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For release at 8:30 a.m. EDT
July 17, 2013

Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Financial Services
U.S. House of Representatives
July 17, 2013

Chairman Hensarling, Ranking Member Waters, and other members of the Committee, I
am pleased to present the Federal Reserve’s semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.
I will discuss current economic conditions and the outlook and then turn to monetary policy. I’ll
finish with a short summary of our ongoing work on regulatory reform.
The Economic Outlook
The economic recovery has continued at a moderate pace in recent quarters despite the
strong headwinds created by federal fiscal policy.
Housing has contributed significantly to recent gains in economic activity. Home sales,
house prices, and residential construction have moved up over the past year, supported by low
mortgage rates and improved confidence in both the housing market and the economy. Rising
housing construction and home sales are adding to job growth, and substantial increases in home
prices are bolstering household finances and consumer spending while reducing the number of
homeowners with underwater mortgages. Housing activity and prices seem likely to continue to
recover, notwithstanding the recent increases in mortgage rates, but it will be important to
monitor developments in this sector carefully.
Conditions in the labor market are improving gradually. The unemployment rate stood at
7.6 percent in June, about a half percentage point lower than in the months before the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC) initiated its current asset purchase program in September.
Nonfarm payroll employment has increased by an average of about 200,000 jobs per month so
far this year. Despite these gains, the jobs situation is far from satisfactory, as the unemployment
rate remains well above its longer-run normal level, and rates of underemployment and longterm unemployment are still much too high.

-2Meanwhile, consumer price inflation has been running below the Committee’s longer-run
objective of 2 percent. The price index for personal consumption expenditures rose only
1 percent over the year ending in May. This softness reflects in part some factors that are likely
to be transitory. Moreover, measures of longer-term inflation expectations have generally
remained stable, which should help move inflation back up toward 2 percent. However, the
Committee is certainly aware that very low inflation poses risks to economic performance--for
example, by raising the real cost of capital investment--and increases the risk of outright
deflation. Consequently, we will monitor this situation closely as well, and we will act as needed
to ensure that inflation moves back toward our 2 percent objective over time.
At the June FOMC meeting, my colleagues and I projected that economic growth would
pick up in coming quarters, resulting in gradual progress toward the levels of unemployment and
inflation consistent with the Federal Reserve’s statutory mandate to foster maximum
employment and price stability. Specifically, most participants saw real GDP growth beginning
to step up during the second half of this year, eventually reaching a pace between 2.9 and 3.6
percent in 2015. They projected the unemployment rate to decline to between 5.8 and 6.2 percent
by the final quarter of 2015. And they saw inflation gradually increasing toward the
Committee’s 2 percent objective.1
The pickup in economic growth projected by most Committee participants partly reflects
their view that federal fiscal policy will exert somewhat less drag over time, as the effects of the
tax increases and the spending sequestration diminish. The Committee also believes that risks to
the economy have diminished since the fall, reflecting some easing of financial stresses in
Europe, the gains in housing and labor markets that I mentioned earlier, the better budgetary

1

These projections reflect FOMC participants’ assessments based on their individual judgments regarding
appropriate monetary policy.

-3positions of state and local governments, and stronger household and business balance sheets.
That said, the risks remain that tight federal fiscal policy will restrain economic growth over the
next few quarters by more than we currently expect, or that the debate concerning other fiscal
policy issues, such as the status of the debt ceiling, will evolve in a way that could hamper the
recovery. More generally, with the recovery still proceeding at only a moderate pace, the
economy remains vulnerable to unanticipated shocks, including the possibility that global
economic growth may be slower than currently anticipated.
Monetary Policy
With unemployment still high and declining only gradually, and with inflation running
below the Committee’s longer-run objective, a highly accommodative monetary policy will
remain appropriate for the foreseeable future.
In normal circumstances, the Committee’s basic tool for providing monetary
accommodation is its target for the federal funds rate. However, the target range for the federal
funds rate has been close to zero since late 2008 and cannot be reduced meaningfully further.
Instead, we are providing additional policy accommodation through two distinct yet
complementary policy tools. The first tool is expanding the Federal Reserve’s portfolio of
longer-term Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS); we are currently
purchasing $40 billion per month in agency MBS and $45 billion per month in Treasuries. The
second tool is “forward guidance” about the Committee’s plans for setting the federal funds rate
target over the medium term.
Within our overall policy framework, we think of these two tools as having somewhat
different roles. We are using asset purchases and the resulting expansion of the Federal
Reserve’s balance sheet primarily to increase the near-term momentum of the economy, with the

-4specific goal of achieving a substantial improvement in the outlook for the labor market in a
context of price stability. We have made some progress toward this goal, and, with inflation
subdued, we intend to continue our purchases until a substantial improvement in the labor market
outlook has been realized. In addition, even after purchases end, the Federal Reserve will be
holding its stock of Treasury and agency securities off the market and reinvesting the proceeds
from maturing securities, which will continue to put downward pressure on longer-term interest
rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more
accommodative.
We are relying on near-zero short-term interest rates, together with our forward guidance
that rates will continue to be exceptionally low--our second tool--to help maintain a high degree
of monetary accommodation for an extended period after asset purchases end, even as the
economic recovery strengthens and unemployment declines toward more-normal levels. In
appropriate combination, these two tools can provide the high level of policy accommodation
needed to promote a stronger economic recovery with price stability.
In the interest of transparency, Committee participants agreed in June that it would be
helpful to lay out more details about our thinking regarding the asset purchase program-specifically, to provide additional information on our assessment of progress to date, as well as
of the likely trajectory of the program if the economy evolves as projected. This agreement to
provide additional information did not reflect a change in policy.
The Committee’s decisions regarding the asset purchase program (and the overall stance
of monetary policy) depend on our assessment of the economic outlook and of the cumulative
progress toward our objectives. Of course, economic forecasts must be revised when new
information arrives and are thus necessarily provisional. As I noted, the economic outcomes that

-5Committee participants saw as most likely in their June projections involved continuing gains in
labor markets, supported by moderate growth that picks up over the next several quarters as the
restraint from fiscal policy diminishes. Committee participants also saw inflation moving back
toward our 2 percent objective over time. If the incoming data were to be broadly consistent
with these projections, we anticipated that it would be appropriate to begin to moderate the
monthly pace of purchases later this year. And if the subsequent data continued to confirm this
pattern of ongoing economic improvement and normalizing inflation, we expected to continue to
reduce the pace of purchases in measured steps through the first half of next year, ending them
around midyear. At that point, if the economy had evolved along the lines we anticipated, the
recovery would have gained further momentum, unemployment would be in the vicinity of
7 percent, and inflation would be moving toward our 2 percent objective. Such outcomes would
be fully consistent with the goals of the asset purchase program that we established in
September.
I emphasize that, because our asset purchases depend on economic and financial
developments, they are by no means on a preset course. On the one hand, if economic conditions
were to improve faster than expected, and inflation appeared to be rising decisively back toward
our objective, the pace of asset purchases could be reduced somewhat more quickly. On the
other hand, if the outlook for employment were to become relatively less favorable, if inflation
did not appear to be moving back toward 2 percent, or if financial conditions--which have
tightened recently--were judged to be insufficiently accommodative to allow us to attain our
mandated objectives, the current pace of purchases could be maintained for longer. Indeed, if
needed, the Committee would be prepared to employ all of its tools, including an increase the

-6pace of purchases for a time, to promote a return to maximum employment in a context of price
stability.
As I noted, the second tool the Committee is using to support the recovery is forward
guidance regarding the path of the federal funds rate. The Committee has said it intends to
maintain a high degree of monetary accommodation for a considerable time after the asset
purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. In particular, the Committee
anticipates that its current exceptionally low target range for the federal funds rate will be
appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent and inflation
and inflation expectations remain well behaved in the sense described in the FOMC’s statement.
As I have observed on several occasions, the phrase “at least as long as” is a key
component of the policy rate guidance. These words indicate that the specific numbers for
unemployment and inflation in the guidance are thresholds, not triggers. Reaching one of the
thresholds would not automatically result in an increase in the federal funds rate target; rather, it
would lead the Committee to consider whether the outlook for the labor market, inflation, and
the broader economy justified such an increase. For example, if a substantial part of the
reductions in measured unemployment were judged to reflect cyclical declines in labor force
participation rather than gains in employment, the Committee would be unlikely to view a
decline in unemployment to 6-1/2 percent as a sufficient reason to raise its target for the federal
funds rate. Likewise, the Committee would be unlikely to raise the funds rate if inflation
remained persistently below our longer-run objective. Moreover, so long as the economy
remains short of maximum employment, inflation remains near our longer-run objective, and
inflation expectations remain well anchored, increases in the target for the federal funds rate,
once they begin, are likely to be gradual.

-7Regulatory Reform
I will finish by providing you with a brief update on progress on reforms to reduce the
systemic risk of the largest financial firms. As Governor Tarullo discussed in his testimony last
week before the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, the Federal Reserve,
with the other federal banking agencies, adopted a final rule earlier this month to implement the
Basel III capital reforms.2 The final rule increases the quantity and quality of required regulatory
capital by establishing a new minimum common equity tier 1 capital ratio and implementing a
capital conservation buffer. The rule also contains a supplementary leverage ratio and a
countercyclical capital buffer that apply only to large and internationally active banking
organizations, consistent with their systemic importance. In addition, the Federal Reserve will
propose capital surcharges on firms that pose the greatest systemic risk and will issue a proposal
to implement the Basel III quantitative liquidity requirements as they are phased in over the next
few years. The Federal Reserve is considering further measures to strengthen the capital
positions of large, internationally active banks, including the proposed rule issued last week that
would increase the required leverage ratios for such firms.3
The Fed also is working to finalize the enhanced prudential standards set out in sections
165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Among these standards, rules relating to stress testing and
resolution planning already are in place, and we have been actively engaged in stress tests and
reviewing the “first-wave” resolution plans. In coordination with other agencies, we have made

2

See Daniel K. Tarullo (2013), “Dodd-Frank Implementation,” statement before the Committee on Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate, July 11,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/tarullo20130711a.htm; and Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (2013), “Federal Reserve Board Approves Final Rule to Help Ensure Banks Maintain Strong
Capital Positions,” press release, July 2, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20130702a.htm.
3
See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (2013), “Agencies Adopt Supplementary Leverage Ratio Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking,” joint press release, July 9, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20130709a.htm.

-8significant progress on the key substantive issues relating to the Volcker rule and are hoping to
complete it by year-end.
Finally, the Federal Reserve is preparing to regulate and supervise systemically important
nonbank financial firms. Last week, the Financial Stability Oversight Council designated two
nonbank financial firms; it has proposed the designation of a third firm, which has requested a
hearing before the council.4 We are developing a supervisory and regulatory framework that can
be tailored to each firm’s business mix, risk profile, and systemic footprint, consistent with the
Collins amendment and other legal requirements under the Dodd-Frank Act.
Thank you. I would be pleased to take your questions.

4

U.S. Department of the Treasury (2013), “Financial Stability Oversight Council Makes First Nonbank Financial
Company Designations to Address Potential Threats to Financial Stability,” press release, July 9,
www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/jl2004.aspx.