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Remarks by Governor Edward M. Gramlich
Before the Charlotte Economics Club, Charlotte, North Carolina
January 13, 2000

Inflation Targeting
At one time or another, opinions on how central banks should operate have focused on
fixing exchange rates, stabilizing the rate of growth of the money supply, smoothing the
growth of nominal income, or setting short-term interest rates through an instrument rule.
But lately both academic economists and central bankers have become enamored of a new
procedure that may have more staying power than these other approaches and that has
certainly been more widely adopted around the world. Called inflation targeting, this new
procedure essentially commits a country's central bank to hit an inflation target, usually
expressed as a low, positive rate of inflation subject to some margin of error and some
allowance for outside price shocks.
New Zealand was the first country to adopt a formal inflation targeting regime back in 1990.
It was soon followed by Canada, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Australia. The
European Central Bank at least alludes to inflation targeting in its strategy statements, as do
many countries in eastern Europe that aspire to join the European Union. At least ten
emerging-market countries have adopted inflation targeting as a way to correct persistent
inflation problems. In the last few months alone, Turkey, Switzerland, and South Africa
have announced that they are switching to inflation targeting. When tallied up, the number
of countries on either a formal or an informal inflation-targeting regime now approaches
thirty. Perhaps more meaningfully, there seems to be no country that has first tried inflation
targeting and then abandoned it.
One apparent holdout is the United States. While U.S. central bankers have often stressed
the paramount importance of controlling inflation, the United States has never adopted a
formal inflation target or an inflation-targeting regime. The Federal Reserve operates under
the Federal Reserve Act, which requires the Fed to try to achieve maximum employment
along with price stability. But both in the academic community and in the halls of the
Congress, there are advocates for change. In a series of articles and books, Bernanke,
Laubach, Mishkin, and Posen (1999) have proposed that the United States adopt an explicit
inflation-targeting regime. Senator Connie Mack has introduced a bill to this effect in the
Congress, so far not adopted.
Recognizing that the question of whether the United States should adopt inflation targeting
is ultimately a congressional prerogative, one could still ask the normative question of
whether the United States should go to inflation targeting. The question is difficult to
answer. While inflation targeting seems to have been successful around the world, the
preconditions for success may not be relevant for this country. Given the strong U.S.
commitment to controlling inflation, in the end there may be little difference between the

way monetary policy already is practiced in the United States and the way it is practiced
under the flexible, forward-looking inflation-targeting regimes followed by many countries.
Finally, although one can find economic circumstances in which inflation targeting will
work well, it is also possible to imagine circumstances in which even forward-looking,
flexible inflation targeting may not work so well, some of these circumstances from the
fairly recent past of the United States.
Basic Aspects of Inflation Targeting
Describing an inflation-targeting regime is straightforward. A country or its central bank
commits to controlling inflation, with an explicit target rate and usually a tolerance band
around this target rate. Obvious price shocks such as indirect taxes, commodity prices, or
interest rates themselves are usually excluded in the calculation of inflation targets. Many
inflation-targeting regimes permit flexibility for pursuing other goals, such as output
stabilization, though the primary commitment of the central bank is clearly to control
inflation. Given the lags in monetary policy, many regimes also are forward-looking, in the
sense that the central bank operates not against current inflation but expected inflation in the
near future.
Three rationales normally are given for the adoption of inflation-targeting regimes: The
provision of a nominal anchor for policy, transparency, and credibility. A nominal anchor
may be required if countries permit their exchange rates to vary and if they do not target
either the growth of monetary quantities or nominal income. Governments or their central
banks may need such an anchor to stabilize inflation, and they can generate the anchor by
announcing an inflation target and then doing what they must do to hit that target.
Such an approach would also lead to more transparent monetary policies, as economic
actors would better understand the goals of monetary authorities. To the extent that
monetary authorities can hit their target, central banks would also gain credibility, which
many need after years of inflation. The ideals of transparency and credibility certainly have
democratic value in their own right, but they may also pay off in narrower economic terms.
It is commonly argued that inflationary expectations are a key aspect of the inflation
process. In lowering inflationary expectations, inflation targeting can itself help reduce
inflationary pressures.
One can also rationalize inflation targeting through another form of economic reasoning.
Some years ago many believed, along with Milton Friedman, that stabilizing the growth of
the money supply would lead to stable prices. But this approach is now generally discredited
because shocks in the demand for money and an unstable transmission mechanism imply
that stable growth of monetary aggregates could lead to quite unstable behavior for prices
and real incomes. The next step was to follow Bennett McCallum (1988) and avoid
inappropriate responses to shocks in the demand for money by having the central bank
simply stabilize nominal income growth. But again, if there were shocks in this nominal
income growth, say productivity shocks, stabilizing nominal income growth would not
necessarily stabilize prices. The same productivity shocks have led to difficulties with the
instrument rule proposed by John Taylor (1993), which requires either a predictable rate of
growth of potential output or a predictable natural rate of unemployment. As these other
procedures for conducting monetary policy have run into difficulty, academic economists
have increasingly drifted to the straightforward view of Bernanke, Laubach, Mishkin, Posen
and many others that, if central banks want to stabilize prices, they should just do that by
inflation targeting.

But the migration of academic economists to inflation targeting is nothing compared with
the migration of actual real world countries to inflation targeting. The earliest and still most
elaborate procedures were adopted by New Zealand, where the parliamentary government in
1990 began negotiating inflation targets with its newly independent central bank, making
these targets public, and holding the bank responsible for hitting the targets. Other regimes
came later and were less elaborate, but by now a great many countries have regimes in
which they publish inflation targets, have the central bank commit to meeting these targets,
and comment on the progress in meeting the targets.
Because all central banks in the world are responsible for controlling inflation, it is
reasonable to ask how explicit inflation-targeting regimes differ from non-targeting regimes.
From a legislative standpoint, the differences seem reasonably clear. Inflation-targeting
regimes have explicit inflation targets, explicit commitments of the central bank to meet
these targets, and less formal commitments to achieve other goals, such as output
stabilization. But from a practical standpoint, the differences could be much less distinct. On
one side, even non-targeting countries often will be strongly committed to controlling
inflation. On the other side, countries that target inflation flexibly and in a forward-looking
manner may also strive to reduce output variability, perhaps because it helps to stabilize
future inflation. As will be discussed below, an empirical analysis by Cecchetti and
Ehrmann (1999) does not find large differences in actual policy parameters between the two
sets of countries.
All existing inflation targets around the world are for low, positive rates of inflation. For
developed countries with stable inflation rates, the world average target rate of inflation is
around 2 percent, with an acceptable band that normally ranges from 1 to 3 percent. Target
levels are higher, but are promised to be stepped down gradually over time, for emergingmarket countries that are trying to bring inflation down from very high levels.
There is academic interest in targeting future price levels as opposed to inflation rates. The
two approaches differ mainly in their response to past errors: Is the central bank to be held
responsible for offsetting these past errors and getting the price level back on track or just
for stabilizing inflation from this time forward? But in practice this distinction may not be
that important. King (1999) shows that, if a long enough interval is given to hit the target,
there may be little difference between a price level target and an inflation rate target. In any
event, no country now targets the future price level.
However, there could be an important difference between a target of a low positive rate of
inflation and one of a zero rate of inflation. Many potential inflation targeters ask, "Why not
zero?"
There are three reasons for targeting for an inflation rate above zero. The first is
measurement bias. Try as they might, most countries do have some bias in their price
indexes. It is hard for governmental statistical agencies to eliminate the measurement bias
that occurs whenever new and improved goods are introduced to consumers, and new and
improved goods are continually being introduced. It is also hard to deal with substitution
bias by updating the weights on various consumer goods. Measurement bias is not huge
around the world, and it is coming down as statistical agencies adopt new and improved
statistical procedures. But there may still be some irreducible upward bias in measuring
inflation.

The second reason for shooting at a rate of inflation slightly above zero is known as the zero
bound problem. If a country's real interest rates are close to zero and its inflation rate is
close to zero, its nominal interest rates will also be close to zero. Since costs of holding cash
are minimal, a central bank cannot push nominal interest rates much below zero. This means
that countries that target for zero inflation could get in the bind of being unable to ease
monetary policy in response to recessionary shocks. Today this issue is not much of a
problem around most of the world, but it has become a significant problem in Japan. The
balance of economic thought on the issue is that, once a country gets into this zero bound
situation, it has a very difficult time getting out. This forms a strong rationale for avoiding
the danger in the first place, which can be helped by targeting for a low positive rate of
inflation.
The third reason for targeting a low positive rate of inflation is labor market inefficiencies.
Akerlof, Dickens, and Perry (1996) argue that these can be lessened with some positive
inflation. Essentially, employers can be spared the necessity of cutting workers' nominal
wage when these workers' productivity falls below their real wage. While Akerlof, Dickens,
and Perry make an empirical case for their views, others find little evidence that labor
markets become less efficient when inflation drops to very low levels.
While economists are still debating these issues, from a pragmatic standpoint many
countries do seem to be gravitating toward a consensus on how inflation targeting should
work. All inflation-targeting developed countries target a low positive rate, and emergingmarket countries aspire to this kind of target. No country targets for deflation. Most
countries target inflation in a flexible and forward-looking manner. Most countries have
roughly similar policies toward openness, commitment, and explanation. If whether the
target should be a low positive number or zero is all there is to argue about, that
disagreement certainly ranks low on the intensity scale of policy disputes.
Theoretical Pros and Cons
From a theoretical perspective, one might think that inflation targets would be most valuable
to countries with a history of bad inflation. These countries' central banks need credibility
and have two basic ways to get it. One is to peg their exchange rate to some hard currency
and essentially tie the hands of their central bank. Currency boards, dollar pegs, and
dollarization are all examples of such policies. The second route is to adopt an inflation
target and to stick to it. If the prior inflation is very bad, as it often is in emerging-market
countries, these targets might have to start at a high level and be worked gradually down as
the central bank brings inflation under control.
Although inflation targeting is usually described as an antidote to past inflationary binges, it
has also been suggested as a cure to potential deflation. Krugman (1998), for example, has
argued that Japan, with nominal interest rates stuck at their floor of zero, can lower real
interest rates and stimulate investment by having the Bank of Japan target a positive rate of
inflation and do what it can to hit that target.
Inflation-targeting regimes might also work well when a country undergoes what is known
as a productivity shock. Suppose a wave of innovations makes productivity rise, pushing up
output and lowering unit labor costs. For a time this shock might be reflected in higher-thantrend rates of growth of output and lower-than-trend rates of unemployment, making it
difficult to rely on normal indicators of demand and supply growth in the conduct of
monetary policy. In such circumstances, a cautious central bank might well just wait for

signs of inflation to emerge, thwart the inflation if it occurs, and not rely as heavily on
normal measures of aggregate demand growth or labor market tightness. Such a central bank
would, in effect, be following an inflation-targeting regime. Although liberals in general
have been very critical of inflation targeting (Galbraith, 1999), in this case inflation
targeting would lead to exactly the type of monetary policy they would favor.
But in some cases, inflation targeting might not work out so well. One case is plain old
recessions. Suppose there were a recessionary shock to aggregate demand. Because inflation
normally responds slowly to such shocks, inflation targeters could respond in any of three
ways. Strict inflation targeters, sometimes snidely called inflation nutters, might sit idly by
and let the recession happen. Or, if inflation fell below target ranges, some central banks
might take steps to boost inflation by expansionary monetary policy. They would clearly do
this if deflation threatened, but they might do it even with low positive rates of inflation
below target ranges.
The third possible response involves flexible and forward-looking inflation targeting as is
actually practiced in most countries. Because inflation usually responds slowly to output
changes in recessions, flexible inflation-targeting regimes would be free to ease policy to
stabilize output, much as would non-targeting central banks. Forward-looking central banks
could even act affirmatively against recessions to prevent future inflation from falling below
its target range. Svensson (1999) argues that such a policy strategy clearly outperforms other
monetary regimes. But even here the flexibility to be forward-looking and to pursue other
goals is less than a commitment of the central bank to try to stabilize output or promote full
employment. The exact importance of these other objectives remains in question, even for
flexible and forward-looking inflation-targeting regimes.
Other instances in which inflation targeting might not work so well are negative supply
shocks, such as most economies experienced in the mid-1970s when oil prices exploded. In
these times, inflation rises just as output falls. The most flexible and competent central bank
in the world would be faced with a difficult dilemma in such circumstances--forestall the
recession by making inflation worse or limit the inflation by making the recession worse.
But at least such a central bank would have a choice. In general, an inflation-targeting
central bank would not have much of a choice. It would be forced to try to limit the inflation
by contractionary policies, hence making the recession worse. Even a flexible, forwardlooking inflation-targeting central bank would not have much freedom in such a situation,
because in the end the central bank would be evaluated much more on its success in meeting
inflation targets than in meeting output growth targets.
Hence, inflation targeting does not appear to solve all the problems central banks might face
and cannot be prescribed as a panacea. It still might be a reasonable policy strategy for most
purposes, and it still seems to be generally the proper approach for dealing with histories of
inflation or deflation and, perhaps, with productivity shocks.
Actual Experience
Theoretical arguments aside, many countries have used inflation targeting for most of the
1990s. Hence we can do more than theorize: We can actually look at the inflation-targeting
experience in several countries and see how it has worked out. Various authors have done
this in two ways. They have compared a country's post-inflation-targeting history with its
pre-inflation-targeting history, and they have compared outcomes in inflation-targeting
countries with those in non-targeting countries.

The time series studies have focused mainly on the three countries that have had the longest
experience with inflation targeting--New Zealand (adopted in 1990), Canada (1991), and the
United Kingdom (1992). According to the simple numbers, once these countries adopted
inflation targeting, actual inflation has fallen in each country, and nominal interest rates
have fallen, suggesting lower inflation expectations. Real measures, such as the growth in
output or unemployment, have either shown little change or worsened only slightly.
Generally, unemployment rose as a country disinflated and then returned to its former
average level, but sometimes not all the way there.
Looking behind these simple numbers, a number of authors have done more sophisticated
econometric tests. Ammer and Freeman (1995) estimated VAR models for real GDP, price
levels, and real interest rates up to the adoption of a targeting regime and then simulated
these models into the targeting era, comparing simulated values with actual values. They
found that inflation fell below predictions in all three countries. Real GDP dipped down and
then recovered in New Zealand and the United Kingdom but dipped down and only partly
recovered in Canada.
A subsequent analysis by Freeman and Willis (1995) focused more intensely on interest
rates. The authors noted that long-term nominal rates fell in all three countries following the
adoption of inflation targeting but then came back up in the mid-1990s. The latter rises
could either indicate that inflation-targeting regimes became less credible or simply reflect
the fact that world interest rates were rising at this time. Freeman and Willis worked out a
model to disentangle the two effects and put most of the explanation for rising long-term
nominal rates on the behavior of world interest rates, hence suggesting that inflationtargeting regimes remained credible.
A more recent set of authors conducted similar tests. Mishkin and Posen (1997) noted that
all three inflation-targeting countries reduced inflation before adopting a formal targeting
regime. The achievement of inflation targeting, then, was to lock in the gains of earlier
fights to stabilize prices. The authors also estimated VAR equations up to the adoption of
inflation targeting and simulated these equations into the targeting period, now for six years.
Just as in the earlier analysis of Ammer and Freeman, this analysis suggested that in all three
countries the inflation targeting led to a drop in inflation and nominal interest rates. In
Canada, the rate of growth of real GDP was down slightly; in the other two countries, there
was no change in the rate of growth of real GDP.
Similar results were found by Kahn and Parrish (1998). Despite the fact that inflation had
dropped in all three countries before the adoption of inflation targeting, these authors
observed upward inflationary blips in New Zealand and Canada; so perhaps the achievement
of keeping inflation under control should not be taken for granted. Their results were
buttressed by those of Kuttner and Posen (1999), whose VAR regressions for the United
Kingdom found that inflation persistence was reduced by inflation targeting, as measured by
inflation itself and by nominal interest rates. In Canada, there was no inflation persistence
before or after inflation targeting as measured by inflation rates, though again targeting
reduced inflation persistence as measured by nominal interest rates. In New Zealand, the
results were the opposite--targeting reduced persistence as measured by inflation rates but
seemed to increase it slightly as measured by nominal interest rates.
The main cross-sectional study of countries was done by Cecchetti and Ehrmann (1999).
They noted that the decade of the 1990s, when many countries went to inflation targeting,

was a good one for economic outcomes: Many monetary regimes tried in this decade are
likely to look good. In their formal work, these authors fit VAR models for twenty-three
countries, nine inflation targeters and fourteen non-targeters. From these models, they
deduced policymakers' aversion to inflation volatility. They found that inflation aversion
rose in countries that adopted inflation targeting but only to the level of aversion already
apparent in the policies of the non-targeting countries. At this point, there is very little
difference between aversion to inflation in countries that target and countries that do not
target inflation.
Taken together, the basic data, the time series tests, and the cross-section tests indicate that
inflation targeting has seemed to succeed. Inflation has dropped materially in the three
countries with the longest experience with the regime, and all inflation-targeting countries
are still content with inflation targeting, in some cases eight to ten years after its adoption.
Measures of inflation persistence also have dropped. A seeming weakness of inflation
targeting is in its response to unemployment, but at this time one can find little evidence that
unemployment has worsened in targeting countries. At the same time, inflation targeting has
been adopted in the 1990s, a good decade for economic outcomes in most countries. It is
unclear how inflation targeting would look in more difficult economic circumstances such
as the 1970s.
Is Inflation Targeting Right for the United States?
The hidden question in all this, of course, is whether the United States should go to a regime
of explicit inflation targeting. I am not going to try to answer that question but will make
several points.
First, the question of whether the United States does or does not adopt a formal inflation
targeting regime is not up to the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve Act now requires the
Fed to strive for maximum employment and balanced growth, along with price stability and
moderate long-term interest rates. Until the Congress changes these guidelines, the Fed will
continue to pursue these goals.
Second, the Federal Reserve is strongly committed to controlling inflation, however
formally this goal is specified in the Fed's mandate. This can be seen from both words and
deeds. Countless official pronouncements and testimony affirm the importance of
controlling inflation. As for actions, at least Cecchetti and Ehrmann find that the Fed's
revealed inflation aversion is now as high as that of the formal inflation-targeting countries.
Given this strong inflation aversion, ultimately there may be little difference between
informal inflation targeting as practiced in the United States and flexible, forward-looking
inflation targeting as practiced in many other countries around the world.
That said, one could still ask the normative question of whether the United States should go
to what I will call a more formal system of inflation targeting. Such a system would have
pluses and minuses. One potential plus is in credibility and transparency. Even if the
present-day pragmatic Fed responds to exogenous rises in the growth of aggregate supply or
drops in the non-inflationary rate of unemployment in a fully accommodative manner,
inflation targeting may better communicate the strategy. For example, explicit inflationtargeting statements may help to make it clear that the Fed is really fighting inflation, not
economic growth.
But there are also potential disadvantages. Economic circumstances have been good in the

1990s, when countries have gone over to inflation targeting, and it is worth repeating that
inflation targeting is no panacea. It may not work well in the presence of negative supply
shocks like those experienced throughout the world in the 1970s.
Moreover, there is a potential problem with inflation targeting even in good economic times.
If forecasting inflation is difficult, even forward-looking inflation-targeting central banks
may respond to inflationary shocks too late to ward off inflation. Although there are several
ways to forecast inflation, none may be that reliable. On one side, many analysts use
econometric models, but these may have intrinsic problems in periods of significant
structural shifts. The very nature of such shocks is that they are not easy to predict or model.
On the other side, one could imagine constructing leading indicators of inflation, but the
experience until now is that not many of these are reliable either. One could also rely on
market expectations of inflation, survey evidence, or other forecasts of inflation. But if
models are not working well and there are not many reliable leading indicators, it is not
clear how much information is contained in these other forecasts. Without models or leading
indicators, even forward-looking inflation targeting strategies may not work as well as
advertised.
Conclusion
Inflation targeting has many things going for it. This strategy of conducting monetary policy
has been widely adopted around the world, and it has seemed to be successful in lowering
inflation and perceptions of future inflation. It has a potential drawback in ignoring explicit
consideration of output gaps and unemployment, but perhaps because it has been applied
flexibly and in a forward-looking manner, in fact it has not seemed to generate more
unemployment than other monetary regimes would have. It also may not work as well in
times of negative supply shocks, though this point remains to be tested. For the United
States, given the strong aversion to inflation already apparent in policy responses, there are
various pros and cons, but it is not obvious that a more formal regime of inflation targeting
will lead to very great differences in actual monetary policies.
References
Akerlof, George A., William T. Dickens, and George L. Perry, 1996, "The Macroeconomics
of Low Inflation," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1:1996, 1-76.
Ammer, John, and Richard T. Freeman, 1995, "Inflation Targeting in the 1990s: The
Experiences of New Zealand, Canada, and the United Kingdom," Journal of Economics and
Business, 47:165-192.
Bernanke, Ben S., Thomas Laubach, Frederic S. Mishkin, and Adam S. Posen, 1999,
Inflation Targeting: Lessons from the International Experience, Princeton University Press.
Cecchetti, Stephen G., and Michael Ehrmann, 1999, "Does Inflation Targeting Increase
Output Volatility? An International Comparison of Policymakers' Preferences and
Outcomes," National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 7426.
Freeman, Richard T., and Jonathan L. Willis, 1995, Targeting Inflation in the 1990s: Recent
Challenges, Federal Reserve Board, International Finance Discussion Papers 1995-525.
Galbraith, James K, 1999, "The Inflation Obsession: Flying in the Face of Facts," Foreign

Affairs, January-February, 78, 152-156.
Kahn, George A., and Klara Parrish, 1998, "Conducting Monetary Policy with Inflation
Targets," Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Economic Review, 3rd quarter, 5-32.
King, Mervyn, 1999, "Challenges for Monetary Policy: New and Old," New Challenges for
Monetary Policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, forthcoming.
Krugman, Paul R.,1998, "It's Baaack: Japan's Slump and the Return of the Liquidity Trap,"
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2:1998, 137-206.
Kuttner, Kenneth N., and Adam S. Posen, 1999, "Does Talk Matter After All? Inflation
Targeting and Central Bank Behavior," Federal Reserve Bank of New York, mimeo.
McCallum, Bennett T., 1998, "Robustness Properties of a Rule for Monetary Policy,"
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 29, 173-204.
Mishkin, Frederic S., and Adam S. Posen, 1997, "Inflation Targeting: Lessons from Four
Countries," Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Economic Policy Review, August, 9-110.
Svensson, Lars E. O., 1999, "How Should Monetary Policy Be Conducted in an Era of Price
Stability?" Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, New Challenges for Monetary Policy,
forthcoming.
Taylor, John B, 1993, "Discretion versus Policy Rules in Practice," Carnegie-Rochester
Conference Series on Public Policy, 39, 195-214.
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