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St. Louis Fed’s Bullard Presents “The First Steps
toward Disin�ation”
June 01, 2022
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard presented “The
First Steps toward Disin�ation” (PDF) virtually on Wednesday at an event hosted by the
Economic Club of Memphis.
Bullard noted that in�ation in the U.S. is comparable to levels seen in the 1970s. He added
that U.S. in�ation expectations could become unmoored without credible Fed action,
possibly leading to a new regime of high in�ation and volatile real economic performance.
“The Fed has reacted by taking important �rst steps to return in�ation to the 2% target,” he
said. “Market interest rates have increased substantially, partially in response to promised
Fed action.”
Meanwhile, U.S. labor markets remain robust, and output is expected to continue to expand
through 2022, he said.

Actual In�ation and Expected In�ation
Bullard noted that the Fed has a statutory mandate to provide stable prices for the U.S.
economy, and that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has an associated in�ation
target of 2% stated in terms of headline personal consumption expenditures (PCE) in�ation.
He pointed out that, as of April, the headline PCE in�ation rate was 6.3%; the core PCE
in�ation rate (which excludes food and energy prices) was 4.9%; and the Dallas Fed
trimmed mean in�ation rate (which measures only the middle portion of the price change
distribution) was 3.8%.
“The current U.S. macroeconomic situation is straining the Fed’s credibility with respect to
its in�ation target,” Bullard said.
Bullard noted that, in the past year, near-term in�ation expectations of �nancial markets,
households and businesses have risen. He added that the current divergence between
actual in�ation readings and expected in�ation based on Treasury In�ation-Protected

Securities will have to be resolved, possibly resulting in still higher in�ation expectations.
“In the 1970s, in�ation expectations became unmoored, and it took years for the Fed to
bring in�ation back to lower levels. The real economy was also volatile during this process,”
Bullard said.

The FOMC’s Moves So Far
Bullard said that in the second half of 2021, the Fed “began to move in a more hawkish
direction to take better control of in�ation risks.”
He pointed out that the FOMC has increased the policy rate at the last two meetings and is
poised to make further increases at coming meetings. In addition, he noted that the FOMC
has ceased asset purchases and has begun to allow passive runoff of the balance sheet,
which is known in markets as quantitative tightening. He added that foreign central banks
are simultaneously increasing their policy rates and allowing their balance sheets to shrink.
Bullard then looked at pre-pandemic values for key U.S. economic data and interest rates.
He highlighted the real GDP growth rate of 2.6%, the headline PCE in�ation rate of 1.5% and
the unemployment rate of 3.6% at the end of 2019. The policy rate associated with these
outcomes was 1.55%, he noted. In addition, the 2-year Treasury yield was 1.61%, the 10year Treasury yield was 1.86%, and the 30-year �xed rate mortgage was 3.96% at the end of
2019.
“This may provide a practical benchmark for where the constellation of rates may settle
once in�ation comes under control in the U.S.,” Bullard suggested.
“The fact that market interest rates have moved above their pre-pandemic benchmarks
while the policy rate has not can be read as an illustration of the effect of credible forward
guidance,” he said. “The Fed still has to follow through to ratify the forward guidance
previously given, but the effects on the economy and on in�ation are already taking hold.”

Robust Labor Markets
Bullard noted that U.S. labor markets remain robust, according to recent data and anecdotal
reports. He pointed out that the Kansas City Fed’s labor market conditions index, which
aggregates various measures of labor market performance into a single metric, remains
near highs last seen in 1999-2000.
In addition, he said that “real-time indicators of U.S. GDP growth suggest continued
expansion in the quarters ahead.” However, he cautioned that risks remain substantial and
stem from uncertainty around the Russia-Ukraine war and the possibility of a sharp
slowdown in China.

The First Steps toward Disin�ation
Bullard concluded by noting that in�ation in the U.S. is far above target and is at levels last
seen in the 1970s and early 1980s. “This situation is risking the Fed’s credibility with
respect to its in�ation target and associated mandate to provide stable prices in the U.S.,” he
said.
He reiterated that the Fed has raised the policy rate, has promised to raise the policy rate
further in the future, and has begun passive balance sheet reduction. “Forward guidance on
these dimensions is helping the Fed move policy more quickly to the degree necessary to
keep in�ation under control,” he added.