speeches · January 3, 2021
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
______________________________________________________________________________
The Road Ahead Under a
New Monetary Policy Framework
______________________________________________________________________________
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Economic Prospects and Policies After COVID-19
A Panel Hosted by
NABE (National Association for Business Economics) at the
ASSA (Allied Social Science Associations) 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting
January 4, 2021
_____________________________________
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
The Road Ahead Under a New Monetary Policy Framework
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
Thank you for the introduction and the opportunity to participate alongside these
distinguished panelists in today’s important discussion. I had hoped to welcome all of
you to Chicago in person, but, well, here we are in our virtual world. Wherever you are, I
wish you a happy and healthy new year. Before I begin my remarks, I should note that
these views are my own and do not necessarily represent those of my colleagues on
the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) or others in the Federal Reserve System.
The current upsurge in Covid cases is a serious problem. But progress on the vaccine
front has been very positive, and it looks like the health crisis will be brought under
control as we move through the year. So as we look forward to life after Covid-19, what
is in store for monetary policy?
Of course, we’ll be entering this period with policy rates at the effective lower bound
(ELB), where we swiftly brought them last March in recognition of the severe impact the
pandemic would have on economic activity and inflation.1 And we have been in a similar
situation before—when we brought policy rates to the effective lower bound with the
Great Financial Crisis and, in the end, held them there for seven years.2
1 See Federal Open Market Committee (2020e, 2020f).
2 See Federal Open Market Committee (2008).
2
The effective lower bound has become all too familiar. Its threat is now clearly a
persistent feature of the economic landscape. It poses profound challenges for central
banks to provide sufficient accommodation to meet their monetary policy goals. One of
these goals is hitting an inflation target. Recall that the Fed first announced a formal
inflation target of 2 percent in 2012.3 And in 2016, we clarified that we would be
concerned if inflation were running persistently above or persistently below 2 percent.4
Yet, with only a few exceptions, inflation has consistently undershot our 2 percent
objective ever since we announced that target.
This experience, together with a growing body of research, strongly shows that under
traditional monetary policies, proximity to the effective lower bound imparts a downward
bias to inflation expectations and actual inflation.5 This is a serious problem. The
inflation rate over the longer run is primarily determined by monetary policy. It is the
central bank’s responsibility. So in my view we can’t spend the next five years
underrunning our target and just offer up explanations for why bringing inflation up to
2 percent is so hard. Instead, we have to avoid such poor outcomes by using policy
strategies that offset this downward bias.
With these challenges in mind, the FOMC recently revised our long-run monetary policy
strategy that guides our policy responses.6 In my remarks today I will review a couple of
its key points. I will also discuss how I see our new framework relating to recent
research on how monetary policy can address the downward bias in inflation
3 Federal Open Market Committee (2012).
4 Federal Open Market Committee (2016).
5 Adam and Billi (2007).
6 Federal Open Market Committee (2020d).
3
expectations. And I will end with some thoughts on what policy may actually look like
under the revised framework.
The revised long-run framework
To me, the biggest impetus for updating our monetary policy strategy came from an
undeniable realization: The effective lower bound on the federal funds rate was not just
an anomaly we stumbled into during the Great Financial Crisis, but a persistent threat to
the achievement of our dual mandate goals.
The research here is clear. For all the well-known structural reasons, the long-run
equilibrium real fed funds rate7 is much lower now than it was in the 1980s and ’90s.
This means even average business cycle shocks will drive the funds rate to its effective
lower bound—let alone the kind of shock we received in March. Research also shows
that under traditional monetary policy strategies, the limits on reducing policy rates
presented by the proximity of the ELB will impart a downward bias to inflation and
inflation expectations relative to our 2 percent target. This bias is always present; it’s not
just an occasional risk associated with a large negative shock. In addition, these limits
on reducing rates will also impede achievement of our maximum employment mandate.
These facts imply a couple of things. First, a systematic adjustment to monetary policy
strategy is needed to offset the bias. Second, at times this bias-adjustment will require
generating inflation above 2 percent in order to center inflation and inflation
7 The equilibrium, or neutral, federal funds rate is the funds rate associated with a neutral monetary policy
(policy that is neither expansionary nor contractionary).
4
expectations at target. I am happy to say that the new monetary policy strategy delivers
on these two fundamental principles with its flexible inflation averaging goal. Namely, it
explicitly seeks to achieve inflation that averages 2 percent over time, and it recognizes
that following a period when inflation has been persistently underrunning 2 percent,
appropriate monetary policy will likely aim to achieve inflation moderately above
2 percent for some time.
The new framework also emphasizes that our maximum employment mandate is a
broad-based and inclusive goal and that monetary policy will seek to eliminate shortfalls
from maximum employment. Recall that the old strategy sought to minimize
deviations—both positive and negative—from maximum employment, not just shortfalls.
This was an important refinement. The new framework recognizes that we should not
rush to raise rates and risk ending a vibrant, more inclusive job market unless inflation
threatens to become uncomfortably high.
A lot of factors can enter the characterization of an inclusive job market. One relevant
statistic, for example, is the gap between Black and White unemployment rates. This
gap fell to an all-time low of 2-1/4 percentage points with the strong labor market in
2019. This and other related indicators mean that the many individual and community
benefits that come with high employment are more effectively reaching a broader share
of the population. Indeed, the valuable features of a strong job market were a major
theme brought out by community leaders in the public Fed Listens events we held as
5
part of the framework review process—events we held to hear about how monetary
policy impacts communities in the real world.8
Monetary policy should not put these benefits of a strong labor market at risk if inflation
is quiescent. Indeed, as we all are well aware, the link between unemployment and
inflation pressures is subject to a great deal of uncertainty. For example, before the
pandemic, inflation was running below target despite a historically low 3-1/2 percent
unemployment rate. This experience highlights the challenge of interpreting monetary
policy strictly through the lens of a simple bivariate Phillips curve.9 Importantly, even
when rates are low and labor markets appear to be tight, we can’t definitely say policy is
accommodative if inflation is still mired below our 2 percent average objective. This is
important to remember when evaluating the lower-for-longer interest rate policies that
accompany episodes at the ELB. In the end, it is actual inflation outcomes that matter.
In a related vein, the new strategy statement does not include specific operational
details for how to achieve our goals. I think that is a feature, not a bug. I have long
thought that no specific formulaic monetary policy rule will be robust to all of the
changes in the economic environment that inevitably will occur. The strategy statement
is, instead, a commitment to an outcome-based policy approach—a philosophy that I
have supported throughout my tenure on the FOMC. The precise policy tools and their
8 Federal Reserve System (2020).
9 The Phillips curve is a statistical relationship that describes a negative correlation between inflation and
unemployment—that is, lower unemployment is associated with higher price and wage inflation. It is often
drawn as a negatively sloped curve that has a measure of labor market tightness, such as the
unemployment rate, on the horizontal axis and a measure of wage or price inflation on the vertical axis.
See Phillips (1958).
6
settings may vary with economic conditions, but the ultimate policy goals remain the
same.
Policy research
Now let me take a step back and talk about the academic literature. I believe our new
framework is quite consistent with researchers’ conclusions about optimal monetary
policy in the presence of the ELB.
This literature has established that the ELB induces a downward bias to achieving an
inflation target under standard symmetric policy responses. It also has proposed a
range of alternative monetary policy frameworks to address this bias. Such frameworks
include flexible average inflation targeting, as the Federal Reserve has adopted; price
level targeting; so-called dovish policies, such as described by Thomas Mertens and
John Williams; and also asymmetric reaction functions and target ranges, as found in
work by Francesco Bianchi, Leonardo Melosi, and Matthias Rottner.10 An important
feature of some of these frameworks is an asymmetry in how the central bank responds
to shocks that push inflation either above or below target. By responding less
aggressively to upside shocks than to downside ones, these policies can shift up the
distribution of inflation outcomes, thereby offsetting the downward bias from the
effective lower bound and aligning expected inflation at target.
Now, these types of models involve very strong assumptions: completely rational and
forward-looking agents, complete credibility of the monetary authority, and no
10 See Mertens and Williams (2019) and Bianchi, Melosi, and Rottner (2019).
7
adjustment lags or other inertias in the economy. Under such conditions, these models
offer clear policy prescriptions and their implementation works perfectly. Rational agents
immediately align their views with the bias-corrected distribution of inflation generated
by the new policy rule.
Of course, this idealized setting is unrealistic when it comes to actually implementing
monetary policy. I view our new flexible average inflation target strategy as a way of
delivering on the spirit of some of these models while acknowledging the complexities of
the real world. Importantly, in the real world, actual outcomes are needed to build
credibility. Some actors will need to see inflation actually average 2 percent in practice
before they fully adjust their expectations. Real-world implementation also will require
extensive and ongoing communication so that the public understands our efforts to
offset the inflation bias. Well-articulated outcome-based forward guidance will be a key
part of this process.
Policy under the new framework
This naturally brings us to the forward guidance the Committee issued in September.11
This guidance created a two-pronged plan. The first prong calls for the federal funds
rate to remain at the effective lower bound until our employment mandate is met,
inflation reaches 2 percent, and inflation is on target to overshoot. Then, the second
prong involves increasing the federal funds rate slowly enough to maintain the
accommodation needed to achieve moderate overshooting for some time, so that
11 Federal Open Market Committee (2020c).
8
inflation actually averages 2 percent. And last month we augmented this with guidance
saying we will maintain our current pace of asset purchases until substantial further
progress has been made toward our maximum and inclusive employment and price
stability goals.12 For this approach to be successful, economic agents must have strong
confidence that policy will remain sufficiently accommodative to generate these
outcomes.
How will this work out in practice? After all, there are multiple paths that could achieve
2 percent average inflation, depending on the horizon and the extent of overshoot
tolerated. Let me give you a couple of examples. Suppose that we take as our
benchmark the average of inflation beginning in the first quarter of 2020. According to
the most recent Summary of Economic Projections, core PCE inflation is projected to be
1.4 percent in 2020 and to gradually rise to 2 percent in 2023.13 Suppose then that core
PCE inflation reaches 2-1/4 percent in 2024 and stays there. In this scenario, average
core inflation would not reach 2 percent until late 2025 or early 2026. A 2 percent
average could be achieved about a year sooner if inflation rose to 2-1/2 percent in 2024.
Now, we are not going to follow a strict numerical formula for moving policy. Still, these
examples illustrate an inevitable bottom line: It likely will take years to get average
inflation up to 2 percent, which means monetary policy will be accommodative for a long
time. This translates into low-for-long policy rates, and indicates that the Fed likely will
12 Federal Open Market Committee (2020b).
13 Federal Open Market Committee (2020a). While our objective is stated in terms of overall inflation
measured by 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.
9
be continuing our current asset purchase program for a while as well. The examples
also show that if we try to fine-tune a very modest inflation overshoot of only a tenth or
two, we run a very large risk of failing to achieve our 2 percent averaging goal within
any reasonable amount of time. For me, getting inflation moving up with momentum and
delivering rates around 2-1/2 percent is important for achieving on our inflation objective
in as timely a manner as possible.
Risk management also argues for accommodative policy. This is because the close
proximity of the ELB limits the Fed’s capacity to lower short-term policy rates. Instead, if
the actual path of inflation turns out to be higher than expected, monetary policy can
always react with higher policy rates to dampen inflation. But if we overestimate the
underlying strength of the economy, the ELB could impede our ability to provide
adequate interest rate accommodation and achieve our dual mandate goals within a
reasonable amount of time.
This is a question that my co-authors Jonas Fisher, François Gourio, Spencer Krane,
and I analyzed when thinking about exiting from the ELB back in 2015.14 To avoid the
heavy costs of a return to the ELB, our analysis showed that, in both forward- and
backward-looking models, optimal monetary policy under discretion should tilt toward
being more accommodative than it otherwise would be and should risk inflation running
above 2 percent for a time. Finding ourselves again at the effective lower bound, I
believe this risk-management argument is as relevant today as it was back then.
14 Evans et al. (2015).
10
Conclusion
The bottom line is that it will take a long time for average inflation to reach 2 percent. To
meet our objectives and manage risks, the Fed’s policy stance will have to be
accommodative for quite a while. Economic agents should be prepared for a period of
very low interest rates and an expansion of our balance sheet as we work to achieve
both our dual mandate objectives.
11
References
Adam, Klaus, and Roberto M. Billi, 2007, “Discretionary monetary policy and the zero
lower bound on nominal interest rates,” Journal of Monetary Economics, Vol. 54, No. 3,
April, pp. 728–752.
Bianchi, Francesco, Leonardo Melosi, and Matthias Rottner, 2019, “Hitting the elusive
inflation target,” Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, working paper, No. 2019-07,
August, available online, https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/working-
papers/2019/2019-07.
Evans, Charles, Jonas Fisher, François Gourio, and Spencer Krane, 2015, “Risk
management for monetary policy near the zero lower bound,” Brookings Papers on
Economic Activity, Vol. 46, No. 1, Spring, pp. 141–196, available online,
https://www.brookings.edu/bpea-articles/risk-management-for-monetary-policy-near-
the-zero-lower-bound/.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020a, Summary of Economic Projections,
Washington, DC, December 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20201216.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020b, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, December 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20201216a.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020c, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, September 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200916a.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020d, “Statement on longer-run goals and monetary
policy strategy,” Washington, DC, as amended effective August 27, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/review-of-monetary-policy-strategy-
tools-and-communications-statement-on-longer-run-goals-monetary-policy-strategy.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020e, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, March 15, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200315a.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020f, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, March 3, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200303a.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2016, “Statement on longer-run goals and monetary
policy strategy,” Washington, DC, as amended effective January 26, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/FOMC_LongerRunGoals_2016012
6.pdf.
12
Federal Open Market Committee, 2012, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement of
longer-run goals and policy strategy,” press release, Washington, DC, January 25,
available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20120125c.htm.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2008, “FOMC statement,” press release, Washington,
DC, December 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20081216b.htm.
Federal Reserve System, 2020, Fed Listens: Perspectives from the Public, report,
Washington, DC, June, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/fedlistens-report-20200612.pdf.
Mertens, Thomas M., and John C. Williams, 2019, “Tying down the anchor: Monetary
policy rules and the lower bound on interest rates,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
staff report, No. 887, revised August 2019, available online,
https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/staff_reports/sr887.html.
Phillips, A. W., 1958, “The relation between unemployment and the rate of change of
money wage rates in the United Kingdom, 1861–1957,” Economica, new series, Vol. 25,
No. 100, pp. 283–299.
13
Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2021, January 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210104_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20210104_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210104_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}