speeches · October 7, 2004
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Governor
For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT (9:00 a.m. CDT)
October 8, 2004
Panel Discussion: What Have We Learned Since October 1979
Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Conference
Reflections on Monetary Policy: Twenty-Five Years After 1979
St. Louis, Missouri
October 8, 2004
The question asked ofthis panel is, "What have we learned since October 1979?"
The evidence suggests that we have learned quite a bit. Most notably, monetary policy
makers, political leaders, and the public have been persuaded by two decades of
experience that low and stable inflation has very substantial economic benefits.
This consensus marks a considerable change from the views held by many
economists at the time that Paul Volcker became Fed Chairman. In 1979, most
economists would have agreed that, in principle, low inflation promotes economic growth
and efficiency in the long run. However, many also believed that, in the range of
inflation rates typically experienced by industrial countries, the benefits of low inflation
are probably small--particularly when set against the short-run costs of a major
disinflation, as the United States faced at that time. Indeed, some economists would have
held that low-inflation policies would likely prove counterproductive even in the long
run, if an increased focus on inflation inhibited monetary policy-makers from responding
adequately to fluctuations in economic activity and employment.
As it turned out, the low-inflation era of the past two decades has seen not only
significant improvements in economic growth and productivity but also a marked
reduction in economic volatility, both in the United States and abroad, a phenomenon
that has been dubbed "the Great Moderation." Recessions have become less frequent and
milder, and quarter-to-quarter volatility in output and employment has declined
significantly as well. The sources of the Great Moderation remain somewhat
controversial, but as I have argued elsewhere, there is evidence for the view that
improved control of inflation has contributed in important measure to this welcome
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change in the economy (Bernanke, 2004). Paul Volcker and his colleagues on the
Federal Open Market Committee deserve enonnous credit both for recognizing the
crucial importance of achieving low and stable inflation and for the courage and
perseverance with which they tackled America's critical inflation problem.
I could say much more about Volcker's achievement and its lasting benefits, but I
am sure that many other speakers will cover that ground. Instead, in my remaining time,
I will focus on some lessons that economists have drawn from the Volcker regime
regarding the importance of credibility in central banking and how that credibility can be
obtained. As usual, the views I will express are my own and are not necessarily shared
by my colleagues in the Federal Reserve System.
Volcker could not have accomplished what he did, of course, had he not been
appointed to the chainnanship by President Jimmy Carter. In retrospect, however,
Carter's appointment decision seems at least a bit incongruous. Why would the President
appoint as head of the central bank an individual whose economic views and policy goals
(not to mention personal style) seemed, at least on the surface, quite different from his
own? However, not long into Volcker's term, a staff economist at the Board of
Governors produced a paper that explained why Carter's decision may in fact have been
quite sensible from the President's, and indeed the society'S, point of view. Although the
question seems a narrow one, the insights of the paper had far broader application;
indeed, this research has substantially advanced our understanding of the links among
central bank credibility, central bank structure, and the effectiveness of monetary policy.
Insiders will have already guessed that the Board economist to whom I refer is
Kenneth Rogoff, currently a professor of economics at Harvard, and that the paper in
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question is Ken's 1985 article, "The Optimal Degree of Commitment to an Intermediate
Monetary Target" (Rogoff, 1985).1 The insights of the Rogoff paper are well worth
recalling today. Rather than considering the paper in isolation, however, I will place it in
the context of two other classic papers on credibility and central bank design, an earlier
work by Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott and a later piece by Carl Walsh. As I
proceed, I will note what I see to be the important lessons and the practical implications
of this line ofresearch.2
Central bankers have long recognized at some level that the credibility of their
pronouncements matters. I think it is fair to say, however, that in the late 1960s and
1970s, as the U.S. inflation crisis was building, economists and policymakers did not
fully understand or appreciate the determinants of credibility and its link to policy
outcomes. In 1977, however, Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott published a classic
paper, entitled "Rules Rather than Discretion: The Inconsistency of Optimal Plans"
(Kydland and Prescott, 1977), that provided the first modem analysis of these issues.3
Specifically, Kydland and Prescott demonstrated why, in many situations, economic
outcomes will be better if policymakers are able to make credible commitments, or
promises, about certain aspects of the policies they will follow in the future. "Credible"
1 Rogoffs paper was widely circulated in 1982, a sad commentary on publication lags in
economICS.
2 In focusing on three landmark papers I necessarily ignore what has become an
enormous literature on credibility and monetary policy. Walsh (2003, chap. 8) provides
an excellent overview. Rogoff (1987) was an important early survey of the "first
feneration" of models of credibility in the context of central banking.
In another noteworthy paper, Calvo (1978) made a number of points similar to those
developed by Kydland and Prescott. The extension of the Kydland-Prescott "inflation
bias" by Barro and Gordon (1983a) has proved highly influential.
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in this context means that the public believes that the policymakers will keep their
promises, even if they face incentives to renege.
In particular, as one of Kydland and Prescott's examples illustrates, monetary
policy-makers will generally find it advantageous to commit publicly to following
policies that will produce low inflation. If the policymakers' statements are believed
(that is, if they are credible), then the public will expect inflation to be low, and demands
for wage and price increases should accordingly be moderate. In a virtuous circle, this
cooperative behavior by the public makes the central bank's commitment to low inflation
easier to fulfill. In contrast, if the public is skeptical of the central bank's commitment to
low inflation (for example, ifit believes that the central bank may give in to the
temptation to overstimulate the economy for the sake of short-term employment gains),
then the public's inflation expectations will be higher than they otherwise would be.
Expectations of high inflation lead to more-aggressive wage and price demands, which
make achieving and maintaining low inflation more difficult and costly (in terms of lost
output and employment) for the central bank.
Providing a clear explanation of why credibility is important for effective
policymaking, as Kydland and Prescott did, was an important step. However, these
authors largely left open the critical issue of how a central bank is supposed to obtain
credibility in the first place. Here is where Rogoffs seminal article took up the thread.4
Rogoff was my graduate school classmate at M.LT., and I recently asked him for his
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recollections about the origins ofthe "conservative" central banker. Here (from a
personal e-mail) is part of his response:
[T]he paper was mainly written at the Board in 1982 ... It came out as an
IMF working paper in February 1983 (I was visiting there), and then the same
version came out as an International Finance Discussion paper [at the Board of
Governors] in September 1983 ... The original version of the paper ... featured
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Motivated by the example ofearter and Volcker, Rogoffs paper showed analytically
why even a president who is not particularly averse to inflation, or at least no more so
than the average member of the general public, might find it in his interest to appoint a
well-known "inflation hawk" to head the central bank. The benefit of appointing a
hawkish central banker is the increased inflation-fighting credibility that such an
appointment brings. The public is certainly more likely to believe an inflation hawk
when he promises to contain inflation because they understand that, as someone who is
intrinsically averse to inflation, he is unlikely to renege on his commitment. As increased
credibility allows the central bank to achieve low inflation at a smaller cost than a non-
credible central bank can, the president may well find, somewhat paradoxically, that he
prefers the economic outcomes achieved under the hawkish central banker to those that
could have been obtained under a central banker with views closer to his own and those
of the pUblic.
Appointing an inflation hawk to head the central bank may not be enough to
ensure credibility for monetary policy, however. As Rogoff noted in his article, for this
strategy to confer significant credibility benefits, the central bank must be perceived by
inflation targeting. Much like the published paper, I suggested that having an
independent central bank can be a solution to the time consistency [that is,
credibility] problem if we give the bank an intermediate target and some
(unspecified) incentive to hit the target .,. I had the conservative central banker
idea in there as well, as one practical way to ensure the central bank placed a high
weight on inflation. Larry Summers, my editor at the [Quarterly Journal of
Economics], urged me to move that idea up to the front section and place inflation
targeting second. This, of course, is how the paper ended up.
[Regarding the Fed], Dale Henderson and Matt Canzoneri liked the paper
very much ... many other researchers gave me feedback on my paper (including
Peter Tinsley, Ed Offenbacher, Bob Flood, Jo Anna Gray, and many others) ...
Last but perhaps most important, there is absolutely no doubt that the paper was
inspired by my experience watching the Volcker Fed at close range. I never would
have written it had I not ... ended up as an economist at the Board.
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the public as being sufficiently independent from the rest of the government to be
immune to short-term political pressures. Thus Rogoffs proposed strategy was really
two-pronged: The appointment of inflation-averse central bankers must be combined
with measures to ensure central bank independence. These ideas, supported by a great
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deal of empirical work, have proven highly influentia1. Indeed, the credibility benefits
of central bank autonomy have been widely recognized in the past twenty years, not only
in the academic literature but, far more consequentially, in the real-world design of
central banking institutions. For example, in the United Kingdom, the euro area, Japan,
and numerous other places, recent legislation or other government action has palpably
strengthened the independence of the central banks.6
Rogoffs proposed solution to the credibility problems of central banks does have
some limitations, however, as Ken recognized both in his paper and in subsequent work.
First, although an inflation-averse central banker enhances credibility and delivers lower
inflation on average, he may not respond to shocks to the economy in the socially
desirable way. For example, faced with an aggregate supply shock (such as a sharp rise
in oil prices), an inflation-averse central banker will tend to react too aggressively (from
society's point of view) to contain the inflationary impact of the shock, with insufficient
5 Walsh (2003, section 8.5) reviews empirical research on the correlations of central bank
independence and economic outcomes. A consistent finding is that more-independent
central banks produce lower inflation without any increase in output volatility.
6 The benefits of central bank independence should not lead us to ignore its downside,
which is that the very distance from the political process that increases the central bank's
policy credibility by necessity also risks isolating the central bank and making it less
democratically accountable. For this reason, central bankers should make
communication with the public and their elected representatives a high priority.
Moreover, central bank independence does not imply that central banks should never
coordinate with other parts of the government, under the appropriate circumstances.
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7
attention to the consequences of his policy for output and employment. Second,
contrary to an assumption of Rogoffs paper, in practice the policy preferences of a newly
appointed central banker will not be precisely known by the public but must be inferred
from policy actions. (Certainly the public's perceptions of Chairman Volcker's views
and objectives evolved over time.) Knowing that the public must make such inferences
might tempt a central banker to misrepresent the state of the economy (Canzoneri, 1985)
or even to take suboptimal policy decisions; for example, the central banker may feel
compelled to tighten policy more aggressively than is warranted in order to convince the
public of his determination to fight inflation. The public's need to infer the central
banker's policy preferences may even generate increased economic instability, as has
been shown in a lively recent literature on the macroeconomic consequences of learning. 8
The third pathbreaking paper I will mention today, a 1995 article by Carl Walsh
entitled "Optimal Contracts for Central Bankers," was an attempt to address both of these
issues.9 To do so, Walsh conducted a thought experiment. He asked his readers to
imagine that the government or society could offer the head of the central bank a
performance contract, one that includes explicit monetary rewards or penalties that
depend on the economic outcomes that occur under his watch. Remarkably, Walsh
7 Lohmann (1992) shows that this problem can be ameliorated ifthe government limits
the central bank's independence, stepping in to override the central bank's decisions
when the supply shock becomes too large. However, to preserve the central bank's
independence in normal situations, this approach would involve stating clearly in advance
the conditions under which the government would intercede, which may not be
practicable.
Evans and Honkopohja (2001) is the standard reference on learning in macroeconomics.
Recent papers that apply models of learning to the analysis of U.S. monetary policy
include Erceg and Levin (2001) and Orphanides and Williams (forthcoming).
9 Persson and Tabellini (1993) provided an influential analysis of the contracting
approach that extended and developed many of the points made by Walsh (1995).
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showed that, in principle, a relatively simple contract between the government and the
central bank would lead to the implementation of monetary policies that would be both
credible and fully optimal. Under this contract, the government provides the central
banker with a base level of compensation but then applies a penalty that depends on the
realized rate of inflation--the higher the observed inflation rate, the greater the penalty.
If the public understands the nature of the contract, and if the penalty assessed for
permitting inflation is large enough to affect central bank behavior, the existence of the
contract would give credence to central bank promises to keep the inflation rate low (that
is, the contract would provide credibility). Walsh's contract has in common with
10
Rogoff's approach the idea that, in a world of imperfect credibility, giving the central
banker an objective function that differs from the true objectives of society may be
useful. However, Walsh also shows that the contracting approach ameliorates the two
problems associated with Rogoff's approach. First, under the Walsh contract, the central
banker has incentives not only to achieve the target rate of inflation but also to respond in
the socially optimal manner to supply shocks. Second, as the inflation objective and the
I I
central banker's incentive scheme are made explicit by the contract, the public's problem
of inferring the central banker's policy preferences is significantly reduced.
There have been a few attempts in the real world to implement an incentive
contract for central bankers--most famously a plan proposed to the New Zealand
10 An objection to this conclusion is that, although the central bank's incentives are made
clear by the contract, the public might worry that the government might renege on its
commitment to low inflation by changing the contract. Those who discount this concern
argue that changing the contract in midstream would be costly for the government,
because laws once enacted are difficult to modify and because changing an established
framework for policy in an opportunistic way would be politically embarrassing.
A key assumption underlying this result is that the central banker cares about the state
II
of the economy as well as about the income provided by his incentive contract.
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legislature, though never adopted, which provided for firing the governor of the central
bank if the inflation rate deviated too far from the government's inflation objective. 12
But Walsh's contracts are best treated as a metaphor rather than as a literal proposal for
central bank reform. Although the pay of central bankers is unlikely ever to depend
directly on the realized rate of inflation, central bankers, like most people, care about
many other aspects of their jobs, including their professional reputations, the prestige of
the institutions in which they serve, and the probability that they will be reappointed.
Walsh's analysis and many subsequent refinements by other authors suggest that
central bank performance might be improved if the government set explicit performance
standards for the central bank (perhaps as part of the institution's charter or enabling
legislation) and regularly compared objectives and outcomes. Alternatively, because
central banks may possess the greater expertise in determining what economic outcomes
are both feasible and most desirable, macroeconomic goals might be set through a joint
exercise of the government and the central bank. Many countries have established targets
for inflation, for example, and central bankers in those countries evidently make strong
efforts to attain those targets. The Federal Reserve Act does not set quantitative goals for
the U.S. central bank, but it does specify the objectives of price stability and maximum
sustainable employment and requires the central bank to present semi-annual reports to
the Congress on monetary policy and the state ofthe economy. Accountability to the
public as well as to the legislature is also important; for this reason, the central bank
should explain regularly what it is trying to achieve and why. In sum, Walsh's paper can
12 In personal communication, Walsh reports to me that he was visiting a research
institute in New Zealand at the time of these discussions. Walsh's reflection on the New
Zealand proposals helped to inspire his paper.
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be read as providing theoretical support for an explicit, well-designed, and transparent
framework for monetary policy, one which sets forth the objectives of policy and holds
central bankers accountable for reaching those objectives (or, at least, for providing a
detailed and plausible explanation of why the objectives were missed).
In the simple model that Walsh analyzes, the optimal contract provides all the
incentives needed to induce the best possible monetary policy, so that appointing a
hawkish central banker is no longer beneficial. However, in practice--because Walsh's
optimal contracts can be roughly approximated at best, because both the incentives and
the policy decisions faced by central bankers are far more complex than can be captured
by simple models, and because the appointment of an inflation-averse central banker may
provide additional assurance to the public that the government and the central bank will
keep their promises--the Walsh approach and the Rogoff approach are almost certainly
complementary.I3 That is, a clear, well-articulated monetary policy framework; inflation-
averse central bankers; and autonomy for central banks in the execution of policy are all
likely to contribute to increased central bank credibility and hence better policy
outcomes. Of course, other factors that I could not cover in this short review, such as the
central bank's reputation for veracity as established over time, may also strengthen its
credibility (Barro and Gordon, 1983b; Backus and Driffill, 1985).14
Let me end where I began, with reference to Paul Volcker and his contributions. I
have discussed today how Volcker's personality and performance inspired one seminal
piece of research about the determinants of central bank credibility. In focusing on a few
13 Several authors have shown this point in models in which the inflation bias arising
from non-credible policies differs across states of nature; see, for example, Herrendorf
and Lockwood (1997) and Svensson (1997).
14 But see Rogoff (1987) for a critique of models of central bank reputation.
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pieces of academic research, however, I have greatly understated the impact of the
Volcker era on views about central banking. The Vo1cker disinflation (and analogous
episodes in the United Kingdom, Canada, and elsewhere) was undoubtedly a major
catalyst for an explosion of fresh thinking by economists and policymakers about central
bank credibility, how it is obtained, and its benefits for monetary policy-making. Over
the past two decades, this new thinking has contributed to a wave of changes in central
banking, particularly with respect to the institutional design of central banks and the
establishment of new frameworks for the making of monetary policy.
Ironically, the applicability of the ideas stimulated by the Volcker chairmanship to
the experience ofthe U.S. economy under his stewardship remains unclear. Though the
appointment ofVolcker undoubtedly increased the credibility of the Federal Reserve, the
Vo1cker disinflation was far from a costless affair, being associated with a minor
15
recession in 1980 and a deep recession in 1981-82. Evidently, Volcker's personal
credibility notwithstanding, Americans' memories of the inflationary 1970s were too
fresh for their inflation expectations to change quickly. It is difficult to know whether
alternative tactics would have helped; for example, the announcement of explicit inflation
objectives (which would certainly have been a radical idea at the time) might have helped
guide inflation expectations downward more quickly, but they might also have created a
political backlash that would have doomed the entire effort. Perhaps no policy approach
or set of institutional arrangements could have eliminated the 1970s inflation at a lower
cost than was actually incurred. If so, then the significance of Paul Vo1cker's
15 Evidence on the behavior of inflation expectations after 1979 supports the view that the
public came to appreciate only very gradually that Vo1cker's policies represented a break
from the immediate past (Erceg and Levin, 2001).
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appointment was not its immediate effect on expectations or credibility but rather the fact
that he was one of the rare individuals tough enough and with sufficient foresight to do
what had to be done. By doing what was necessary to achieve price stability, the Volcker
Fed laid the groundwork for two decades, so far, of strong economic performance.
,
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References
Backus, David, and John Driffill (1985). "Inflation and Reputation," American Economic
Review (75), June, pp. 530-8.
Barro, Robert, and David Gordon (1983a). "A Positive Theory of Monetary Policy in a
Natural Rate Model," Journal ofP olitical Economy (91), pp. 589-610.
Barro, Robert, and David Gordon (1983b). "Rules, Discretion, and Reputation in a Model
of Monetary Policy," Journal ofM onetary Economics (12), pp. 101-21.
Bernanke, Ben (2004). "The Great Moderation," remarks before the Eastern Economic
Association, Washington, D.C., February 20.
Calvo, Guillermo (1978). "On the Time Consistency of the Optimal Policy in a
Monetary Economy," Econometrica (46), November, pp. 1411-28.
Canzoneri, Matthew (1985). "Monetary Policy Games and the Role of Private
Information," American Economic Review (75), September, pp. 547-64.
Erceg, Christopher, and Andrew Levin (2001). "Imperfect Credibility and Inflation
Persistence," Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Finance and Economics
Discussion Series, 2001-45 (October).
Evans, George, and Seppo Honkopohja (2001). Learning and Expectations in
Macroeconomics. Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press.
Herrendorf, Berthold, and Ben Lockwood (1997). "Rogoffs 'Conservative' Central
Banker Restored," Journal ofM oney, Credit, and Banking (29), November, pp. 476-95.
Kydland, Finn, and Edward Prescott (1977). "Rules Rather than Discretion: The
Inconsistency of Optimal Plans," Journal ofP olitical Economy (85), June, pp. 473-92.
Lohmann, Suzanne (1992). "Optimal Commitment in Monetary Policy: Credibility
versus Flexibility," American Economic Review (82), March, pp. 273-86.
Orphanides, Athanasios, and John C. Williams (forthcoming). "Imperfect Knowledge,
Inflation Expectations, and Monetary Policy," in B. Bemanke and M. Woodford, eds.,
The Inflation Targeting Debate. Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press for NBER.
Persson, Torsten, and Guido Tabellini (1993). "Designing Institutions for Monetary
Stability," Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy (39), pp. 53-84.
Rogoff, Kenneth (1985). "The Optimal Degree of Commitment to an Intermediate
Monetary Target," Quarterly Journal ofE conomics (100), November, pp. 1169-89.
,
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Rogoff, Kenneth (1987). "Reputational Constraints on Monetary Policy," Carnegie
Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy (26), pp. 141-82.
Svensson, Lars (1997). "Optimal Inflation Contracts, 'Conservative' Central Banks, and
Linear Inflation Contracts," American Economic Review (87), March, pp. 98-114.
Walsh, Carl (1995). "Optimal Contracts for Central Bankers," American Economic
Review (85), March, pp. 150-67.
Walsh, Carl (2003). Monetary Theory and Policy, 2nd ed. Cambridge, Mass: MIT
Press.
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2004, October 7). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20041008_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20041008_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2004},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20041008_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}