speeches · May 2, 2024
Regional President Speech
Austan D. Goolsbee · President
Central Bank
Communications
Beyond “How Many?”
Austan D. Goolsbee
Hoover Monetary Policy Conference:
Getting Global Monetary Policy On Track
Hoover Institution at Stanford University
Stanford, CA
May 3, 2024
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of
the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Central Bank Communications
Beyond “How Many?”
Austan D. Goolsbee
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Thank you for the invitation out to the conference. It’s a special delight for me to see
John Cochrane, my old neighbor from across the street. John used to keep our emergency
house key for us, and the alarm company would call him if things went wrong and we
weren’t there. I’m hoping that if my talk goes sideways here, he’s still willing to be my
emergency contact.
And I should add now, to the great relief of my colleagues, that these are my own
views and not those of the Federal Reserve System or the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
Today, I want to talk a bit about central bank communications, but I came to it in an
odd way.
When I started at the Chicago Fed in January ’23, it felt like we had just lived through a
really crazy time in our economic history and there were so many fundamental economic
issues we needed to discuss and resolve.
But then at my first appearances with the press, the questions seemed to always center on
the same thing: So, how many rate hikes do you see this year?
I was actually a bit dismayed. By itself, with no economic context or rationale or even
what a person thinks will happen with economic conditions, the answer to “how many?”
is mostly just speculation. There is not much economic content in a question like that.
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Why not ask about what is actually informative about future decision-making—like
reaction functions or economic worldviews or risk assessments?
In my puzzlement about why they seem so interested in context-free numbers, I have
concluded that this may be a bit of our own doing in that some aspects of our current
communications approach actually encourage this kind of speculation.
So today I would like to make three points: where I think Fed communications, especially
in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), fails to deliver economic information
that it could; how it might be improved; and the importance of participants’ public
speaking and writings for communicating their reaction functions and risk-management
considerations. And I will conclude with a bit of a defense of cacophony, the much-
maligned bugaboo of FOMC communications.
Everyone knows that communications issues have always been important for central
banks and are closely tied to inflation expectations, bank credibility, and even public
trust. I’m not sure I’m fully on board with Ben Bernanke’s comment that monetary
policy is 98 percent talk and 2 percent action, but we all know the importance of a clear
understanding of a central bank’s goals and strategies in monetary policy transmission.
The Fed and many other central banks’ approaches to communications have changed
dramatically in the past 30 years with the shift to much greater transparency.
One of the leading components of that has been the Summary of Economic Projections
and its “dot plot” of FOMC participants’ interest rate projections. In it, each person
gives an answer (anonymously) to the “how many?” question and does so for the next
several years.
3
It is widely followed and provides a dose of transparency about a diverse collection
of views. And its influence may be spreading. Recently there have been high-level
considerations of whether the European Central Bank (ECB) should adopt a dot plot.
As a starting thought, though, it is worth noting that in the 2020 Hutchins Center survey
of academic and private sector Fed watchers, only about 50 percent of respondents
1
reported that they find the dot plot useful.
One thing that might be pulling that number down, in my opinion, is that the SEP is
not actually that useful for identifying FOMC participants’ monetary policy reaction
functions. I’m defining the reaction function broadly here—how someone would react to
changes in economic conditions—rather than in a technical way, like what their policy
function coefficients are in a Taylor rule.
I mostly agree with the old Mervyn King (2000) argument that it’s a sign of success
when markets react to new data releases more than to statements of central banker
2
opinions. One key to achieving that outcome is that people understand FOMC
participants’ reaction functions.
The SEP isn’t that helpful in communicating them. Each participant’s rate path projection
is made with a forecast of economic conditions, but the SEP does not report which goes
with which. Even the median doesn’t give you a coherent observation because the person
making the median rate projection is not likely to be the same person making the median
inflation or gross domestic product (GDP) projection.
Without a connection of economic conditions to rate projections, the dot plot is just a
collection of opinions without economic content. No wonder the press doesn’t ask about
1 Powell and Wessel (2021).
2 As King (2000) stated, “A transparent monetary policy reaction function means that the news should be in developments of the
economy not in the announcements of decisions by the central bank.”
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anything else. Our own major communications document implicitly tells them that the
economic rationale isn’t needed. Just tell us “how many” and we’ll put them in a plot.
Because it can’t be connected to the economic conditions the participant thinks will justify
that interest rate, there is nothing to tell us why they think this a reasonable choice.
We can do better. In a way, this is really a cousin to the old debate about time-dependent
versus state-contingent forward guidance. State-contingent guidance is more useful
because it conveys economic content and a reaction function.
Saying in 2011 that the Committee doesn’t expect to raise rates for two years is not as
helpful as an Evans rule that it won’t consider moving until unemployment is below
6.5 percent as long as inflation is below 2.5 percent. The time-based guidance is basically
just opinion. The Evans rule clarifies what the Committee is watching and conveys
information about its reaction function.
Now think about the dot plot. It’s a lot like time-dependent guidance. It’s not tied to
anything. We would be better off if it could be more like state-dependent guidance—more
like a reaction function.
So let’s consider how the SEP could be made more useful in this way: First, I am going
to echo some comments that Mickey and Charlie just made. We could go a long way
by publishing the matrix. It doesn’t need to personally attribute each projection, but at
least a matrix that anonymously matches the economic forecasts to the rate path for each
participant would answer some important questions.
For example, suppose you observe a high dot for next year’s funds rate. You could tell in
the matrix whether it was that they think the economy is overheating and they want to
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rein in inflation or they think faster, noninflationary growth implies a higher equilibrium
rate. Today you can’t.
Over time, more would be revealed about reaction functions as observed changes in the
economic environment show the relationships between participants’ views on the outlook
and appropriate policy.
Another, more direct form of state-contingent information might be to add something like
the stress test scenarios that are done for banks or the alt sims in the Tealbook. Of course
this wouldn’t be as easy to implement as publishing the matrix, but it is food for thought
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on how to convey reaction functions.
But the goal is to convey information about how participants might respond to
developments. It’s also helpful when their speeches and writings explain their thinking.
And this idea also highlights the important piece of communications—which is conveying
the implications of unusual circumstances and risk management for setting policy. In
times of heightened uncertainty or unusual risks, the policy playbook can be complicated
and requires more than just dots. And such times seem to happen with uncomfortably
high frequency.
The Committee has communicated unusual circumstances and practiced risk-management
policy for a long time. This shows up in formal voted-upon FOMC statements, policy tilts,
and other communications. Examples over the past 30 years include the 1990s policy
responses to the Asian Financial Crisis and the Russian default; the recognition in 2003
of the then-novel risk that inflation in the U.S. could be too low; and the heightened
uncertainty in 2007–08 as the financial crisis unfolded even while some inflation risk
3 People have been thinking about these kinds of ideas from the earliest days of the SEP releases. The FOMC discussed
them as alternatives when it debated and ultimately rejected producing a consensus forecast back in 2012. Among
external commentators, a prominent paper by Steve Cecchetti and Kim Schoenholtz written for the public Fed Listens
portion of the 2019 policy framework review explicitly called for publishing the matrix (Cecchetti and Schoenholtz,
2019).
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remained. And we are all familiar with examples surrounding the Great Recession and
the pandemic.
In all of these cases, communications was an important tool to get us beyond context-
free “how many?” discussions and to provide the public with better state-contingent
information that underlies our policy decisions.
Conclusion
So my plea is that we try to push our communications and especially the SEP to better
convey how we respond to economic conditions. This does mean a large number of
voices. Alan Blinder (2007) and others have called this the cacophony problem and
would probably view it as a negative of having this much information available to the
public before every meeting.
I don’t agree, though. Yes, it would be easier to understand if there is just one voice
talking about policy. But the FOMC is a committee with lots of views, and the policy gets
forged in that environment. Without offending the Senate, in my view, in the twenty-first
century the FOMC is the world’s greatest deliberative body. Having folks with different
worldviews makes for better decision-making. There’s nothing wrong with the public
knowing these views. It’s reality.
Today we are conducting policy during a fascinating and uncertain time. How we
communicate will be critical. We should endeavor to convey our deliberations and our
thinking, not just our opinion. It’s why I say that “how many?” is not enough.
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References
Blinder, Alan S., 2007, “Monetary policy by committee: Why and how?,” European Journal of
Political Economy, Vol. 23, No. 1, March, pp. 106–123. Crossref, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.
ejpoleco.2006.01.003
Cecchetti, Stephen G., and Kermit L. Schoenholtz, 2019, “Improving U.S. monetary policy
communications,” paper at Fed Listens Event: Conference on Monetary Policy Strategy, Tools
& Communication Practices, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, June 4, available online, https://
www.chicagofed.org/-/media/others/events/2019/monetary-policy-conference/communications-
cecchetti-schoenholtz-pdf.pdf.
King, Mervyn, 2000, “Monetary policy: Theory in practice,” speech by deputy governor, Bank of
England, given to the joint luncheon of the American Economic Association and the American
Finance Association, Boston, MA, January 7, available online, https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/-/
media/boe/files/speech/2000/monetary-policy-theory-in-practice.pdf.
Powell, Tyler, and David Wessel, 2021, “Survey of academic and market observers gives high
marks to Fed communications,” Brookings Institution, Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary
Policy, report, January 14, available online, https://www.brookings.edu/articles/survey-of-
academic-and-market-observers-gives-high-marks-to-fed-communications/.
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Cite this document
APA
Austan D. Goolsbee (2024, May 2). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20240503_austan_d_goolsbee
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20240503_austan_d_goolsbee,
author = {Austan D. Goolsbee},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2024},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20240503_austan_d_goolsbee},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}