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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Safe Real Interest Rates and Fed
Policy
11/10/2016
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed “Safe
Real Interest Rates and Fed Policy” on Thursday at Commerce Bank’s annual economic
breakfast.
Bullard discussed how a single equation can describe much of the state of the current
monetary policy debate, and how the St. Louis Fed’s new regime-based approach to
near-term U.S. macroeconomic and monetary policy projections, which was adopted in
June, ts within this one-equation format.1

For media inquiries contact:
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James Bullard
St. Louis Fed President and CEO

“The bottom line: Low interest rates are likely to continue to be the norm over the next
two to three years,” he said.
The Policy Rate Path Dichotomy
Bullard noted that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) operates by setting a
short-term nominal interest rate (i.e., the federal funds rate target), which is also
referred to as the policy rate. It in uences all other nominal interest rates. The policy
rate setting is currently 38 basis points, which is extraordinarily low by postwar
historical standards.
“The FOMC is considering raising the policy rate to a somewhat higher level,” he said,
adding, “the St. Louis Fed’s rate path projection is much atter than those of the rest of
the Committee.”
The Short-Term Real Interest Rate
To help illustrate the current situation, Bullard outlined a simple Taylor-type rule that
could be used to provide a recommended value for the FOMC’s policy rate. “Because
unemployment and in ation are relatively close to their long-run values, the
recommended policy rate from a Taylor-type rule depends mostly on the safe real rate
of return,” he said.
Thus, the Taylor-type rule simpli es to the policy rate being the sum of the real interest
rate on safe, short-term assets—like short-term government debt—and the FOMC’s
in ation target (2 percent, or 200 basis points).
Bullard noted that one way to measure the real return on short-term safe assets is to
consider the one-year nominal Treasury security and to subtract a one-year smoothed
in ation rate from it, which produces an ex-post one-year real return on a safe asset.
“There are other methods of calculation, but this one is simple, model-free, and uses a

James Bullard is president and
chief executive o cer of the
Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis. In these roles, he
participates in the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) and
directs the activities of the
Federal Reserve’s Eighth
District.
President's Website
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Video Appearances
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Research Papers

relatively short maturity that allows use of year-over-year in ation measures,” he
explained.
Measured this way, the real rate of return on safe assets has been more than 200 basis
points lower in recent years than it was during the 2001-2007 expansion. “This goes a
long way toward explaining why the policy rate is low today,” Bullard said. “Furthermore,
it seems unlikely that the real rate of return on safe assets will return to its historical
level over the next two to three years. At the St. Louis Fed, we call this a ‘low-safe-realrate regime.’”
From July 2013 to September 2016, this ex-post one-year real rate of return on safe
assets averaged -1.34 percent, or -134 basis points. Adding this value to the in ation
target leads to a recommended policy rate of 66 basis points. “I conclude that a single
25-basis-point increase in the policy rate—from 38 to 63 basis points—will get us very
close to the recommended Taylor rule value over the forecast horizon,” Bullard said.
Regime-Dependent Monetary Policy
Bullard then discussed the St. Louis Fed’s new approach to forecasting and monetary
policy. Under this approach, the macroeconomy could visit a set of possible regimes
and monetary policy is regime-dependent.
“When the real rate of return on safe assets is relatively high, a Taylor-type rule would
recommend relatively high settings for the policy rate. This is one possible regime,” he
said. “When the real rate of return on safe assets is relatively low, as it is now, a Taylortype rule recommends relatively low settings for the policy rate. This appears to be the
current regime.”
Therefore, these two regimes would lead to very different settings for the policy rate,
one high and the other low, he said. “But policy is following a Taylor-type rule in both
circumstances, meaning that the policy rate can be adjusted for deviations of output
and in ation from long-run levels. The monetary policy is ‘equally good’ in each of the
regimes,” he explained. “If there is a change of regime, monetary policy would have to
adjust to the new circumstance.”
Why Are Real Returns Low?
Bullard stated that the reasons behind the extremely low real rate of return on safe
assets have been widely debated. Real rates of return on safe assets have been
declining relative to the real return on capital in the U.S. for several decades, he noted,
adding that this decline cannot be attributed to monetary policy. “This suggests that
there has been an increasing demand for safe assets during this period. We call this the
‘high-liquidity-premium’ regime,” he said.
He then discussed the low productivity growth in the U.S. “The low-productivity-growth
regime is feeding into lower rates of real GDP growth and lower rates of consumption
growth than would otherwise be the case. This is likely putting downward pressure on
safe real rates of return,” he said.
He noted that the high liquidity premium and low productivity growth seem unlikely to
change over the forecast horizon.
“Safe real rates of return are exceptionally low and are not expected to rise soon,”
Bullard concluded. “This means, in turn, that the policy rate should be expected to
remain exceptionally low over the forecast horizon. This can still be viewed as a highquality monetary policy, as the Taylor rule is followed even though the level of the policy
rate is lower.”
1

For more discussion of the St. Louis Fed’s new approach, see Bullard’s webpage at
www.stlouisfed.org/from-the-president/key-policy-papers.

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