speeches · October 9, 2022
Regional President Speech
Charles L. Evans · President
______________________________________________________________________________
Going the Distance on Inflation Redux
______________________________________________________________________________
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
64th National Association for Business Economics (NABE)
Annual Meeting
Chicago, IL
October 10, 2022
_____________________________________
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Going the Distance on Inflation Redux
Charles L. Evans
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
The last time I spoke at a NABE event was in September 2021.1 At that time we had
only begun to see some broadening of inflation beyond items most directly affected by
pandemic-related relative price swings. Most forecasters, including myself and many of
you in this room, thought the momentum wouldn’t be sustained and were forecasting
inflation to return near the Fed’s 2 percent target by the end of 2022.2
Well, the economic landscape certainly looks different now! In the U.S. and elsewhere
around the world, what began as narrowly concentrated shocks to relative prices has
spread, turning into broad-based increases in overall inflation to levels far above every
central bank’s target. Accordingly, monetary policymakers now are significantly
tightening policy in order to bring inflation back in line with their price stability mandates.
Since March 2022, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has increased the
federal funds rate—our main policy tool—by 3 percentage points. We also are reducing
the size of our balance sheet at a relatively rapid clip.
The Federal Reserve is committed to returning inflation to its 2 percent average goal. To
do so, I expect we will need to raise rates further and then to hold that stance for a
1 Evans (2021).
2 The median projection in the September 2021 NABE Outlook Survey for core inflation in 2022 as measured by the
Price Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) was 2.2 percent (National Association for Business
Economics, 2021). Core inflation strips out the volatile food and energy sectors and is a better indicator of
underlying inflation trends than is total inflation.
2
while. Of course, the exact path forward for policy will depend on the evolution of the
economy and risks to the outlook. My talk today will describe my thinking behind this
path in more detail, as well as why I think we can bring inflation down relatively quickly
while also avoiding a recession.
Before I begin, I am obliged to remind you that the views I share with you today are my
own and do not necessarily represent those of my colleagues on the FOMC or others in
the Federal Reserve System.
Economic overview
This audience is certainly familiar with the current situation. So I won’t spend too much
time discussing the incoming data—which as you know have been mixed. Household
and business spending have been moderating. Lower real disposable income and a
policy-induced tightening in financial conditions are clearly in play, most notably in the
very interest-rate-sensitive housing markets, where mortgage rates have about doubled
since the beginning of the year.
In contrast, the labor market remains strong, with robust job growth, elevated job
openings and quits, and an unemployment rate that is at the very low level we
experienced before the Covid crisis. However, over the past few months we’ve heard
more reports from our business and community contacts of reduced job turnover and
that some are finding it easier to attract qualified workers. These are signs that some of
the unusual strength in labor demand may be waning. Increasing pay and more flexible
work arrangements may be part of the explanation, as well as the softer growth in
spending. As of yet, these anecdotal reports haven’t shown through strongly in the
aggregate data, although job growth has moderated some from its extremely rapid pace
3
and last week’s JOLTS (Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey) report contained a
notable drop in vacancies.
On the labor supply side, while many workers who left the labor force during the
pandemic have reentered the labor market, many others have not, and today labor force
participation is still well below its pre-pandemic rate. Most of this shortfall is accounted
for by older workers, as the pandemic apparently accelerated the retirement decision for
many baby boomers who would have eventually exited from the labor force anyway.
Another factor weighing on labor supply is the quite low inflow to the U.S. labor force
from immigration.
A strong labor market may still help draw some of those sitting on the sidelines back
into the workforce and alleviate some labor market pressure. When I spoke here last
year, I expected the labor supply response to be fairly large, but as time passes, I’ve
become less optimistic that this channel will provide much relief from labor market
pressures. Indeed, the labor force participation rate currently does not appear far from
its long-term trend.3
Policy adjustments needed to bring inflation into line with goal
This brings me to a discussion of what is the principal issue facing the economy in the
U.S. and elsewhere around the world—inflation. After more than a decade of missing
our average 2 percent target to the downside, PCE inflation has risen quite quickly—
3 After many years of sustained economic growth leading up to the Covid crisis, labor force participation had been
higher than demographic and other trends would have predicted.
4
from under 1 percent in mid-2020 to 6.2 percent in the most recent August data.4
Excluding food and energy, core PCE prices rose 4.9 percent over the past 12 months.
Reducing inflation to a level consistent with the Fed’s 2 percent objective will require a
period of restrictive financial conditions to restore better balance between supply and
demand economy-wide. This will generate below-trend growth and some softening of
labor market conditions. But ensuring low and stable inflation is a prerequisite for
achieving the sustained strong labor market outcomes that bring benefits to everyone in
our society.
These broad contours are demonstrated in the FOMC’s latest Summary of Economic
Projections (SEP), which this audience is undoubtedly familiar with.5 The SEP dot plot
shows that most FOMC participants are looking at something like another 100 to
125 basis points of rate increases this calendar year, with the median projection for
the federal funds rate then rising a bit further to 4.6 percent at the end of next year.
This monetary restraint is clearly showing through in the projection for GDP growth,
which the median participant sees running somewhat below its long-run rate over the
next year and a half or so before moving back up to trend later in the projection period.
The unemployment rate is projected to rise to 4.4 percent by late next year and then
remain near that level in 2024 and 2025. While this does represent a noticeably
4 The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge is the annual change in the Price Index for Personal Consumption
Expenditures.
5 Federal Open Market Committee (2022). The quarterly Summary of Economic Projections presents FOMC
participants’ forecasts of key economic variables over the next three to four years and for the longer run.
5
softer labor market when compared with today’s, these certainly are not
recession-like numbers.6
As for inflation, with supply-side improvements, restrictive monetary policy, and below-
trend growth, inflation is expected to moderate significantly. According to the median
SEP projection, total PCE inflation is expected to fall to 2.8 percent in 2023 and
eventually return to our 2 percent target by the end of 2025. I should note that my
personal forecast is broadly in line with the median SEP forecast. This is also true for
many outside forecasters as we see in the NABE Outlook Survey that was released this
morning, although the NABE survey’s median federal funds rate is somewhat below the
SEP’s median.7
Does this forecast make sense?
In sum, the consensus baseline is projecting a large decline in inflation over the next
year and a half, but with only a modest increase in the unemployment rate. A pretty
good-looking soft landing. Now, we all recognize the substantial uncertainty surrounding
the outlook today. But what about this baseline? What rationale can get us there? I can’t
speak for others, but let me walk you through some of my thinking. And remember this
is a modal forecast, and other, less rosy alternatives have a reasonable likelihood
of occurring.
I’ll begin with some familiar observations about the role that relative price adjustments
and supply chain problems played in the rapid increase in prices. The pandemic
6 For comparison, the U.S. unemployment rate has peaked at over 6 percent either during or shortly after every
recession since World War II.
7 The NABE Outlook Survey is available online, https://nabe.com/NABE/NABE/Surveys/Surveys.aspx.
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induced a shift in household spending from services, such as travel or dining out,
toward goods, such as appliances for home improvement projects or consumer
electronics. Many goods-producing businesses struggled to keep pace with this strong
demand, particularly as they faced Covid-related disruptions in production and supply
chains. Labor shortages due to a broad-based drop in labor force participation were part
of the story, too.
Inflation began to pick up in early 2021 as prices rose sharply for goods that were
especially sensitive to supply chain problems and for services that were just beginning
to reopen from the pandemic shutdowns. It has taken us time to get there, but today
there are a number of signs that supply chain difficulties are improving: Ports are less
congested, freight costs are falling, and supplier delivery times are improving. And with
the pandemic bounce-back behind us, some heat is coming off items such as airfares
and hotel prices.
But all is not well yet. For example, for quite a while, a shortage of microprocessors held
back the production of motor vehicles. Well, the chip shortage seems to be largely
resolved, but shortages of other parts are now reportedly limiting assemblies. The
problems at parts suppliers appear related to difficulties they are still having in staffing
production lines. I’m sure we’ve all heard many other anecdotes that highlight this
interaction between labor market tightness and supply chain issues. Save this idea—I’ll
come back to it in a moment.
Looking ahead, supply chain repair will continue and consumption patterns will
normalize; and we may also see some further recovery in labor force participation,
though as I mentioned, I think the prospects for this are limited. Admittedly, these
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adjustments have taken much longer than I had expected. And disruptions from the
Russian invasion of Ukraine and unpredictable Covid-related shutdowns, notably in
China, haven’t helped. But progress has been made, and more is coming. And the
reduced price pressures from these supply-side adjustments are an important factor in
my forecast for declining inflation.
However, over the past year or so we’ve seen a lot more inflation than can be explained
by changes in relative prices: We’ve experienced a broad-based increase in inflationary
pressures that monetary policy must address. Without a period of restrictive policy,
inflation will come down some, but not to anything near our 2 percent objective. The
required monetary response will restrain aggregate demand. An important question then
is, how much will this restraint weigh on the employment leg of our dual mandate?
Obviously, the pandemic-era shocks have wreaked havoc on the usual relationships
between economic variables and on the models we use to explain them. This has been
particularly true in the labor market. Here, though, the unfamiliar patterns point to
reasons why our inflation forecast may be achieved with only moderate increases
in unemployment.
For example, there is the configuration of the Beveridge curve, where we have seen a
marked increase in the vacancy rate observed for any given unemployment rate.8 It is
possible that as labor demand subsides, we could see a large decline in vacancies and
reduced pressure on wages and inflation without a corresponding large increase in the
8 The Beveridge curve refers to the inverse relationship between the unemployment rate and the job vacancy rate.
A chart plotting the Beveridge Curve from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics is available online,
https://www.bls.gov/charts/job-openings-and-labor-turnover/job-openings-unemployment-beveridge-curve.htm.
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unemployment rate. Indeed, the drop in the ratio of vacancies to unemployment in the
August JOLTS report is good news for this hypothesis.
Now, there is a good deal of debate over this topic, and I don’t want to wade into that
here. Indeed, I have a confession—I’ve always been more comfortable viewing labor
market dynamics and inflation through the lens of the Phillips curve.9 Call me a
hopeless romantic. Anyway, here, too, I see unusual behavior that suggests we can
disinflate without a large increase in unemployment if we navigate the path to a
reasonably restrictive policy setting carefully and judiciously.
The rapid increase in inflation we’ve experienced can be explained by a temporary
steepening in the Phillips curve. Conceptually, this steeper-than-usual Phillips curve is
due to the unusual interactions between labor market tightness and supply chain
problems that I noted earlier—namely, the lack of materials and parts arising
from shortages of labor at upstream suppliers. This phenomenon appears to be
fairly widespread.
Because of this additional supply chain channel, at recent unemployment rates, labor
market stress is having a larger effect on inflation than would typically be the case.
These extra supply chain interactions were not an issue when the unemployment rate
was around the same low level in 2019, and so we saw less of an inflationary impact
from tight labor markets back then. If this steeper-than-usual Phillips curve is generating
much of the higher inflation we are seeing now, then we should also expect this steeper
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).
9
curve to help bring inflation down relatively quickly with only moderate increases in
unemployment. Steep on the way up is steep on the way down.
Furthermore, I have in mind a nonaccelerationist Phillips curve, in which inflation
expectations are not a mechanical function of recent inflation. Today, longer-term
inflation expectations are anchored near our target, and so provide an important
downward force on actual inflation. So my baseline forecast sees the combination of
further supply-side repair, a steeper Phillips curve, and anchored long-run inflation
expectations moving inflation back to target without having to generate an inordinate
amount of slack in the economy.
This mechanism does, however, require reducing the heat in labor and product markets
as well as maintaining a downward pull from inflation expectations. This is where tighter
monetary policy comes into play. I see the nominal funds rate rising to a bit above
4-1/2 percent early next year and then remaining at this level for some time while we
assess how our policy adjustments are affecting the economy. When you factor in
inflation expectations and the reductions in our balance sheet, we’ll be at something
equivalent to nearly a 2 percent real funds rate at this time. This is a fair amount of
restriction when compared with the 1/4 to 1/2 percent long-run real neutral federal funds
rate that is implied in the SEP. But I feel it is needed to facilitate market adjustments by
bringing aggregate demand into better balance with aggregate supply and to ensure
that long-run inflation expectations remain in check.
Our rapid pace of rate increases has fast-tracked our arrival to such a restrictive
stance. Front-loading was a good thing, given how far below neutral rates were. But
overshooting is costly, too, and there is great uncertainty about how restrictive policy
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must actually become. This puts a premium on the strategy of getting to a place where
policy can plan to rest and evaluate data and developments.
Risks and policy communications
There are many risks that could derail this optimistic forecast. And, unfortunately, many
of those risks appear to be to the downside: Supply-side repair could continue to move
too slowly; events in Ukraine or further Covid-related shutdowns could put additional
pressure on costs; and monetary policy may, on the one hand, not rein inflation in
enough or, on the other hand, weigh too heavily on employment.
Another risk is that inflation expectations could become unanchored. Inflation will be
much more difficult to rein in if households and businesses start thinking outsized
increases in wages and prices are the new norm and incorporate those expectations
into their decision-making. But the good news is that, in general, measures of longer-
horizon inflation expectations have remained within a range that is consistent with our
2 percent inflation objective. This is true in most surveys or in the compensation for
inflation that is priced into financial market assets, suggesting households and
businesses see the primary drivers of inflationary pressures as being shorter-lived.
These perceptions can change and aren’t something we can take for granted. I believe
the Federal Reserve’s strong policy actions and communications have played an
important role in anchoring long-run inflation expectations by demonstrating and
conveying our commitment to bring inflation back into line with our 2 percent average
objective. The public and markets appear to believe we will be successful. But it is up to
us to follow through and do our job.
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Now policy communications has many aspects to it. I admit we don’t always get it
perfect—and we certainly hear from you when we don’t! Then again, sometimes we
receive criticism about what I see as useful communications. In particular, I know some
are uncomfortable with the idea that the Fed provides projections for policy rates in the
SEP, knowing that we will certainly see a different path for rates if economic conditions
or risks turn out otherwise. Some even say this is a good reason not to provide such
projections at all—if you can’t tell me the number for sure, why tell me anything? I
strongly disagree with this view. Monetary policy is clearly influencing our projections,
so what’s the downside of revealing how we view its role in doing so?
I know we have had elevated financial market volatility at times over this rate cycle.
These are uncertain times, and no communications can—or should—reduce underlying
fundamental economic uncertainty. But think how much additional uncertainty and
costly volatility we would have unnecessarily generated over the past year if we had not
augmented our policy moves with guidance about our plans for the ultimate level for the
federal funds rate and its expected influence on economic outcomes.
Indeed, even though rate hikes didn’t begin until March, the information in the SEPs and
other Fed communications likely assisted in substantially tightening financial conditions
by mid-year, and did so without the large dislocations in financial flows that have at
times accompanied past changes in the trajectory of policy. And given how quickly
financial conditions reacted to our policy communications, perhaps we have shortened
one leg of the long and variable lags of the monetary transmission mechanism. This
seems like a good development.
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Conclusion
I realize I may have come off this morning sounding rather optimistic. I don’t want to
diminish the task in front of us or downplay the difficulties some may experience under
the less favorable labor market conditions envisioned by my baseline outlook. And there
is a real risk of seeing heavier costs with a larger-than-expected drop in employment.
These are things we must be mindful of.
No matter the circumstances, the FOMC will always set policy with the goal of
progressing toward both our dual mandate objectives of maximum inclusive
employment and price stability as expeditiously as possible. Today, though, inflation is
our primary concern. Reducing it will likely require a sustained period of restrictive
monetary policy, below-trend growth, and some softening of labor market conditions.
But this is necessary to restore inflation to our 2 percent target. We hope to achieve this
goal as quickly and efficiently as possible, leading to a period of sustained price stability
and strong labor market outcomes under which all can prosper.
Thank you.
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References
Evans, Charles L., 2021, “Going the distance on inflation,” speech at the 63rd National
Association for Business Economics (NABE) Annual Meeting, Arlington, VA,
September 27, available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/speeches/2021/september-27-nabe-annual-
meeting.
Federal Open Market Committee, 2022, Summary of Economic Projections,
Washington, DC, September 21, available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20220921.pdf.
National Association for Business Economics, 2021, “NABE panelists temper forecast
for GDP growth in 2021; two-thirds expect full job market recovery by late 2022,” NABE
Outlook Survey summary, Washington, DC, September, available online,
https://www.nabe.com/NABE/NABE/Surveys/Outlook_Surveys/september-2021-
Outlook-Survey-Summary.aspx.
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, November, pp. 283–299. Crossref, https://doi.org/10.2307/2550759
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Cite this document
APA
Charles L. Evans (2022, October 9). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20221010_charles_l_evans
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20221010_charles_l_evans,
author = {Charles L. Evans},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2022},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20221010_charles_l_evans},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}