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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Considerations for U.S. Monetary
Policy Normalization
4/15/2015
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard
discussed “Some Considerations for U.S. Monetary Policy Normalization” at the 24th
Annual Hyman P. Minsky Conference on Wednesday.
In addition to touching on the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) recent removal
of the word “patient” from its policy statement, Bullard highlighted some of the factors
weighing on the decision to begin normalizing U.S. monetary policy. These include: 1)
U.S. labor markets have been improving at a rapid pace over the last year; 2) U.S. GDP
growth prospects remain relatively robust; 3) today’s low U.S. in ation is due mostly to
temporary factors, which will likely reverse over the medium term; 4) some standard
Taylor-type rules suggest the U.S. should already be off the zero lower bound; and 5)
nancial stability risks are asymmetric toward staying too long at zero.
Bullard noted that the U.S. economy is much closer to normal than it has been for many
years. “Now may be a good time to begin normalizing U.S. monetary policy so that it is
set appropriately for an improving economy over the next two years,” he said. He added,
however, that “Even with some normalization, monetary policy will remain exceptionally
accommodative.”
The FOMC Removes “Patient”
“At its March meeting, the FOMC appropriately returned to data-dependent monetary
policy by removing ‘patient’ from its statement,” Bullard said. He explained the word
“patient” was a particular type of forward guidance that suggested the policy rate would
not be adjusted over the next “couple of meetings.” He added, “By removing ‘patient,’ the
Committee can return to more standard monetary policy decision-making, under which
an appropriate policy rate is decided at each meeting.”
Bullard noted that this removal might be thought of as “the end of forward guidance.”
While forward guidance was viewed as appropriate during the period of zero interest
rates, it is unlikely to be appropriate in less extreme circumstances, he added.
“Decisions now depend on incoming data relative to forecasts,” Bullard said. While
better-than-expected or worse-than-expected outcomes may push the FOMC toward a
somewhat different policy rate path, he noted the general trend is for an improving U.S.
economy to lead to higher interest rates. “To say otherwise risks the ‘perma-zero’
equilibrium experienced by Japan over the last two decades,” he added.

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James Bullard
St. Louis Fed President and CEO

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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Regarding expectations for the policy rate path, Bullard remarked that nancial markets
indicate they currently expect the policy rate to cross 50 basis points in the rst quarter
of 2016, which is somewhat later than indicated in the FOMC’s latest Summary of
Economic Projections (SEP). “This difference of views on the nature of the U.S. policy
rate path will need to be reconciled at some point,” Bullard said.
Five Factors
As the FOMC considers the normalization of U.S. monetary policy, the following factors
are weighing on the decision to begin the normalization process, Bullard said, noting
this is not an exhaustive list.
Continued Improvement in U.S. Labor Markets
Bullard noted that the unemployment rate in the U.S. has generally fallen faster in
recent years than the FOMC expected and that jobs have been created at a rapid pace
over the last year. He added that today’s unemployment rate is approaching the range
of longer-run or normal values suggested by the FOMC.
In terms of current projections, he noted that the SEP central tendency suggests
unemployment will decline only gradually from its current level, which is the same type
of projection made in previous years. However, Bullard said, “The history of the last two
expansions in the U.S., the 1990s and the 2000s, suggests that unemployment will
reach much lower levels.”
He also discussed broader measures of labor market performance, including the labor
market conditions index developed by Federal Reserve Board of Governors staff. “The
level of this index has risen above its long-run average value. This suggests that
accounting for a variety of labor market indicators, labor market performance today is
above average,” Bullard explained.
“In summary, labor markets continue to improve and are approaching or even
exceeding normal performance levels,” Bullard said, and he added that labor market
outcomes will likely signi cantly overshoot long-run levels over the next two years,
since monetary policy will remain highly accommodative as normalization begins.
U.S. Growth Prospects Remain Robust
Despite a slowdown in the rst quarter, Bullard said that real GDP growth will likely
continue apace. “I think that the U.S. economy is likely to maintain a growth rate near 3
percent over the medium term,” he said. He added that with potential growth rates in
the U.S. now centering around 2 percent, a 3 percent growth rate represents growth well
above trend.
Bullard noted that two important tailwinds are aiding the U.S.: the persistent decline in
global oil prices and the onset of sovereign-debt quantitative easing in the euro area,
which has driven U.S. bond yields lower. “Both lower oil prices and lower long-term
yields tend to be important factors for U.S. macroeconomic performance,” Bullard said.
Regarding exchange rates, he noted that a broad range of macroeconomic research
suggests limited effects of exchange rate movements on U.S. economic performance.
U.S. In ation Is Temporarily Low
While in ation was above the FOMC’s 2 percent target as of January 2012, Bullard
noted that it ran below target in 2013 and 2014. In addition, market-based measures of
in ation expectations have declined to low levels in recent months. “Most likely, these
expectations will rise back toward the FOMC’s in ation target in coming months and
quarters,” Bullard said. “However, this bears careful watching. In ation and in ation
expectations moving away from target is a concern.”

While market-based measures of in ation expectations from ve to 10 years in the
future should not be signi cantly impacted by gyrations in global oil markets, Bullard
pointed out that the decline in these in ation expectations does seem to be highly
correlated with oil price movements since last summer. “I am reserving judgment
concerning these in ation expectations until oil prices show consistent stabilization,”
he said.
He also discussed nominal wage growth, which is sometimes cited as a factor that
may in uence in ation going forward. “However, nominal wages tend to lag in ation
outcomes,” Bullard said. “In addition, nominal wages have a component related to
productivity growth, a variable that is di cult to measure and predict.”
Taylor-type Rules
As monetary policy approaches normalization, it is interesting to re-examine Taylor-type
policy rules, Bullard said. He explained that in a Taylor-type rule, the short-term nominal
interest rate should respond to deviations of in ation from target and of actual
unemployment from its long-run level.
He looked at one such policy rule—the Taylor (1999) rule with interest rate smoothing—
which suggests that liftoff should already have occurred by now. “The Committee has
not moved off of the zero interest rate policy so far, despite standard policy rule
recommendations. In this sense, the Committee is already exhibiting considerable
patience,” Bullard said.
Financial Stability Risks Are Asymmetric Toward Remaining Too Long at Zero
Given that the FOMC has not altered the policy rate in more than six years, Bullard
posed the question of whether the Fed is unwittingly following an “interest rate peg”
policy and is therefore risking a possible scenario of asset-price bubbles. He explained
that under an interest rate peg, the policy rate never moves despite changing economic
circumstances. According to New Keynesian literature, a key consequence of such a
policy is that many different equilibria are possible, including some that may have wide
asset-price swings that look like bubbles.
Thus, “A risk of remaining at the zero lower bound too long is that a signi cant asset
market bubble will develop,” Bullard said. He noted that the U.S. has been plagued by
such bubbles in the 1990s (tech/NASDAQ) and the 2000s (housing prices). Each one
eventually burst, and the aftermath included a recession. Bullard said that such an
outcome would be unwelcome and constitutes a signi cant risk for U.S. monetary
policy, much larger than the risks associated with the zero lower bound.
“If a bubble in a key asset market develops, history has shown that we have little ability
to contain it,” Bullard said. “A gradual normalization would help to mitigate this risk
while still providing signi cant monetary policy accommodation for the U.S. economy.
Such an approach may extend the expected length of the current economic expansion.”

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