was in
order. I think this more accommodative stance is needed to support a roughly
similar growth outlook to what I had anticipated before and, importantly, to
support moving inflation up with greater assurance to achieve our symmetric 2
percent goal within a reasonable time.
Limits to what monetary policy can accomplish
I have adjusted my policy path in a way I see as most likely to yield economic
outcomes consistent with our dual mandate objectives. As I have since last fall, I
see economic fundamentals as being good. But the intermediate-term path for
monetary policy simply needed some modest repositioning in order to better align
against possible risks. But, beyond such adjustments, we also need to
acknowledge that there is a limit to what monetary policy alone can accomplish.
My outlook recognizes that the economy faces a number of important challenges
today—difficult trade negotiations over important long-term disagreements,
slowing foreign growth, and uncertainty weighing on domestic demand. These
10
are the types of problems that monetary policy is able to address to some
degree, as more accommodative financial conditions can provide an offsetting
boost to weakening aggregate demand. Furthermore, inflation is below target;
and as theory tells us so forcefully, in the end, it’s the monetary actions of central
banks that determine the inflation rate.
That said, there are limits to what monetary policy can do. An important reason is
constraints on our capacity to cut policy rates in the event of a serious downturn.
These constraints arise because we also face longer-term structural issues that
monetary policy has little impact on, but nonetheless have important implications
for central banks. Altogether, these longer-term factors point to an environment
of lower trend growth and lower interest rates that is likely to persist for years. My
colleagues and I have spoken frequently and in depth about these issues, so I
will be brief in explaining their causes.
An economy’s long-run growth rate is constrained by its productive capacity—it’s
a speed limit of sorts; you can exceed it for brief periods, but not forever. That
capacity depends on the economy’s available labor resources and on the
productivity of that labor. Unfortunately, demographics in the U.S. and in most
advanced economies are working to lower the growth in labor input: Populations
are aging; and in the U.S., the labor force participation rate has been on a
downtrend for nearly 20 years.
Along with slower labor force growth, the U.S. also has experienced slower
growth in labor productivity. Improvements in labor quality—that is, gains in
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education and worker experience—are no longer adding much to productivity in
the U.S. Business investment has been relatively soft during this expansion, so
that capital used by the workforce has increased only modestly. Likewise, despite
widespread gains in technology, we’ve seen only modest growth in total factor
productivity, which reflects how well we put various inputs together to produce
output.
When my research staff does the growth accounting arithmetic, they expect labor
hours to grow by one-half percent and labor productivity to grow by 1-1/4 percent
on an annual basis. This puts the sustainable growth rate of the U.S. currently at
about 1-3/4 percent.
Today’s uncertain and hostile trade climate may weigh further on potential
growth. This is because trade fosters cross-border competition among
businesses, which in turn leads to productivity enhancement and innovation.
Conversely, insulation from international market forces typically reduces a
business enterprise’s motivation to innovate, as it faces less competition. So
trend growth could be even lower than the estimate I just cited. 8
These adverse long-term trends have enormous implications for standards of
living. But there is little monetary policy can do about them; it can’t affect
demographics and at best has a second- or third-order impact on productivity
trends. Other kinds of policies can address some of these factors, such as by
8 Furthermore, if there were an increase in restrictions on legal immigration and related actions on
undocumented immigration, then the growth in trend labor hours would be weaker.
12
ensuring a well-educated workforce, but these are the responsibility of other
branches of government.
That said, these trends influence the monetary policymaking environment a great
deal. Economic theory tells us that as the potential growth rate of the economy
declines, so does the equilibrium level of real interest rates; this is the rate
consistent with full employment of the economy’s productive resources and is
often referred to as real r*. To get to the federal funds rate that is neither
contractionary nor expansionary—the so-called equilibrium federal funds rate—
you need to add our 2 percent inflation target to real r*. Today, the median
estimate of my colleagues on the FOMC for that rate is 2-1/2 percent. That is
significantly below the median participant’s evaluation of over 4 percent just a
few years ago.9 It is also below the 5 percent or so rate in the early 2000s, as
estimated by some models.10
Simply put, a lower equilibrium rate means a smaller capacity for monetary policy
to counteract negative shocks to the economy. In the past, policymakers were
able to provide 500 basis points of accommodation on average during an easing
cycle. Today, if circumstances demand it, there is far less room to cut the federal
funds rate before it reaches the neighborhood of zero—what we refer to as the
effective lower bound on rates, or ELB. The FOMC would then be forced to turn
to less effective tools to provide the necessary accommodation, making it more
9 Federal Open Market Committee (2012).
10 See, for example, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest, report,
available online, https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/rstar.
13
difficult to achieve our mandated policy goals. The calculus is even more
challenging if we fail to meet our 2 percent inflation objective, as nominal interest
rates would settle out at an even lower level. That’s why meeting our inflation
objective is especially important.
Opportunity to make better use of the current framework
Because a low r* environment presents practical limits on the capacity of
traditional tools, the FOMC is in the process of evaluating alternative monetary
policy frameworks that might be helpful in addressing the ELB constraint.
I don’t want to prejudge the results of our discussions. But regardless of the
outcome of the review, I think there is an opportunity to make better use of our
current framework. Here I am thinking specifically about the adjective
“symmetric” that describes our 2 percent inflation target. The FOMC has stated
and reaffirmed annually that “the Committee would be concerned if inflation were
running persistently above or below this objective.”11 I think there is room for us
to better describe what symmetry means for the proactive operation of monetary
policy.
Let me illustrate this point with the current situation in which we have persistently
underrun our inflation objective. As I noted, this may have resulted in businesses,
households, and financial markets expecting inflation will underrun 2 percent for
some time to come. In order to boost these expectations, we need to provide
11 See Federal Open Market Committee (2019).
14
aggressive enough accommodation to get inflation moving up with some
momentum. After all, no one ever made a free throw without enough muscle
behind it to first get the ball to the hoop. This kind of force could well result in
inflation modestly overrunning 2 percent for some time. But in the current
situation, this would not be a policy error. Engineering a modest overshoot of our
inflation objective better guarantees that we would actually meet our inflation
target in the future. Moreover, tolerating inflation as high as 2-1/2 percent does
not entail much of a welfare loss—especially given the lengthy undershoot we’ve
permitted. This is because for me, more generally, symmetry means paying
attention to both past and prospective misses from our target to ensure that
inflation averages 2 percent over the long haul.
In terms of a broad monetary policy strategy, I favor a powerful, full-throated
commitment to follow outcome-based monetary policies aimed at achieving
maximum employment and symmetric 2 percent inflation within a reasonable
time. The best tactics to achieve these outcomes may change over time. For
example, at times this approach could prescribe forward guidance with
thresholds that need to be met before changing rates. At other times, it could
prescribe overshooting our 2 percent inflation objective with momentum. The
point is to focus on our objectives—and not on the specific operational tools used
to obtain them.
Importantly, in a world where monetary policy is challenged by low equilibrium
rates and elevated odds of hitting the ELB, outcome-based policy calls for a
relentless focus on our symmetric 2 percent inflation objective throughout the
15
cycle. We have to have a “do-whatever-it-takes” attitude toward policy all the
time—in a downturn, when we are constrained by the effective lower bound, as
well as in an expansion, if inflation remains stubbornly below our objective.
I recognize and accept that monetary policy will never be a panacea to all the
negative shocks hitting the economy. But when it comes to price stability, the
monetary authority has the sole responsibility for achieving an inflation objective.
For us, that is symmetric 2 percent inflation.
Conclusion
To summarize, as I have for some time, I advocate for an outcome-based
approach to monetary policy that would achieve our dual mandate goals on a
timely basis while effectively managing various risks. Over the past ten months—
as the forces affecting the U.S. economy changed from tailwinds to headwinds
and as we lost the inflation momentum we had seemed to build—this outcome-
based approach has dictated a shift in my appropriate policy path. Looking
ahead, no matter which framework the FOMC adopts, I will continue to advocate
for using all the available and best tools to achieve our dual mandate goals.
16
References
Baker, Scott R., Nicholas Bloom, and Steven J. Davis, 2016, “Measuring
economic policy uncertainty,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 131, No. 4,
November, pp. 1593–1636, available online,
https://academic.oup.com/qje/article/131/4/1593/2468873.
Caldara, Dario, Matteo Iacoviello, Patrick Molligo, Andrea Prestipino, and Andrea
Raffo, 2019, “The economic effects of trade policy uncertainty,” International
Finance Discussion Papers, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
No. 1256, September, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/ifdp/files/ifdp1256.pdf.
Evans, Charles L., 2019, “Monetary policy: Assessing crosscurrents,” speech at
the Discover Financial Services Company Meeting, Riverwoods, IL, January 9,
available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2019/monetary-policy-
assessing-crosscurrents-discover.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2019, “Statement on longer-run goals and
monetary policy strategy,” Washington, DC, as amended effective January 29,
available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomc_longeRrunGoals.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2018, Summary of Economic Projections,
Washington, DC, December 19, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20181219.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2012, Summary of Economic Projections,
Washington, DC, January 24–25, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/FOMC20120125SEPcompila
tion.pdf.
International Monetary Fund, 2019, “Still sluggish global growth,” World
Economic Outlook Update, Washington, DC, July 23, available online,
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/Issues/2019/07/18/WEOupdateJuly201
9.
International Monetary Fund, 2018, World Economic Outlook: Challenges to
Steady Growth, Washington, DC, October, available online,
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/Issues/2018/09/24/world-economic-
outlook-october-2018.
Powell, Jerome H., 2019, transcript of Federal Reserve Chair’s press conference,
Washington DC, July 31, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/files/FOMCpresconf20190731.pdf.
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2019, September 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20191001_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20191001_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2019},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20191001_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}