speeches · September 6, 2022
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
An Update on the Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Market News International Webcast
(via videoconference)
September 7, 2022
1
Introduction
Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today on the MNI webcast. I will focus my opening
remarks on how monetary policy will foster a return to price stability, and I look forward to the question-
and-answer portion of the session to hear what is on your mind. 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 Key Economic Challenge Is High Inflation
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
between strong demand and constrained supply, which has led to significant upward pressures on prices.
Inflation is the number one concern of businesses and households: this is evident in surveys and in my
conversations with regional contacts. High inflation imposes a particularly onerous burden on those who
do not have the wherewithal to pay more for essentials like food, gasoline, and shelter, and who now have
to make some hard choices about how to spend their money.
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
2
financial conditions, resulting in an economic transition to below-trend growth in nominal output, slower
employment growth, and a higher unemployment rate.
Economic Growth
Economic activity is beginning to slow down from last year’s robust pace. It is responding to our
monetary policy actions and to the tightening in overall financial conditions since last year. But the
slowdown also reflects how households and businesses are responding to very high inflation and their
concerns about the economic outlook, to the waning effects of the pandemic fiscal stimulus, and to slower
growth abroad. Consumer spending, housing activity, and business investment have decelerated from the
robust pace seen last year. Indeed, the level of real GDP decreased in the first half of this year. Despite
this moderation, aggregate demand is still out of balance with aggregate supply, which remains
constrained due to supply chain disruptions stemming from pandemic-related shutdowns across the globe
and the war in Ukraine. Many firms tell us that they will be investing to make their supply chains more
resilient to be better prepared for the future. In the meantime, supply disruptions remain a challenge and
they have added to price pressures.
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 is so strong. I do believe that the risks of recession over the next two years have moved up
because financial conditions are tightening globally, inflation is very high in many countries, global
growth is slowing, and the devastating war in Ukraine is adding considerable uncertainty and downside
risks to the growth outlook, especially in Europe.
I am in the process of preparing my submission to the Summary of Economic Projections of FOMC
participants, which will be released after our next FOMC meeting in two weeks. 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
3
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 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
employment report for August, released last Friday, suggests that we are beginning to see some
moderation but that labor market conditions remain strong.
Last year, the economy added 6.7 million jobs, a robust average of over 550 thousand jobs per month.
This year, average job gains have slowed to about 440 thousand per month. The unemployment rate rose
in August, but at 3.7 percent, it remains very low. The increase in the unemployment rate partly reflects
an increase in labor force participation. The participation rate of prime-age workers has returned to where
one would expect it to be. Many people chose to retire during the pandemic and left the labor force, and
the overall participation rate, which includes those of retirement age, has risen only gradually. A
continued rise in participation would be helpful in easing the imbalance between labor market demand
and labor market supply. But typically, most people do not return to the job market once they have
retired. So there is little reason to think that we will see an influx of workers that is large enough to return
the overall participation rate to its pre-pandemic level. Although the number of job openings has eased in
recent months, labor demand is still outpacing labor supply. There is still almost double the number of
openings per unemployed worker. To put this into perspective: in 2019, another time of tight labor
markets, there were about 1.2 openings per unemployed worker.
4
Contacts across a broad spectrum of firms tell us it has been very difficult to find workers. They 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. The employment cost index for
private industry workers accelerated over the six months ending in June, rising at a 6.0 percent annual
pace. More recent reports suggest that wage pressures may be beginning to stabilize, but they remain
high. Even so, for many workers their wage increases have not kept up with inflation, and their
purchasing power is being eroded. 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.
Inflation
As their costs have continued to rise, businesses have been raising the prices they charge their customers
and finding little resistance. Despite some moderation in economic activity, inflation readings continue to
be at the highest levels in 40 years. 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
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. Measures of the underlying inflation trend did not uniformly decline in
July,1 and given developments related to the ongoing war in Ukraine, gas and energy prices may move
higher again later this year. In addition, services inflation, which tends to be persistent, is at its highest
1 Only the core PCE inflation rate, which excludes food and energy, declined in July. 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. 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 the
median and trimmed-mean CPI inflation rates and the median PCE inflation rate and provides analyses of inflation
and inflation expectations to inform policymakers, researchers, and the general public.
5
level since the early 1990s, with growth in housing rent and shelter costs likely to keep inflation elevated
for some time. In my view, it will take a while for inflation to return to the Fed’s 2 percent goal. But I do
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, because I expect the Fed to take further action to make it 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
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.2 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. I would favor the FOMC’s considering
selling some of our agency mortgage-backed securities at some point during balance-sheet reduction in
order to speed the return of our portfolio’s composition to being primarily Treasury securities.3 Holding
2 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).
3 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. See the Federal Open Market Committee (2022a), pp. 4-5.
6
mainly Treasuries will help to minimize the effect of the Fed’s holdings on the allocation of credit across
economic sectors.4
As is always the case, we will be calibrating our monetary policy based on the implications of incoming
information for the economic outlook and on the progress toward our monetary policy goals. Monetary
policy acts with a lag on the economy. It is unlikely that we have seen the full effect on households and
businesses of the rate increases we have implemented so far. Moreover, because of the lagged effects of
monetary policy, it would not be appropriate to continue moving rates up until inflation is back down to 2
percent. That said, given the current level of inflation and the economic outlook, I believe that further
increases in our policy rate are needed.
We will need to move policy into a restrictive stance in order to put inflation on a sustained downward
trajectory to 2 percent. 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. My current view is that it will be necessary to
move the nominal 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.
4 One potential way to implement sales would be to sell agency securities up to the cap in any month in which
principal payments were less than the cap. This is similar to our treatment of Treasuries. Another way to implement
sales would be to set a monthly floor on reductions, which would be met first by principal payments received and
then by sales. See Mester (2022a).
7
Making that assessment will remain challenging because there is a high level of uncertainty surrounding
the outlook for the global economy. Both the demand side and the supply side of the economy will be
affected by a variety of forces, including the war in Ukraine and the energy situation in Europe, the global
economic outlook, the sentiment of consumers and businesses and their reaction to elevated inflation
readings, changes in supply chain disruptions, and labor force participation.
In formulating my monetary policy views, I will be guarding against declaring 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.5 Before I conclude that inflation has peaked, I will
need to see several months of declines in the month-over-month readings.
I will be carefully watching measures of inflation expectations, particularly expectations of inflation over
the medium and longer term. The rise in inflation expectations since last year has been concentrated in
shorter-term expectations, which tend to move with gasoline prices and the prices of other salient items
like food. Nonetheless, medium- and longer-term expectations remain at the upper end of the range of
values consistent with our 2 percent inflation goal, and they could move up further depending on inflation
developments over the balance of the year. A risk-management perspective on monetary policymaking
strongly argues against being complacent about a rise in longer-term 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. Better economic outcomes are achieved when policymakers assume that rises in inflation and
inflation expectations are persistent and act forcibly to bring both down.6 Such action gives the public
5 For a short, readable history, see Sablik (2013).
6 See Mester (2022b), De Pooter, et al. (2016), Walsh (2022), and Schnabel (2022).
8
more confidence that policymakers are committed to ensuring price stability, and this helps to anchor the
public’s expectations about inflation, reinforcing the effect of the policy action itself.
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 return to negative territory; 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. Perhaps Paul Volcker said it best 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.”7
In summary, price stability is the foundation for sustaining maximum employment and a healthy,
productive economy over time. I do not view the current situation as one in which there is a tradeoff
between our two monetary policy goals. If we fail to take decisive action 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.
7 Volcker (1981), p. 2.
9
References
De Pooter, Michiel, Alan Detmeister, Eric Engstrom, Don Kim, David Lebow, Canlin Li, Elmar Mertens,
Jeremy Nalewaik, Marius Rodriguez, Jae Sim, Brad Strum, Robert Tetlow, Min Wei, and Emre Yoldas,
“Longer-Term Inflation Expectations: Evidence and Policy Implications,” memo to the FOMC, March 4,
2016, authorized for public release by the FOMC Secretariat on 1/14/2022.
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/FOMC20160304memo07.pdf)
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)
Mester, Loretta J., “The FOMC’s Plan for Significantly Reducing the Federal Reserve’s Securities
Holdings,” panel remarks, 2022 Financial Markets Conference: A New Era of Financial Innovation and
Disruption: Challenges and Opportunities, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Amelia Island, FL, May 10,
2022a.
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/en/newsroom-and-events/speeches/sp-20220510-the-fomcs-plan-for-
significantly-reducing-the-federal-reserves-securities-holdings.aspx)
Mester, Loretta J., “The Role of Inflation Expectations in Monetary Policymaking: A Practitioner’s
Perspective,” European Central Bank Forum on Central Banking: Challenges for Monetary Policy in a
Rapidly Changing World, Sintra, Portugal, June 29, 2022b.
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/newsroom-and-events/speeches/sp-20220629-the-role-of-inflation-
expectations-in-monetary-policymaking)
Sablik, Tim, “Recession of 1981-82,” Federal Reserve History, Federal Reserve System, November 22,
2013.
(https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/recession-of-1981-82)
Schnabel, Isabel, “Monetary Policy and the Great Volatility,” panel remarks at the Economic Policy
Symposium, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, August 27, 2022.
(https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2022/html/ecb.sp220827~93f7d07535.en.html)
Volcker, Paul A. “No Time for Backsliding,” remarks at the National Press Club, Washington, DC,
September 25, 1981.
(https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/statements-speeches-paul-a-volcker-451/time-backsliding-8243)
Walsh, Carl E., “Inflation Surges and Monetary Policy,” Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies,
Bank of Japan, IMES Discussion Paper Series, 2022-E-12, July 2022.
(https://www.imes.boj.or.jp/research/abstracts/english/22-E-12.html)
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2022, September 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220907_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20220907_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2022},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220907_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}