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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses U.S. Macroeconomic and
Monetary Policy Outlook
7/12/2016
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed “A
Tale of Two Narratives” on Tuesday during an event of the St. Louis Gateway Chapter of
the National Association for Business Economics (NABE). In particular, he explained
how the St. Louis Fed’s approach to near-term U.S. macroeconomic and monetary
policy projections recently changed.1

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James Bullard
St. Louis Fed President and CEO

Bullard noted that the St. Louis Fed’s previous narrative assumed that the economy is
converging to a unique, long-run steady state and that values for key macroeconomic
variables are essentially tending toward an average of their past values. With in ation
and unemployment gaps near zero, he pointed out that business cycle dynamics
appear to be over. Therefore, the implication under the old narrative is that “the policy
rate would likely rise over the forecast horizon to be consistent with its steady state
value.”
He then described how the St. Louis Fed’s new narrative differs from the previous one.
“In the new narrative, the concept of a single, long-run steady state is abandoned.
Instead, there is a set of possible regimes that the economy may visit,” he said. Bullard
added that regimes are considered persistent and that switches between regimes,
while possible, are not forecastable. In terms of monetary policy under this new
narrative, the implication is that “the policy rate would likely remain essentially at over
the forecast horizon to remain consistent with the current regime.”
Bullard noted that the new approach delivers a simple forecast of U.S. macroeconomic
outcomes over the next two and a half years. He indicated that the St. Louis Fed’s
forecast is for real gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 2 percent, an
unemployment rate of 4.7 percent and a Dallas Fed trimmed-mean personal
consumption expenditures (PCE) in ation rate of 2 percent.
A regime-dependent policy rate path of 0.63 percent over the forecast horizon supports
these forecasts for output, unemployment and in ation, he said, adding that “risks
associated with this projected policy rate are likely to the upside.”

The Previous Narrative
Bullard said that during the past several years, the St. Louis Fed’s typical medium-term
forecast was for output to grow at an above-trend pace, for unemployment to decline,
for in ation (net of commodity price effects) to overshoot 2 percent, and for policy rate
increases to be consistent with the unique steady state. He noted that from the second

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.
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half of 2013 to the rst half of 2015, output growth and unemployment data supported
the previous narrative. However, in ation barely moved during that period.
Also, Bullard explained, output growth has arguably slowed and is currently not far from
a 2 percent trend, unemployment may not fall much below current values, and trimmedmean PCE in ation is close to 2 percent but not rising rapidly.
“The usefulness of our previous narrative may have come to an end,” he noted.

The New Narrative
Bullard said that the St. Louis Fed wanted to replace the certainty about where the
economy is headed with a manageable expression of the uncertainty surrounding
medium- and longer-term outcomes due to the different possible regimes the economy
may visit.
As such, he discussed three important fundamental factors that determine the nature
of the regimes: productivity growth, the real interest rate on short-term government
debt and the state of the business cycle.
He noted that labor productivity growth has been low on average since at least 2011.
Hence, this is viewed as a “low-productivity-growth regime.” Turning to the real rate of
return on short-term government debt, Bullard noted that it has been exceptionally low
by recent historical standards. This is viewed as a “low-real-rate regime.” Regarding the
state of the business cycle, he said that “we have no reason to forecast a recession
given the current state of the U.S. economy.” Therefore, this is viewed as a “norecession regime.”
Because regime switches are not forecastable, he reiterated, the St. Louis Fed’s
forecast is limited to a horizon of two and a half years, as the new approach does not
include long-run projections.
He acknowledged that there are some risks to this forecast, including the fact that
these fundamental factors could switch into new regimes. That is, the economy could
switch to a high-productivity-growth regime, to a high-real-rate regime or to a recession
state.
However, he concluded, “if a regime switch does occur, the policy rate path would have
to change appropriately—it is still data dependent.”
1

For more details, see Bullard’s speech in London on June 30, “A New Characterization
of the U.S. Macroeconomic and Monetary Policy Outlook,” and the St. Louis Fed’s
statement released on June 17, “The St. Louis Fed's New Characterization of the
Outlook for the U.S. Economy.”

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