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Remarks on the 2018 U.S.
Macroeconomic Outlook
James Bullard
President and CEO

29th Annual Economic Outlook Conference
Gatton College of Business and Economics
University of Kentucky
Feb. 6, 2018
Lexington, Ky.
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
•
•
•
•
•

U.S. real GDP growth surprised to the upside during 2017.
The natural prediction from here would be that growth will
now slow toward trend during 2018 and 2019.
The possibility of a tax-driven investment boom in the U.S.
leans against this type of forecast.
Inflation remains low. Continued strong labor market
performance is unlikely to translate into meaningfully
higher inflation because Phillips curve effects are weak.
Inflation expectations have moved more in line with the 2
percent inflation target of the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
Monetary policy is closer to neutral today.
3

The 2017 Economic Growth Surprise

4

Real GDP growth surprised to the upside
•

•
•
•

The U.S. real GDP growth rate in the fourth quarter was 2.5
percent, measured from one year earlier, against a trend
growth rate that we at the St. Louis Fed think is about 2.0
percent.
As of December 2016, the FOMC median projection for 2017
growth was 2.1 percent, so the upside surprise in 2017 was
arguably modest.
The U.S. was joined by other large economies in achieving
better-than-expected growth. This fed into the profits of U.S.
multinationals, which helped U.S. equity prices rally in 2017.
The natural forecast to make at this point would be that
growth will slow toward the trend pace during 2018 and 2019.
5

The 2017 U.S. economic growth surprise

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and Federal Reserve Board. Last observation: 2017-Q4.
6

The 2017 global growth surprise
Country

IMF Projection for 2017
2017
Growth surprise
as of October 2016
Q4-on-Q4 (percentage points)

United States

2.2%

2.5%

+0.3

Euro area

1.5%

2.7%

+1.2

United Kingdom

1.1%

1.5%

+0.4

Japan

0.6%

2.1%*

+1.5

China

6.2%

6.9%

+0.7

* 2017 Q3-on-Q3.
Sources: International Monetary Fund World Economic Outlook, October 2016; Bureau of Economic Analysis; Eurostat;
Economic and Social Research Institute (Government of Japan); National Bureau of Statistics of China and author’s
calculations.

7

Equity valuations rally on global growth

Sources: Bloomberg and author’s calculations. Last observation: Feb. 5, 2018.
8

An Investment Boom in 2018?

9

Will tax reform fuel an investment boom?
•
•
•
•
•

The recent reform of the U.S. tax code lowered the
corporate tax rate and made other changes designed to spur
investment.
Investment has been relatively low during the last 8 years.
If investment returns to its average from past expansions,
growth in the U.S. will improve.
Most forecasters seem to be hedging their bets on whether
or not an investment boom will materialize.
An investment boom is not my baseline case, but I am
keeping a close watch on this issue.

10

Investment has been low

Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and author’s calculations. Last observation: 2017-Q4. The shaded areas indicate
NBER recessions.
11

Inflation Remains Low

12

U.S. inflation has been mostly below
target since 2012

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: December 2017.
13

Trimmed-mean PCE inflation lower
than expected in 2017

Sources: FRB of Dallas and author’s calculations. Last observation: December 2017.
14

The outlook for inflation
•
•
•
•

The low readings on inflation during 2017 occurred against
a backdrop of relatively good labor market performance
and a still historically low policy rate.
The recent report on jobs was good, with the BLS reporting
200,000 jobs created and the unemployment rate holding
steady at 4.1 percent in January.
I caution against interpreting good news from labor markets
as translating directly into higher inflation.
The empirical relationship between these variables has
broken down in recent years and may be close to zero.

15

Jobs growth slowing but still robust

Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics and author’s calculations. Last observation: January 2018.
16

Some recent estimates of the key
Phillips curve parameter
•

•
•
•

The latest annual report of the Bank for International
Settlements has published some statistical estimates of the
relationship between inflation and measures of resource
utilization, like unemployment.
They used rolling 15-year samples of data from G-7
economies and averaged across the results.
The relationship used to be reliably negative: Lower
unemployment led to higher inflation.
But in recent years, the relationship has not been
significantly different from zero.

17

The disappearing Phillips curve

Note: Rolling 15-year window estimates and confidence bands from a panel of G-7 economies.
Source: Bank for International Settlements (2017).
18

Inflation expectations have increased
but remain a bit low
•
•
•
•

According to modern theory, a variable that may give a
signal of future inflation is inflation expectations.
Market-based measures of inflation compensation have
moved higher recently.
The measures today are closer to being in line with the
FOMC’s 2 percent inflation target, but remain a bit low.
The market-based measures are for consumer price index
(CPI) inflation, and so we adjust them downward somewhat
to roughly translate into PCE inflation.
o Historically, PCE inflation has run somewhat lower than CPI

inflation.

19

Inflation expectations remain a bit low

Source: Federal Reserve Board. Last observations: Feb. 2 (breakeven inflation rates) and Jan. 26, 2018.
20

Monetary Policy

21

The monetary policy stance
•

•
•
•

The FOMC has begun to reduce the size of its balance
sheet, gradually reversing the quantitative easing programs
that characterized U.S. monetary policy while the policy
rate was near zero.
The policy rate range has been increased gradually and now
stands at 1.25 – 1.50 percent.
Current estimates of the neutral real rate, commonly called
r*, are near zero.
With core PCE inflation at 1.5 percent, the current policy
rate setting minus PCE inflation is near r*, suggesting the
current policy setting is closer to neutral than in previous
years.
22

Monetary policy closer to neutral

Sources: Federal Reserve Board, Bureau of Economic Analysis, FRB of San Francisco and author’s calculations. Last
observations: 2017-Q4 and 2017-Q3.
23

Conclusion

24

Conclusion
•
•
•
•
•

The natural prediction from here would be that U.S. real
GDP growth will now slow toward trend during 2018 and
2019.
The possibility of a tax-driven investment boom in the U.S.
leans against this type of forecast.
Inflation remains low. Continued strong labor market
performance may not reliably translate into meaningfully
higher inflation.
Inflation expectations have moved more in line with the 2
percent inflation target.
Monetary policy is closer to neutral today.
25

Connect With Us
James Bullard

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