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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Monetary Policy in a Low Policy
Rate Environment
5/23/2013
LONDON, U.K. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard gave
remarks Thursday on “Monetary Policy in a Low Policy Rate Environment” at the O cial
Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) Golden Series Lecture.
During his presentation, Bullard said, “The most important monetary policy question
during the last ve years has been how to pursue easier monetary policy when the
policy rate is already near zero.” He discussed several policy options—do nothing,
forward guidance, quantitative easing (QE), negative interest rates on reserves and the
twist program—and concluded that quantitative easing remains the best monetary
policy option in this situation. “Quantitative easing is closest to standard monetary
policy, involves clear action and has been effective,” he explained.
Regarding the other options, he said, “Doing nothing risks the mildly de ationary
situation experienced by Japan in recent years.” Furthermore, “Forward guidance
depends on the credibility of promises for future central bank behavior, and can send an
unwitting pessimistic signal about future macroeconomic performance.” Bullard added
that negative deposit rates and the twist program are likely to be only minimally
effective.
The EU-U.S. Macroeconomic Situation
Bullard noted that since 2010, the U.S. recovery has been slower than expected from
the nancial crisis and the ensuing recession. Nonetheless, the U.S. unemployment
rate has continued to fall despite relatively slow growth. In contrast, the Euro area has
recently returned to recession, and its unemployment rate has increased. However, he
pointed out that in both the U.S. and the Euro area, in ation has recently been below
target and on a downward trend.
Given low in ation and a near-zero policy rate, Bullard noted that policymakers around
the world have used a variety of unconventional approaches to monetary policy since
2008. “If these policies are effective, they should be able to keep in ation and in ation
expectations near target despite relatively weak macroeconomic performance,” he said.
Monetary Policy Option 1: Do Nothing
One might argue that the near-zero policy rate provides su cient monetary
accommodation to keep in ation near target and assist the real economy to the extent
possible, Bullard said. However, “The experience from Japan seems to indicate that
merely keeping the policy rate near zero for an extended period of time does not by

itself keep in ation positive,” he said. “In particular, there seems to be a steady state
equilibrium in which the nominal rate remains near zero and in ation remains mildly
negative.” (For more on this topic, see Bullard’s “Seven Faces of ‘The Peril’” article from
2010.)
While academic and policymaker reactions to the possible existence of such a steady
state are varied, “many seem to agree that it is insu cient to simply count on the fact
that the policy rate is near zero to provide enough accommodation to maintain in ation
near target,” Bullard said.
Monetary Policy Option 2: Forward Guidance
In regard to forward guidance, Bullard cited New Keynesian literature relying on sticky
prices that has been in uential in U.S. monetary policymaking and for making the
argument for forward guidance. Led by economist Michael Woodford, this line of
research argues that policy accommodation can be provided even when the policy rate
is near zero, Bullard said. He explained that the extra accommodation comes from a
promise to maintain the near-zero policy rate beyond the point when ordinary
policymaker behavior would call for raising the policy rate.
However, “The ‘Woodford period’ approach to forward guidance relies on a credible
announcement made today that future monetary policy will deviate from normal,”
Bullard said. “If the announcement is not credible, then the private sector will not react
with more consumption and investment today—that is, any effects would be minimal.”
Thus, forward guidance may have a credibility issue.
Bullard also noted that forward guidance may give a pessimistic signal. “In general, any
attempt to provide additional policy accommodation today by promising easy policy in
the future can be viewed as suggesting the future will be characterized by poor
macroeconomic performance,” he explained. “This can be extremely counterproductive, as rms and households may prepare for a prolonged stagnation.”
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has used forward guidance and has tried
to make a credible commitment to relatively easy future policy without sending a
pessimistic signal, Bullard said. In recent months, the FOMC has turned to thresholds
on in ation (2.5 percent) and unemployment (6.5 percent) as minimal criteria for
raising the policy rate. “The adoption of threshold-based forward guidance was a clear
improvement on the previous calendar-based forward guidance, which seemed to be
plagued by the pessimistic signal problem,” Bullard said.
Bullard pointed out that other central banks, including the European Central Bank and
the Bank of England, have been more circumspect concerning the use of forward
guidance as a policy tool than the Fed. “There is a strong tradition in central banking
that suggests that policymakers should never pre-commit to a particular policy course
in part because future circumstances are unpredictable,” Bullard said. “At a minimum,
the correct use of forward guidance as a policy tool is a subtle matter.”
Monetary Policy Option 3: Quantitative Easing
As another option, Bullard noted that the central bank can make outright purchases of
government debt (or mortgage-backed securities) by creating base money. The FOMC
and the Bank of England have adopted this approach to monetary policy. “Quantitative
easing is relatively close to standard monetary policy in that it puts downward pressure
on nominal and real interest rates,” Bullard explained.
“The reaction in nancial markets clearly indicates that such purchases are effective in
easing nancial conditions,” Bullard said. For instance, the traditional effects of “easier
monetary policy” include higher in ation expectations, currency depreciation, higher
equity valuations and lower real interest rates. “All of these have been associated with

quantitative easing in the U.S.,” he stated. Given that nancial markets tend to
anticipate a policy change ahead of the actual policy action, the effects of QE2 and QE3
can be seen in the data in the months prior to the FOMC’s actual decisions.
Bullard discussed a similar experience in Japan, where policymakers have recently
embarked on a new quantitative easing program. He noted that nancial markets
anticipated the actual policy move. In the months leading up the adoption of the policy,
the yen depreciated and Japanese equity valuations rose; however, he said, the effects
on real interest rates and in ation expectations are harder to discern in Japanese data.
While the evidence suggests that outright asset purchases ease nancial conditions
according to conventional de nitions, the ultimate effects of these easier nancial
conditions can be linked to changes in real economic activity six to 18 months later,
Bullard said. “Discerning these effects on real activity requires careful econometrics
because other shocks are in uencing the economy during the period of interest,” he
added.
Monetary Policy Option 4: Negative Interest on Reserves
Bullard noted that the Fed and other central banks pay interest on reserves—currently
0.25 percent. While one could argue that this rate is too high if the objective is to
encourage banking institutions to lend out available funds, “the extent to which the
central bank could charge for the holding of reserves is probably limited,” he explained.
“Effects of moving in this direction are probably minor.”
Monetary Policy Option 5: Twist Program
The FOMC used this tool between mid-2011 and the end of 2012. The central bank can
sell short-term government debt and buy longer-term government debt, hence removing
duration from the market. “There is little historical evidence that the maturity structure
of the U.S. debt is an important macroeconomic variable,” Bullard said. “Any effects
from the twist operation were probably minor.”
Which Monetary Policy Option Is Best?
Based on his review of these ve policy options, Bullard said that quantitative easing
has been the most reliable tool while policy rates have been near zero. Thus, for nearterm stabilization policy, Bullard’s conclusion for the U.S. is to “continue with the
present quantitative easing program, adjusting the rate of purchases appropriately in
view of incoming data on both real economic performance and in ation.”

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