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For release on delivery
12:40 p.m. EDT
September 7, 2022

Bringing Inflation Down

Remarks by
Lael Brainard
Vice Chair
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
The Clearing House and Bank Policy Institute
2022 Annual Conference
New York, New York

September 7, 2022

Over the past year, inflation has been very high in the United States and around
the world (figure 1). High inflation imposes costs on all households, and especially lowincome households. The multiple waves of the pandemic, combined with Russia’s war
against Ukraine, unleashed a series of supply shocks hitting goods, labor, and
commodities that, in combination with strong demand, have contributed to ongoing high
inflation. With a series of inflationary supply shocks, it is especially important to guard
against the risk that households and businesses could start to expect inflation to remain
above 2 percent in the longer run, which would make it much more challenging to bring
inflation back down to our target. The Federal Reserve is taking action to keep inflation
expectations anchored and bring inflation back to 2 percent over time. 1
While last year’s rapid pace of economic growth was boosted by accommodative
fiscal and monetary policy as well as reopening, demand has moderated this year as those
tailwinds have abated. A sizable fiscal drag on output growth alongside a sharp
tightening in financial conditions has contributed to a slowing in activity. In the first half
of 2022, real gross domestic product (GDP) declined outright, overall real consumer
spending grew at just one-fourth of its 2021 pace, and residential investment, a
particularly interest-sensitive sector, declined by 8 percent (figure 2).2

I am grateful to Kurt Lewis of the Federal Reserve Board for his assistance in preparing this text and to
Kenneth Eva for preparing the figures. These views are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of the
Federal Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee.
2
For comparison, growth in the alternative activity measure of real gross domestic income (GDI) has come
in just below potential in the first half of the year. The national income and product accounts contain two
measures of total economic output, measured through an expenditure approach, reported as more-familiar
GDP, or an income approach, reported as GDI. These two series generally track each other fairly closely,
but research indicates that some independent information about the business cycle can be found in each of
the series. The gap between the levels of GDP and GDI, known as the statistical discrepancy, was over
$750 billion in the second quarter, by far its largest historical size. For a discussion of these series and the
business cycle, see Jeremy J. Nalewaik (2010), “The Income- and Expenditure-Side Estimates of U.S.
Output Growth,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Spring, pp. 71–106,
https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/2010a_bpea_nalewaik.pdf.
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-2The concentration of strong consumer spending in supply-constrained sectors has
contributed to high inflation. Consumer spending is in the midst of an ongoing but still
incomplete rotation back toward pre-pandemic patterns. Real spending on goods has
declined modestly in each of the past two quarters, while real spending on services has
expanded at about half its 2021 growth rate. Even so, the level of goods spending
remains 5 percent above the level implied by its pre-pandemic trend, while services
spending remains 4 percent below its trend (figure 3).
In addition to the fiscal drag and tighter financial conditions, high inflation—
particularly in food and gas prices—has restrained consumer spending by reducing real
purchasing power. While price increases in food and energy are weighing on
discretionary spending by all Americans, they are especially hard on low-income
families, who spend three-fourths of their income on necessities such as food, gas, and
shelter—more than double the 31 percent for high-income households.3
Since the very elevated prices at the pump in June, the nationwide average price
of a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline has declined every day throughout July and
August, most recently falling below $4 a gallon, according to the American Automobile
Association. 4 The rise and fall of gasoline prices played a major role in the dynamics of
inflation over the summer, contributing 0.4 percentage point to month-over-month
personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation in June and subtracting 0.2
percentage point in July. This 0.6 percentage point swing in the contribution of gasoline

For more details on this difference and further information on how the effect of inflation varies across
households, see Lael Brainard (2022), “Variation in the Inflation Experiences of Households,” speech
delivered at the Spring 2022 Institute Research Conference, Opportunity and Inclusive Growth Institute,
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Minneapolis, April 5,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20220405a.htm.
4
For more information, see https://gasprices.aaa.com.
3

-3prices was an important driver of the decline in month-over-month PCE inflation from 1
percent in June to negative 0.1 percent in July.
In contrast, food price pressures continue to worsen, reflecting Russia’s
continuing war against Ukraine, as well as extreme weather events in the United States,
Europe, and China.5 The PCE index for food and beverages has increased each month
this year by an average of 1.2 percent, resulting in an 8½ percent cumulative increase in
the index year-to-date through July. For context, the net change in the food and
beverages price index over the entire four-year period before the pandemic was only 0.5
percent.
Core inflation—inflation excluding volatile food and energy prices—also
moderated in July. Core goods PCE inflation decelerated to 0.1 percent month-overmonth in July after averaging 0.5 percent in May and June. 6 While the moderation in
monthly inflation is welcome, it will be necessary to see several months of low monthly
inflation readings to be confident that inflation is moving back down to 2 percent.
How long it takes to move inflation back down to 2 percent will depend on a
combination of continued easing in supply constraints, slower demand growth, and lower
markups, against the backdrop of anchored expectations. With regard to supply
constraints, a variety of indicators are showing signs of improvement on delivery times
and supplies of some goods. In addition, labor force participation showed a welcome
increase in the August employment data, particularly in the boost in participation among

See, for example, Kim Chipman and Tarso Veloso Ribeiro (2022), “Dried-Out Farms from China to Iowa
Will Pressure Food Prices,” Bloomberg, August 27.
6 Price increases for nondurable goods moderated, and price declines in used vehicles as well as durable
goods other than motor vehicles more than offset further increases in the prices of new cars and trucks.
Prices for PCE services excluding energy and housing declined 0.1 percent in July, the first price decline in
this category since November 2020.
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-4women in the core working years of 25 to 54 years of age. Even with this improvement,
the participation rate is still 1 percentage point below its pre-pandemic level, well in
excess of the decline in the participation rate that would have been expected due to
retirements in the absence of the pandemic.
Reductions in markups could also make an important contribution to reduced
pricing pressures. Last year’s rapid demand growth in the face of supply constraints led
to product shortages in some areas of the economy and high margins for many firms.
Although we are hearing some reports of large retailers planning markdowns due to
excess inventories, we do not have hard data at an aggregate level suggesting that
businesses are reducing margins in response to more price sensitivity among customers.
At an aggregate level, in the second quarter, measures of profits in the nonfinancial sector
relative to GDP remained near the postwar peak reached last year. 7
Using the available macroeconomic data, it is challenging to measure directly
how much firms mark up their prices relative to their costs. That said, there is evidence
at the sectoral level that margins remain high in areas such as motor vehicles and retail.
After moving together closely for several years, starting early last year, the new motor
vehicle consumer price index (CPI), which measures the price dealers charge to
customers, diverged from the equivalent producer price index (PPI), which measures the
price dealers paid to manufacturers. Since then, the CPI has increased three times faster
than the PPI (figure 4). This divergence between retail and wholesale prices suggests an
unusually large retail auto margin. With production now increasing, and interest-

After-tax profits in the nonfinancial corporate sector, adjusted for inventory valuation and capital
consumption and expressed as a fraction of nominal GDP, were 13 percent in the second quarter. This is
just slightly lower than the series high since 1947 of 13.5 percent, set in the second quarter of 2021.

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-5sensitive demand cooling, there may soon be pressures to reduce vehicle margins and
prices in order to move the higher volume of cars being produced off dealer lots.
Similarly, overall retail margins—the difference between the price retailers charge
for a good and the price retailers paid for that good—have risen significantly more than
the average hourly wage that retailers pay workers to stock shelves and serve customers
over the past year, suggesting that there may also be scope for reductions in retail
margins. With gross retail margins amounting to about 30 percent of sales, a reduction in
currently elevated margins could make an important contribution to reduced inflation
pressures in consumer goods.
Labor demand continues to exhibit considerable strength, which is hard to
reconcile with the more downbeat tone of activity. Year-to-date through August, payroll
employment has increased by about 3½ million jobs, a surprisingly strong increase given
the decelerating spending and declining GDP over the first half of the year. The
unemployment rate has fallen, on net, from 4 percent in January to 3.7 percent in August.
Possibly the strongest indications that the labor market is tight were the first- and secondquarter readings of the employment cost index (ECI), which point to strong and broadbased growth in total hourly compensation. The 6.3 percent reading for the ECI in the
second quarter was the largest annualized quarterly growth in compensation under this
metric since 1982. The most recent reading of average hourly earnings suggested some
possible cooling, decelerating from a gain of 0.5 percent in July to 0.3 percent in August,
although it will be important to see additional data.
The deceleration in economic activity thus far this year has coincided with only a
slight easing in job openings, on net, since their peak in March. The current high level of

-6job openings relative to job seekers remains close to the largest in postwar history,
consistent with a tight labor market (figure 5). Businesses that experienced
unprecedented challenges restoring or expanding their workforces following the
pandemic may be more inclined to make greater efforts to retain their employees than
they normally would when facing a slowdown in economic activity. This may mean that
slowing aggregate demand will lead to a smaller increase in unemployment than we have
seen in previous recessions, but it is too early to draw any definitive conclusions, and I
will be monitoring a variety of labor market indicators closely.8
As we follow through on our plan to move monetary policy to an appropriately
restrictive stance, the effect of the increased policy rate and pace of balance sheet
shrinkage should put downward pressure on aggregate demand, particularly in interestsensitive sectors like housing. Continued improvements in supply conditions and a
further rotation of consumption away from goods and into services should also help by
reducing price pressures in goods. With regard to non-housing services, the magnitude of
price pressure over the next several quarters will depend on an overall slowing in
spending as well as the extent to which labor supply improves in these sectors.
Since pivoting last year, our actions and communications have tightened financial
conditions significantly and at a much more rapid speed than earlier cycles. So far during
2022, real 2-year yields have risen more than 350 basis points to about 1.2 percent, and
10-year real yields have risen almost 200 basis points and now stand at 0.85 percent—in

8
The debate in this area can be seen in two recent pieces. See Andrew Figura and Chris Waller (2022),
“What Does the Beveridge Curve Tell Us about the Likelihood of a Soft Landing?” FEDS Notes
(Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, July 29), https://doi.org/10.17016/23807172.3190; and Olivier Blanchard, Alex Domash, and Lawrence H. Summers (2022), “Bad News for the
Fed from the Beveridge Space,” Peterson Institute for International Economics, Policy Brief 22-7
(Washington: PIIE, July), https://www.piie.com/sites/default/files/documents/pb22-7.pdf.

-7the range of values for 10-year real yields from 2014 to 2018. The rapid tightening in
monetary policy is also reflected in a significant increase in the projected real short rate:
The Blue Chip Financial Forecasts has the expected short rate moving above 0.5 percent
in real terms to a significantly higher level than pre-pandemic within the next 12 months
(figure 6).
It may take some time for the full effect of these tighter financial conditions to
work their way through the economy. The disinflationary process here at home should be
reinforced by weaker demand and tightening in many other countries. This is particularly
the case as Europe contends with downside risks to activity and a severe energy shortage
caused by Russia’s war against Ukraine, and as China maintains its zero-COVID
approach against a backdrop of weaker consumption.
At some point in the tightening cycle, the risks will become more two-sided. The
rapidity of the tightening cycle and its global nature, as well as the uncertainty around the
pace at which the effects of tighter financial conditions are working their way through
aggregate demand, create risks associated with overtightening. And if history is any
guide, it is important to avoid the risk of pulling back too soon. Following a lengthy
sequence of adverse supply shocks to goods, labor, and commodities that, in combination
with strong demand, drove inflation to multidecade highs, we must maintain a riskmanagement posture to defend the inflation expectations anchor. 9 While we have no
control over the supply shocks to food, energy, labor, or semiconductors, we have both
the capacity and the responsibility to maintain anchored inflation expectations and price
stability.
See Ricardo Reis (2022), “The Burst of High Inflation in 2021–22: How and Why Did We Get Here?”
working paper.
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-8We are in this for as long as it takes to get inflation down. So far, we have
expeditiously raised the policy rate to the peak of the previous cycle, and the policy rate
will need to rise further. As of this month, the maximum monthly reduction in the
balance sheet will be nearly double the level of the previous cycle. 10 Together, the
increase in the policy rate and the reduction in the balance sheet should help bring
demand into alignment with supply. Monetary policy will need to be restrictive for some
time to provide confidence that inflation is moving down to target. The economic
environment is highly uncertain, and the path of policy will be data dependent. While the
precise course of action will depend on the evolution of the outlook, I am confident we
will achieve a return to 2 percent inflation. Our resolve is firm, our goals are clear, and
our tools are up to the task.

As of September 2022, the monthly caps on the runoff of Treasury securities and mortgage-backed
securities are $60 billion and $35 billion per month, as compared with $30 billion and $20 billion,
respectively, from 2017 to 2019.

10