speeches · November 7, 2021
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
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What’s Driving Growth and Inflation?
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Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Original Equipment Suppliers Association (OESA)
2021 Automotive Supplier Conference:
Beyond Disruption
Novi, MI
November 8, 2021
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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
What’s Driving Growth and Inflation?
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
It’s a pleasure to address the Automotive Supplier Conference. The auto sector plays a
central role in the Midwest and national economies. This year’s event, with its focus on
the future of the industry, provides an excellent opportunity to discuss my views on the
future of the economy and monetary policy. After my formal remarks, I look forward to
answering your questions and, very importantly, to hearing about some of the issues
you are facing. Your thoughtful comments contribute to better monetary policymaking.
So thank you.
And, speaking of policy, this is the point in the speech where I have to remind you that
the views I will express today are my own and not necessarily those of the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC) or the Federal Reserve System.
Setting the stage
As you know, the Federal Reserve has a congressional mandate to use its policy tools
to help promote maximum employment and price stability. The FOMC considers
maximum employment to be a broad-based and inclusive goal. For price stability, the
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Committee seeks inflation that averages 2 percent over time, as measured by the Price
Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE).1
So how are we doing? With the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020, the
U.S. experienced an extremely deep recession as large swaths of the economy shut
down to combat the virus. Although the virus has taken a horrible toll on the health and
livelihoods of so many people, economic activity in the U.S. did begin to rebound
quickly; and by the second quarter of this year, gross domestic product (GDP) had
surpassed its pre-pandemic level and has risen further since. The labor market has
improved as well. After peaking near 15 percent in April 2020—which for a variety of
reasons was an understatement of the true extent of joblessness—the unemployment
rate now stands at 4.6 percent.
Given how dire an event the pandemic has been, this economic progress is remarkable.
Households and businesses showed amazing ingenuity in finding ways to operate
safely. The health care sector was able to develop and deploy vaccines extremely
rapidly. And the government provided crucial support through fiscal and monetary
policy actions.
Even so, about 4-3/4 million fewer people are working today than were before the
pandemic. Furthermore, the recession fell harder on minorities and women, as higher
percentages of them work in industries most affected by the pandemic. Some of these
workers are still feeling the extra pinch of the pandemic. So, while good progress has
1 Federal Open Market Committee (2021c).
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been made, we still have a way to go before we meet the FOMC’s inclusive
employment mandate.
Of course, inflation is the other part of the Federal Reserve’s policy mandate. Here, the
picture is complex. Sharp declines in demand in sectors heavily hit by the pandemic,
such as travel and leisure and hospitality, led to some very weak inflation readings last
year. However, this year inflation has picked up sharply. Some of this reflects the
normalization of prices in these heavily pandemic-hit sectors. But more generally, the
sharp recovery in demand has led to supply chain disruptions and labor shortages. A
big question for policymakers today is how much of a mark will these pressures leave
on underlying inflation.
Before I get into specifics, I want to emphasize that Covid continues to play a critical
role in the economic outlook. The spread of the Delta variant slowed momentum
recently. After surging 6.5 percent in the first half of the year, growth in the third quarter
decelerated sharply to 2.0 percent. The increases in Covid cases in some countries
important to global supply chains also put further pressure on prices.
All of this is a stark reminder that progress on the economy is still very much tied to
progress on the virus, and the path forward remains highly uncertain. However, with
case counts coming down in the U.S. and further improvements in public health, there’s
room for optimism. A couple of early readings on business activity in October were
strong, and some daily and weekly indicators of consumer spending have ticked up over
the past few weeks. Most forecasters are looking for strong growth in the fourth quarter.
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The growth outlook remains healthy, though there are risks
So what lies ahead for growth? Four times a year the FOMC releases its Summary of
Economic Projections (SEP), which presents FOMC participants’ forecasts of key
economic variables over the next three years and for the longer run. Participants also
provide their assessments of the appropriate monetary policy that supports those
forecasts. The most recent SEP projections were made in mid-September.2 The median
FOMC participant expects growth of 5.9 percent this year and 3.8 percent next year and
then growth of 2.5 percent in 2023 and 2.0 percent in 2024. Those are healthy numbers.
My own outlook is largely in line with the median SEP projection.
However, this is an evolving situation with a great deal of uncertainty. For example,
since these forecasts were made, the impact of the Delta variant and supply constraints
have become more evident. I’ve already mentioned the third-quarter GDP number. In
addition, manufacturing output fell 3/4 percent in September after a smaller decline in
August. The drop was largely accounted for by lower motor vehicle output as a result of
the microchip shortage and disruptions to refining and chemical production due to
Hurricane Ida. Still, the flatness in factory output excluding these factors is a sign that
supply constraints have taken a broader toll on the manufacturing sector. Now these
factors probably represent more of a shift in the timing of growth between 2021 and
2022 than a more lasting softening in activity. But that remains to be seen.
In the labor market, the median SEP forecast has the unemployment rate falling to
3.8 percent by the end of next year and settling in around 3.5 percent in 2023. For
2 Federal Open Market Committee (2021b).
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comparison, the median projected longer-run unemployment rate is 4 percent. So, by
this measure, our full employment goal would be well within sight. Of course, we will be
looking at a broader list of labor market indicators when making this assessment. In
particular, as I’ll discuss in a minute, labor force participation remains depressed,
meaning the unemployment rate doesn’t tell the whole story about how the labor market
is performing.
Supply bottlenecks and labor shortages complicate the inflation situation
But what about our price stability mandate? Is it close at hand? This is a more
complicated question to answer. We’ve all seen higher prices lately—ranging from a
variety of materials input costs to what you are paying at the grocery checkout or at the
gas pump. For the 12 months ending in September, the Personal Consumption
Expenditures Price Index rose an eye-popping 4.4 percent. As I noted earlier, some of
these high readings reflect the normalization of prices in sectors where prices had been
depressed during the pandemic. And some reflect short-term supply chain disruptions,
shortages of many kinds of workers, and other supply pressures that have accompanied
the sharp recovery in demand in many sectors. Those associated cost increases are
being passed through to higher consumer prices.
So, a $64,000 question for monetary policymakers is, how persistent will these price
increases be?3 I think much of the current surge in inflation is temporary, but that
assessment certainly needs explaining. First, the effects on inflation of increases in
3 The first episode of The $64,000 Question aired on CBS on June 5, 1955. Today, the top prize for the game show
would be worth more than $464,000 after adjusting for inflation.
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prices for those goods and services where demand had been depressed during the
pandemic will end as those prices return to more normal levels. That story is
pretty simple.
The supply side story is much more complicated. But let me give you one example. The
pandemic set in motion many changes. With people forced to spend more time at home,
households shifted their spending from services, such as travel or dining out, toward
goods, such as appliances for home improvement projects or consumer electronics.
And many of these items contain a large number of sophisticated microprocessors. At
the same time, expecting a severe and prolonged recession, automakers substantially
scaled back their production plans. This included ordering fewer microprocessors used
in motor vehicles.
Well, we all know how this story turned out. The demand for vehicles recovered much
more robustly than most expected. Meanwhile, chip producers had allocated more
product to firms manufacturing consumer electronics and other such items. To this add
in a fire in Japan at a major chip producer and some other supply disruptions, such as a
drought in Taiwan, and then car and light truck production becomes severely curtailed.
Auto and truck production had recovered to a 10-3/4 million unit annual rate around the
turn of the year; last summer it had fallen to just about an 8-1/2 million unit rate. The
supply disruptions also have spurred an associated surge in vehicle prices.
This is just one story, but in many areas we are seeing producers struggling with such
supply bottlenecks. In some cases, lean just-in-time production processes have come
under pressure from multiple directions simultaneously as the flood of demand has put
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logistics systems under immense strain. For example, one contact at a conglomerate
that manufactures machinery for a global clientele described how difficulties sourcing a
simple $2 part could delay shipment of a $10,000 machine. He and others observed
that issues such as these are now routine and require careful planning to manage
successfully. With many components being sourced from different suppliers often
spread around the globe, the potential for delays is compounded. Difficulties in getting
shipping containers to the right locations, backups at ports, a trucking fleet impaired by
deferred maintenance, and a shortage of drivers have added to the supply pressures.
On top of this, many businesses are reporting difficulties hiring workers. Now, I can’t
recall a time when managers weren’t complaining about hiring difficulties, but in the past
that comment has usually been accompanied by the qualification: “And I’m not
increasing wages to get them.” That’s certainly not the case today. We are seeing
marked increases in wages, signing bonuses, and benefits as firms try to hire the
workers they want.
How is this going to turn out? As introductory economics courses always teach, an
increase in demand and reduced supply in a market will cause the price for that good or
service to rise. And that increase in price will dampen demand, bring forth more supply,
and eventually eliminate the shortage. We have already seen that happen for a few
products. For example, the price of lumber more than doubled between February 2020
and this past May as home construction surged late last year. New construction has
since softened, and lumber prices have come down about 40 percent since their peak.
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Eventually, these adjustments will be behind us and supply and demand conditions will
normalize, bringing inflation lower. But how long that process will take is highly
uncertain. The issues seem more persistent than many thought they would be a few
months ago. And even when the adjustments are done, the prices of some goods and
services may be permanently higher. For those whose incomes have not kept pace with
inflation, paying higher prices is a hardship.
Let me go into some more detail on supply conditions in the labor market. While there
are ample job openings, as I noted, about 4-3/4 million fewer people are employed
today than prior to the pandemic. Much of this shortfall reflects people who are on the
sidelines right now, not looking for a job.
In economic statistics, the labor force counts how many people are either employed or
actively looking for work—so it’s a measure of the supply of available workers. Today,
about 3 million fewer people are in the labor force than before the pandemic. Given
population trends, if the labor force participation rate had held constant, we would have
seen an increase of about 1.4 million participants over this time.
What is going on? First, health concerns may still be keeping some people from looking
for work. And some workers in leisure and hospitality and other outward-facing
industries may be waiting to see that reopening is back for good before committing to a
new job. Second, expanded unemployment insurance benefits as well as other fiscal
support may have reduced the incentive for some workers to return to the workforce.
Third, retirements have surged; my staff estimates that since the pandemic began there
have been 1 million or more retirements that cannot be explained by typical
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demographic trends. Fourth, school closures and childcare concerns have kept some
parents of young children out of the labor force.
I do not expect these factors to persist. As public health conditions improve, jobs will
become more predictable, as will childcare and school schedules. Expanded
unemployment insurance programs have ended, and any savings from other payments
will be depleted. Stronger labor market conditions will draw some early retirees—as well
as many who now describe themselves as retired—back to work.
So taken altogether, I expect that the currently elevated inflation readings from supply
side pressures will eventually fade. That said, I had expected to see more progress by
now. And there are some indications that inflationary pressures may be building more
broadly. Rents and homeownership costs have accelerated in recent months.4 And
measures such as the Dallas Fed’s Trimmed Mean PCE inflation rate that are designed
to filter out erratic changes in prices also have picked up recently.5 These developments
deserve careful monitoring and present a greater upside risk to my inflation outlook than
I had thought last summer.
Implications for inflation and monetary policy
The big question for the medium- and longer-term inflation outlooks is whether the
increases in prices and wages we are seeing today will find their way into the underlying
4 Rents and owner-equivalent rents that are imputed for households owning their primary residence account for
almost 40 percent of the core Consumer Price Index and a much smaller, though still significant, 17 percent share
of the core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index. Measures of core inflation strip out volatile food and
energy components.
5 The Dallas Fed’s Trimmed Mean PCE inflation rate is available online, https://www.dallasfed.org/research/pce.
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wage and price setting mentality of households and businesses. In other words, are
businesses and workers going to expect continually larger increases in wages and
prices, so that we will have transitioned to permanently higher inflation? Or do they
interpret the current situation as a reaction to temporary supply side factors, so that
once those ease, we will return to an environment more like what we saw prior to
the pandemic?
These are difficult questions to answer. But if you look at surveys of households or
measures derived from financial markets, longer-run inflation expectations appear either
roughly in line with or even a bit below the FOMC’s 2 percent average inflation goal. So,
with the caveat that none of these indicators are very precise, they signal today’s
outsized inflation as being temporary.
The median FOMC participant also expects the recent surge in inflation to be
temporary. The median SEP projection made in mid-September is for inflation to end
the year at 4.2 percent before quickly dropping to 2.2 percent in 2022 and 2023 and
moving slightly lower in 2024 to 2.1 percent. And I would note that the stance of
monetary policy underlying this forecast is highly accommodative. The median
projection for the federal funds rate has one 25 basis point increase occurring next year
and then three rate hikes in each of 2023 and 2024.
This path reflects the forward guidance the Federal Open Market Committee has given
about interest rates for more than a year and reaffirmed at our meeting last week.6 That
6 This forward guidance has been included in FOMC statements since September 2020 (see Federal Open Market
Committee, 2020b). For the latest FOMC statement, issued on November 3, 2021, see Federal Open Market
Committee (2021a).
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is, rates will remain at their current zero to 1/4 percent range “until labor market
conditions have reached levels consistent with the Committee’s assessments of
maximum employment and inflation has risen to 2 percent and is on track to moderately
exceed 2 percent for some time.”7 And even after that, the Committee expects to
maintain an accommodative stance until that inflation outcome is in fact achieved.
Of course, since early in the pandemic, the Fed also has been purchasing Treasuries
and agency mortgage-backed securities—first to assist key financial markets to function
effectively and then to help the recovery by further easing financial conditions. Last
December the FOMC stated its intention to continue asset purchases at a pace of at
least $120 billion per month until substantial further progress was made toward our
maximum employment and price stability goals.8 At last week’s meeting, the Committee
judged that the economy had met this test.9 So later this month, we will begin to
gradually reduce the monthly pace of purchases. At the moment, the expected pace of
tapering could result in our net purchases ceasing entirely by the middle of next year.
However, we are prepared to adjust the pace if warranted by changes in the
economic outlook.
Furthermore, this tapering decision does not imply any direct signal regarding our
interest rate policy. We continue to articulate a different and more stringent test for the
economic conditions that would need to be met before raising the federal funds rate. So,
the exact timing of that rate path will depend on economic outcomes. As you can see,
7 Federal Open Market Committee (2020b, 2021a).
8 Federal Open Market Committee (2020a).
9 Federal Open Market Committee (2021a).
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there are many uncertainties to the outlook and changing circumstances could lead the
FOMC to move up or delay rate increases. But judging from where the economy stands
today, it looks like we are in for a low rate environment for some time to come.
Thank you. And now, I look forward to your questions.
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References
Federal Open Market Committee, 2021a, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, November 3, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/monetary20211103a1.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2021b, Summary of Economic Projections,
Washington, DC, September 22, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20210922.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2021c, “Statement on longer-run goals and monetary
policy strategy,” Washington, DC, as reaffirmed effective January 26, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomc_longerrungoals.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020a, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, December 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/monetary20201216a1.pdf.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2020b, “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,”
press release, Washington, DC, September 16, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/monetary20200916a1.pdf.
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2021, November 7). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20211108_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20211108_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20211108_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}