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St. Louis Fed’s Bullard Discusses “Is the Fed ‘Behind the
Curve’? Two Interpretations” at the Hoover Institution
May 06, 2022
STANFORD, Calif. –Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard provided updated
estimates of the degree to which the Federal Reserve is “behind the curve” (PDF) on raising its
policy rate in response to high in�ation in the U.S. He spoke Friday at an event hosted by
Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.
Bullard highlighted two interpretations of “behind the curve,” incorporating more recent data
since his April 7 and April 21 presentations on this topic.
• In the �rst interpretation, he used the latest Dallas Fed trimmed mean in�ation rate—the
most generous (lowest) interpretation of the persistent component of current in�ation
—along with other “generous assumptions” in a Taylor-type policy rule to get a minimal
recommended value for the policy rate under current macroeconomic conditions. The
recommended policy rate from the minimalist policy rule calculation is 3.63% (363 basis
points), while the current value of the policy rate is 87.5 basis points. Thus, the current
policy rate is below the minimalist recommendation by 275 basis points, Bullard said
• In the second interpretation, Bullard suggested that the 2-year Treasury yield may provide
a better representation of where Fed policy is likely to be in the near future, because of the
forward guidance the Fed has given since the fourth quarter of 2021. The value of the
2-year Treasury yield on May 5 was 2.71%, about 90 basis points shy of the rate
recommended in the �rst calculation, he said.
Generously de�ned Taylor-type monetary policy rules, even if based on a minimum
interpretation of the persistent component of in�ation, still recommend substantial increases in
the policy rate, Bullard said. He added that the Fed is far “behind the curve” by this �rst
interpretation.
However, he noted that the �rst interpretation does not take into account Fed credibility or its
use of forward guidance. “Credible forward guidance means market interest rates have
increased substantially in advance of tangible Fed action. By this second de�nition of ‘behind the
curve,’ the Fed is not as far behind, but it must now increase the policy rate to ratify the forward
guidance previously given,” he said.