View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

For release on delivery
8:50 a.m. EDT
May 31, 2023

Brief Remarks

by
Michelle W. Bowman
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at a
Fed Listens Event on Transitioning to the Post-Pandemic Economy, hosted by
the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Boston, Massachusetts

May 31, 2023

It is very good to be here, and to be part of this Fed Listens event and discussion
about the effects of the pandemic experience on the U.S. economy, highlighting
challenges in the labor and housing markets.
While there are many ways to think about the impact of these effects, I find it
helpful to consider both the cyclical or temporary factors and those that are structural and
longer term. As monetary policymakers, we are primarily focused on the cyclical
matters—meaning how the pandemic and the measures taken to address it complicated
accomplishing our dual-mandate objectives of maximum employment and stable prices.
Making the best monetary policy decisions over the business cycle requires
distinguishing between temporary effects and lasting, structural changes.
Today’s agenda includes the employment recovery following the high
unemployment during the spring of 2020 leading to the current tight labor market.
Today’s labor market strength reflects policy decisions taken in light of the pandemic
experience, including the widespread lockdowns, reliance upon remote work, and other
factors that may have structurally altered the labor market. I am very much looking
forward to the discussion.
I also look forward to learning from the perspectives of today’s participants from
around New England about the issues that will be discussed today. I find it especially
helpful to participate in regional discussions to broaden my understanding of economic
conditions throughout the country. This local perspective is one of the great advantages
of the Federal Reserve System’s regional structure, and of the Fed Listens initiative,
which complements the Board’s efforts to understand national economic conditions.

-2In 2019, the Board launched Fed Listens with a year of listening sessions with the
public focused on monetary policy and, specifically, on how the Federal Open Market
Committee uses interest rates and other tools to promote a healthy economy. While data
can tell us a lot, learning about the experiences behind those data helps bring economic
data to life for me and for my colleagues. Through Fed Listens and other engagements
with the public, we hear about how Americans are faring in the economy and about how
our policy decisions affect individuals, businesses, and communities. So our efforts to
enhance our ability to listen have continued and have become what I expect will be, and
certainly should be, a permanent feature of the Federal Reserve’s decisionmaking.
Since the pandemic, and with the onset of high inflation, we have seen shifts in
the availability of affordable housing and in the housing market more generally. I’m
interested to hear how these impacts are being felt in New England. The availability and
affordability of housing are critical for families and for communities seeking to attract
new jobs and the workers to fill those new employment opportunities. Distinguishing
between the short-term effects of the pandemic and longer-term structural shifts in the
economy is crucial in making the near-term policy decisions to achieve our dual-mandate
goals.
In the near term, higher interest rates intended to lower inflation work most
directly in the housing market. While we expect lower rents will eventually be reflected
in inflation data as new leases make their way into the calculations, the residential real
estate market appears to be rebounding, with home prices leveling out recently, which
has implications for our fight to lower inflation.

-3The pandemic abruptly changed the lives of most Americans and their families,
and it fed a surge of demand for those who sought larger homes. It ushered in a wave of
homebuilding and renovation that was a significant contributing factor for inflation and
supply chain challenges. Much of that initial inflation has moderated, but it will be
important to understand the long-term effect of the pandemic environment on household
formation and housing demand going forward.
Thank you again, President Collins, for hosting this Fed Listens event and for the
opportunity to be part of this discussion.