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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses FOMC Forecasts and Implications
for Monetary Policy
12/7/2015
MUNCIE, Ind. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard re ected on
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) forecasts running up to 2015 and their
implications for monetary policy. He delivered his remarks during the 20th Annual
Indiana Economic Outlook Luncheon at Ball State University on Monday.

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James Bullard
St. Louis Fed President and CEO

During his presentation, titled “A Hat Trick for the FOMC,” Bullard noted that each
quarter, FOMC participants prepare forecasts for variables including real gross
domestic product (GDP) growth, the unemployment rate and in ation. In the last 18
months, the FOMC has been surprised on all three of those variables, he said. “The
surprise has been that real GDP growth has been slower than expected, in ation has
been lower than expected, and labor markets have improved more rapidly than
expected,” he explained.
“These misses are such that they continue to pull the Committee in different directions
on monetary policy,” Bullard said. “Unexpectedly low in ation and real GDP growth
suggest pushing policy in a somewhat easier direction. Robust labor markets suggest
pushing policy in a somewhat tighter direction,” he explained. Bullard noted that, in
response to these surprises, the FOMC’s adjustment to policy was to move toward a
later normalization.

James Bullard is president and
chief executive o cer of the
Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis. In these roles, he
participates in the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) and
directs the activities of the
Federal Reserve’s Eighth
District.

Assessment of FOMC Forecasts for 2015

President's Website

Since FOMC participants’ forecasts are submitted under an assumption of appropriate
monetary policy, “this aspect of the exercise clouds the meaning of these Committee
forecasts,” Bullard said, adding, “This is a long-standing problem.” However, during his
presentation, he treated the FOMC prognostications as forecasts of what will actually
happen.

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Bullard examined the FOMC’s 2015 forecast ranges and “central tendency”—which
omits the three highest and three lowest projections—for three macroeconomic
variables. The forecasts he assessed for 2015 were those made for the June 2014
FOMC meeting.
Regarding the FOMC’s GDP forecasts, Bullard noted that the central tendency of the
FOMC overestimated real GDP growth for 2015. The bottom line, he said, is that the
growth forecast was too high for 2015. This includes the St. Louis Fed’s own forecast,
he added.

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Bullard then turned to a discussion of the FOMC forecasts for unemployment. “The
Committee missed the extent of the decline in unemployment in 2015, expecting less
labor market improvement than was observed,” he said. While the St. Louis Fed had one
of the lower forecasts for the end-of-year unemployment rate for 2015, he noted that
this estimate was still too high. Thus, for the third year in a row, Bullard said that the
FOMC was too pessimistic on labor market improvement.
Bullard added that forecasts from the private sector have also been too pessimistic on
unemployment. “Fed and private sector forecasters may want to change their thinking
on unemployment, having been wrong three years in a row,” he said.
In discussing in ation forecasts, Bullard noted that the FOMC, as well as the St. Louis
Fed, overestimated headline in ation for 2015. “However, a large oil price shock is still
in uencing the in ation numbers,” he said. Bullard added that while the FOMC was
closer on its forecast for core in ation (which excludes food and energy prices), it was
also still too high, as was the St. Louis Fed’s core in ation forecast. “We expected
in ation to rebound as the economy improved,” he noted.
Implications for Current Monetary Policy
In traditional central banking, Bullard explained that when macroeconomic performance
deviates from expectations, policymakers chart a different course for interest rates.
“The surprisingly strong improvement in labor markets suggests somewhat earlier and
faster policy rate increases than would otherwise be the case. But the slower-thanexpected real GDP growth and lower-than-expected in ation suggest somewhat later
and slower policy rate increases than otherwise,” he said.
The result, he noted, was a more dovish policy stance. “The Committee did adjust the
policy rate path in response to the news embodied in forecast errors between the
summer of 2014 and today,” Bullard said, adding that this adjustment was toward a
later increase in the policy rate from near zero.
“This can be interpreted as showing that the Committee does react to news on the
economy that deviates from expectations,” Bullard said. “It also suggests that negative
surprises with respect to real GDP growth and in ation carried more weight during this
period than the positive surprises on labor market performance.”

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