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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Presents More on Modern
Monetary Policy Rules
December 07, 2018
Carmel, Ind. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard gave remarks
titled “More on Modern Monetary Policy Rules” to the Indiana Bankers Association on
Friday. He further elaborated on some key directions the Fed could take to update monetary
policy rules.
In his talk, Bullard pointed out that “monetary policy rules have proven to be very useful in
laying out benchmarks for monetary policy actions.” One popular rule has been the 1999
version of the Taylor rule, referred to here as Taylor (1999), which was constructed based
on U.S. data from the 1980s and 1990s.1
“Since that time, three important macroeconomic developments have altered key elements
of policy rule construction,” he said. These developments are lower short-term real interest
rates, the disappearing Phillips curve and better measures of in�ation expectations.
“Incorporating these developments yields a modernized policy rule that suggests the
current level of the policy rate is about right over the forecast horizon,” Bullard said.

Lower Short-Term Real Interest Rates
The �rst adjustment in a modernized version of the Taylor (1999) rule is to account for the
trend in short-term real interest rates, which has been decidedly lower over the last three
decades, he explained. He noted that the Fed can in�uence short-term real interest rates
through monetary policy but cannot control trends in these rates.
To obtain a trend value of the short-term real interest rate, he calculated the trend in a oneyear ex-post safe real rate of return. He noted the current trend value of the short-term safe
real interest rate is about zero in the U.S., and is even lower when measured on a global
basis.
Therefore, he used zero as the value of “r-star” in the modernized policy rule, and assumed
it would not change appreciably over the forecast horizon. “I think this is prudent given the

especially low value of the global safe real rate,” Bullard said.

The Disappearing Phillips Curve
The second adjustment is to account for the disappearing Phillips curve, which describes
the feedback from the real economy to in�ation. “In the 1970s and 1980s, this feedback was
relatively strong and formed the basis for the part of the monetary policy rule labeled as the
output gap,” Bullard said. “However, this feedback has attenuated markedly since that time,
to the point where arguably there is very little feedback at all.”
Bullard noted that the degree of attenuation has been approximately a factor of 10 in the
U.S. That is, an unemployment gap that would have generated 100 basis points of in�ation
in the past would today generate only about 10 basis points of in�ation, he explained. As a
�rst pass to capture this in a modernized monetary policy rule, the coef�cient on the output
gap can be reduced by a factor of 10, he said.

Better Measures of In�ation Expectations
The real-time measurement of in�ation expectations has improved markedly in the U.S.,
Bullard noted. Therefore, the third adjustment to the policy rule would be to change the
in�ation gap term to measure the distance between the market-based expectations of
in�ation over the next �ve years and the in�ation target.
One advantage of using in�ation expectations in a modernized policy rule is that it allows
for a forward-looking element in the rule, Bullard noted. “Forward-looking �nancial market
participants are incorporating all available information—including existing theories,
market developments and other policy developments—in forming their expectations of
future in�ation,” he said.
Bullard added the current reading on market-based in�ation expectations suggests that
�nancial markets do not expect the Fed to attain its stated in�ation target over the next �ve
years on a personal consumption expenditures (PCE) in�ation basis. When incorporating
an expected in�ation gap in the modernized version of the monetary policy rule, he also
assumed that expected in�ation returns to target over the forecast horizon, he pointed out.

A Modernized Monetary Policy Rule
Bullard then examined the recommended policy rate path implied by the modernized
monetary policy rule, which accounts for the three adjustments: using a lower value for the
short-term real interest rate, accounting for the reduction of the feedback from the real
economy to in�ation and replacing the in�ation gap with an in�ation expectations gap. He
also compared this path with the median in the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC)

Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) and the policy rate path implied by the
unmodernized Taylor (1999) rule.
He said that “the modernized version of the Taylor (1999) rule recommends a relatively
subdued policy rate path over the forecast horizon—similar to the St. Louis Fed’s
recommended path in the SEP.” The unmodernized Taylor (1999) rule calls for rapid
increases in the policy rate, he noted, but this rule does not take into account the three
important macroeconomic developments since the 1980s and 1990s.
The median path for the policy rate in the FOMC’s September 2018 SEP arguably takes on
board some of the modernization, Bullard said. Thus, the projected policy rate path is
between the modernized and unmodernized versions of the Taylor (1999) rule.
1 The rule described here as the “Taylor (1999)” rule is slightly different from the one in

Taylor (1999). Here, the current level of the interest rate also depends on the previous
period’s value (smoothing).
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