Monetary Policy and the U.S. Economy

Similar documents
The Aftermath of the Housing Bubble

The U.S. Macroeconomic Situation and Monetary Policy

Ghosts and Forecasts. James Bullard. President and CEO, FRB-St. Louis. CFA Society Chicago Distinguished Speakers Series 16 January 2015 Chicago, Ill.

The U.S. and Midwest Economy in 2016: Implications for Supply Chain Firms

IW Monetary Outlook December 2015

Statement by. Janet L. Yellen. Chair. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. before the. Committee on Financial Services

2013 global economic outlook: Are promising growth trends sustainable? Timothy Hopper, Ph.D., Chief Economist, TIAA-CREF January 24, 2013

Project LINK Meeting New York, October Country Report: Australia

Chapter 12: Gross Domestic Product and Growth Section 1

Strategy Document 1/03

2015 Mid-Year Market Review

Monthly Economic Dashboard

Why Treasury Yields Are Projected to Remain Low in 2015 March 2015

INFLATION REPORT PRESS CONFERENCE. Thursday 4 th February Opening remarks by the Governor

FOMC FAQS COMMENTARY KEY TAKEAWAYS LPL RESEARCH WEEKLY ECONOMIC. December John Canally, Jr., CFA Chief Economic Strategist, LPL Financial

Bond Market Insights October 10, 2014

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 17 MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND ISSUES March 17, 2016

FGFOA Webinar Series: During Unusual Times. Presented By:

South African Reserve Bank. Statement of the Monetary Policy Committee. Issued by Lesetja Kganyago, Governor of the South African Reserve Bank

Eurozone. EY Eurozone Forecast September 2013

U.S. ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.

The global economy Banco de Portugal Lisbon, 24 September 2013 Mr. Pier Carlo Padoan OECD Deputy Secretary-General and Chief Economist

THE STATE OF THE ECONOMY

U.S. ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.

The Causes of Inflation in Japan

Fixed Income Market Comments

Haruhiko Kuroda: Crude oil prices and price stability

U.S. ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.

FIXED INCOME STRATEGY HIGHLIGHTS OCTOBER, 2015

Forecasting Chinese Economy for the Years

Perspective. Economic and Market. Does a 2% 10-year U.S. Bond Yield Make Sense When...

EFN REPORT. ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR THE EURO AREA IN 2013 and 2014

Lecture 4: The Aftermath of the Crisis

What is the neutral interest rate level? Is it worthwhile searching for it from a market perspective? Bjørn Roger Wilhelmsen

GDP growth to remain weak as the UK economy rebalances

National Economic Indicators. September 28, 2015

CHAPTER 7: AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

THE POTENTIAL MACROECONOMIC EFFECT OF DEBT CEILING BRINKMANSHIP

HARD TIMES A Macroeconomic Analysis Presented To: The Financial Advisor Symposium

Government debt and unconventional monetary policy

Sweden 2013 Article IV Consultation: Concluding Statement of the Mission Stockholm May 31, 2013

U.S. Fixed Income: Potential Interest Rate Shock Scenario

Determination of the December 2007 Peak in Economic Activity

Interest Rate Forecast

OVERCOMING THE ZERO BOUND WITH NEGATIVE INTEREST RATE POLICY

Economics 101 Multiple Choice Questions for Final Examination Miller

FRBSF ECONOMIC LETTER

Evaluating the Australian Outlook through a Global Lens

Report to the public on the Bank of Israel s discussions prior to deciding on. the interest rate for January 2015

Contents. Key points from the 2014 Q4 Survey 4. General economic environment 5. Market conditions and the economy 6. Cash flow and risk 9 M&A 11

44 ECB STOCK MARKET DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LIGHT OF THE CURRENT LOW-YIELD ENVIRONMENT

Svein Gjedrem: Prospects for the Norwegian economy

Session 12. Aggregate Supply: The Phillips curve. Credibility

Jarle Bergo: Monetary policy and the outlook for the Norwegian economy

FLASH ECONOMICS. Can a central bank keep real interest rates abnormally low over the long term? ECONOMIC RESEARCH. 2 June 2016 No.

Prices and Monetary Policy in Times of Rising Energy Prices

UK Economic Forecast Q1 2015

Economics 152 Solution to Sample Midterm 2

Euro Zone s Economic Outlook and What it Means for the United States

Figure C Supervisory risk assessment for insurance and pension funds expected future development

The Case for Unconstrained Fixed Income

Recession Risk Recedes as Jobs Grow

Unemployment and Economic Recovery

DOLLARS & SENSE TD Economics

PRESENT DISCOUNTED VALUE

Economic Outlook for Europe and Finland

The President s Report to the Board of Directors

Solution. Solution. Monetary Policy. macroeconomics. economics

Gauging Current Conditions: The Economic Outlook and Its Impact on Workers Compensation

Economic Outlook, November 2013 November 21, Jeffrey M. Lacker President Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

EFN REPORT. ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR THE EURO AREA IN 2013 and 2014

FOMC review Less confident Fed likely to stay on hold in March as well

Fixed Income Asset Allocation

e 2015f. Real GDP Growth (%)

Bond Market Perspectives

Statement to Parliamentary Committee

Bond Market Insights July 15, 2015

FLASH ECONOMICS. Are there good reasons not to accept 1% inflation in the euro zone? ECONOMIC RESEARCH

Gundlach The Scariest Indicator in the World

Adjusting to a Changing Economic World. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. It s a pleasure to be with you here in Montréal today.

CBI Yorkshire and Humber Annual Dinner

San Diego City Employees Retirement System

Economic Forecast OUTPUT AND EMPLOYMENT WHAT THE TABLE SHOWS:

Section 2 Evaluation of current account balance fluctuations

MBA Forecast Commentary Joel Kan,

Why the Lack of Inflation Is a Problem

Bond Market Momentum, Valuation and Risks

Bond Outlook. Third Quarter Waiting on the Fed. 10-Year Treasury Yields. Treasury Bonds. Break-even Inflation Rate

Switzerland 2013 Article for Consultation Preliminary Conclusions Bern, March 18, 2013

Recent U.S. Economic Growth In Charts MAY 2012

The Recession: Similarities to and Differences from the Past

Interest Rate Insurance Prices Implicit in Option Prices

TREASURY MANAGEMENT UPDATE QUARTER /15

Gundlach s High-Conviction Investment Idea By Robert Huebscher December 26, 2012

Markets Roundup. Research. US data show that deflation risks are rising

LEE BUSI N ESS SCHOOL UNITED STATES QUARTERLY ECONOMIC FORECAST. U.S. Economic Growth to Accelerate. Chart 1. Growth Rate of U.S.

ANNEX 1 - MACROECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS FOR ITALY OF ACHIEVING COMPLIANCE WITH THE DEBT RULE UNDER TWO DIFFERENT SCENARIOS

MLC Investment Management. Constructing Fixed Income Portfolios in a Low Interest Rate Environment. August 2010

Seven-year asset class forecast returns, 2015 update

Transcription:

Monetary Policy and the U.S. Economy James Bullard President and CEO 19 August 2010 Rogers, Arkansas Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Open Market Committee members.

This talk The U.S. macroeconomic outlook has been downgraded, but remains positive going forward. The European sovereign debt crisis has abated somewhat but remains a factor in the global economic mix. Core inflation has fallen to low but still manageable levels. Any additional quantitative easing undertaken by the FOMC should be a disciplined reaction to further disinflation risks.

Outlook: Downgraded but still positive

NIPA revision: The recession was deeper than initially estimated Real GDP Growth: Current and Previous Estimates Percent change, annual rate 8.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0-2.0-4.0-6.0-8.0 2007Q4 2008Q2 2008Q4 2009Q2 2009Q4 2010Q2 Current Actual Previous Actual Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: Q2-2010.

Not all signals from GDP suggest slowing The second-quarter figure was influenced by imports. Economists sometimes consider domestic purchases as an indicator of household appetite for spending. Real final sales to domestic purchasers includes imports.

Growth of final domestic demand for Q2-2010 was strong Growth of Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers Percent change, annual rate 6 4 4.1 2 1.3 0-2 -4-6 -8 2007:Q1 2008:Q1 2009:Q1 2010:Q1 Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: Q2-2010.

Manufacturing continues to expand Industrial production rose 1 percent in July. ISM surveys remain within the range defined as expansionary.

Manufacturing continues to expand, but at a slower pace Source: Institute for Supply Management. Last observation: July 2010.

Non-manufacturing activity also continues to expand Source: Institute for Supply Management. Last observation: July 2010.

Labor markets remain weak Unemployment remains high. Private-sector jobs growth has been below expectations in the past three months. Hours worked has increased at a slow rate. But U.S. productivity has improved dramatically compared with other G-7 economies.

Aggregate hours are growing slowly Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: July 2010.

Productivity in the U.S. has increased since the crisis Source: Board of Governors. Last observation: Q2-2010 for the U.S. and Q1-2010 for all other countries.

Housing markets remain weak Home sales remain at a low level. Single family home construction also remains at a low level. Dramatic improvement seems unlikely in the near term. House prices remain below a 2001 nominal GDP benchmark.

House prices remain low Source: S&P, Fiserv, and MacroMarkets LLC. Last observation: Q2-2010 for GDP and Q1-2010 for house prices.

The European sovereign debt crisis abates

Developments in Europe The European sovereign debt crisis has abated somewhat, but remains an important factor in the global economic mix. Future developments depend on the ability of sovereign governments to deliver on fiscal retrenchment programs. Sensible fiscal retrenchment can improve the medium-term growth prospects for these countries.

The cost of credit insurance is high Source: Bloomberg. Last observation: 8/12/2010, daily data.

European bond spreads remain elevated Source: Financial Times. Last observation: 8/9/2010, weekly data.

The effect on the U.S. has abated Measures of U.S. financial stress have fallen from peak levels. The eurodollar exchange rate has retraced much of the euro weakness from this spring. Key longer-term interest rates in the U.S. are below pre-crisis levels.

Financial stress rose sharply after April 23 Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Last observation: 8/6/2010, weekly data.

Capital market rates are below pre-crisis levels Source: Federal Reserve, Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, FHLMC. Last observation: 8/13/2010, weekly data.

Inflation developments

Disinflation during 2010 Disinflationary trends have reasserted themselves during 2010. Some key measures of core inflation have fallen to about one percent. Inflation that is too low can be problematic, as the Japanese experience has shown.

Core inflation measures are low Source: BLS, BEA, and FRB Cleveland. Last observation: June 2010 for PCE measures and July 2010 for CPI Measures.

Inflation and nominal interest rates Taylor-type policy rules in combination with a Fisher relation creates two possible long-run outcomes for the macroeconomy. Japan has been in one of these, the U.S. in the other. The Japanese experience has generally been regarded as disappointing. U.S. policy should strive to avoid this possibility. For more commentary, see my paper Seven Faces of the Peril, posted on my web site. http://research.stlouisfed.org/econ/bullard/index.html

Interest rates and inflation in Japan and the U.S. Source: OECD data and author s calculations. Last observation: May 2010.

Expected inflation Expected inflation at the targeted steady state is relatively high. Expected inflation at the unintended steady state is low or negative. Fortunately, expected inflation in the U.S. today, as measured from TIPS data, remains relatively high. However, these expectations have moved lower partly in response to the crisis in Europe.

Expected inflation has declined Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. Release Date: August 13, 2010.

Another look at expected inflation Source: Federal Reserve Board. Release Date: August 16, 2010.

The near-zero rate policy Keeping the policy rate near-zero may push the economy toward the targeted steady state. However, the policy is also consistent with the unintended steady state, where there is mild deflation. It may not be prudent to rely on low policy rates alone to keep the U.S. out of the deflationary outcome. Instead, supplement current policy with additional QE, should inflation move lower. The U.K. QE program can be viewed as more successful than the U.S. program for this reason.

U.S. and U.K. core inflation: opposite directions Source: OECD. Last observation: June 2010.

What should QE look like?

Large, sudden purchases rarely are optimal Shock and awe is almost never a good way to proceed. Instead, policy actions should be commensurate with the risks that the economy faces. A series of smaller policy actions can add up to a large action, but only if incoming data suggest that as the appropriate course. Example: 25-basis-point interest rate moves are relatively small by themselves, but can have large effects as part of a policy path for interest rates.

A disciplined program Today, with core inflation at low but manageable levels and the economy expected to continue to expand, no action is necessary. Should economic developments suggest increased disinflation risk, purchases of Treasury securities in excess of those required to keep the size of the balance sheet constant may be warranted. Purchase size should be in proportion to the size of any deterioration in the outlook. One key goal of the program is to keep core inflation in the U.S. from falling close to levels observed in Japan.

Conclusions The U.S. outlook has been downgraded, but still remains positive continued expansion is the most likely course going forward. The European sovereign debt crisis has abated somewhat, but remains a factor in the global economic mix. Core inflation has fallen to low, but still manageable, levels. If the risk of further disinflation builds, Fed action may be warranted. Any QE actions should be disciplined and focused.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/ James Bullard research.stlouisfed.org/econ/bullard/