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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Macroeconomic Goals and
Monetary Policy Stance
7/17/2014
OWENSBORO, Ky. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard
discussed “Fed Goals and the Policy Stance” at a Greater Owensboro Chamber of
Commerce event on Thursday.
To achieve its mandates of price stability and maximum sustainable employment, the
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has been using two main tools for
implementing monetary policy: the short-term policy interest rate, which includes
forward guidance, and quantitative easing. “The U.S. economy is approaching normal
conditions in terms of the main macroeconomic goals assigned to the Federal
Reserve,” Bullard said. “However, the policy stance of the FOMC has not begun to
normalize yet.” Noting that it will take a long time to normalize monetary policy, he
added, “If macroeconomic conditions continue to improve at the current pace, the
normalization process may need to begin sooner rather than later.”
While this mismatch between our macroeconomic goals and the stance of monetary
policy is not currently causing problems for the economy, Bullard said it may cause
problems going forward. “The objective is to execute policy normalization over the next
few years without creating excessive in ation or substantial nancial stability risks,” he
explained.
In ation and Unemployment
Bullard noted that while in ation has been surprisingly low from the second quarter of
2013 through the rst quarter of 2014, recent readings on in ation have moved closer
to the FOMC’s target of 2 percent.
On the labor market front, Bullard said that while U.S. unemployment has been high
over the past ve years, it is now much closer to normal. The unemployment rate today
is about 1.4 percentage points lower than it was a year ago and only 0.3 percentage
points above the median unemployment rate over the period from January 1960 to
June 2014, he said.
However, he added that a smaller fraction of the U.S. population is participating in the
labor market than during the 1980s and 1990s. “I interpret lower labor force
participation as a relatively benign development driven mostly by demographics, and I
project that labor force participation may decline further in the years ahead,” Bullard
said.

He examined various projections that suggest that U.S. labor force participation is
unlikely to rise on a sustained basis in the years ahead. “This suggests we should not
expect an in ux of workers coming back into the labor force, driving unemployment
higher or slowing declines in unemployment,” he said. “Instead, unemployment is likely
to continue declining so long as the economy remains relatively robust.”1
He further noted that hours worked might be a better way to think about the amount of
labor being supplied to market work. “The index of aggregate hours worked has fully
recovered to its pre-recession peak and seems poised to go higher,” he said, adding,
“This view of the labor market also helps address the issue of part-time versus full-time
jobs.”
Macroeconomic Goals
To measure the distance of the economy from the FOMC’s goals, Bullard used a simple
function that depends on the distance of in ation from the FOMC’s long-run target and
on the distance of the unemployment rate from its long-run average. This version puts
equal weight on in ation and unemployment and is sometimes used to evaluate
various policy options, Bullard explained.
In his calculations, the target rate of in ation was set at 2 percent, the FOMC’s in ation
target. The long-run average rate of unemployment was set at 5.35 percent, the
midpoint of the central tendency of the FOMC’s Summary of Economic Projections in
June. The function currently shows a low value that is close to pre-crisis levels, he said,
adding that “the FOMC is closer to its macroeconomic targets today than it has been
most of the time since 1960.”
Monetary Policy Stance
Bullard then discussed how close the FOMC’s monetary policy settings are to normal.
In response to the nancial crisis, the FOMC lowered the policy rate to zero and
implemented outright asset purchases. While the FOMC began tapering the pace of
asset purchases in January 2014, Bullard noted that the two main policy actions have
not been reversed so far. That is, the Fed balance sheet is still large and increasing,
and the policy rate remains at the zero lower bound.
Bullard measured the distance of the monetary policy stance from normal using a
simple function that depends on the distance of the policy rate from its normal level
and on the distance of the size of the Fed balance sheet relative to GDP from its longrun average. This version puts equal weight on the policy rate and the balance sheet,
he noted.
In these calculations, the normal level of the policy rate was set at 5.5 percent, the
average value of the federal funds rate from January 1975 to March 2014. The long-run
average size of the Fed balance sheet as a percent of GDP was set at 7.4 percent, the
average value over the same period. “Currently, the function measuring the distance of
the policy stance from normal shows a high value, far from pre-crisis levels,” he said.
Thus, there is a mismatch. “The macroeconomic goals of the Committee are close to
being met. However, the policy settings of the Committee are far from normal,” Bullard
said. “While this mismatch is not causing macroeconomic problems today, it takes a
long time to normalize policy and the mismatch may cause problems in the years
ahead as the economy continues to expand.”
Normalizing Monetary Policy
Bullard discussed some factors that are mitigating the mismatch and why the FOMC
has not begun normalizing policy. These factors have included a surprisingly low
in ation rate for much of the past year, unexpectedly slow real GDP growth during most

of the recovery and labor markets that do not seem to be fully recovered, although they
are improving.
“Normalization will take a long time, and current policy settings are far from normal,
suggesting an earlier start. Relatively low in ation and relatively weak labor markets
have up to now suggested a later start,” Bullard said. “Stronger-than-expected data,
rising in ation and rapidly improving labor markets may change this calculus in the
months and quarters ahead.”
1

For more discussion, see Bullard’s speech on Feb. 19, 2014, “The Rise and Fall of

Labor Force Participation in the U.S.”

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