speeches · October 10, 2022
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
An Update on the Economy and Monetary Policy:
Perseverance in Returning to Price Stability
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Signature Luncheon
Economic Club of New York
New York, NY
October 11, 2022
1
Introduction
I thank the Economic Club of New York for the opportunity to speak with you today. I am looking
forward to the dialog. It is likely no surprise that I will focus my prepared remarks on inflation and how
monetary policymakers will persevere in fostering a return to price stability. 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.
Unacceptably high and persistent inflation remains the key challenge facing the U.S. economy. Inflation
has been running well above 2 percent for almost a year and a half, and the risks to inflation forecasts are
skewed to the upside. Everyone is feeling the brunt of high inflation. It is imposing a particularly
onerous burden on those households and businesses that do not have the wherewithal to pay more for
essentials like food, gasoline, and shelter. Lower-income households spend a higher proportion of their
income on these essentials, and these components have had some of the strongest price increases. We
have moved from a situation in which households and businesses could be rationally inattentive to
inflation to one in which inflation is on everyone’s mind, with lower-income households having to make
hard choices about how to spend their money to make ends meet.
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. Without price stability, businesses and households
have to divert attention to trying to preserve the purchasing power of their money, and it becomes more
difficult to plan for the future and to make long-term commitments and investments. Hence, high
inflation can have negative long-run implications for an economy’s potential growth rate and standard of
living.
2
The FOMC is strongly committed to using its tools to return the economy to price stability and it will
persevere to make this happen. We are 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, the FOMC has reduced monetary policy accommodation by raising the target range of the fed
funds rate by 3 percentage points and by reducing assets the Fed is holding on its balance sheet.
Given the current level of inflation, its broad-based nature, and its persistence, I believe monetary policy
will need to become more restrictive in order to put inflation on a sustainable downward path to 2 percent.
Given appropriately restrictive financial conditions, my modal outlook is that inflation will move down
appreciably next year, to about 3-1/2 percent, and continue to decline, reaching our 2 percent goal in
2025. I anticipate that the return to price stability will entail a period of output growth that is well below
trend over the next two years. This below-trend growth will lead to slower employment growth, with the
unemployment rate moving up to 4-1/2 percent by the end of next year and up a bit more in 2024. We are
likely to experience higher-than-normal levels of financial market volatility as well. At this point, indices
constructed by the St. Louis Fed and the Kansas City Fed point to low levels of financial stress, but we
will need to remain attentive to financial vulnerabilities.1 With growth well below trend over the next
couple of years, it is possible that a shock could push the U.S. economy into recession for a time. None
of this is painless, but the high inflation we are experiencing is already inflicting pain on many people.
The necessary costs incurred now for the economy to transition back to price stability are much lower
than the costs borne later were inflation to become embedded in the economy, influencing wage- and
price-setting behavior, investment decisions, and longer-term productivity growth. 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.”2
1 The St. Louis Fed Financial Stress Index is available at https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/STLFSI3. The Kansas
City Financial Stress Index is available at https://www.kansascityfed.org/data-and-trends/kansas-city-financial-
stress-index/current-release/.
2 See Paul A. Volcker, “No Time for Backsliding,” remarks at the National Press Club, Washington, DC, September
25, 1981, p. 2. (https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/statements-speeches-paul-a-volcker-451/time-backsliding-8243)
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Economic Growth
The inflation we are experiencing today 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. Indeed, both aggregate demand and aggregate supply were affected by the pandemic and by
the responses of households, businesses, and policymakers to it. Mandated shutdowns and the voluntary
pullback in demand for high-contact services led to a shift in spending early in the pandemic from
services to goods. When the economy reopened, demand surged. This strong demand was supported by
the extraordinary level of fiscal transfers and accommodative monetary policy applied during the height
of the pandemic.
Economic growth is slowing down from last year’s robust 5-3/4 percent pace. Indeed, the level of real
GDP decreased in the first half of this year, but current estimates suggest that it resumed rising in the
second half. Activity is slowing partly in response to the monetary policy actions taken this year, which
have led to tighter overall financial conditions. This is most easily seen in the housing market. Housing
demand increased during the pandemic as housing preferences shifted. Housing supply, which was
already somewhat constrained before the pandemic, could not keep up with increased demand and house
prices rose. This year housing market activity has slowed appreciably as mortgage rates have risen 3-1/2
percentage points since the start of the year. Housing starts and sales have moved down. House price
inflation is beginning to ease but the year-over-year increase in house prices is still in double digits and
well above pre-pandemic levels; growth in rents also remains high.
In addition to tighter financial conditions, the slowdown in economic activity more broadly 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. Both
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consumer spending and business investment have decelerated from the robust pace seen last year, and as
the effects of the pandemic have waned, consumption has begun to shift from goods to services.
The supply side of the economy remains constrained relative to demand. There are signs that supply
chain bottlenecks, which have stemmed from pandemic-related shutdowns across the globe and the war in
Ukraine, have begun to ease.3 Our business contacts tell us that supply chain disruptions remain a
challenge but over time they have learned to navigate through them more effectively. They report that the
larger factor holding back production is the lack of available workers.
Labor Markets
We are seeing some signs of moderation in the labor market, but overall conditions remain very strong
and labor demand is still outpacing labor supply. The number of job openings has fallen this year, but
there are still 1.7 openings per unemployed person. Back in 2019, another time of tight labor markets,
there were about 1.2 openings per unemployed worker. Last year, job gains averaged over 550 thousand
per month. This year, through September, job gains have eased to an average of 420 thousand per month,
but that is still very strong job growth by historical standards. The unemployment rate is lower now than
it was at the start of the year, and at 3.5 percent is at a 50-year low. The participation rate of prime-age
workers has returned to where one would expect it to be based on demographics. 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 demand and
supply. But typically, most people who have retired and have begun to receive Social Security payments
do not return to the job market. I don’t expect to get much help from immigration either: net migration
3 The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Global Supply Chain Pressure Index (GSCPI) has fallen appreciably this
year but remains above its pre-pandemic level. And if transportation costs rise again, supply chain pressures may
also begin to rise. The GSCPI is available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/gscpi#/overview.
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has been declining since the late 1990s. So it is likely that much of the rebalancing will need to come on
the labor demand side. This could occur mainly through firms reducing the number of workers they are
seeking rather than through layoffs. Indeed, many employers have told us that because it has been so hard
to attract and retain workers over the past two years, they will strive to keep them on their payrolls even if
demand for their products slows down. This would result in a smaller rise in the unemployment rate than
has been seen in other economic slowdowns.
The imbalance between labor demand and supply has put upward pressure on wages. The employment
cost index for private industry workers accelerated over the six months ending in June, rising at a 6
percent annual pace. If you squint, more recent reports suggest that wage pressures may be starting to
stabilize. For example, average hourly earnings rose at about a 4-1/2 percent annual pace in the three
months ending in September, compared to a little over 4-3/4 percent in 2021. With trend productivity
growth estimated to be around 1-1/4 to 1-1/2 percent, nominal wage growth will need to moderate to
around 3-1/4 to 3-1/2 percent to be consistent with price stability. Even with the moderation in nominal
wage growth that will occur as the economy returns to price stability, workers will be better off. In real
terms, workers have been losing ground because wage increases have not kept up with inflation. Indeed,
since April of last year, wages adjusted for inflation have been declining. If real wages continue to
decline, it will be difficult to attract people back to the workforce, exacerbating the imbalance in the labor
market.
Inflation
Despite some moderation on the demand side of the economy and nascent signs of improvement in
supply side conditions, there has been no progress on inflation. Inflation readings have persisted at the
highest levels in 40 years. Measured year-over-year, in August, PCE inflation was still running over 6
percent and CPI inflation was over 8 percent. The core measures, which omit food and energy prices, and
the median and trimmed-mean measures, which exclude components with the most extreme movements
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each month, tell a similar story of broad-based, persistently high inflation.4 I note that we look at these
measures not because food and energy prices or the prices of other volatile components, such as apparel,
are not important parts of a household’s consumption basket. Indeed, our long-run inflation target is
based on total PCE inflation, which includes all components. But we look at these alternative measures
because they can give us a better sense of where inflation is likely going. Measured year-over-year, these
underlying inflation measures all moved up in August. The month-to-month changes in the inflation
measures have shown no real decline, so we cannot even say inflation has peaked yet, let alone that it is
on a sustainable downward path to 2 percent. 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 level since the early 1990s, with growth in housing rent and shelter costs
likely to keep inflation elevated for some time.
In my view, even with appropriate monetary policy actions, given inflation dynamics, it will take a couple
of years before inflation returns to the Fed’s 2 percent goal. But I do expect to see meaningful progress
over the next year as output growth and employment growth slow and there is some improvement in
supply side conditions. A key factor in this outlook is that medium- and longer-term inflation
expectations remain anchored at levels consistent with our 2 percent goal despite current high inflation
readings. This anchoring should help to bring inflation back to our goal without as large a change in the
output gap. It is the job of monetary policymakers to ensure that inflation expectations remain well
anchored.
4 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.
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/our-research/center-for-inflation-research.aspx)
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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. And as
always, we are 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 so we need to be forward looking. It is unlikely that we
have seen the full effects on households and businesses of the latest rate increases we have implemented
and it would not be appropriate to continue moving rates up until inflation is back down to 2 percent. But
it is also the case that based on Fed communications, financial conditions began to tighten well before our
first rate increase in March and those effects have been passing through to the economy. Yet high
inflation persists, an indication that we need to increase rates further.
In order to put inflation on a sustained downward trajectory to 2 percent, policy will need to move into a
restrictive stance. 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. Although we have
raised the nominal fed funds rate by 300 basis points, policy is not yet restrictive. The median projection
for the longer-run nominal fed funds rate in the September Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) of
FOMC participants is 2.5 percent, which is my own estimate as well.5 This means that if inflation were 2
percent, and inflation expectations were well anchored at levels consistent with that goal, a real fed funds
rate of half of a percent would be neutral in the sense of neither stimulating nor restraining economic
activity. But that is an important “if.” Currently, inflation and shorter-term inflation expectations are
well above 2 percent. If we adjust the current nominal fed funds rate by the SEP median projection for
inflation next year, which is 2.8 percent, policy is still a tad accommodative. Further funds rate increases
5 See Federal Open Market Committee, “Summary of Economic Projections,” September 21, 2022.
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20220921.pdf)
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are needed to get policy into a restrictive stance, and the median fed funds rate path in the SEP has rates
moving up to 4.4 percent by the end of this year and to 4.6 percent next year.
Because I see more persistence in inflation than the median SEP projection, the funds rate path I
submitted for the September SEP was a bit higher over the next year than the median path, and I do not
anticipate any cuts in the fed funds target range next year. But let me emphasize that this is based on my
current reading of the economy and outlook, and I will adjust my views as warranted based on the
implications of incoming economic and financial information for the outlook and risks around the
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. Given lags in the data, the reconnaissance we
receive from our contacts about what is happening on the ground in real-time will be particularly
important in assessing the effects of the cumulative tightening on the economy. Making this assessment
will be challenging because both the demand and the supply sides of the U.S. economy will continue to
be affected by a variety of factors. This includes economic and policy developments in the rest of the
world, which can affect the U.S. economy through trade and financial market channels.
We will be operating in an uncertain environment for some time. High uncertainty is usually associated
with being cautious, and being cautious is often associated with acting inertially. But in the current
environment of high and persistent inflation, a risk management, robust control approach counsels that
being cautious does not mean doing less. Instead, it means being very careful to not allow wishful
thinking to substitute for compelling evidence, leading one to prematurely declare victory over inflation
and pause or reverse rate increases too soon. It means not being complacent that inflation expectations
will remain well anchored in this high inflation environment but taking appropriate actions to keep them
anchored.
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It has been very helpful that medium- and longer-term inflation expectations have moved up less than
short-run expectations. They are below current inflation readings, an indication that the public believes
that inflation will move back down. Yet the recent declines in medium- and longer-term expectations
occurred as gasoline prices declined; the jury is still out about whether these readings will rise again if
gasoline prices move back up. In addition, every month that inflation remains highly elevated raises the
chances that inflation expectations will become unanchored and that firms and households will begin to
make decisions based on persistently high inflation. If that were to happen, returning to price stability
would be more difficult and much more costly in terms of lost output and higher unemployment. Even if
one doesn’t think an unanchoring of inflation expectations is the most likely scenario, the costs of being
wrong are high given the current state of the economy. So the robust control approach encourages strong
action to keep expectations anchored to prevent the worst-case outcome from actually occurring.6 In my
view, in the current environment, being cautious means that the FOMC should persevere in taking policy
actions to return the economy to price stability.
Summary
In summary, inflation remains very elevated and is placing a large burden on households and businesses.
The FOMC is committed to taking appropriate action to tighten financial conditions by raising the fed
funds rate and continuing to reduce the assets on the Fed’s balance sheet in order to return the economy to
price stability. Monetary policy is moving into restrictive territory and will need to be there for some
time in order to put inflation on a sustained downward path to our 2 percent goal. We will be looking at a
variety of incoming data and collecting economic and financial information from our business, labor
6 See Loretta J. Mester, “Inflation, Inflation Expectations, and Monetary Policymaking Strategy,” remarks at the
Distinguished Speaker Series, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Golub Center for Finance and Policy,
Cambridge, MA, September 26, 2022
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/newsroom-and-events/speeches/sp-20220926-inflation-inflation-expectations-and-
monetary-policymaking-strategy)
and Loretta J. Mester, “Acknowledging Uncertainty,” remarks at the Shadow Open Market Committee Fall Meeting,
New York, NY, October 7, 2016
(https://www.clevelandfed.org/newsroom-and-events/speeches/sp-20161007-acknowledging-uncertainty).
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market, and community contacts to help guide our policy decisions. As is always the case when we are
transitioning monetary policy, we will need to continue to weigh the risks of tightening too much against
the risks of tightening too little. Given current economic conditions and the outlook, in my view, at this
point the larger risks come from tightening too little and allowing very high inflation to persist and
become embedded in the economy. As the effects of tighter policy work through the broader economy, I
expect my view of the balance of these risks will shift, and I am looking forward to that time because it
will mean that we have made meaningful progress on the transition back to price stability.
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2022, October 10). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20221011_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20221011_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2022},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20221011_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}