speeches · September 1, 2020
Regional President Speech
John C. Williams · President
SPEECH
A New Chapter for the FOMC Monetary Policy Framework
September 02, 2020
John C. Williams, President and Chief Executive Officer
Remarks at "In Conversation: New York Fed Presidents on COVID-19" (Bretton Woods Committee Webinar)
As prepared for delivery
Thank you, Bill. It's great to be with you today, at least virtually, and I am looking forward to our discussion. But before we dive in,
I thought I would offer some thoughts on the announcement made last week about the completion of the Federal Open Market
Committee's review of its monetary policy framework and the issuance of a new Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary
Policy Strategy.1
Before I continue—and you know what comes next, Bill—let me give the usual disclaimer that the views I express are mine alone
and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Open Market Committee or anyone else in the Federal Reserve System.
Allow me to add one last "before" caveat. Before I explain the new statement, it is important to reflect on the context in which the
original statement was issued. Then I'll share how the monetary policy framework of today positions us best to achieve our goals
and manage the very challenging environment that lies ahead.
The original consensus statement was issued back in January 2012 and represented an important step in the Committee's progress
toward greater transparency around its goals and strategy. It incorporated key aspects of flexible inflation targeting, a monetary
policy framework that had gained wide acceptance around the world.
This framework served us well, but the need for change was clear. In the past eight years, basic facts that shaped the original
framework have fundamentally changed.
First and foremost is the dramatic decline in the neutral interest rate, that is, the short-term interest expected to prevail when the
economy is operating at its full potential and inflation is at its longer-run target. Since January 2012, FOMC participants' median
estimate of the neutral nominal rate has fallen by 1-3/4 percentage points, from 4.25 percent to 2.5 percent. A similar decline is
seen in private sector forecasts and bond yields.2 This secular decline in interest rates is not limited to the United States—we're
seeing it across the globe—and it reflects longer-run trends in demographics, productivity, and other factors that are unlikely to
reverse anytime soon.3
Lower neutral interest rates constrain the ability of monetary policy to offset negative shocks to the economy. This effect has been
seen most clearly in the behavior of inflation. Over the past decade, inflation in the United States has been below our 2 percent
longer-run target most of the time, and measures of inflation expectations have drifted down.
These declines in trend inflation and inflation expectations can create a pernicious feedback loop of reduced policy space and even
lower inflation expectations. Again, this experience is not unique to the United States, indicating that it stems from factors
common across countries, rather than issues unique to our economy. Indeed, most inflation-targeting advanced economies have
struggled to achieve their inflation goals on a sustained basis over the past decade.
This brings us to last week's announcement and the issuance of a new consensus statement of our policy framework. It is a
culmination of extensive outreach and conversations with communities and stakeholders across the country, careful and thorough
analysis, and active discussion and debate among Committee participants.4,5 We took important lessons from the experience of
the past decade, reassessed the evidence, and looked at the challenges ahead of us. All this effort was worth it: this new statement
means we are better positioned to achieve our goals. In fact, the process worked so well, we've committed to repeating it roughly
every five years!
The new framework statement directly and effectively addresses the problems caused by a low neutral rate and persistently low
inflation.
First, it stipulates that, following periods when inflation has been running persistently below 2 percent, a temporary overshooting
of the longer-run inflation target will likely be desirable to keep inflation and inflation expectations centered on 2 percent. Second,
it makes clear that we seek inflation that averages 2 percent over time, consistent with our longer-run target. Finally, the statement
makes unequivocally clear that we seek maximum employment and will aim to eliminate shortfalls from this broad and inclusive
goal. These changes are mutually reinforcing and will meaningfully improve our ability to achieve both of our dual mandate goals
in an environment of a very low neutral rate.
I'll conclude with this: The new framework represents both an important evolution in our thinking about how to achieve our goals
and another step toward greater transparency. It reaffirms key aspects of the original statement that have stood the test of time
and refines others in line with experience and evolving practices. It also makes some more significant changes in light of
developments and lessons learned in recent years. And most importantly, it positions us for success in achieving our maximum
employment and price stability goals in the future.
1 See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy, as amended effective August 27, 2020.
2 Longer-run forecasts of interest rates can be found in Blue Chip Financial Forecasts (Wolters Kluwer). For the decline these forecasts over this period, see the June 2012
and June 2020 issues.
3 See John C. Williams, Three Questions on R-Star, FRBSF Economic Letter, 2017-05 (February 21, 2017), for a discussion of the decline in the natural rate of interest.
Estimates of the natural rate for the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the euro area are available at Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Measuring the Natural
Rate of Interest.
4 Jerome H. Powell, New Economic Challenges and the Fed's Monetary Policy Review, Speech at “Navigating the Decade Ahead: Implications for Monetary Policy,” an
economic policy symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole, Wyoming (via webcast) (August 27, 2020).
5 Richard H. Clarida, The Federal Reserve's New Monetary Policy Framework: A Robust Evolution, Speech at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington,
D.C. (via webcast) (August 31, 2020).
Cite this document
APA
John C. Williams (2020, September 1). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200902_john_c_williams
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20200902_john_c_williams,
author = {John C. Williams},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200902_john_c_williams},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}