speeches · November 30, 2020
Regional President Speech
Mary C. Daly · President
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2020 Lessons, 2021 Priorities
Mary C. Daly, President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Arizona State University Economic Forecast Luncheon Virtual Event
Tempe, AZ
December 1, 2020
11:15AM MT
Remarks as prepared for delivery.
Introduction
Hello everyone. Thank you for the invitation to join you today.
It’s safe to say that 2020 has been a year to remember. Twelve months
ago, we were in the midst of the longest economic expansion in U.S. history.
Unemployment sat near historic lows, wages and incomes were rising, and
inflation was moving gradually back toward our 2 percent target.
Then COVID-19 hit our shores. And our fortunes changed almost
overnight. To date, more than 250,000 Americans have died and countless
others have been sick. People have lost jobs, businesses, and livelihoods, and
the burden has fallen most harshly on those least able to bear it. This is an
enormous human toll.
Although we’ve retraced some of the initial economic losses, the
economy remains far below the levels of employment and output we had prior
to COVID-19. And coronavirus cases are once again surging.
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So today, I will discuss two important questions. What lessons should
we take from this difficult year? And what priorities should we focus on in
2021?
But let me first remind you that the remarks I’m delivering today are my
own, and do not necessarily reflect the views of anyone else within the
Federal Reserve System.
2020 lessons
Let’s begin by considering the lessons learned from 2020. There are
many, but I will focus on those related to the economy and how it functions.
Lessons that can help us build a more prosperous and resilient future.
The first lesson is that we are all interconnected. Our fates are tied
together — as individuals, as communities, as states, and as a nation.
COVID-19 has exposed this connectivity in stark relief. I think about my
own community, Oakland, California. So many businesses in my neighborhood
have had to shutter to fight the virus. Without income, these businesses
haven’t been able to pay their rent. This has passed through to landlords,
who’ve then had trouble paying the mortgages on the buildings they own. This
then spilled onto banks, who had to cover the forbearance or loss, leaving
them with fewer funds to lend to other businesses looking for a lifeline. And
on and on it goes. The circular flow we all learned about in Economics 101 is
real.
But while we are all interconnected, COVID-19 has reminded us that the
impact of economic shocks does not fall equally. That’s the second important
lesson from this year. Not everyone has the same experiences in our society.
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And far too often these differences in outcomes trace back to race, ethnicity,
gender, or socioeconomic position.
You can see this in the data on COVID. A disproportionate share of
pandemic job losses have occurred among men and women of color.1 Mothers
with children at home have had to leave the labor force altogether to provide
schooling and child care.2 And low and moderate income communities across
the country have seen an outsized decline in income and wealth at the same
time that the basic needs of their citizens have risen.3
Of course, these are not new issues. But the lens of COVID has vividly
and painfully highlighted their costs.
And this leads me to my third lesson of 2020. We are limiting our
economic prosperity. Persistent and pervasive differences in outcomes
repeatedly leave talent on the table and cost our economy.4
Looking only at differences in outcomes by race, a recent report found
that aggregate economic output since 2000 would have been $16 trillion
higher if Black and white Americans had more equal education and wages. To
put this in growth terms, the U.S. economy would have grown about two-
tenths of a percentage point faster every year since 2000 if these gaps had
been closed. 5
And racial differences in education and wages are only some of the gaps
in our society. Differences in credit, wealth, and occupational and investment
opportunities by race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status cumulate to mean
1 Gould and Wilson (2020), Kochhar (2020).
2 Edwards (2020).
3 Shrimali, Mattiuzzi, and Choi (2020).
4 Cook (2020), Bostic (2020), Hsieh et al. (2019), Daly (2019a).
5 Peterson and Mann (2020).
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less innovation, lower productivity, and ultimately slower growth for
everyone.6
2021 priorities
So what do these lessons imply for policy priorities going forward?
There are many to consider, but today I will focus on the ones related to
monetary policy and the Federal Reserve.
Sustain the bridge
An important precondition for continued economic recovery is that the
virus be well contained. Unfortunately, the public health trajectory is very
worrisome, with COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths trending higher
across the country.
So the Federal Reserve’s first priority is to use its tools to help bridge
the economy across the disruptions caused by the virus. This means keeping
the federal funds rate near zero and continuing to perform our lender of last
resort responsibilities.7
Our commitment to maintaining this accommodative stance until the
economy is back on stable footing lowers borrowing costs for households,
6 Cook (2014), Cook and Gerson (2019), Hsieh et al. (2019), Matthews and Wilson (2018),
Peterson and Mann (2020).
7 The Federal Reserve established a broad set of emergency lending facilities in March 2020
(Powell 2020). Funding for these programs via the U.S. Department of the Treasury is
slated to expire at the end of 2020, and the Federal Reserve has announced plans to return
the unused portions of the funds allocated to the CARES Act facilities
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/foia/letter-from-chair-powell-to-secretary-mnuchin-
20201120.htm). As noted there, the Federal Reserve retains additional financing options
via the Exchange Stabilization Fund.
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businesses, and state and local governments.8 And so far our policies are
working. Interest rate-sensitive sectors, like housing and autos, have
rebounded sharply in the past six months. Individuals and businesses have
been able to refinance debt, initiate new loans, and make investments, which
has kept more workers employed in the economy. This translates into
stronger income and consumption growth for millions of Americans.
But we must stay vigilant. So the Fed will be ready to respond with our
full range of policy tools until COVID-19 is behind us.
Return to full employment and sustainable 2 percent inflation
Then the real work will begin. COVID-19 will leave a deep hole, and it
will take ongoing monetary policy support to bring us back to full
employment and average 2 percent inflation.
So what will that look like? The fundamental road map can be found in
the FOMC’s new monetary policy strategy announced in late August.9 That
document acknowledged that maximum employment is not a fixed target. It is
a broad-based and inclusive goal that changes as the economy evolves. The
strategy also clarified that achieving our price stability goal—average inflation
of 2 percent—requires a new regime: flexible average inflation targeting. In
practice, this means we will be willing to accept periods of moderately above
2 percent inflation, in order to offset sustained periods of below 2 percent
inflation.
Using this strategy document, the FOMC released forward guidance in
September, saying that we expect to keep the target range for the federal
8 Board of Governors (2020a, b).
9 Board of Governors (2020c).
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funds rate at 0 to ¼ percent until labor market conditions have reached levels
consistent with maximum employment, and inflation is on track to moderately
exceed 2 percent for some time. This approach will support the economic
recovery and the Fed’s dual mandate goals.
Remember that our tools are powerful
So what could get in our way? History points to one important thing:
doubts that our tools are powerful enough to achieve our goals.10
A full and true recovery from COVID-19 will most likely be protracted.
And it will be tempting, as time passes, to think that monetary policy has done
all that it can. That we no longer have a role to play.
We saw this in the last recovery. There were concerns among some that
the Federal Reserve was overstepping its role and using monetary policy to
influence long-standing structural problems like skills gaps and permanent
job dislocation.11 But the data did not support those fears, and monetary
policy remained accommodative. The result was the longest expansion in U.S.
history, a historically low unemployment rate, and a significant narrowing of
wage, income, and wealth gaps in the economy.12
The priority going forward will be to remember. To remember that
workers and firms are flexible, people are resilient, and with a strong
economy the labor market is more durable and elastic than we think. To
remember that, by supporting strong and sustained growth, monetary policy
can help deliver the full employment outcomes we desire.
10 Romer and Romer (2013).
11 Kocherlakota (2010), Lacker (2012), and Phelps (2008). Daly et al. (2012) provide an
alternative view.
12 Aaronson et al. (2019), Robertson (2019), Semega et al. (2020), Bhutta et al. (2020).
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Of course, the temptation to think we are powerless will be even greater
for inflation. After all, we only occasionally brushed against our 2 percent
target in a nearly 11-year expansion. But decades of research have repeatedly
shown that inflation in the long run is primarily determined by monetary
policy—and central banks have the ability to control where it settles.
Our primary tool for achieving our inflation goal is our credibility. And
here the move to flexible average inflation targeting is powerful. It tells
households and businesses that we are fully committed to delivering 2
percent inflation over time and ensures that inflation expectations remain
well-anchored around our target.
Going forward, we will need to match these statements with our
policies. Hitting or exceeding 2 percent inflation for a few months does not
mean victory. To fully achieve the goal of price stability, we need to see a
sustained period of moderately above-target inflation. Only then will the job
be complete.
So again, we will need to remember. Remember that inflation is always
and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.13 That even when progress is
gradual the central bank can, with commitment, bring inflation sustainably to
target.
Ensure that we can finish
Now the implications of my remarks thus far are that policy rates will
likely be lower for longer. This naturally raises concerns about financial
stability. In such a low rate environment, investors could reach for yield, asset
13 Friedman (1970), p. 24.
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markets could inflate, and the banking and broader financial system might
find itself ill prepared to cope should the economy falter.
While these risks cannot be dismissed, it is not at all clear that
conventional monetary policy is the best way to mitigate them. Interest rates
are a blunt tool. Moving them to combat financial imbalances has limited
upsides and potentially significant downsides, such as derailing an expansion
and leaving us short of our maximum employment and price stability goals.14
Other, better methods include tools directly targeted on the financial
system. Over the past decade, regulators around the globe have developed and
strengthened a suite of micro and macro prudential programs designed to
keep financial firms well capitalized over the business cycle.15 In the United
States, these include capital and liquidity stress-testing and tools like the
countercyclical capital buffer and the stress capital buffer. The Fed also has
the power to restrict banks from paying dividends or doing share buybacks
when capital could be at risk, as recently executed in response to the
pandemic.
All of these policies are built on the recognition that well-capitalized
banks are critical to a healthy financial system and that the best capital banks
can get is the capital that they already have.
In coming years, we will need to continue to build out and strengthen
our suite of tools to further mitigate risk. The financial system and the
economy are constantly changing, and regulatory principles and supervisory
approaches must evolve to keep pace. It’s easy to see where more may be
needed. A growing share of financial intermediation in the U.S. takes place
14 Jordà, Schularick, and Taylor (2015), Bernanke (2015), Svensson (2015).
15 Yilla and Liang (2020), Williams (2015).
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outside of the formal banking system. Understanding this evolution and how it
impacts financial stability is critical.16 The rising frequency of devastating
weather events also demands attention. It highlights the need for further
work on climate risk and how it will affect the financial system and the
broader economy.17
Ensure that our work helps everyone
Finally, we will need to do more to ensure that the benefits of low
interest rates and rising asset valuations can spread widely throughout the
economy.
The COVID-19 response made it clear that our interest rate policies and
lending programs do not reach everyone equally. Many businesses and
households are outside of the traditional banking system and do not have the
same opportunities to refinance or initiate loans.18 We’ve heard repeatedly in
the 12th District and across the country that these differences hampered the
pandemic relief, slowing its delivery to many in need.
To solve these issues, and increase the reach of the financial
infrastructure, we will need to think outside of the traditional banking box.
This could mean developing firmer partnerships with Community
Development Financial Institutions and other nonprofit or small dollar
lenders. These institutions are already connected to low- and moderate-
income communities and are innovating to improve their reach among those
most in need. It could also mean taking lessons from recent months and
16 U.S. Department of the Treasury (2020).
17 Brainard (2019) and Daly (2019b).
18 Shrimali, Mattiuzzi, and Choi (2020) and Liu and Parilla (2020).
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developing blueprints for lending relief programs that can be more equitably
deployed next time they are needed.
The bottom line is clear. Building safe and sound ways to increase
financial support to all Americans needs to be a top priority.19, 20
Summing up
There is no doubt that 2020 has been a challenging year. It’s reversed so
much of the economic progress we made in the last expansion, and
highlighted and magnified the persistent and systemic barriers that prevent
us from reaching our potential.
But it’s also brought us clarity. Clarity of priorities and clarity of
purpose.
As we close this year and move on to the next, let’s bring that thread
with us. The path will not be easy and the journey will not be short. But if we
align together and use all of our tools, we will complete the job.
And this is what 2021 demands of us.
Thank you.
19 Hangen and Swack (2020).
20 Opportunity Fund (2018).
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Cite this document
APA
Mary C. Daly (2020, November 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20201201_mary_c_daly
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20201201_mary_c_daly,
author = {Mary C. Daly},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20201201_mary_c_daly},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}