speeches · August 30, 2022
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
Returning to Price Stability
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Government Affairs Breakfast
Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce
Dayton, OH
August 31, 2022
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Introduction
It is a great pleasure to be with you today, and I thank Jackie Gamblin for the kind introduction. As many
of you know, in addition to being CEO of JYG Innovations, Jackie is also a director of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Cleveland. I’d like to take this opportunity to thank Jackie for her public service to my
organization and to the country. Jackie and her fellow directors provide a wealth of information on the
economic circumstances of households and businesses in their regions. The information comes from their
own firms and customers, as well as other business and community contacts like you. In the
unprecedented environment we have all had to confront since the start of the pandemic, I cannot overstate
the value of this reconnaissance in helping me and my colleagues at the Fed formulate monetary policy.
Indeed, since I last spoke at this breakfast four years ago, much has transpired. At that time, the economy
was in the ninth year of an expansion; labor markets were strong; and inflation was finally moving up to
our 2 percent goal after running below this goal for some time. The Fed was continuing to increase its
policy rate, the fed funds rate, to be consistent with these healthy economic conditions and the outlook.
The economic expansion continued for another two years, until the pandemic changed all that. The
resilience shown by households and businesses over the past two challenging years has been truly
remarkable. Yet many challenges remain; in particular, inflation, which is at a 40-year high, is a serious
burden for households, businesses, and the overall economy. Today, I will focus my remarks on how
monetary policy will foster a return to price stability. Of course, the views I present will be my own and
not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System or of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market
Committee.
The Economy
The key challenge facing our economy is unacceptably high inflation. Inflation has been running well
above 2 percent for over a year now; it is very high not only in the U.S. but in other advanced economies
around the globe. This inflation stems from many factors, but fundamentally, it reflects an imbalance
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between strong demand and constrained supply, which has led to significant upward pressures on prices.
Various surveys and my conversations with regional contacts reveal that inflation is the number one
concern of businesses and households. It imposes a particularly onerous burden on those who don’t have
the wherewithal to pay more for essentials like food, gasoline, and shelter, whose inflation rates have
been particularly high.
Price stability is the foundation of a strong economy; it is necessary for ensuring that the U.S. can sustain
healthy labor market conditions over the medium and longer run and that the economy can be productive
and live up to its potential for everyone’s benefit. The FOMC is committed to using its tools to bring
inflation back down to our longer-run goal of 2 percent; it is taking decisive action to remove monetary
policy accommodation to bring demand into better balance with constrained supply in both product and
labor markets. Since March of this year, the FOMC has raised the target range of the fed funds rate by
2-1/4 percentage points, and it has begun to reduce the assets the Fed is holding on its balance sheet,
which will also reduce accommodation. Given current rates of inflation, I believe that the Fed has more
work to do in order to get inflation under control. This will entail further rate increases to tighten
financial conditions, resulting in an economic transition to below-trend growth in nominal output, slower
employment growth, and a higher unemployment rate.
Economic Growth
In fact, we are beginning to see activity slow down from last year’s robust pace. In part, this can be
attributed to our monetary policy actions and the tightening in overall financial conditions compared to a
year ago. But it also reflects households’ and businesses’ responses to very high inflation and their
concerns about the economic outlook, as well as the waning effects of the pandemic fiscal stimulus, and
slower growth abroad. Consumer spending, housing activity, and business investment have decelerated
from the robust pace seen last year. Indeed, real GDP moved down in the first half of this year. In the
first quarter, the main contributors to the decline in output were declines in net exports and government
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spending and slower inventory investment, but consumer and business spending remained solid. The
second quarter saw slower growth in these components as well. While manufacturing surveys suggest
activity has moderated, firms in our region tell us that their strong order books should keep them busy at
least through the end of the year. In response to higher mortgage rates, residential investment, one of the
most interest-rate-sensitive sectors of the economy, also fell quite sharply in the second quarter. Yet,
because the supply of housing has not kept up with demand, housing prices and rents remain quite
elevated.
Indeed, supply constraints have posed a significant challenge across a variety of sectors since the
economy reopened after the pandemic shutdowns. In product markets, firms have had to deal with a
cascading set of disruptions to their global supply chains. These disruptions stem from pandemic-related
shutdowns across the globe and the war in Ukraine, which has further constrained supplies in energy,
metals, and agricultural commodity markets. Firms in Dayton and other parts of our region tell us that the
supply challenges have lasted longer than they expected and they have had to be creative in meeting those
challenges. Some manufacturers are stockpiling large volumes of materials to have them on hand to meet
future demand or to fill their backlogged orders. Other firms are custom making parts to substitute for
those that are unavailable. Many have been trying to adjust their inventories to be better prepared to meet
current and future demand, which explains some of the overstocking at the end of last year, followed by
slower inventory building this year. Many firms tell us that they will be investing to make their supply
chains more resilient to be better prepared for the future.
Analysts often use the rule-of-thumb that two consecutive quarters of negative real GDP growth means
the economy is in recession. I do not believe the U.S. economy is currently in a recession because the
labor market remains very strong. I do acknowledge that the risks of recession over the next year or two
have moved up because financial conditions are tightening globally, inflation remains at high levels in
many countries, and the devastating war in Ukraine adds considerable uncertainty and downside risks to
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the growth outlook, especially in Europe. That said, at this point, I have not incorporated a recession into
my baseline outlook for the U.S., but instead expect a fairly sharp slowing in activity, especially when
compared to the robust growth the U.S. experienced in 2021. While there is considerable uncertainty, I
currently expect that the U.S. economy will return to positive growth in the second half of the year, but
for this year as a whole and for next year, I expect growth to run well below 2 percent, which is my
estimate of trend growth.
Labor Markets
With the economy growing below trend, I expect the current very strong labor market conditions to cool,
with the unemployment rate rising somewhat above 4 percent by the end of next year. Some cooling off
in the labor market will put it on more sustainable footing compared to the unsustainably tight conditions
that exist today.
The economy added 6.7 million jobs last year, an average of over 550 thousand jobs per month, which is
very robust. There are widespread reports from a broad spectrum of firms about how hard it has been to
find workers. Even so, employment growth has remained very strong this year. Job gains averaged about
460 thousand per month over the first half of the year, and they accelerated in July. The unemployment
rate fell to 3.5 percent, matching the lowest level reached during the long pre-pandemic expansion.
Although the number of job openings has eased in recent months, they remain at historically high levels:
there are close to 2 openings per unemployed worker; in 2019, another time of tight labor markets, there
were about 1.2 openings per unemployed worker.
A variety of reasons have contributed to people leaving the workforce early in the pandemic and then
only slowly returning. These include responsibilities for caring for children or other family members;
fear of the virus; reevaluation of their careers; and retirement. Reduced immigration has also constrained
labor supply. The participation rate of prime-age workers has returned to where one would expect it to
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be. Overall participation, which includes those of retirement age, has improved, but only gradually.
Typically, most people don’t return to the job market once they have retired. So there is little reason to
think that we will see an influx of workers large enough to return the overall participation rate to its pre-
pandemic level.
Firms have been using a variety of ways to attract and retain staff, including offering more flexible work
schedules, signing and retention bonuses, expanded benefits, and higher base wages. Wage pressures
have been building up for a while and show little sign of abating. The employment cost index for private
industry workers accelerated over the six months ending in June, rising at a 6.0 percent annual pace.
Even so, these wage increases have not kept up with inflation, so workers’ purchasing power is being
eroded. Higher wages that reflect higher productivity growth don’t contribute to inflation, and they are a
positive for both workers and firms. But current wage increases are not consistent with inflation returning
to our 2 percent goal. With trend productivity growth estimated to be around 1-1/4 to 1-1/2 percent, wage
growth will need to moderate to around 3-1/4 to 3-1/2 percent to be consistent with price stability. As
former Fed Chair Paul Volcker pointed out in the midst of his fight against very high inflation in 1981:
“[Wage gains], when they are not grounded in real growth and productivity, are a kind of economic ‘shell
game’ in which rising incomes disappear at the supermarket or the shoe store… .”1
Inflation
As their costs have continued to rise, businesses have been raising the prices they charge their customers
and finding little resistance. Over the past year, price pressures have broadened across goods and
services, and despite some moderation in economic activity, inflation readings continue to be at the
highest levels in 40 years. To assess the inflation situation, I look at a variety of measures. The Fed has
set its inflation target in terms of PCE inflation. Measured year-over-year, PCE inflation came in at about
6-1/4 percent in July; CPI inflation was 8-1/2 percent. These readings were down slightly from their June
1 Volcker (1981a), p. 2.
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readings, mainly reflecting a sharp drop in the price of gasoline and energy. This was welcome news, but
we have to guard against wishful thinking becoming a substitute for compelling evidence.
In my view, it is far too soon to conclude that inflation has peaked, let alone that it is on a sustainable
downward path to 2 percent. First, measures of the underlying inflation trend did not uniformly decline in
July. Only the core PCE inflation rate, which excludes food and energy, declined. Measured year-over-
year, core CPI inflation and the median and trimmed-mean inflation rates, which exclude the components
with extreme movements, were either stable or actually increased.2 Second, in the coming months, goods
inflation may slow in response to easing demand and the appreciation of the dollar, but the prices of
energy and other commodities are set in global markets, and developments related to the ongoing war in
Ukraine may lead to higher prices later this year. Third, inflation in the prices of services tends to be
more persistent. Services inflation is at its highest level since the early 1990s, and growth in housing rent
and shelter costs, which represent a large share of measured inflation, will likely keep inflation elevated
for some time. All of this suggests that it will take a while for inflation to reach the Fed’s 2 percent goal.
I expect inflation to move down into a range of 5 to 6 percent for this year and then to make more
progress toward our goal over the next two years, but it will require further action on the part of the Fed to
make that so.
Monetary Policy
In making its monetary policy decisions, the FOMC is always guided by its strong commitment to
achieving its congressionally mandated goals of price stability and maximum employment. Monetary
policy cannot affect the supply-side factors that have contributed to the very high inflation readings.
Instead, it works on the demand side of the economy. The Fed is being resolute and intentional in
2 The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland produces the median and trimmed-mean CPI inflation rate and the median
PCE inflation rate. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas produces the trimmed-mean PCE inflation rate. The
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s Center for Inflation Research produces inflation measures and analyses of
inflation and inflation expectations to inform policymakers, researchers, and the general public.
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tightening financial conditions to bring demand into better balance with supply to alleviate price
pressures. Since March, we have raised the target range of the fed funds rate a cumulative 2-1/4
percentage points and financial conditions are tighter than they were at the end of last year.
In addition, in June we began to reduce the size of our balance sheet according to the plan announced in
May.3 Reducing the amount of the Fed’s securities holdings will help to lessen downward pressure on
longer-term interest rates by returning duration to the market. The reduction in our balance sheet is being
done primarily by adjusting how much we reinvest of the principal payments we receive on our assets.
Without asset sales, the process could take three years or so.4
Monetary policy acts with a lag on the economy. So even though other financial conditions, like
mortgage rates, have adjusted, it is likely we have not yet seen the full effect of the rate increases we have
implemented so far on households and businesses. Given the lagged effects of monetary policy, it would
not be appropriate to continue moving rates up until inflation is back down to 2 percent. As is always the
case, we will be calibrating our policy based on the implications of incoming information for the
economic outlook and on the progress toward our monetary policy goals. That said, at our last meeting,
the FOMC indicated that it anticipates that ongoing rate increases in the fed funds rate will be appropriate.
I certainly agree with that view.
Given the current level of inflation and the economic outlook, I anticipate that policy will need to move
into a restrictive stance in order to put inflation on a sustained downward trajectory to 2 percent. In my
3 Starting in September, the Fed will allow up to $60 billion per month of Treasury securities and up to $35 billion
per month of agency securities to run off the balance sheet. To the extent that maturing Treasury coupon securities
are less than the monthly cap, Treasury bills will make up the rest of the runoff up to the cap. See the Federal Open
Market Committee (2022b).
4 As indicated in the minutes of the March 2022 FOMC meeting, FOMC participants generally agreed that after
balance-sheet reduction was well underway, it would be appropriate to consider sales of agency mortgage-backed
securities. Sales would help to speed the return of our portfolio’s composition to being primarily Treasury
securities, consistent with the FOMC’s stated desire to minimize the effect of the Fed’s balance-sheet holdings on
the allocation of credit across economic sectors. See the Federal Open Market Committee (2022a), pp. 4-5.
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view, that means that short-term interest rates adjusted for expected inflation, that is, real interest rates,
will need to move into positive territory and remain there for some time. Right now, nominal short-term
interest rates are lower than expected inflation, so short-term real interest rates are still negative and
monetary policy is still accommodative. The current level of the fed funds rate is near the range of
estimates of its longer-run nominal level, and when inflation is at 2 percent and inflation expectations are
consistent with 2 percent inflation, this longer-run level would be neutral in the sense of neither
stimulating nor restraining economic activity. But in the current high-inflation environment, a
2-1/2 percent nominal funds rate is still accommodative and the Fed has more work to do. My current
view is that it will be necessary to move the fed funds rate up to somewhat above 4 percent by early next
year and hold it there; I do not anticipate the Fed cutting the fed funds rate target next year. But let me
emphasize that this is based on my current reading of the economy and outlook. While it is clear that the
fed funds rate needs to move up from its current level, the size of rate increases at any particular FOMC
meeting and the peak fed funds rate will depend on the inflation outlook, which depends on the
assessment of how rapidly aggregate demand and supply are coming back into better balance and price
pressures are being reduced.
Making that assessment will remain challenging because there is a high level of uncertainty surrounding
the outlook for the global economy, with a variety of forces affecting the demand and supply sides of the
economy. The war in Ukraine and the energy situation in Europe could impose further costs on the
people in that region and on the global economy, posing downside risks to growth but upside risks to
inflation. A souring in consumer and business sentiment and reactions to elevated inflation readings
could result in a larger than anticipated moderation in activity. There are some potential positives on the
supply side of the economy. The newly passed fiscal package may have a larger effect on productivity
growth and inflation over the near term than current private-sector estimates suggest.5 And with some
5 Analysis by Penn Wharton Budget Model (2022) indicates that the Inflation Reduction Act would reduce
cumulative government deficits by $264 billion over the 10-year budget window, have no meaningful effect on
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luck, supply chain disruptions will abate faster than anticipated and labor market participation will
continue to rise, helping to ease supply constraints in product and labor markets and bringing supply into
better balance with demand. But we cannot rely on luck.
It would be a mistake to declare victory over the inflation beast too soon. Doing so would put us back in
the stop-and-go monetary policy world of the 1970s, which was very costly to households and
businesses.6 In assessing the appropriate stance of policy, I will be looking for compelling evidence that
inflation is on a sustainable downward trajectory to our 2 percent goal. Before I conclude that inflation
has peaked, I will need to see several months of declines in the month-over-month readings. I will also be
carefully watching measures of inflation expectations, particularly expectations of inflation over the
medium and longer term. Currently, consumers and businesses expect inflation to be well above 2
percent over the next year. While recent readings of medium- and longer-term expectations have eased
off a bit, they have moved up over time and are at the upper end of the range of values consistent with our
inflation goal. Research indicates that changes in the prices of particular salient items, including gasoline
and food, can have an outsized effect on households’ inflation expectations.7 Gas prices have come down
from recent highs but with the uncertainty surrounding world oil supply, gasoline prices could rise again,
and food prices might remain high.
We need to be particularly attuned to inflation expectations. If longer-term inflation expectations were to
become unanchored and move above levels consistent with our longer-run inflation goal, high inflation
would become embedded in the economy, affecting the actions of both firms and consumers; at that point
it would be considerably more difficult and more costly to bring inflation down. A risk-management
inflation in the near term, but would reduce inflation by 0.1 percentage point by the middle of the first decade. See
Penn Wharton Budget Model (2022).
6 For a short, readable history, see Sablik (2013).
7 For the effect of experiences from high-inflation eras on inflation expectations, see Malmendier and Nagel (2016).
For the effect of salient prices on inflation expectations, see Coibion and Gorodnichenko (2015), Cavallo, Cruces,
and Perez-Truglia (2017), D’Acunto, et al. (2021), and Campos, McMain, and Pedemonte (2022).
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perspective strongly argues against policymakers being complacent about a rise in longer-term
expectations. Instead, better economic outcomes are achieved if policymakers assume rises in inflation
and inflation expectations are persistent and act forcibly to bring both down. It is good to remember that
inflation expectations are determined not only by movements in inflation but also by policymakers’
actions to follow through on their strongly stated commitment to price stability, thereby justifying the
public’s belief in our commitment.
Commitment and Follow-Through
The return to price stability will take some time and a lot of fortitude. There will be bumps along the
road. Financial markets could well remain volatile as financial conditions tighten further; growth could
slow more than expected; and the unemployment rate could move above estimates of its longer-run level.
This will be painful in the near term but so is high inflation. High inflation imposes costs on households
and businesses in both the short and long run. It eats into savings and makes it hard to plan for the future.
If we fail to take the actions needed to get inflation down and firmly anchor inflation expectations, we
will not be able to sustain healthy labor markets over the medium and long run, to the detriment of the
public.
As Paul Volcker said as he fought inflation in the 1980s: “…failure to carry through now in the fight on
inflation will only make any subsequent effort more difficult, at much greater risk to the economy.”8
That statement is as true now as it was then. That is why I remain resolute in setting monetary policy to
return the economy to price stability, which is the foundation for sustaining maximum employment and a
healthy, productive economy over time.
8 Volcker (1981b), p. 2.
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References
Campos, Chris, Michael McMain, and Mathieu Pedemonte, “Understanding Which Prices Affect
Inflation Expectations,” Economic Commentary, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Number 2022-06,
April 19, 2022.
(https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-ec-202206)
Cavallo, Alberto, Guillermo Cruces, and Ricardo Perez-Truglia, “Inflation Expectations, Learning, and
Supermarket Prices: Evidence from Survey Experiments,” American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics
9, 2017, pp. 1-35.
(https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/mac.20150147)
Coibion, Olivier, and Yuriy Gorodnichenko, “Is the Phillips Curve Alive and Well after All? Inflation
Expectations and the Missing Disinflation,” American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 7, 2015,
pp. 197-232.
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/mac.20130306)
D’Acunto, Francesco, Ulrike Malmendier, Juan Ospina, and Michael Weber, “Exposure to Grocery Prices
and Inflation Expectations,” Journal of Political Economy 129, 2021, pp 1615-1639.
(https://doi.org/10.1086/713192)
Federal Open Market Committee, Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee, March 15-16, 2022a.
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20220316.pdf)
Federal Open Market Committee, Plans for Reducing the Size of the Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet,
May 4, 2022b.
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20220504b.htm)
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s Center for Inflation Research.
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/en/our-research/center-for-inflation-research.aspx)
Malmendier, Ulrike, and Stefan Nagel, “Learning from Inflation Experiences,” Quarterly Journal of
Economics 131, 2016, pp. 53-87.
(https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjv037)
Penn Wharton Budget Model, “Senate-Passed Inflation Reduction Act: Estimates of Budgetary and
Macroeconomic Effects,” University of Pennsylvania, August 12, 2022.
(https://budgetmodel.wharton.upenn.edu/issues/2022/8/12/senate-passed-inflation-reduction-act)
Sablik, Tim, “Recession of 1981-1982,” Federal Reserve History, Federal Reserve System, November 22,
2013 (https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/recession-of-1981-82)
Volcker, Paul A. “Dealing with Inflation: Obstacles and Opportunities,” remarks at the Alfred M. Landon
Lecture Series on Public Issues, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, April 15, 1981a.
(https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/statements-speeches-paul-a-volcker-451/dealing-inflation-obstacles-
opportunities-8236)
Volcker, Paul A. “No Time for Backsliding,” remarks at the National Press Club, Washington, DC,
September 25, 1981b.
(https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/statements-speeches-paul-a-volcker-451/time-backsliding-8243)
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2022, August 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220831_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20220831_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2022},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220831_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}