speeches · August 28, 2003
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
8:00 a.m. MDT (10:00 a.m. EDT)
August 29, 2003
Opening Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
a symposium sponsored by the
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Jackson Hole, Wyoming
August 29, 2003
Monetary Policy under Uncertainty
Uncertainty is not just an important feature of the monetary policy landscape; it is the
defining characteristic of that landscape. As a consequence, the conduct of monetary policy in
the United States at its core involves crucial elements of risk management, a process that requires
an understanding of the many sources of risk and uncertainty that policymakers face and the
quantifying of those risks when possible. It also entails devising, in light of those risks, a
strategy for policy directed at maximizing the probabilities of achieving over time our goal of
price stability and the maximum sustainable economic growth that we associate with it.
Toward that objective, we have drawn on the work of analysts who over the past half
century have devoted much effort to improving our understanding of the economy and its
monetary transmission mechanism. A critical result has been the identification of a relatively
small set of key relationships that, taken together, provide a useful approximation of our
economy's dynamics. Such an approximation underlies the statistical models that we at the
Federal Reserve employ to assess the likely influence of our policy decisions.
Despite the extensive efforts to capture and quantify these key macroeconomic
relationships, our knowledge about many of the important linkages is far from complete and in
all likelihood will always remain so. Every model, no matter how detailed or how well designed
conceptually and empirically, is a vastly simplified representation of the world that we
experience with all its intricacies on a day-to-day basis. Consequently, even with large advances
in computational capabilities and greater comprehension of economic linkages, our knowledge
base is barely able to keep pace with the ever-increasing complexity of our global economy.
Given this state of flux, it is apparent that a prominent shortcoming of our structural
models is that, for ease in parameter estimation, not only are economic responses presumed fixed
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through time, but they are generally assumed to be linear. An assumption of linearity may be
adequate for estimating average relationships, but few expect that an economy will respond
linearly to every aberration. Although some nonlinearities are accounted for in our modeling
exercises, we cannot be certain that our simulations provide reasonable approximations of the
economy's behavior in times of large idiosyncratic shocks.
Recent history has also reinforced the perception that the relationships underlying the
economy's structure change over time in ways that are difficult to anticipate. This has been most
apparent in the changing role of our standard measure of the money stock. Because an interest
rate, by definition, is the exchange rate for money against non-monies, money obviously is
central to monetary policy. However, in the past two decades, what constitutes money has been
obscured by the introduction of technologies that have facilitated the proliferation of financial
products and have altered the empirical relationship between economic activity and what we
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define as money, and in doing so has inhibited the keying of monetary policy to the control of the
measured money stock.1
Another example of ongoing structural change relates to innovations in mortgage finance.
This includes the elimination of Regulation Q, the emergence of variable rate loans, the growth
of the mortgage-backed securities market, and improvements in the efficiency of the credit
application process. These developments appear to have buffered activity in the housing market
to some extent from shifts in monetary policy. But some of the same innovations in housing
finance have opened new avenues of policy influence on economic behavior. For example,
households have been able with increasing ease to extract equity from their homes, and this
Nonetheless, in the tradition of Milton Friedman, it is difficult to disregard the long-run
relationship between money and prices. In particular, since 1959 unit money supply, the ratio of
M2 to real GDP, has increased at an annual rate of 3.7 percent and GDP prices have risen
3.8 percent per year. (A consistent time-series for M2 is available back to 1959. Among other
changes, deposit data at a daily frequency were incorporated in measures of the monetary
aggregates as of that date.)
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doubtless has helped support consumer spending in recent years, complementing the traditional
effects of monetary policy.
* * *
What then are the implications of this largely irreducible uncertainty for the conduct of
monetary policy? A well-known proposition is that, under a very restrictive set of assumptions,
uncertainty has no bearing on the actions that policymakers might choose, and so they should
proceed as if they know the precise structure of the economy.2 These assumptions—linearity in
the structure of the economy, perfect knowledge of the interest-sensitivity of aggregate spending
and other so-called slope parameters, and a very specific attitude of policymakers toward
risk-are never met in the real world.
Indeed, given our inevitably incomplete knowledge about key structural aspects of our
ever-changing economy and the sometimes asymmetric costs or benefits of particular outcomes,
a central bank seeking to maximize its probability of achieving its goals is driven, I believe, to a
risk-management approach to policy. By this I mean that policymakers need to consider not only
the most likely future path for the economy but also the distribution of possible outcomes about
2William Brainard, "Uncertainty and the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy," American
Economic Review, May 1967, pp. 411-25.
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that path. They then need to reach a judgment about the probabilities, costs, and benefits of the
various possible outcomes under alternative choices for policy.
A policy action that is calculated to be optimal based on a simulation of one particular
model may not, in fact, be optimal once the full extent of uncertainty in the policymaking
environment is taken into account. In general, it is entirely possible that different policies will
exhibit different degrees of robustness with respect to the true underlying structure of the
economy. For example, policy A might be judged as best advancing the policymakers'
objectives, conditional on a particular model of the economy, but might also be seen as having
relatively severe adverse consequences if the true structure of the economy turns out to be other
than the one assumed. On the other hand, policy B might be somewhat less effective in
advancing the policy objectives under the assumed baseline model but might be relatively benign
in the event that the structure of the economy turns out to differ from the baseline. These
considerations have inclined Federal Reserve policymakers toward policies that limit the risk of
deflation even though the baseline forecasts from most conventional models would not project
such an event.
* * *
At times, policy practitioners operating under a risk-management paradigm may be led to
undertake actions intended to provide some insurance against the emergence of especially
adverse outcomes. For example, following the Russian debt default in the fall of 1998, the
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) eased policy despite our perception that the economy
was expanding at a satisfactory pace and that, even without a policy initiative, was likely to
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continue to do so.3 We eased policy because we were concerned about the low-probability risk
that the default might severely disrupt domestic and international financial markets, with
outsized adverse feedback to the performance of the U.S. economy.
The product of a low-probability event and a severe outcome, should it occur, was judged
a larger threat than the possible adverse consequences of insurance that might prove
unnecessary. The cost~or premium—of the financial-contagion insurance was the associated
increase in the risk of higher inflation at some future date. This cost was viewed as relatively
low at the time, largely because increased competition, driven by globalization, thwarted
employers' ability to pass through higher labor costs into prices. Given the Russian default, the
benefits of the unusual policy action were deemed to outweigh its costs.
Such a cost-benefit analysis is an ongoing part of monetary policy decisionmaking, and
tips more toward monetary ease when the fallout from a contractionary event such as the Russian
default seems increasingly likely and its occurrence seems especially costly. Conversely, in
1979, with inflation threatening to get out of control, the cost to the economy of a major
withdrawal of liquidity was judged far less than the potential long-term consequences of leaving
accelerating prices unaddressed.
3See minutes of the FOMC meeting of September 29, 1998.
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* * *
In implementing a risk-management approach to policy, we must confront the fact that
only a limited number of risks can be quantified with any confidence. And even these risks are
generally quantifiable only if we accept the assumption that the future will replicate the past.
Other risks are essentially unquantifiable—representing Knightian uncertainty, if you
will — because we may not fully appreciate even the full range of possibilities, let alone each
possibility's likelihood. As a result, risk management often involves significant judgment on the
part of policymakers, as we evaluate the risks of different events and the probability that our
actions will alter those risks.
For such judgment, we policymakers, rather than relying solely on the specific linkages
expressed in our formal models, have tended to draw from broader, though less mathematically
precise, hypotheses of how the world works. For example, inference of how market participants
might respond to a monetary policy initiative may need to reference past behavior during a period
only roughly comparable to the current situation.
Some critics have argued that such an approach to policy is too
undisciplined—judgmental, seemingly discretionary, and difficult to explain. The Federal
Reserve should, some conclude, attempt to be more formal in its operations by tying its actions
solely to the prescriptions of a formal policy rule. That any approach along these lines would
lead to an improvement in economic performance, however, is highly doubtful. Our problem is
not the complexity of our models but the far greater complexity of a world economy whose
underlying linkages appear to be in a continual state of flux.
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Rules by their nature are simple, and when significant and shifting uncertainties exist in
the economic environment, they cannot substitute for risk-management paradigms, which are far
better suited to policymaking. Were we to introduce an interest rate rule, how would we judge
the meaning of a rule that posits a rate far above or below the current rate? Should policymakers
adjust the current rate to that suggested by the rule? Should we conclude that this deviation is
normal variance and disregard the signal? Or should we assume that the parameters of the rule
are misspecified and adjust them to fit the current rate? Given errors in our underlying data,
coupled with normal variance, we might not know the correct course of action for a considerable
time. Partly for these reasons, the prescriptions of formal interest rate rules are best viewed only
as helpful adjuncts to policy, as indeed many proponents of policy rules have suggested.
* * *
In summary then, monetary policy based on risk management appears to be the most
useful regime by which to conduct policy. The increasingly intricate economic and financial
linkages in our global economy, in my judgment, compel such a conclusion. Over the next
couple of days, we will have the opportunity to consider in greater detail some important changes
in our economic and financial systems and their implications for the conduct of monetary policy.
As always, I look forward to an engaging discussion.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2003, August 28). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20030829_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20030829_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2003},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20030829_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}