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The U.S. Economy and
Monetary Policy
James Bullard
President and CEO, FRB-St. Louis
19th Conference of Montreal–Entering the Next
Economy: New Realities, New Frontiers

10 June 2013
Montreal, Canada
Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of others on the Federal Open Market Committee.

Introduction

This talk
U.S. economic performance continues to be characterized by
steady if unspectacular growth.
U.S. labor markets have improved relative to August 2012,
the data that was available at the date of the FOMC decision
to initiate QE3.
Inflation in the U.S. has surprised to the downside.
Financial market excess is limited at this point.
This configuration of data suggests that the FOMC can
continue to pursue its aggressive asset purchase program.

Slow But Steady Growth

Real GDP growth: U.S., Canada, U.K., and Euro area

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, OECD, and eurostat. Last observation: 2013-Q1.

Improving Labor Markets

Nonfarm payroll employment

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: May 2013.

Unemployment rate

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: May 2013.

Labor force participation rate

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last observation: May 2013.

Inflation Is Low

U.S. inflation

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Last observation: April 2013.

Remarks on inflation
Commodity prices globally have been soft over the last year.
This may be due in part to the recession in Europe, coupled
with slower-than-expected growth in China.
However, even core price inflation has been low in the U.S.
Low inflation may give the FOMC more leeway to continue
its aggressive asset purchase program.

Financial Excess Is Limited

Financial excess is limited
An important concern for the FOMC is that low interest rates
can be associated with excessive risk-taking in financial
markets.
So far, it appears that this type of activity has been limited
since the end of the recession in 2009.
The Dodd-Frank Act is meant to help contain some
dimensions of this activity.
Still, this issue bears careful watching: Both the 1990s and
the 2000s were characterized by very large asset bubbles.

U.S. Monetary Policy

An aggressive asset purchase program
The FOMC is currently authorizing asset purchases of $85
billion per month.
The flow rate of purchases is now widely regarded as the key
aspect of meeting-to-meeting policy choices.
Labor market conditions have improved since last summer,
suggesting the Committee could slow the pace of purchases
…
… but surprisingly low inflation readings may mean the
Committee can maintain its aggressive program over a longer
time frame.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
stlouisfed.org

Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)
research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/

James Bullard
research.stlouisfed.org/econ/bullard/