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The Path Forward for U.S.
Monetary Policy in a Global
Context
James Bullard
President and CEO

OMFIF City Lecture
June 29, 2017
London, United Kingdom
Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of the
Federal Open Market Committee.
1

Introduction

2

Key themes in this talk
•
•
•
•

The U.S. economy remains in a low-growth, low-inflation,
low-interest-rate regime.
The current level of the U.S. policy rate is appropriate for
this regime.
The most likely outcome over the forecast horizon is that
the regime persists and, hence, the current level of the
policy rate remains appropriate.
Many future developments could impact this policy path,
but the Fed does not need to act pre-emptively with respect
to any of them.

3

Low Growth

4

U.S. real GDP growth in 2017
•
•
•

•

The empirical impulse response since the financial crisis
suggests that the U.S. has converged to 2 percent real GDP
growth.
The current estimate for U.S. real GDP growth in the first
quarter of 2017 is 1.4 percent at an annual rate.*
Tracking estimates for second-quarter real GDP growth
now suggest some improvement from the first quarter, but
not enough to move the U.S. economy away from a regime
characterized by 2 percent trend growth.
The 2 percent growth regime appears to remain intact.

* This is the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ final estimate released on June 29.
5

The empirical impulse response

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis and FRB of Dallas. Last observation: 2017-Q1 (final estimate) and April 2017.
The shaded area indicates NBER recession.
6

Forecasts for 2017-Q2 growth have
declined

Source: FRB of Atlanta, FRB of New York, FRB of St. Louis, Macroeconomic Advisers. Last observation: See table on p. 8.
7

Tracking estimates for 2017-Q2 U.S.
real GDP growth and H1 average
Source

Date

Estimate*

2017-H1†

Blue Chip Consensus

June 10

3.0%

2.2%

St. Louis Fed Economic News Index

June 23

2.4%

1.9%

FRBNY Staff Nowcast

June 23

1.9%

1.7%

Atlanta Fed GDPNow

June 26

2.9%

2.2%

Macroeconomic Advisers

June 28

3.3%

2.4%

CNBC Moody’s Consensus (median) June 28

2.9%

2.2%

*
†

percent change from the previous quarter, annualized
average of Bureau of Economic Analysis’ 2017-Q1 final estimate (1.4%) and 2017-Q2 estimates

8

Low Inflation

9

U.S. inflation in 2017
•
•
•

The FOMC’s inflation target is 2 percent.
The U.S. inflation rate has been below the inflation target
since 2012.
Recent inflation data have surprised to the downside and
call into question the idea that U.S. inflation is reliably
returning toward target.

10

Inflation readings are lower
Inflation measure

Dec-2016 Last obs. Difference

Sticky CPI (FRB of Atlanta)

258

214

-44

Median CPI (FRB of Cleveland)

250

228

-22

Core CPI

220

170

-50

Trimmed-mean PCE (FRB of Dallas)

186

175

-11

Core PCE

175

154

-21

Values are expressed in basis points. Inflation rates are measured as percent changes from one year earlier.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, FRB of Cleveland, FRB of Atlanta, Bureau of Economic Analysis, FRB of Dallas and
author’s calculations. Last observations: April 2017 (PCE) and May 2017 (CPI).

11

Trimmed-mean PCE inflation lower

Source: FRB of Dallas and author’s calculations. Last observations: April 2017.
12

Effect of declines in the price of cell
services and prescription drugs

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics and author’s calculations. Last observation: May 2017.
13

Low Interest Rates

14

Monetary policy normalization
•

U.S. monetary policy has been normalizing by increasing
the policy rate, but against the backdrop of:
o relatively weak U.S. real GDP growth,
o downside U.S. inflation surprises and

•

o a global regime of low policy rates.

The financial market reaction has been reflected in:
o a lower U.S. 10-year Treasury yield,

o lower market-based U.S. inflation expectations and

o an implied policy rate path closer to the St. Louis Fed path

for 2017 and 2018 of 113 basis points.

15

U.S. policy rate is rising while other
key policy rates remain low and fixed

Source: Federal Reserve Board, European Central Bank, Bank of England and Bank of Japan. Last observation: June 26,
2017.
16

The U.S. Treasury yield curve is above
foreign counterparts

Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury, Bank of England, European Central Bank and Japan’s Ministry of Finance.
Last observation: June 26, 2017.
17

Longer-term U.S. yields have declined
since March, flattening the yield curve

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: June 26, 2017.
18

Inflation breakevens have weakened

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: June 27, 2017.
19

Market expectations of the policy rate
path remain below FOMC projections

Source: Bloomberg and author’s calculations. Last observation: June 26, 2017.
20

Additional Developments

21

Remarks on additional developments
•

I want to now focus on a few additional developments
concerning the U.S. macroeconomic outlook:
o Unemployment in the U.S. is relatively low and may head

lower—how will this affect the U.S. inflation outlook?
o The U.S. fiscal situation may be altered by pending
legislation—how will this affect the U.S. macroeconomic
outlook?
o The global growth outlook has brightened—how will this
affect the U.S. macroeconomic outlook?
o U.S. financial conditions are easier than they were at the
time of the December 2016 FOMC meeting—how should
we interpret this?

22

Does the Low U.S. Unemployment Rate
Signal a Meaningful Rise in Inflation?

23

Unemployment is low
•
•
•

The U.S. unemployment rate declined to 4.3 percent in the
May reading.
Does this mean that U.S. inflation is about to increase
substantially?
The short answer is no.

24

The estimated influence of
unemployment on inflation
•
•
•

Let’s consider one study, Blanchard (2016), which
estimates a Phillips curve relationship for the U.S.*
Let’s suppose the unemployment rate continued to fall
from current levels.
How much would the inflation rate increase according to
these estimates?

* See O. Blanchard, 2016, “The U.S. Phillips Curve: Back to the 60s?” Peterson Institute for International Economics,
Policy Brief No. PB16-1.
25

The estimated influence of
unemployment on inflation
If the unemployment rate
was …

The predicted core PCE
inflation rate would be …

4.3% *

1.5% *

4.0%

1.6%

3.5%

1.7%

3.0%

1.8%

2.5%

1.9%

*

•

current value (May 2017 for unemployment, April 2017 for inflation)

Bottom line: Even if the U.S. unemployment rate declines
substantially further, current estimates suggest the effects
on U.S. inflation are likely to be small.
26

Low unemployment coexists with low
inflation in many countries
Unemployment
rate

Price Core price
inflation inflation

Wage
inflation

U.S.

4.3%

1.9%

1.7%

2.5%

Germany

3.9%

1.4%

1.1%

1.1%

U.K.

4.6%

2.7%

2.5%

2.1%

Japan

2.8%

0.4%

0.0%

0.4%

Inflation rates are year-over-year percentage changes.
Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Eurostat, Office for National Statistics, Statistics Japan and Ministry of
Health, Labour and Welfare. Last observations: various.

27

Impact of New U.S. Fiscal and
Regulatory Policies

28

The prospect of higher growth
•
•

Will the new fiscal and regulatory policies move the U.S.
into a higher-growth regime? The Fed can wait and see.
Here are two considerations:
o The economy is not in recession today, so fiscal policies

should not be viewed as countercyclical measures. They
should be viewed as supply-side improvements.
o U.S. productivity growth is low and could be improved
considerably.
• Deregulation could improve productivity growth.
• Infrastructure spending could improve productivity growth.
• Tax reform could improve productivity growth.

29

Global Growth

30

The impact of better global growth
prospects on the U.S. economy
•
•
•
•

The global growth outlook has improved since last year.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) upgraded its
world economic outlook for 2017 this spring.
Key upgrades occurred for Japan, Europe and China.
Nevertheless, these upgrades are too small and too
uncertain to have a meaningful impact on U.S.
macroeconomic performance.

31

Global growth: Forecasts for 2017
have improved since last fall
2017 Real GDP Growth

Apr-2017 Oct-2016 Difference

World Output

3.5%

3.4%

0.1

U.S.

2.3%

2.2%

0.1

Euro area

1.7%

1.5%

0.2

U.K.

2.0%

1.1%

0.9

Japan

1.2%

0.6%

0.6

China

6.6%

6.2%

0.4

Growth rates are year-over-year; differences are expressed in percentage points.
Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook.

32

Financial Conditions Indexes

33

U.S. financial conditions indexes
suggest improvement
•
•
•
•

Standard financial conditions indexes (FCI) suggest that
financial conditions have improved since the December
2016 FOMC meeting.
This is sometimes interpreted to mean that the FOMC
decisions to increase the policy rate are not having any
effect.
Some of the drivers of FCI movements include low
volatility as measured by the VIX, higher equity valuations
and lower credit spreads.
The FOMC has not historically targeted these types of
variables when making monetary policy.
34

Financial conditions have improved
since last November

Source: FRB of St. Louis and Goldman Sachs. Last observation: week of June 16, 2017, and June 23, 2017.
Note: Lower readings mean improved financial conditions.
35

Higher equity valuations driven in
part by technology stocks

Source: Bloomberg and author’s calculations. Last observation: June 26, 2017.
36

Conclusion

37

Conclusion
•
•
•
•

The U.S. economy remains in the low-growth, lowinflation, low-interest-rate regime that has characterized
recent years.
U.S. inflation and market-based inflation expectations have
surprised to the downside in recent months.
Low unemployment readings are probably not an indicator
of meaningfully higher inflation over the forecast horizon.
The current level of the policy rate is appropriate given
current macroeconomic data.

38

Connect With Us
James Bullard

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