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For release on delivery
12:30 p.m. EDT
June 4, 2004

The Outlook for Inflation
Remarks by

Donald L. Kohn

Member

Board of Govemors of the Federal Reserve System

to the

National Economists Club

Washington, D.C.

June 4,2004

Inflation has picked up this year, and by enough to raise questions in the minds of some about
whether it might be on a rising trend that poses a risk to price stability. Total consumer price inflation as
measured by the chain price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE) has risen from 1.4
percent over the twelve months oflast year to an annual rate of3.0 percent over the first four months of
2004. Of course, a portion of this acceleration is due to the faster increase in energy prices this year.
But the strengthening in price increases has not been confined to energy markets. PCE prices excluding
food and energy have risen at an annual rate of 1.7 percent this year, up from 0.8 percent last year.
The consumer price index has shown a similar pattern of acceleration.
The recent shift up in inflation can be seen not just in the price indexes but also in attitudes,
anecdotes, and expectations. Businesses report that the prices of many inputs to the production
process are increasing, and they also sense a return of "pricing power" that has allowed them to pass
on at least some of these cost increases to their customers; my impression is that of late a greater
number of stories in general-circulation newspapers have focused on rising prices and their effect on
households; and expectations by economists and households of near-term inflation have moved higher.
The commitment ofthe Federal Reserve to maintaining price stability remains strong and
unaltered. Price stability is our responsibility, and the record of the past thirty-five years demonstrates
how important it is that we meet it. Allowing businesses and households to plan and operate without
worrying about increases in the general price level over the long run is how we contribute best to
fostering economic efficiency and rising standards of living. A number of members of the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC), myself included, have been quite explicit in noting that the current level of
the federal funds rate will not be consistent, over time, with the objective of preserving price stability.
The question is what path of tightening is likely to be necessary to accomplish that objective, and the

-2-

answer to that question will depend critically on the behavior of inflation.
Although inflation is ultimately a monetary phenomenon, the stance of policy--measured either
by interest rates or liquidity provision--is not connected in a direct and simple way to the rate of
inflation. Individual prices are detelmined by supply and demand in the markets for goods and
services, and the average of those prices by relationships of aggregate supply and demand. Monetary
policy acts on inflation indirectly by altering the balance among the mUltiplicity of factors that affect
supply and demand. To make well-informed policy decisions, we need to analyze the elements behind
the recent increase in inflation and form some judgment about its likely future course.
Like many economists, I believe the inflation process is influenced by a number of factors, chief
among which are: the degree to which the productive capacity in the economy is being utilized; onetime shifts in product prices resulting from shocks to important supply and demand curves; changes in
productivity growth; and inflation expectations. This basic model is a rough approximation of a
complex and constantly evolving mechanism of price determination, and its track record can hardly be
considered flawless. I But it does offer a useful framework for the analysis of inflation, and I am going
to use it for that purpose here.
I want to emphasize that I am speaking for myself today. The analysis and views are my own,
and not necessarily those of my colleagues on the FOMC. 2

In simulations of the FRBfUS model, which uses such a framework, the 70 percent
confidence interval around the four-quarter forecast of core PCE inflation is 1-1/4 percentage points
wide.
I

2David Wilcox, John Roberts, Jeremy Rudd, and Peter Tulip of the Federal Reserve Board's
staff provided valuable assistance.

-3-

The Data
Before beginning to examine the detenninants of inflation, we need to remind ourselves of the
inherently noisy nature of the price data. They are highly variable month-to-month and quarter-toquarter, and they are imperfect proxies for the true change in general prices. As a consequence,
discerning the underlying trend of inflation is no easy task.
Had I been speaking to you just a year ago, you would have expected me to address the
possibility of deflation and what the Federal Reserve might do either to head it off or to deal with it
once interest rates had reached zero. In newspapers and in market reports, you would have read that
the integration of China and India into the global trading system meant persistent excess supply of labor
and products that would place downward pressure on wages and prices in the developed world for
years to corne. Now the concern has shifted to whether inflation is rising, and those earlier stories are
frequently being turned on their heads. It is increasingly common to hear that strong demand for energy
and other basic materials, importantly including demand from Asia, has been boosting inflation here.
To be sure, the underlying economic situation has changed over the past year--most
particularly, growth has picked up in the United States and elsewhere around the world. But actual
circumstances probably have not shifted as dramatically as the commentary, which serves as a warning
about how important it is to try to gauge the fundamental forces bearing on inflation so as to reduce the
chances of being misled by noisy data.
In that regard, although a weak economy, associated slack in resource utilization, and rapid
increases in productivity were undoubtedly reducing inflation last year, core inflation--especially as
measured by the core CPI--seems to have fallen by more, and to a lower level, in 2003 than these

-4-

fundamentals can explain. Typically, such departures from historically normal behavior do not persist,
and inflation tends to return to a level more in line with its fundamental determinants. Indeed, the stepup in inflation this year from last year's pace may partly reflect such a return.
Within the CPI, the component called owners' equivalent rent, which accounts for nearly a
quarter of the overall index, seems to have been an important factor in the surprising decline in inflation
last year. That series uses movements in home rents as a proxy for changes in the cost of home
ownership. Owners' equivalent rent rose only 2 percent in 2003, down from 3-114 percent in 2002.
Some deceleration in rents is to be expected when low interest rates hold down the user cost of owning
a home, favoring home ownership over renting. However, owners' equivalent rent softened more than
one would have predicted from historical relationships between rents and interest rates. So far this
year, owners' equivalent rent has risen at an annual rate of 3 percent, returning to a more typical
relationship with interest rates and contributing to the pickup in core inflation.
Of course, even if some of the rebound in core consumer price inflation represents simply a
reversal of some of the factors that kept inflation unusually low last year, other influences might be at
work that would cause inflation to continue to rise. To get a sense of whether we are on the cusp of
worsening inflation, we must examine what might be affecting the supply and demand for goods and
servIces.
Determinants of Inflation

Economic slack. Judgments about the source of the recent increase in inflation and the likely
course of prices over the next year or so rest in part on an assessment of how close the economy is to
producing at its long-run potential. History indicates that when capital and labor are not fully

-5employed, competition for market share and for jobs tends to push down the rate ofinflation. 3
Using measures of potential output and economic slack in real-time forecasting and
policymaking presents daunting challenges. That is because potential output is not something that can
ever be observed and directly verified; we infer it from the behavior of other variables, including prices
themselves, that we do observe. Estimating potential output and slack also is complicated by changes
over time in labor and product markets that alter the degree of resource utilization that is consistent with
stable inflation.
That said, most indicators we have suggest that the economy continues to operate with an
appreciable--albeit diminishing--margin of slack. For about the past six months, the unemployment rate
has averaged a little less than 5-3/4 percent. This rate is down from its peak of about 6-1/4 percent in
the middle oflast year, but it is still somewhat above a level that, on the basis of the experience of the
last decade or so, appears to be consistent with stable inflation. Capacity utilization in manufacturing
has recovered to a little more than 75 percent in recent months. But that level remains well below its
long-run average of 80 percent.
A number of observers have argued lately that a pickup in the pace of technological change and
a more rapid evolution in the character of global competition have increased the speed at which capital
equipment is becoming obsolete and at which workers' skills are becoming poorly matched withjob
requirements. If these effects are important, current consensus estimates of the natural rate of

3We need to be careful not to overstate the importance of slack for determining the future
course of inflation, however. In most econometric models, measures of slack account for only about
one-fourth or less of the year-ahead fluctuations in core consumer price inflation.

-6unemployment as well as of the "natural rate of capacity utilization" could overstate the degree of
effective slack.
I am skeptical of these arguments for a couple of reasons. In the labor market, the behavior of
compensation in recent years has been consistent with standard models of wage dynamics incorporating
a natural rate still somewhat below the current unemployment rate. Moreover, one of the surprising
developments of the current cycle has been the extent of the decline in labor-force participation. Many
analysts have adopted the working hypothesis that this decline reflects a type of "discouraged worker"
effect, albeit one that is not captured in the standard statistical series attempting to measure that
phenomenon. Presumably, many of the people who exited the workforce in the face of poor
employment prospects now stand ready to resume competing for jobs as the market improves. If that
is correct, then the current level of the unemployment rate relative to estimates of the natural rate, may,
if anything, understate the availability of labor resources.

In addition, I do not believe that the relationship of the Federal Reserve's measure of capacity
utilization to available slack in the manufacturing sector has changed materially of late. This measure is,
for the most part, benchmarked to utilization rates from a large survey of individual plant managers who
would be aware of, and take into account, the technological obsolescence of the equipment in their own
factories. These survey data, as well as data on capacity from various trade sources, should fully reflect
pennanent plant closings within, at most, a year or SO.4

4In the view of some observers, the argument that the Federal Reserve's capacity measures
overstate available slack has been lent some credibility recently by the much higher capacity utilization
numbers published by the Institute of Supply Management (ISM). The differences between the ISM
and Federal Reserve's estimates of operating rates likely lie in the definitions of capacity. The Federal

-7-

Most measures of resource utilization have not changed very much from a year and more ago,
when inflation was falling. The unemployment rate hovered near 5-3/4 percent through much of 2002
and the first quarter of 2003; capacity utilization has recovered only a fraction from its lowest level since
the very deep recession of the early 1980s. The structure and functioning of markets and the pace of
obsolescence simply do not change enough over a year to alter materially the implications of a given
reading on these particular indicators. The net decline in core measures of inflation over the past few
years--even after taking account of possible understatement of inflation last year--is consistent with a
noticeable gap in resource utilization still existing today.
Going forward, I anticipate continued strong growth in demand but, given persistent solid gains
in productivity and potential output, only a gradual closing of the output gap. Under these
circumstances, ongoing competitive pressures in labor and product markets should help to contain cost
and price increases. The downward pressure will probably diminish over time, but at least for a while,
economic slack should continue to operate as a restraining force on the overall trend in inflation.
Of course, I may be wrong in this assessment of slack in the economy. As central bankers, we
need to be cognizant of the uncertainties associated with our estimates of potential output and adjust
policies if events prove us wrong. But for now, I believe the balance of the evidence points to the

Reserve's measure assumes the availability of additional labor, if needed. The ISM measures the
capacity of plants to produce with their current labor force. In the wake of a significant cyclical
contraction in manufacturing employment, such as we have experienced in recent years, a definition of
capacity that relies on workers in place will indicate much less slack than a definition that does not
include current labor as a limiting factor. Since labor can be added relatively quickly, the Federal
Reserve's definition of capacity utilization seems more relevant for assessing effective slack in the
manufacturing sector.

-8conclusion that the recent rise in inflation probably does not signal that the economy has been producing
beyond its sustainable potential, but rather that other causes have been at work. I now tum to these
other causes.

Price shocks. Quite a few prices have been pushed higher in recent quarters by special
influences on the supply and demand for the specific products involved. Such increases are probably
contributing to the broad pickUp in inflation that we have seen this year, but most likely they are not
going to be a source of continuing upward pressure on prices.
It is not surprising that the substantial strengthening of aggregate demand here and abroad has

boosted prices for inputs into the production process, with the most noticeable effects on products for
which the short-run supply is relatively price-inelastic. Increases in commodity prices are typical as an
expansion gathers momentum, but they have been unusually large in the current episode because of the
synchronous strengthening here and overseas, especially in Asia. Petroleum prices have been under
particular pressure, reflecting not only stronger demand but also risks that supplies could be constrained
by terrorism or political disruption.
The decline in the foreign exchange value of the dollar over the past year or so has contributed
to the rise in the price of imports in the United States. The prices of core non-energy imports began to
increase more rapidly than the general level of core consumer prices in 2003, and the difference
widened in the first quarter of this year, adding to general price increases. In addition, the dollar's
decline has reduced the intensity of foreign competition felt by U.S. producers, which may be one
source of the sense among domestic producers that their pricing power has returned.
Commodities and imports are only a small part of what we consume, and changes in their

-9prices as well as in the price of energy usually do not affect measured core consumer inflation very
much. But the recent situation has been notable for the size and number of price shocks going in the
same direction, so that even with limited pass-though of individual price movements, the total effect
probably has been significant. Judging from the results of statistical models incorporating the factors we
have been examining, increases in commodity, energy and import prices together might have boosted
core consumer inflation on the order of roughly 114 to 112 percentage point over the past four quarters.
But we are already seeing evidence of the limited nature of these types of price-level
adjustments. The prices of many non-energy commodities have come down from their peaks lately,
perhaps reflecting an actual or expected moderation of growth in Asia and ongoing demand and supply
responses to higher prices. In addition, the dollar has stabilized as optimism has increased about the
strength and durability of the expansion in the United States. Energy prices have continued to climb,
but futures markets see some moderation of these prices getting under way before long. Ifthese
circumstances prevail, shocks to commodity, energy, and import prices should no longer be adding as
much to inflation.
Of course, over the longer haul, whether or not these one-off shifts in the price level lead to
ongoing price inflation will be determined by their effects on inflation expectations and the response of
monetary policy, an issue I will refer to shortly.

Productivity. The rate of increase in productivity also can have important effects on inflation
pressures. In the past few years, for example, the juxtaposition of very rapid productivity growth and
weak aggregate demand has resulted in the slack in resource utilization I talked about earlier, which
contributed to the decrease in inflation. But productivity growth also influences inflation through its

-10effects on labor compensation and profit margins.
Over the long run, real labor compensation tends to track labor productivity. This implies that
when productivity accelerates, compensation eventually will as well. The record of the post-World
War II period suggests, however, that changes in compensation tend to lag well behind changes in
productivity trends. Thus, when underlying productivity growth picks up, finns tend to enjoy a wider
profit margin for a time because unit labor costs tend initially to decelerate. The economy can enjoy the
fruits of more rapid productivity growth for a while in the form of unusually high levels of production
without added inflation or in the fonn of lower inflation. We realized some of each in the last half of the
1990s after productivity growth picked up. Over time, as compensation catches up to productivity,
profit margins tend to come back toward more normal levels, and output must return to its long-run
potential if inflation is to be avoided.
Productivity increased especially rapidly through the recent downturn and the initial stages of
the subsequent expansion. We will not know for some time with any degree of confidence whether this
increase marked a further pickup in structural productivity growth--that is, over and above the already
rapid rate of increase of the late 1990s. We can be reasonably certain that a portion of the
extraordinary increase in productivity over the past few years was a response to the particular
circumstances that were prevailing. These included the pressures on the profits and finances of firms
when the economy was sluggish and the availability of efficiency gains as businesses continued to find
better ways to utilize the large amounts of new technology and capital that became available in the
1990s. The extraordinary increase in productivity in recent years reduced unit labor costs and elevated
profit margins to near record levels, even as inflation continued to decline.

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I think we can anticipate that productivity growth will remain strong on a sustained basis, even
if it is unlikely to match the outsized gains of the past few years. Meanwhile, compensation growth
should strengthen as labor markets tighten and businesses bid harder for labor to take advantage of
profit opportunities. Nonetheless, the high level of business profit margins suggests that, even if unit
labor costs begin to rise more quickly than prices, the effect on inflation could be muted for a time
because firms would have room to absorb some of the cost increases in the form of reduced profit
margins. Such was the experience in the late 1990s. The initial surge in productivity showed up mostly
in higher profit margins in 1996 and 1997. From 1998 through 2000, as compensation caught up to
productivity, unit labor costs rose more rapidly than prices without placing inflation under significant
upward pressure. To be sure, margins cannot shrink forever--just as they cannot grow to the sky. But
elevated margins provide some cushion against cost pressures being passed through to prices--so long
as the central bank does not allow excess demand to develop in product markets.
Inflation expectations. Inflation expectations playa key role in price determination. Among

other effects, a rise in inflation expectations tends to become self-fulfilling as people seek to protect
themselves in the process of setting wages and prices.
Expectations of price increases over the near-term--specifically, over the next year--have, in
fact, risen noticeably on the heels of the actual increase in inflation. But, as I have discussed, some of
the price shocks giving rise to the increase in inflation in the past few months look as though they are
unlikely to be repeated and may already be in the process of partially reversing, and expectations
should subside with actual inflation.
Moreover, available surveys suggest that the recent uptick in total and core inflation has not

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materially affected expectations of inflation over the longer term. This stability of long-term inflation
expectations is evident in the Survey of Professional Forecasters, conducted by the Federal Reserve
Bank of Philadelphia, and in the median expectations of households responding to the University of
Michigan survey.
However, the pattern of inflation compensation in Treasury securities markets has been less
reassuring. A widening of the spread between the ten-year nominal and ten-year indexed securities is
not itself surprising; part of that widening is accounted for by the increase in short-term inflation
expectations. But part could be read also as signaling investor concerns about inflation over a more
distant horizon. The spread of the forward rates embedded in the nominal yield curve from five to ten
years out over the forward rates derived from the indexed yield curve has widened more than 50 basis
points since late March.
Changes in this spread can be a misleading indicator of inflation expectations. It is affected by
idiosyncratic movements in either nominal or indexed yields, and it reflects changing liquidity in these
markets and compensation for inflation risk as well as for inflation itself. But it could be a warning sign.
Long-term inflation expectations firmly anchored at price stability make the task of keeping inflation low
much easier. The Federal Reserve has made plain its commitment to preserving price stability, and I
am confident that we would act decisively to counter any deterioration in longer-run inflation
expectations that threatened that objective.
Summary and Policy Implications
The evidence and analysis I have just reviewed suggest that the recent pickup in price increases
probably does not represent the leading edge of steadily worsening inflation. Much of the acceleration

-13in the early months of this year likely reflects a rebound from unexplainably low inflation last year and
the feed-through of increases in commodity, energy, and import prices. The best indications are that
some economic slack persists and that long-term inflation expectations are stable, which bolsters the
inference that the economy has not entered a situation of steadily rising inflation. Most economic
forecasts point to a gradual approach toward full utilization of the productive capacity ofthe economy.
Commodity, energy, and import prices are unlikely to continue moving up at the speed of recent
quarters. Productivity growth is still strong. And elevated profit margins are available to absorb
increases in unit labor costs for a while. As a result, inflation is most likely to remain at levels consistent
with a continuation of effective price stability.
That said, the federal funds rate cannot be held at its current 1evel indefinitely if price stability is
to be preserved. The very accommodative stance of policy--including both the low level of the funds
rate and the FOMC's indications that it was intending to hold it at that level for a while--was put in
place to counter unusually weak demand and declining inflation. Circumstances have changed and
policy will respond. The challenge we face is to remove the accommodation in such a way as to foster
both the return to full employment and the maintenance of price stability.
Because I believe that the rise in inflation will be limited and because I agree that growth of
output is likely to only moderately exceed the growth of the economy's potential, I supported the
FOMC's assessment at its last meeting that accommodation likely can be removed at a pace that is
likely to be measured.
But experience counsels caution. There is much about the inflation process that we do not
understand, and I have been surprised at the extent of the pickup in core inflation this year. Moreover,

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measures of inflation expectations will require careful scrutiny as we move forward. An examination of
the variables believed to proxy for aggregate demand and potential supply can help to explain inflation
and to forecast future price developments, and the concepts are integral to making monetary policy.
But given our limited understanding of price determination, we must also keep a close watch on actual
inflation outcomes.

It took about twenty years to undo the effects on economic behavior of the inflationary episode
of the 1970s. We must preserve those gains if we are to meet our responsibilities for fostering
economic growth and stability.