speeches · October 13, 2021
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2021
Forecasters Club of New York
New York, N.Y.
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In an era of low interest rates, forward guidance has become a crucial tool in the
Fed’s toolbox.
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The Fed’s �rst forward guidance in the early 2000s was couched in general terms.
During the Great Recession, the Fed introduced date-based forward guidance.
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While markets and reporters may prefer dates, tying monetary policy to the calendar
in times of great uncertainty is asking for Fed credibility to be put on the line.
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The Fed now issues outcome-based forward guidance, making it clear that monetary
policy is driven by economic conditions, not dates.
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Regarding the Fed’s asset purchases today, we have updated our guidance to re�ect
changing economic conditions and signal policy changes in advance.
Throughout the COVID-19 crisis, the Fed has supported the economy by maintaining low
rates and conducting ongoing large-scale purchases of Treasurys and agency mortgage-
backed securities. As the recovery has progressed, there has been a lot of talk about how
and when the Fed will unwind these measures. We have attempted to give guidance on our
path forward by tying our policies to speci�c outcomes.
Speci�cally, we said in September 2020 that we would reinforce our new monetary policy
framework by keeping rates near zero until “labor market conditions have reached levels
consistent with the Committee’s assessments of maximum employment and in�ation has
risen to 2 percent and is on track to moderately exceed 2 percent for some time.” In
December, we committed to continue asset purchases “until substantial further progress
has been made” toward our maximum employment and price stability goals.
Today, I want to talk about the value of issuing policy guidance tied to outcomes and share
my thoughts on how to address the challenges of this approach. I hope this will be of
interest to you, as forecasters. Before I dive in, I should note that the views I express are my
own and not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) or in the Federal Reserve System.
For much of its history, the Fed was famously tight-lipped about its actions. It’s hard to
believe now, but until 1994, we did not publicly release a policy statement after each
meeting. The minutes of FOMC meetings also remained secret until the late 1960s and then
were only released with about a 90-day lag. The Fed defended this secrecy for years —
Richmond’s own Marvin Goodfriend analyzed many of those arguments in a 1985 paper.
This opacity led Fed watchers to seek information wherever they could get it, including
analyzing the thickness of Alan Greenspan’s briefcase as he headed to FOMC meetings for
clues about whether the Fed might change policy.
We have come a long way since those days. Today, the Fed issues a policy statement
immediately after each FOMC meeting, releases the minutes three weeks later, and
releases verbatim transcripts after �ve years. This increased transparency is healthy for the
Fed as a public institution, and it was also supported by a growing body of research which
emphasized the importance of central bank communication and credibility.
At �rst, the Fed’s initial steps toward greater transparency involved providing more
information about current monetary policy. But in the early 2000s, the Fed also began to
provide information about the likely path of future policy through “forward guidance.” In
2003, the FOMC voted to reduce the federal funds rate to 1 percent and chose not to go
any lower. However, the Fed still wanted to provide more accommodation to strengthen
economic conditions. As argued in a key paper that same year by Gauti Eggertsson and
Michael Woodford, central bank communications about the trajectory of future policy
become crucial at the e�ective lower bound (ELB). Such forward guidance can allow the
Fed to in�uence longer-term rates when it has run out of room to reduce short-term rates
by setting expectations for the likely future path of short-term rates.
Initially, the Fed’s forward guidance was very general. In its August 2003 policy statement,
the FOMC wrote that it believed “policy accommodation can be maintained for a
considerable period.” The following year, when the FOMC was considering raising rates, it
signaled that it would be “patient” and that the pace of rate increase was “likely to be
measured.” True to its word, the Fed increased rates gradually between 2004 and 2006 in
increments of 25 basis points (although no one would call that pace “gradual” in today’s
economic environment).
During the Great Recession, the Fed again employed and continued to evolve its forward
guidance. At �rst, the FOMC used general language similar to 2003. Then, it introduced
speci�c, calendar-based guidance in its August 2011 statement, signaling that it would likely
be necessary to maintain low rates “at least through mid-2013.”
The move to calendar-based forward guidance was heavily debated at the time, as the
transcripts of the FOMC meetings from that period reveal. Some policymakers felt that a
calendar date helped reinforce the Fed’s forecasts for the future path of the economy,
which the FOMC began releasing in the form of the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP)
earlier that year. But others worried that tying future policy to a date put the Fed in an
awkward position. If economic conditions didn’t evolve the way policymakers predicted,
then they would either have to follow through on a date-based plan that no longer made
sense or revise the date, diminishing its value as a signal of future behavior. In times of
great uncertainty, that was asking for Fed credibility to be put on the line.
In December 2012, the FOMC moved from calendar- to outcome-based guidance. It said it
would be “appropriate” to keep rates low “at least as long as the unemployment rate
remains above 6-1/2 percent, in�ation between one and two years ahead is projected to be
no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal,
and longer-term in�ation expectations continue to be well anchored.”
This made it clearer that Fed policy would be driven by economic conditions, not dates. This
approach tried to provide the public with a clearer understanding of how the Fed would
react to new data and it gave the Fed greater �exibility in times of heightened uncertainty.
Still, the transition to outcome-based guidance wasn’t seamless. The formula outlined at
that time (like the one we have outlined today) isn’t a simple one. Certainly, those three
criteria don’t just roll o� the tongue. It’s also not a precise one as judgment calls are
required. How would the public know if in�ation expectations were no longer well
anchored?
Another potential problem is that the outcomes de�ned could prove wrong if the economy
shifts. The maximum level of unemployment, for example, moves over time, making it hard
for the Fed to provide outcome-based guidance that is appropriate at all circumstances.
This means that like dates, the Fed might need to revise its outcomes, leading to similar
communication and credibility challenges. This is one reason why the Fed doesn’t attach a
speci�c number to the employment goal in its forward guidance today.
The Fed is facing challenges now as it seeks to navigate a highly uncertain recovery from
the pandemic. In�ation has been above our long-run 2 percent target for months, but will
this run-up in prices be transitory or sustained? Unemployment remains above pre-
pandemic levels, but has the economy changed in ways that have shifted the maximum
level of employment? What does “substantial further progress” look like for a broad-based
and inclusive metric that has many measures? Should �scal policies not imagined when our
guidance was de�ned change its terms?
Finally, it seems clear to me that many audiences �nd outcome-based guidance
unsatisfying because it cannot provide a de�nitive roadmap of the Fed’s future policy path.
Trading instruments are often date-based, so traders would prefer to know exactly when
monetary policy is going to change. For reporters and the public they serve, outcome-based
guidance can seem like inside baseball and is not as easy to process as dates. You as
forecasters get this, I’m sure.
I think this has led reporters and market analysts to overemphasize the SEP, particularly
the “dot plot” that presents FOMC members’ individual estimates of the appropriate future
path of policy. The median forecast is often treated as a commitment by the Fed to a
particular date-based path. But as Chair Powell has made clear in his press conferences,
the SEP is a collection of individual forecasts, not a committee consensus. It can’t be a
substitute for the forward guidance the FOMC presents in its policy statement.
If the public keeps asking for dates, should the Fed go back to issuing calendar-based
forward guidance? It’s clear from past experience that this isn’t the optimal path. Markets
and reporters may want clear dates, but in times of high uncertainty, the Fed can’t credibly
commit to guiding policy by dates rather than data.
Sticking with outcome-based guidance, the Fed could try to be more speci�c about its
thresholds, but past experience also suggests this approach has limitations. It’s harder to
get alignment among the committee. The higher the level of speci�city, the higher the risk
that you’ll bind yourself to a suboptimal path. Surely, there’s some value to leveraging good
judgment. In addition, some of the Fed’s objectives, like maximum employment, are hard to
forecast and are in�uenced by factors outside of our control.
We could strengthen the connection between the SEP and outcome-based guidance. I like
the SEP because it disciplines me to tie my policy prescription to my economic forecast. In
times when forward guidance is a crucial component of Fed communications, I think that
through very carefully. Currently, however, the SEP does not tie economic forecasts to a dot
on the dot plot. Doing so would provide a clearer picture of each FOMC member’s
individual reaction function, and taken as a whole, this could help shed more light on the
Fed’s overall reaction function. That said, since the SEP isn’t a committee consensus, we
could still run into a problem where the SEP and policy statement send con�icting
messages.
Ultimately, I think the most important thing we can do to build con�dence in forward
guidance is to cleanly execute. In the early 2000s, the Fed signaled that it would follow a
gradual path for rate lifto� and then did so. The 2013 taper tantrum was an example of
when Fed communications and forward guidance were not so well aligned.
Hopefully, we are executing during the COVID-19 recovery in a way that builds credibility.
Regarding our guidance on asset purchases:
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In December, we said we would continue “until substantial further progress has been
made toward the Committee’s maximum employment and price stability goals.”
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In July, we said that “the economy has made progress toward these goals.”
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In September, we said that “if progress continues broadly as expected, the Committee
judges that a moderation in the pace of asset purchases may soon be warranted.” That
is the advance warning we had promised so that no one would be surprised. Hopefully
it will enable a seamless transition when the time to start tapering comes.
That still leaves rate forward guidance, which is explicitly di�erent. We have hit 2 percent
on in�ation, but we still have a lot to learn about whether recent in�ation levels will be
sustained and how much room we have to run in the labor market until we get to
maximum employment. As COVID-19 hopefully eases, I expect the answers to these
questions to become clearer.
Cleanly executing communication going forward is my goal. Doing so best cements
outcome-based guidance as a tool comfortable for us and valuable for the market, for the
public, and for you as forecasters.
Thank you to Tim Sablik for assistance preparing these remarks.
Marvin Goodfriend, “Monetary Mystique: Secrecy and Central Banking,” Federal Reserve Bank
of Richmond Working Paper No. 85-7, Revised August 1985.
William T. Gavin and Rachel J. Mandal, “Inside the Briefcase: The Art of Predicting the Federal
Reserve,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Regional Economist, July 2000.
Gauti B. Eggertsson and Michael Woodford, “The Zero Bound on Interest Rates and Optimal
Monetary Policy,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2003, no. 1.
Monetary Policy
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2021, October 13). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20211014_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20211014_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20211014_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}