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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Data Dependency of Tapering and
Current Policy Tools
11/1/2013
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed “The
Tapering Debate: Data and Tools,” at the Financial Forum hosted by the St. Louis
Regional Chamber on Friday.
Bullard noted that current U.S. monetary policy has two components: 1) a short-term
policy rate, which has been near zero since December 2008, and its associated forward
guidance, and 2) an asset purchase program that began in September 2012, with
purchases currently at a pace of $85 billion per month.
At its meeting earlier this week, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) made no
changes to the pace of asset purchases. “Any FOMC decision on tapering is data
dependent,” Bullard emphasized, explaining that data dependence in this case
encompasses both cumulative progress in labor markets since September 2012 and a
judgment concerning the sustainability of that progress.
During his presentation, Bullard also discussed the FOMC’s two different monetary
policy tools currently in use—the asset purchases and forward guidance. “A decision to
modestly reduce the pace of asset purchases can still leave a very accommodative
policy in place to the extent forward guidance remains intact,” he explained. Bullard
said that while the FOMC views the two tools as independent, nancial markets view
them as closely linked. “This presents challenges for the Committee,” he noted.
Tapering Decisions Depend on the Data
Bullard said that cumulative progress in labor market outcomes since September 2012
provides the most powerful part of the case for tapering, or reducing the pace of
purchases. The FOMC’s stated goal when it began the current asset purchase program
in September 2012 was substantial improvement in labor market outcomes. Bullard
noted that two key labor market indicators—unemployment and nonfarm payroll
employment—have shown clear improvement over the past year.
To be sure, not all aspects of labor markets have improved, he said. For instance,
growth in total hours worked has been slower than it was before the September 2012
decision.
“To the extent that key labor market indicators continue to show cumulative
improvement, the likelihood of tapering asset purchases will continue to rise,” Bullard
said. “This is because the Committee’s 2012 criterion of substantial improvement in

labor markets gets easier and easier to satisfy on a cumulative basis as labor markets
continue to heal.”
However, he cautioned that “the Committee also wants reassurance that any progress
made in labor markets will stick.”
Two Monetary Policy Tools
Bullard then turned to how policymakers and nancial markets view the FOMC’s nearzero policy rate coupled with forward guidance and the asset purchase program. He
noted that policymakers tend to think of these tools separately, and nancial markets
tend to think of the two tools together. “Both views have some merit,” he said.
The nancial market view has some merit because for both tools, the setting is
dependent on the state of the economy, Bullard said. “When there is a change to the
macroeconomic outlook, it is reasonable to think that the settings for both tools would
be affected.” The policymaker view also has some merit because the two tools can be
thought of as independent, Bullard explained. “The policymaker can choose to respond
to a change in the outlook by altering the setting of one tool, leaving the other
unchanged,” he said. “In particular, a decision to taper need not change the
Committee’s forward guidance.”
Bullard discussed two recent events that provide a window on the connection between
asset purchases and forward guidance. The rst was in June, when the FOMC
announced a “roadmap” for a possible tapering decision in the autumn. The second
event was in September, when the FOMC decided not to taper at that particular meeting
and instead decided to continue with the current pace of purchases. Bullard noted that
the June announcement was viewed as relatively hawkish by nancial markets and the
September announcement was viewed as relatively dovish.
“The ‘ nancial markets signature’ from the unexpected changes in the policy stance at
the June and September FOMC meetings showed that asset purchases are very
effective,” Bullard said. He explained that key variables, including the real interest rate,
the exchange rate, equity prices and expected in ation, moved signi cantly and in the
conventional direction following these announcements. “This demonstrates that
changes in the pace of asset purchases have a very similar nancial market effect as
changes in the policy rate during more ‘normal times,’” Bullard said.
While changing the pace of asset purchases acts very much like a conventional change
in interest rates, this effect also spilled over to the expected path of the policy rate (the
FOMC’s “forward guidance”). Bullard noted that this effect was perhaps surprising to
policymakers, who view the two tools as independent, but not to nancial markets,
which view the two tools as tied closely together.
“The Committee needs to either convince markets that the two tools are separate, or
learn to live with the joint effects of tapering on both the pace of asset purchases and
the perception of future policy rates,” Bullard said.

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