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A Tame Taper

James Bullard
President and CEO, FRB-St. Louis
Arkansas Day with the Bank Commissioner
16 May 2014
Little Rock, Ark.

Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Open Market Committee.

Introduction

Recent themes in U.S. monetary policy

The taper has been tame compared to last summer.
Looking through weak first quarter real GDP growth.
The FOMC is much closer to its goals than at any time in the
past five years.
Inflation: Stabilized at a low level.

Tame Taper So Far

The taper tantrum
What happened during the “taper tantrum” in the summer of
2013?
 U.S. interest rates increased.
 Emerging-market currencies depreciated against the U.S.
dollar.
 Capital flowed to the U.S.
 Emerging-market equity prices declined.

Longer-term U.S. interest rates increased

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: week of September 20, 2013.

Emerging-market currencies depreciated

Source: author’s calculations. Last observation: week of September 20, 2013.

Emerging-market capital inflows reversed
Emerging Markets: Bond and Equity Fund Flows

Source: Nechio, Fernanda. “Fed Tapering News and Emerging Markets.” Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Economic Letter No. 2014-06, March 3, 2014.

Emerging-market stock indexes dropped

Source: author’s calculations. Last observation: week of September 20, 2013.

The actual taper

The taper tantrum during the summer of 2013 was based on
perceptions of Fed actions.
The actual taper did not occur until December 2013.
The FOMC has reduced its pace of asset purchases four times
by $10 billion each time.
Yet the effects on global financial markets have been much
less striking.

Longer-term U.S. interest rates declined

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: week of May 9, 2014.

Most emerging-market currencies appreciated

Source: author’s calculations. Last observation: week of May 9, 2014.

Most emerging-market stock indexes increased

Source: author’s calculations. Last observation: week of May 9, 2013.

Interpreting the taper
The FOMC took no explicit policy action at the June 2013
meeting, yet triggered a significant movement in global
financial markets.
Since December 2013, the FOMC has taken four explicit
policy actions, yet triggered far less of a financial market
response.
One interpretation is that as of June 2013, it was premature to
argue that the U.S. economy was strong enough to pull back
on asset purchases.
As of December 2013, better growth and employment data
justified the taper decision.

Looking Through First-Quarter Data

First-quarter GDP growth

The reported annualized U.S. real GDP growth rate for 2014
Q1 was close to zero.
Some tracking estimates are calling for an even lower reading
once revised data are taken into account.
The weak first-quarter performance has been widely
attributed to particularly cold and snowy winter weather.

Real GDP growth—recent data

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: 2014-Q1.

Real GDP growth with forecasts for 2014

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis and Macroeconomic Advisers. Last observation: 2014-Q1.

Interpreting Q1 GDP growth

While first-quarter GDP growth was weak, growth in coming
quarters is still predicted to be robust.
The average quarterly pace of growth in 2014 may still be an
improvement relative to 2013.

Much Closer to Goals

The FOMC is much closer to its goals

Over the past five years, unemployment in the U.S. has been
high and inflation has remained relatively low.
This situation has led to an extraordinary monetary policy
response.
But today, Fed goals are within sight.
This helps to justify the FOMC’s tapering of asset purchases.

An objective function
The distance of the economy from the FOMC’s goals can be
measured with a simple objective function:
Distance from goals = (𝜋 − 𝜋 ∗ )2 +(𝑢 − 𝑢∗ )2 .

 𝜋 is inflation and 𝜋 ∗ is the target rate of inflation, in percentage
points.
 𝑢 is the unemployment rate and 𝑢∗ is the long-run average rate
of unemployment.

This version puts equal weight on inflation and
unemployment and is sometimes used to evaluate various
policy options.

An objective function
Set 𝜋 ∗ = 2, the FOMC’s inflation target.

For 𝜋 I will use the year-over-year PCE headline inflation
rate.
Set 𝑢∗ = 5.4, the midpoint of the central tendency of the
FOMC Summary of Economic Projections.
How far away is the Fed from its goals?

Objective function value since 1960

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics
and author’s calculations. Last observation: March 2014.

Objective function value since 2006

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics
and author’s calculations. Last observation: March 2014.

Distribution of objective function values
Frequency
(percent)
70

Mar-2014

60
50
40

the objective function value is closer to
the FOMC’s goals than it has been
about 60% of the time since 1960

30
20
10
0
0

5
10
15
20
25
Objective function value 1960-present

30

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics
and author’s calculations. Last observation: March 2014.

Monetary Policy

Monetary policy

Question: If the Fed is relatively close to its objectives, why
is monetary policy so far from normal?
Two reasons:
 Labor markets do not seem to be fully recovered.
 Inflation remains low.

I can illustrate these two points with two charts.

The labor market in one chart

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Conference Board, National Federation of Independent Business, and author’s
calculations, based on a chart constructed by the FRB of Atlanta. Last observation: April 2014.

Inflation remains low

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: March 2014.

Conclusion

Conclusion

The FOMC’s reductions in the pace of asset purchases have
proceeded smoothly so far.
First-quarter real GDP growth was weak, but forecasts for the
remainder of the year are strong.
The FOMC is much closer to its policy goals than it has been
in the past five years.
Inflation remains low.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
stlouisfed.org

Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)
research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/

James Bullard
research.stlouisfed.org/econ/bullard/