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Four Questions for Current
Monetary Policy

James Bullard
President and CEO, FRB-St. Louis
New York Association for Business Economics

20 September 2013
New York, N.Y.
Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of others on the Federal Open Market Committee.

Introduction

This talk
Four interesting questions for current monetary policy:
 Is QE an effective way to conduct monetary stabilization
policy?
 Are FOMC decisions about QE tapering data dependent?
 Does cumulative progress in labor market outcomes since
September 2012 matter for QE tapering?
 Do current low inflation readings suggest that the Committee
can be patient in assessing the QE program?

All of these questions have the same answer: “Yes.”

Question One: QE Effectiveness

QE effectiveness
Is QE an effective way to conduct conventional monetary
stabilization policy when the policy rate is at the zero lower
bound?
Yes.
Consider two recent cases:
 The June 2013 FOMC meeting, in which the Committee leaned
toward an earlier-than-expected reduction in the pace of
purchases.
 The just-completed September 2013 FOMC meeting, in which
the Committee delayed tapering.

The argument for effectiveness
In June 2013, the policy decision was more hawkish than
markets expected before the meeting.
In September 2013, the policy decision was more dovish than
expected before the meeting.
Many of my friends in academia and in financial markets
argue that changes in the pace of purchases should not have
an important effect in financial markets (and hence would
have no eventual effect on the real economy either).
However, the empirical evidence from these two episodes
provides striking confirmation that changes in the expected
pace of purchases act just like conventional monetary policy.

Conventional policy effects
In normal times, the FOMC would adjust the expected path
of the policy rate upward or downward depending on
macroeconomic circumstances.
An easier-than-expected policy path would (1) lower real
interest rates, (2) raise inflation expectations, (3) increase
equity prices, and (4) depreciate the dollar.
A tighter-than-expected policy path would have the opposite
effects.
The changes in the expected pace of purchases at the June
and September FOMC meetings had exactly the same effects
as conventional monetary policy.

Conclusion on effectiveness
Changes in the expected pace of purchases at the June and
September FOMC meetings had the same financial market
effects as would have occurred had the Committee been able
to change the policy rate path directly.
I conclude that using the pace of purchases as the policy
instrument is just as effective as normal monetary policy
actions would be in normal times.
In other words, QE is an effective way to conduct monetary
stabilization policy.

Real interest rate

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: September 19, 2013.

Expected inflation

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: September 19, 2013.

Equity prices

Source: Dow Jones. Last observation: September 19, 2013.

Exchange rate

Source: Wall Street Journal. Last observation: September 19, 2013.

Question Two: QE Data Dependence

Data dependence and QE
Are FOMC decisions about QE tapering data dependent?
Yes.
The Chairman has repeatedly emphasized that decisions on the
pace of tapering depend on incoming macroeconomic data.
This was illustrated by the recent FOMC decision to delay
tapering.
At the meeting, the Committee downgraded its assessment of
forecast real GDP growth for 2013 and 2014, and
simultaneously reduced its expectations for inflation.
Normally, the Committee would not want to reduce policy
accommodation in this situation.

Real GDP growth forecasts

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: September 18, 2013.

PCE inflation forecasts

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: September 18, 2013.

Conclusion on data dependence
The Committee downgraded its outlook at the September
meeting relative to the June meeting.
This reflected weaker-than-expected data during the
intermeeting period.
The June narrative, that the second half of 2013 would
display strong growth, was called into question.

Question Three: Cumulative Progress

Cumulative progress in labor markets
Does cumulative progress in labor market outcomes since
September 2012 matter for QE tapering?
Yes.
When the Committee started the QE program in September
2012, the stated goal was substantial improvement in labor
market outcomes.
Two key labor market indicators have shown clear
improvement over the last year: Unemployment and nonfarm
payrolls.

Unemployment rate

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: August 2013.

Nonfarm payroll employment

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: August 2013.

Conclusion on cumulative progress
To the extent that these two important labor market indicators
continue to show improvement, the likelihood of tapering
policy action will continue to rise.
But ….

Question Four: Inflation

Low inflation and QE
Do current low inflation readings suggest that the Committee
can be patient in assessing the QE program?
Yes.
The main macroeconomic surprise in the U.S. since
September 2012 has been a lower rate of inflation.
Near-term inflation expectations measured from the TIPS
market suggested little inflation pressure before the recent
FOMC meeting.
While I expect inflation to rise during the coming quarters, I
want to see evidence of such an increase before endorsing
less accommodative policy action by the FOMC.

PCE inflation and SEP forecasts

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis and Federal Reserve Board. Last observations: 2013-Q2 and September 18, 2013.

PCE inflation

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: July 2013.

Inflation expectations have declined since March

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: September 13, 2013.

Conclusion

Conclusions
Financial market reaction to the June and September FOMC
meetings provides sharp evidence that changes in the
expected pace of asset purchases have conventional monetary
policy effects.
The September FOMC decision illustrates that tapering
decisions are data dependent.
Continued cumulative labor market gains relative to
September 2012 increase the probability of tapering.
Relatively low inflation readings allow the Committee to be
patient in assessing the future of asset purchases.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
stlouisfed.org

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

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