speeches · October 1, 2023
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
A Timely Journey Back to Price Stability:
Are We There Yet? No. Will We Get There? Yes.
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
The 50 Club
Cleveland, OH
October 2, 2023
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Introduction
I thank Dan Walsh and the 50 Club for inviting me to speak this evening. The FOMC, which sets
monetary policy in the U.S., met less than two weeks ago. So this is an excellent time to give you an
update on the economy and monetary policy. 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 FOMC.
The Cleveland Fed is only a couple of blocks away from here. We are celebrating the 100th anniversary
of our building this year, and we are very proud to be part of the architectural history of Cleveland. We
are even prouder to be part of the civic landscape. I feel privileged to represent the Fourth Federal
Reserve District, which comprises the state of Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and West
Virginia, at our policy meetings in Washington. Many of you also play an important role in the monetary
policymaking process because you generously provide us with insights into economic conditions, whether
it be through our surveys, as members of our advisory councils, or as directors. The reconnaissance that
you provide on business activity, the labor market, and financial conditions is often more timely than the
official data, so it helps us evaluate not only where the economy is but where it is going. This kind of
information helps me formulate my economic outlook and my views on monetary policy to foster the
Fed’s statutory goals of price stability and maximum employment. Thank you for this public service.
The Journey So Far
Before I turn to the outlook for the economy, it’s good to recap where we’ve been. Before the pandemic
hit in early 2020, the U.S. economy had been on very solid ground. It was the 11th year of the expansion
and the labor market was very strong. The unemployment rate was at historically low levels, jobs were
growing at a strong pace, and participation in the labor force was solid. After being too low for some
time, inflation was near the FOMC’s longer-run goal of 2 percent.
Of course, the pandemic changed all that.
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The economy shut down in March 2020, and fiscal and monetary policymakers took aggressive actions to
support households and businesses, ensuring that credit continued to flow and limiting lasting damage to
the economy. When public health statistics began to improve in May 2020, many parts of the country
began to relax some of their stay-at-home restrictions, and the economy began to reopen.
But it was not business as usual. The mandated shutdowns and the voluntary pullback in demand for
high-contact services led consumers to shift spending from services to goods early in the pandemic. As
health conditions improved and the economy reopened, demand surged and was supported by fiscal
transfers and accommodative monetary policy. Spending has been shifting back from goods to services,
although the spending levels in both of these sectors are not yet back to their pre-pandemic trends. The
pandemic also led many people to leave the workforce, making it much more difficult for firms to find the
workers they needed. Remote work became much more common. This led to changes in the demand for
housing, and sales of new and existing single-family homes surged in 2020 and 2021. In addition, supply
chains were disrupted, making it much more difficult for firms to keep up with demand for their products.
The changes in spending patterns, workforce participation, housing demand, and supply chains led to a
situation in which demand in both product markets and labor markets became out of balance with supply.
Those imbalances occurred in an environment of accommodative fiscal and monetary policy, which led to
a significant increase in inflation starting in the spring of 2021. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February
2022 added to inflationary pressures, spurring higher prices for oil, food, and other commodities. In
2022, headline inflation reached levels not seen in 40 years, running 7 to 9 percent, depending on the
measure.
Economic Developments
In response to the sharp rise in inflation, the Fed began tightening the stance of monetary policy in March
of last year. Since then, the FOMC has raised the target range of the federal funds rate, its policy rate, by
5-1/4 percentage points. We are also reducing the size of the Fed’s balance sheet by allowing assets to
roll off in a systematic way according to the plan announced in May 2022. This balance-sheet reduction
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is also firming the stance of monetary policy. The tightening of monetary policy has led to a broader
tightening in financial conditions. Treasury yields, mortgage rates, and credit spreads have risen. Banks
have been tightening their credit standards, making credit less available to businesses and households, but
the contraction in credit has not been sharper than what one might expect given the rise in interest rates.
As this tighter monetary policy has transmitted to the broader economy, demand has begun to moderate.
At the same time, supply chain disruptions have improved. Our business contacts report that bottlenecks
have eased, and survey data indicate that delivery times have shortened. Businesses have also told us that
they have learned how to better navigate supply issues. So demand and supply are adjusting and coming
into better balance.
Real output growth has slowed from its robust pace in 2021, but the economy appears to have more
underlying momentum than was apparent at the end of last year. Consumers have been particularly
resilient. Consumer spending makes up about 70 percent of GDP; it has been increasing at a solid pace
this year, supported by strong income growth and savings accumulated during the pandemic. Businesses
have moderated their spending on equipment and software as demand has slowed, but our business
contacts are more optimistic than they were at the beginning of the year that the economy will avoid a
recession. In the housing market, there is a longer-term shortage of available housing; so despite the
sharp increase in mortgage rates over the past two years, with the 30-year rate now nearing 8 percent,
housing starts and sales of existing homes have stabilized and sales of new single-family homes are
beginning to pick up again. This overall performance suggests there is more underlying momentum in the
economy than we thought even just three months ago. In fact, FOMC participants’ projections of
economic growth this year were revised up at our recent meeting.1 Now, instead of projecting that growth
will be well below trend this year, the median projection is that growth will be a bit over 2 percent, which
1 Four times a year, the FOMC summarizes Committee participants’ projections of output growth, the
unemployment rate, inflation, and the associated appropriate policy path. For the September 2023 Summary of
Economic Projections, see https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomcprojtabl20230920.htm.
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is somewhat above trend. Growth is expected to slow to below trend next year as tighter credit and
financial conditions and waning fiscal support for households weigh on spending.
Labor market conditions remain strong but are moderating, bringing labor demand and supply into better
balance. The unemployment rate in Ohio is 3.4 percent, near its historical low. But our business contacts
say they are seeing some easing in the labor market, with increases in job applications and in the number
of candidates coming in for interviews. Only a small number of firms told us that they plan to lay off
workers this year. But many firms said they are slowing their hiring and fewer businesses are hoarding
workers since it has become easier to hire. We are seeing the same thing in the national job market. The
national unemployment rate is low, at 3.8 percent, with August’s rise in the unemployment rate mainly
reflecting an increase in labor force participation. Job growth has slowed over the course of the year, with
payroll gains averaging 150 thousand per month over the past three months compared to about 300
thousand per month over the first three months of the year. The number of job openings has also been
declining, but the ratio of job openings to unemployed workers is 1.5, which is still above the 1.2 level
seen in the strong labor market conditions in 2019.
Wage pressures are easing by some measures. Firms in our District tell us they are not having to adjust
compensation as frequently as in the last few years except for those workers with specialized skills and in
sectors with shortages, including nursing. Expected wage increases among our contacts have moved
down, but at 4 percent, they remain higher than wage gains seen before the pandemic. In the nation, wage
growth is still well above the level consistent with 2 percent inflation given current estimates of trend
productivity growth. While increased labor force participation by prime-age workers is helping to ease
the imbalance between labor demand and supply, it seems likely that labor demand conditions will also
need to ease further to bring wage growth down to levels consistent with 2 percent inflation. In the
September FOMC projections, the median participant expects the unemployment rate to rise over the next
year, but only a little, to 4.1 percent, which is consistent with a moderating but still solid labor market.
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Inflation
The Fed’s inflation goal is 2 percent, measured by the annual change in the price index for personal
consumption expenditures, or PCE inflation. Inflation has been running well above the Fed’s goal for
more than two years. The good news is that the overall economy remains relatively strong, and at the
same time, we are making discernable progress on the journey back to price stability. Inflation levels,
both the headline numbers, which include food and energy prices, and measures of underlying inflation,
including the core, median, and trimmed-mean measures, have moved down from their peaks. Measured
year-over-year, total PCE inflation peaked at 7 percent in June of last year. As of this August, it has
fallen to about 3-1/2 percent, despite the recent rise in oil prices. Other measures that strip out the
components with the most extreme price movements each month and which tend to give a better
indication of the inflation trend are also improving. The Cleveland Fed’s Center for Inflation Research
produces and tracks a number of inflation indicators.2 The Cleveland Fed’s median PCE inflation
measure peaked at just over 6 percent in March and is now down to 4-1/2 percent. And core PCE
inflation, which omits food and energy prices, peaked at over 5-1/2 percent last year and moved down to
under 4 percent in August. The progress is even easier to see when you look at the price changes over
shorter time horizons, such as three-month or six-month annualized inflation rates, and when you look at
inflation in the prices of goods excluding food and energy.
Despite the progress, inflation remains too high. We will need to see continued progress on inflation in
goods prices. Since consumers spend a larger share of their income on services, services have a higher
weight in the inflation indices.3 So we also need to see more progress on inflation in the prices of
services. Inflation in housing services, measured by rents and the imputed rents for owner-occupied
2 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/center-for-inflation-research).
3 About 65 percent of the total consumption basket is core services compared to about 23 percent for core goods.
The rest of the basket comprises energy (4 percent) and food at home (8 percent). Housing services, a component of
core services, constitute about 15 percent of consumers’ total spending.
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housing, remains elevated but has begun to slow, reflecting moderating rent inflation in new leases. But
inflation in core services excluding housing has shown little improvement over time.
Moreover, the risks to the inflation forecast remain tilted to the upside. We have been helped on the
inflation journey by the fact that despite high inflation rates, medium- and longer-term inflation
expectations remain reasonably well-anchored in a range consistent with the Fed’s goal of 2 percent
inflation. But oil prices are now increasing. There is the potential that they will pass through to other
core prices and stall progress. In addition, because gasoline prices are particularly salient for households
that have to fill up their cars or trucks once or twice a week, rising gasoline prices could begin to make
consumers think inflation will be rising again. If so, higher inflation could become embedded in people’s
view of the economy and affect their behavior in ways inconsistent with price stability.4 In fact, when we
asked our regional business contacts their expectations for inflation, the mean response was nearly 4
percent for the year ahead and 3.2 percent for the next five years, considerably higher than our target.
While we have not yet completed the journey back to price stability, there should be no doubt that the
FOMC will get the job done. To achieve our longer-run goal of 2 percent inflation in a sustainable and
timely way, we will need to see continued sustained disinflation and that will likely require further
moderation of demand in both product and labor markets. This brings me to monetary policy.
Monetary Policy
At its recent meeting, the FOMC decided to maintain the target range of the fed funds rate at 5-1/4 to
5-1/2 percent and to continue to reduce the Fed’s securities holdings. In determining the extent of
additional policy firming that may be appropriate, the FOMC will be assessing incoming economic and
4 Cleveland Fed researchers find that households form their expectations of inflation based on their lifetime
experience of inflation, which means that acting to bring down inflation in a timely way to limit experience with
high inflation will yield longer-term benefits. See Mathieu O. Pedemonte, Hiroshi Toma, and Esteban Verdugo,
“Aggregate Implications of Heterogeneous Inflation Expectations: The Role of Individual Experience,” Working
Paper No. 23-04, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, January 2023. (https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-wp-202304)
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financial developments as well as the cumulative effects of the tightening done so far, since we know that
monetary policy affects the economy with a lag. The economic projections released by the FOMC in
September indicate that the median participant thinks another rate increase will be appropriate this year
and that monetary policy will have to be held sufficiently restrictive for a while in order to get inflation
back down to 2 percent.
This is consistent with my own reading of economic conditions, the outlook, and the risks to the outlook.
At this point, I suspect we may well need to raise the fed funds rate once more this year and then hold it
there for some time as we accumulate more information on economic developments and assess the effects
of the tightening in financial conditions that has already occurred. But whether the fed funds rate needs to
go higher than its current level and for how long policy needs to remain restrictive will depend on how
the economy evolves relative to the outlook. There is considerable uncertainty around the outlook: for
example, the slowdown in the Chinese economy, the possibility of an extended UAW strike, and the
potential for a government shutdown later this year all pose some risks around the outlook. So policy
decisions will need to be guided by actual progress on our dual mandate goals, in particular, whether the
good rate of progress we have seen on inflation over the past three months is sustained and whether labor
market conditions remain healthy as they moderate. This will require us to carefully monitor economic,
banking, and financial market developments and to collect reports from our regional contacts, so that we
can set monetary policy in a way that balances the costs over time of over-tightening vs. under-tightening
monetary policy. Tightening too much would slow the economy more than necessary and entail higher
costs than needed to get inflation back to our goal. Tightening too little would allow high inflation to
persist, with short- and long-run consequences, and would necessitate a much longer and more costly
journey back to price stability.
A Timely Return to Price Stability
Let me conclude by explaining why I think it is important that we return the economy to price stability in
a timely way. I want to guard against becoming complacent with moderating inflation if the pace of that
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moderation implies it is going to take longer and longer to achieve the Fed’s 2 percent goal. Many
forecasters have been underestimating the persistence of inflation since the beginning of this high-
inflation episode. FOMC participants have been pushing out the date of when inflation is expected to
return to our goal. For example, the June 2021 median FOMC projection had core inflation moving down
to 2.1 percent in 2022. A year later, the median projection had core inflation not reaching our goal until
after 2024, and now, according to the median projection in September, our 2 percent goal is not expected
to be reached until 2026.
When inflation persists at levels above our goal of price stability, the price level is moving up faster than
we would like and households and businesses have to pay those higher-than-desired prices. Since the first
quarter of 2021, when inflation began to rise, inflation has been running at an annualized pace of nearly
5-1/2 percent, while worker compensation (as measured by the employment cost index for private
workers’ compensation) has risen less, at an annualized rate of just over 4-1/2 percent. This means that
despite sizable increases in nominal wages, compensation adjusted for inflation hasn’t been keeping up
with the high rate of inflation over this episode. This is likely part of the reason Cleveland Fed surveys
find that people have a strong dislike of high inflation.5
High inflation also imposes longer-run costs on the economy. It makes it harder to plan for the future,
and it affects people’s decisions about getting an education or training for a new job and businesses’
decisions about whether to invest in new plants and equipment. These types of investments in human and
physical capital help determine our economy’s pace of innovation and productivity growth and therefore
its potential growth rate and our longer-run standard of living. It is costly to our economy in both the
short and the long run to allow inflation to remain so high for so long.
5 See Ina Hajdini, Edward S. Knotek II, John Leer, Mathieu Pedemonte, Robert W. Rich, and Raphael S. Schoenle,
“Low Passthrough from Inflation Expectations to Income Growth Expectations: Why People Dislike Inflation,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland Working Paper No. 22-21R, March 2023 (https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-wp-
202221r).
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Finally, getting inflation back to 2 percent in a timely way puts the economy in a better position to
weather the next shock, whenever it occurs. An economy that is at maximum employment and price
stability is a stronger economy and one that is more resilient to shocks.
Summary
So, in summary, the economy is on a good path. Demand is moderating and supply conditions are
improving. Labor market conditions remain strong, but the imbalance between labor demand and supply
is narrowing and firms are finding it easier to find the workers they need. Progress is being made on
inflation, but the level of inflation remains too high. We are likely near or possibly at the peak of the fed
funds tightening cycle. Now our task turns to ensuring that we keep monetary policy restrictive for long
enough to be confident that inflation returns to our 2 percent goal in a timely way. We are not there yet,
but we will get there because price stability is critical for the long-run health of the labor market, the
overall economy, and the stability of the financial system.
Thank you for your attention. I look forward to our discussion.
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2023, October 1). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20231002_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20231002_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2023},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20231002_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}