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At the Canadian American Business Council's RBC Distinguished Speakers Series,
Embassy of Canada, Washington, D.C.
November 12, 2002
It is a great pleasure for me to be here with you today. Certainly, the theme for today's
session--"North American Monetary Policy"--ought to provoke some lively discussion. Let
me start with the usual disclaimer--my remarks reflect my personal views and should not be
taken as an official view of the Board of Governors or the Federal Reserve System. As you
know, the FOMC last week chose to lower the target federal funds rate 50 basis points to a
forty-year low of 1-1/4 percent and also indicated that it viewed the risks to the economy
going forward as balanced. Of course, the macroeconomic developments over the last few
years that have brought us to this point have been quite remarkable, and I'll offer some
perspectives on some of those key developments in a moment. Over this same period, there
have been some quite important developments in the art and science of central banking, and
it seems useful to pause here at the outset to take stock of this evolution in central banking
practice in the United States.
Though barely a single page in length, last week's FOMC announcement embodied all of the
key structural elements of the current monetary policy framework in the United States. The
text of the announcement provided a rationale for the decision in terms of the FOMC's twin
objectives--long-run price stability and sustainable economic growth. The policy decision
itself involved a specific setting for the key monetary policy instrument--the target federal
funds rate. And the goals of central bank transparency and accountability were served by a
discussion of the Committee's views about the important forces impinging on the economy at
the present time and its sense of the balance of risks to the economy in the future. All three
of these key elements of the monetary policy framework--the FOMC's objectives, primary
policy instrument, and emphasis on transparency--have undergone significant change in
recent years.
As indicated in the original version of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, the Federal Reserve
was founded "to furnish an elastic currency" and to promote "more effective supervision of
banking." It wasn't until 1977 that the Congress amended the Federal Reserve Act to include
very specific monetary policy objectives. Notably, the Congress established a so-called dual
mandate for the Federal Reserve by directing it to foster conditions that would promote the
goals of price stability and "maximum" employment. Over time, maximum employment is
only possible when economic growth is sustainable--that is, when economic growth is
sufficient to eventually eliminate any gap between level of aggregate demand and the
economy's potential to produce. These dual objectives of price stability and sustainable
output growth are the cornerstones of the U.S. monetary policy framework. The U.S. system
of dual monetary policy objectives is sometimes regarded as quite distinct from the monetary
policy frameworks adopted by many other countries in recent years that tend to emphasize
price stability as the primary goal of monetary policy. My own view, though, is that the
apparent differences between such frameworks and the U.S. system--while significant--may
not be quite so large as commonly believed. For example, in addition to a price stability

objective, many central bank charters include references to auxiliary objectives such as
supporting the nation's general economic welfare or the stability of the financial system.
The instruments of monetary policy have changed in significant ways as well. In the United
States and some other countries, money and credit aggregates have played an especially
important role as monetary policy instruments at times in the past. However, the use of such
variables as reliable guides for policy became increasingly problematic over recent years as
increased competition and innovation in the financial sector tended to undermine the
historical linkages between money and credit aggregates and key macroeconomic variables
such as nominal GDP. Partly as a result, many central banks, including the Federal Reserve,
came to view setting a particular level for a short-term interest rate, rather than controlling
the growth of money and credit aggregates, as the primary modus operandi of monetary
policy.
A final trend in central banking that was again implicit in last week's FOMC announcement
is a movement toward greater transparency. Less than a decade ago, for example, the FOMC
did not explicitly announce its policy decisions. Indeed, through much of the 1980s and early
1990s, the FOMC "signaled" its policy intentions to the market indirectly through a process
involving technical distinctions among particular types of open market operations. In
retrospect, while this procedure helped to support a cottage industry of Wall Street
Fedwatchers, it increasingly came to be seen by the public and the Federal Reserve as
unnecessary and even counterproductive. As a result, in 1994, the FOMC began explicitly
announcing its policy decisions.
In a bid to further increase transparency, the FOMC introduced a balance of risks
assessment in early 2000 as part of its policy decisions. The balance of risks assessment was
designed as a vehicle to communicate the Committee's sense of the economic outlook over
the "foreseeable future." The foreseeable future is one of those wonderful phrases we
central bankers get to use. It is not intended to refer to a specific time horizon, and indeed,
when the FOMC introduced the balance of risks statement, it suggested that the time horizon
encompassed by the foreseeable future might well vary depending on the economic
circumstances. However, in contrast to the previous "bias" statement, the concept of the
foreseeable future in the balance of risks statement was intended to extend well beyond the
upcoming intermeeting period. The balance of risks statement is released to the public at the
conclusion of each FOMC meeting. By contrast, prior to 1999, the "bias" statement was only
made known to the public after a six-week lag in the release of the minutes for each FOMC
meeting. This past March, the FOMC took a further step toward increased transparency by
including the roll call of the vote on the federal funds rate target, as well as an indication of
the preferred policy choice of any dissenters. Indeed, press coverage following the
September FOMC meeting noted the two dissents in favor of a policy easing reported in the
announcement following that meeting.
So why have the Federal Reserve and many other central banks moved toward a policy
framework involving greater transparency? The principle that central banks should be free of
political interference in pursuing legally mandated objectives is now widely regarded as a
key tenet supporting central bank credibility and effectiveness. However, democratic
societies rightly should expect that central banks, as public institutions, should be publicly
accountable for their actions, and greater transparency in central banking is an important
factor in ensuring that this is the case. But central banks have found transparency useful for
monetary policy purposes as well. By providing a clear rationale for their actions and an
assessment of the economic outlook, central banks can reduce unnecessary uncertainties

faced by market participants. Moreover, investors armed with a clearer understanding of the
central bank's motives and views are better able to anticipate future monetary policy actions.
This, in turn, helps to create a form of "automatic stabilizer" operating in financial markets;
as the economy is buffeted by shocks, market participants anticipate how the central bank is
likely to move short-term interest rates in the future, and these expectations are then
immediately reflected in movements in long-term interest rates that help to counteract the
effects of the shocks.
Well, I hope by now I've convinced you that the FOMC's announcements--though
sometimes criticized as terse or inscrutable--are in fact the embodiment of nearly every
major change in the U.S. monetary policy framework in the last twenty-five years. Not bad
for a one-page document. Having talked at some length about the broad conceptual
framework underlying last week's FOMC announcement, I'd like to now turn to what it
actually said. A key passage of the announcement read as follows:
The Committee continues to believe that an accommodative stance of monetary
policy, coupled with still-robust underlying growth in productivity, is providing
important ongoing support to economic activity. However, incoming economic
data have tended to confirm that greater uncertainty, in part attributable to
heightened geopolitical risks, is currently inhibiting spending, production, and
employment.
Those two sentences succinctly summarize the important crosscurrents that the FOMC must
take into account in the current environment. On the one hand, the current very low setting
of the target funds rate is undoubtedly imparting considerable economic stimulus. Moreover,
the U.S. economy has proven to be remarkably resilient in recent years, and underlying
economic trends such as continued strong productivity growth bode well for economic
prospects in the longer run. Indeed, the latest productivity data released just last week
showed yet another very substantial increase in labor productivity in the third quarter. While
some of the recent outsized increases in productivity may prove to be temporary, the recent
data do suggest that underlying trend productivity growth remains quite buoyant, and that, in
turn, should ultimately show through to stronger incomes for households and an improved
profit outlook for businesses.
On the other hand, the U.S. economy has been beset by a string of adverse shocks in the last
two years, and the FOMC last week expressed its concerns that the lingering effects of those
shocks and the uncertainty about the economic outlook were factors hindering the economic
recovery. As noted in the minutes of several past FOMC meetings, that uncertainty seems to
be attributable to a confluence of several factors. The high-profile cases of corporate
accounting scandals in the United States over recent months undoubtedly are an important
part of the story. Certainly, the direct costs of these episodes in terms of losses sustained by
investors and employees in the affected firms have been very substantial. But even more
pernicious from a macroeconomic perspective has been the ensuing widespread loss of
investor confidence in the integrity of firms' financial statements more broadly.
Unfortunately, the spectacular misdeeds that have come to light have made it perfectly
rational for investors to question the veracity of data and other information disclosed by all
businesses. And that mistrust, in turn, has almost certainly contributed to the downdraft in
many firms' equity prices and an increase in borrowing costs over recent months.
A related key source of uncertainty in the economic outlook is the prospect for a rebound in
investment spending. To date, the Federal Reserve's easing actions have spurred the

economy most visibly by increasing consumer demand for interest-sensitive items-particularly autos and new homes. Businesses, by contrast, have largely acted to shore up
their frayed balance sheets by locking in longer-term funding at attractive rates and using the
proceeds to pay down other forms of debt or to stockpile substantial holdings of liquid
assets. To be sure, although it has yet to show any real signs of vigor, business fixed
investment has at least seemed to stabilize. And business inventories currently seem lean in
many industries, so there may be considerable scope for a pickup in inventory investment as
the economy recovers. Still, for now, the pace of investment spending is tepid at best.
Finally, of course, the world situation is yet another factor contributing to the overall
uncertainty about near-term economic prospects. The potential for further terrorist attacks
and the tense situation in the Mideast are obviously sources of concern. Moreover, Europe
seems to be encountering a "soft spot" in economic activity similar to that evident in recent
weeks in the United States. And, of course, the economic difficulties in Japan and South
America are well known and seem unlikely to abate significantly over the near term.
Despite the significant uncertainties, the FOMC retained an overall sense of confidence
about prospects for the U.S. economy. Indeed, the FOMC statement also included the
passage:
[T]he Committee believes that today's additional monetary easing should prove
helpful as the economy works its way through this current soft spot. With this
action, the Committee believes that…the risks are balanced with respect to the
prospects for both goals [sustainable economic growth and price stability] in the
foreseeable future.
Thus, barring further adverse shocks, the FOMC perceived the economy as passing through
a "soft spot" at present and viewed the current stance of policy as adequate to foster the
economic recovery. Let me assure you, though, that the Federal Reserve remains vigilant
and stands ready, as always, to implement any changes in the stance of policy deemed
necessary to ensure progress toward achieving its twin goals of sustainable economic growth
and price stability.
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2002 Speeches

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