speeches · October 16, 2003
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Governor
Panel Discussion
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 28th Annual Policy Conference:
Inflation Targeting: Prospects and Problems, October 17,2003
Should the Federal Reserve announce a quantitative inflation objective? Those
opposed to the idea have noted, correctly, that the Fed has built strong credibility as an
inflation-fighter without taking that step, and that that credibility has allowed the Fed to
be relatively flexible in responding to short-run disturbances to output and employment
without destabilizing inflation expectations. So, the opponents argue, why reduce that
flexibility unnecessarily by announcing an explicit target for inflation?
It would be foolish to deny that the Fed has been quite successful on the whole
over the past two decades. Whether the U.S. central bank would have been even more
successful, had it announced an explicit objective for inflation at some point, is
impossible to say. We just don't know. We can't re-run history; and although empirical
cross-country comparisons can be useful, they are far from being controlled experiments.
However, the relevant question at this point is not the unknowable outcome of the
historical counterfactual but whether, given the initial conditions we face today, the
adoption of an explicit inflation objective might not improve U.S. monetary policy in the
future. The Fed's environment today is different from that of the 1980s and 1990s in at
least one important respect, which is that price stability is no longer just over the horizon
but has been achieved-core inflation rates are currently not much above one percent.
Thus, in contrast to the experience of the past 35 years or so, in which there could be little
doubt about the Fed's desired direction for inflation, today the risks to inflation are more
nearly symmetrical; that is, inflation can be too low as well as too high.
A case can be made, I believe, that when the economy is operating in the region
of price stability, public expectations and beliefs about the central bank's plans and
objectives, always important, become even more so. First, because the public can no
longer safely assume that the central bank prefers lower to higher inflation, expectations
about future policy actions and future inflation may become highly sensitive to what the
public perceives to be the Fed's "just right" level of inflation. Uncertainty about this
"just right" level of inflation thus may translate, in tum, into broader economic and
financial uncertainty. Second, at very low inflation rates, the zero lower bound on the
policy interest rate is more likely to become relevant, which increases the potential
importance of effective expectations management by monetary policymakers. For
example, when interest rates are very low, the best way to ease policy may be to explain
to the public that the current low interest rate will be maintained for a longer period,
rather than simply lowering the current rate. The enhanced importance of public beliefs
and expectations about monetary policy in the region of price stability argues, it seems to
me, for greater attention by the central bank to its methods of communication with the
public in that region.
On the premise that effective communication is even more crucial near price
stability, I will focus today on how an incremental move toward inflation targeting, in the
form of the announcement of a long-run inflation objective, might help the Fed
communicate better and perhaps improve policy decisions as well, without the costs
feared by those concerned about potential loss of flexibility. As usual, my views are not
to be attributed to my colleagues on the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System or the Federal Open Market Committee.
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As a preliminary, I need to introduce the idea of the optimal long-run inflation
rate, or OLIR for short. (Suggestions for a catchier name are welcome.) The OLIR is the
long-run (or steady-state) inflation rate that achieves the best average economic
performance over time with respect to both the inflation and output objectives.
Note that the OLIR is the relevant concept for dual-mandate central banks, like
the Federal Reserve. Thus it is not necessarily equivalent to literal price stability, or zero
inflation adjusted for the usual measurement error bias. Rather, under a dual mandate, a
strong case can be made that, below a certain inflation rate, the benefits of reduced
microeconomic distortions gained from price stability are outweighed by the costs of too
frequent encounters of the funds rate with the zero-lower-bound on nominal interest rates.
(This argument underlies the common view that there should be a "buffer zone" against
deflation.) Hence, in general, the OLIR will be greater than zero inflation, correctly
measured. Note also that the OLIR is an average long-run rate; variation of actual
inflation around the OLIR over the business cycle would be expected and acceptable
(Meyer, 2003).
What is the OLIR for the U.S. economy? A fairly extensive recent literature has
attempted to quantify the OLIR. (See, e.g., Coenen, Orphanides, and Wieland, 2003, and
references therein.) Because direct measures of the benefits of low inflation are not
available, in practice papers in this literature estimate the OLIR to be the lowest inflation
rate for which the risk of the funds rate hitting the lower bound appears to be "acceptably
small." Interestingly, the results using this approach seem fairly consistent across
models and specifications, with several papers (including work using the FRBUS model,
see Reifschneider and Williams, 2000) having concluded that the risk of hitting the zero
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bound seems to decline sharply once the long-run average inflation rate rises to about 2
percent. In addition, other studies of the costs of very low inflation (such as the supposed
effects of downward nominal wage rigidity on the allocation oflabor) have found that
these costs are also largely eliminated at inflation rates of about 2 percent (Akerlof,
Dickens, and Perry, 1996; see also Altig, 2003).
Fortuitously, then, it may be the case that something in the vicinity of2 percent is
the optimal long-run average inflation rate for a variety of assumptions about the costs of
inflation, the structure of the economy, the distribution of shocks, etc. However, before
we embrace that number, many details remain to be filled in. For example, in practice,
much might depend on the specification of the inflation index, on assumptions made
about the steady-state value of the real interest rate, and other factors. Also important
would be getting a better sense of the range of uncertainty around this number. More
research on this issue would be highly worthwhile. As the economy seems currently to
be moving toward a sustainable expansion path, with a stabilizing rate of inflation,
having an estimate of the OLIR likewise seems crucial to making good policy in the next
few years. The issue is one that, in my view, the FOMC and the staff should be looking
at carefully.
Suppose, as I believe would be feasible, that the FOMC were able to agree on a
value or central tendency for the OLIR, based on the results of staff research and
discussion among Committee members. Of course, the value of OLIR would only be a
rough approximation to the "truth", but one cannot avoid making such approximations in
policymaking, whether implicitly or explicitly. Should the FOMC then take the next
step and announce this number to the public? Some have argued that such an
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announcement would be unnecessary because the Fed's implicit inflation objective is
already well understood by the market. I am skeptical. Publicly expressed preferences
by FOMe members for long-run inflation have ranged considerably, from less than I
percent to 2.5 percent or more. Long-run inflation expectations implicit in the pricing of
inflation-indexed securities vary significantly over time, and the apparently high
sensitivity oflong-term nominal interest rates to Fed actions suggests some uncertainty
about the Fed's long-run inflation target (Gurkaynak, Sack, and Swanson, 2003). Gavin
(2003) points out that the range of private-sector forecasts for inflation is typically higher
for the U.S. than for inflation-targeting countries.
If announcing the OLIR does not constrain short-run policy unduly, I really
cannot see any argument against it. To reassure those worried about possible loss of
short-run flexibility, my proposal is that the FOMe announce its value for the OLIR to
the public with the following provisos (not necessarily in these exact words):
(i) The FOMe believes that the stated inflation rate is the one that best
promotes its output, employment, and price stability goals in the long run.
Hence, in the long run, the FOMe will try to guide the inflation rate
toward the stated value and maintain it near that value on average over the
business cycle.
(ii) However, the FOMe regards this inflation rate as a long-run objective
only and sets no fixed time frame for reaching it. In particular, in deciding
how quickly to move toward the long-run inflation objective, the FOMe
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will always take into account the implications for near-term economic and
financial stability.
As you can see, stating the OLIR with these provisos places no unwanted
constraints on short-run monetary policy, leaving the Committee free to deal with current
financial and cyclical conditions as the Committee sees fit. In this respect, the proposal is
very similar to one recently advanced by Governor Gramlich (2003).
To be clear, because neither the horizon at which the inflation objective is to be
attained nor the expected path of inflation and output is specified under this proposal,
what I am suggesting is not equivalent to inflation targeting as commonly understood.
Instead, what is being proposed is an incremental step that I believe would provide
important benefits in itself and which would leave the door open for further steps later if
that seemed appropriate. In the language of Faust and Henderson (2003) at this
conference, my objective is to get the mean of inflation right while leaving the
determination of the variance open for future discussion and debate.
Without any fixed time frames for reaching the optimal long-run inflation rate,
would an announced value for the OLIR carry any credibility? I think it would, for the
important reason that the OLIR is not an arbitrarily selected value. In particular, because
this inflation rate would have been judged by the Committee to be the one under which
the economy operates best in the long run, the FOMC would have an incentive to try to
reach it eventually, even if it were not an announced long-run objective of policy. Thus,
despite the lack of a time frame, the OLIR should have long-run credibility, that is, it
should be the best (lowest-forecast-error) answer to the question: "What do you expect
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the average inflation rate in the United States to be over the ten-year period that begins
(say) three years from now?"
Additional reasons that the announcement would carry weight are the
accumulated credibility of the Fed and the fact that we are presumably starting from a
point near the optimal inflation rate, so that a period of costly disinflation will not be
needed to reach the OUR. In other words, this relatively unconstrained approach might
not work for other central banks, and it might not have worked for the Fed at other times
(e.g., when we were at early stages of the disinflation process); but given the current
configuration of circumstances, it should work now.
I have argued that announcing the OLIR would not have significant costs. What
are the benefits? In my view, the announcement of the OUR should serve as a useful
clarification of the long-run objective of the Fed and would thereby provide a long-run
"anchor" to monetary policy. Among other benefits, the announcement of the OUR
should help participants in financial markets price long-term bonds and other financial
assets more efficiently; help to lower inflation risk in financial markets and in other forms
of contracting; and tend to stabilize long-term inflation expectations more broadly, which
in tum would make short-run stabilization policy more effective (Orphanides and
Williams,2003). Although the announcement of the OLIR would not constrain short-run
policymaking in undesirable ways, it would nevertheless also help the market make
inferences about the likely timing and extent of tightening and easing cycles, since all
else equal the FOMe would want the inflation rate to move "asymptotically" toward the
long-run desired level. For example, if the current inflation rate were known to be below
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the OUR, that fact would convey some information about how long it will likely be
before the Fed begins its tightening cycle.
Because some of the principal benefits of announcing the OUR would arise from
the reduction of uncertainty in financial markets and in the economy more broadly, I
prefer the announcement of a single number for the OUR, or at least a number with a
surrounding tolerance range that is as narrow as the Committee can live with. I
acknowledge that the OUR cannot be determined precisely. Nevertheless, to the extent
that the FOMC is fairly indifferent over a modest range oflong-run inflation rates, there
would be a positive benefit to choosing a single number within that range and trying to
coordinate public expectations on that number.
Agreeing on and announcing a value for the OUR might improve policymaking
more directly, at least on the margin. In particular, the stated inflation objective would
help guide policy during periods, like now, in which the economy is (we hope) returning
to a sustainable growth path; at all times, it would also serve as a reminder to
policymakers to keep one eye on the long run at the same time that they are reacting to
current developments in the economy. But, to reiterate, it seems likely that the biggest
gains would be in the area of communications. Sharing the OUR with the public would
address the most important information asymmetry in the system: namely, the public's
imperfect knowledge of the FOMC's objectives. I believe this step would help to reduce
the reliance of the Fed on complex and easily misinterpreted qualitative language in its
communications with the public.
I conclude with a word on the politics of this proposal. One concern frequently
expressed about announcing an inflation objective is that the Congress would interpret
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the introduction of an inflation target as a repudiation of the dual mandate. This would
be a misinterpretation, but I understand why some legislators might draw the wrong
conclusion.
However, it seems to me that the recent attention to the risk of deflation changes
the political calculus. There now exists a broad awareness that an inflation rate that is too
low, by raising the probability of deflation and a binding zero bound on the nominal
interest rate, poses a threat to output and employment stability. Therefore the connection
between the announced OLIR and the real side of the economy will be much more
apparent to non-economists. Indeed, the entire rationale for the OLIR can be expressed
in terms of jobs and growth. The FOMC might say to Congress: "We don't want long
run inflation to be too high, because low inflation promotes growth and productivity. On
the other hand, inflation shouldn't be too low, because we want to have all the room we
need to respond to the dangers that deflation poses for output and employment. We pose
the objective in terms of inflation only because that is what the Fed can control in the
long run." It does not seem to me to be such a difficult case to make in terms of the
existing dual mandate. In addition we would have the explicit proviso that important
short-run economic and financial goals will not be sacrificed in order to reach the long
term inflation objective more quickly. Although it would be important to vet these ideas
thoroughly with the relevant Congressional committees before proceeding, I am hopeful
that a change of the type I am proposing would be acceptable to Congress as being within
the spirit of existing legislation.
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REFERENCES
Akerlof, George, William Dickens, and George Perry, "The Macroeconomics of Low
Inflation," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1996:1, 1-76.
Altig, David, "What is the Right Inflation Rate?", Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland,
Economic Commentary, September 15,2003.
Coenen, Gunter, Athanasios Orphanides, and Volker Wieland, "Price Stability and
Monetary Policy Effectiveness When Nominal Interest Rates are Bounded at Zero," ECB
working paper series no. 231, May 2003.
Gavin, William, "Inflation Targeting: Why it Works and How to Make it Work Better,"
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, working paper 2003-027B, September 2003.
Gramlich, Edward, "Maintaining Price Stability," remarks before the Economic Club of
Toronto, Toronto, Canada, October 1,2003.
Gurkaynak, Refet, Brian Sack, and Eric Swanson, "The Excess Sensitivity of Long-Term
Interest Rates: Evidence and Implications for Macroeconomic Models," working paper,
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2003.
Meyer, Laurence, "Practical Problems and Obstacles to Inflation Targeting," presented at
Economic Policy Conference, Federal Bank of St. Louis, October 16-17, 2003.
Orphanides, Athanasios and John C. Williams, "Imperfect Knowledge, Inflation
Expectations, and Monetary Policy," working paper, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, June 2003.
Reifschneider, David and John C. Williams, "Three Lessons for Monetary Policy in a
Low-Inflation Era," Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, November 2000, Part 2,
936-72.
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Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2003, October 16). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20031017_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20031017_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2003},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20031017_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}