View original document

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

A Policymaker’s Perspective on the Economic Outlook :: January 17, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
home | news & media | careers | site map

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK o f CLEVELAND
A bout U
Tours

For the Public

News & Media

Com munit y D e velopm ent

S tream ing Media

Forefront M agazine

Speakers Bureau

I Our IRegion

I Research

I Ban kin g

I Learning Center

Savings Bonds

Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2008 > A Policymaker’s Perspective on the
Economic...

SH ARE

^

f ...

A Policymaker’s Perspective on
the Economic Outlook

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

Introduction
This is a natural time to think about what may happen in the year
ahead. As business leaders, you may have already adjusted your
business plan and set your capital budgets to achieve the goals you
have set for your companies. For Federal Reserve monetary
policymakers, our “goals” are straightforward. We have a dual
mandate from Congress - price stability and maximum employment but Congress has given the Federal Reserve independence in choosing
our so-called business plan on how to achieve these two objectives.

President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Association for Corporate Growth
Cleveland, OH
January 17, 2008

The data we get on the economy are backward-looking - meaning
that they give us information about the economy at some point in the
past. But monetary policy is forward-looking, meaning that whatever
policy decision the Federal Reserve makes affects economic growth
and inflation in the future. So effective policymaking requires that
we make the most informed assessment possible about where the
economy is heading over the next several months, quarters, and even
years.
For some of you, establishing your business plan is an ongoing, rather
than an annual, exercise. Certainly that is the case for the Federal
Reserve. We make policy decisions based on continually updated
economic projections. Perhaps new data reveal that the economic
landscape was different than we saw it when we made a previous
decision. Or perhaps we see that the economy is approaching hurdles
we had not anticipated. Making economic projections is a difficult,
but nevertheless an essential, part of the policymaking process.
This morning, I want to spend some time talking with you about the
Federal Reserve’s economic projections and my current views on the
state of the economy. I will begin by describing the recent decision
by the Federal Reserve to release our economic projections more
frequently and the role that economic projections play as
communication devices. Next, I will discuss the process I use to make
my own economic projections, and I will conclude with my current
views on the economy.
Please understand that the opinions I express today are my own. I do
not presume to speak for any of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.

I. Economic Projections as Communication
Devices
So let me begin my remarks by describing the changes the Federal
Reserve has made in releasing our economic projections and the role
they play as communication devices.

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080117.cfm[4/29/2014 2:03:32 PM]

A Policymaker’s Perspective on the Economic Outlook :: January 17, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
For most of our history, the Federal Reserve did not announce any
policy moves, choosing instead to let the world guess at our policies
by carefully reading the financial market indicators. But gone are the
days when central banks find it advantageous to operate in secret.
Over time, and especially since 1994, the Federal Open Market
Committee (or FOMC), the Federal Reserve’s policymaking group, has
taken a series of steps to become more transparent. These days, the
public can see a press statement on the Board of Governors’ website
soon after the FOMC meets, and can read the full minutes of that
meeting within just three weeks.
This past November, Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the
Federal Reserve is taking another step forward. We are now releasing
our economic projections more frequently, and we are expanding
their content. We are releasing our economic projections four times a
year instead of just twice a year, which will give you more timely
updates on how we see the economic environment unfolding. These
projections are a compilation of the individual forecasts made by
Federal Reserve governors and Reserve Bank presidents based on
their own assessments of the appropriate policy required to achieve
our dual mandate.
We are providing projections for real GDP growth, the unemployment
rate, and two measures of inflation--overall inflation and “core”
inflation, which excludes the volatile food and energy components.
We have also extended the forecast horizon from two years to three
years so you can get a better sense of where we think the economy
and inflation are headed in the medium term.
In addition to providing more information about the economic
outlook, we are also including a detailed narrative of the major
influences shaping our projections. The narrative discloses the range
of opinion among Committee participants and provides some
measures of how we assess the uncertainties in our projections. All of
this information is intended to provide you with a better
understanding of the path the Federal Reserve expects the economy
to follow on our way to achieving our dual mandate of price stability
and maximum employment.
I believe that these enhanced economic projections will bring a
number of benefits. First, the Federal Reserve is accountable to the
public, and the more effectively we explain our decisions - and the
rationale behind them - the better we are able to maintain our
democratic legitimacy. Second, clarity about our policy objectives
and strategy may help anchor the public’s long-term inflation
expectations and improve overall economic performance. With
inflation expectations anchored, I believe that we will actually gain
added flexibility to address near-term problems, such as the recent
turbulence in the financial markets, without risking our credibility.
Third, greater public understanding of what we are trying to
accomplish and how we plan to do it should lead to better decision­
making by households, businesses, and financial market participants.

II. The Process of Making Economic
Projections
Now I’d like to take a few moments to share with you the process I
use to make my own economic projections. At the next FOMC
meeting, at the end of this month, I will submit my economic
projections for 2008, 2009, and 2010. Here is how I am approaching
that task.
I begin with a data-driven model of the economy. This so-called
“structural” model is a collection of mathematical equations that
represent the major sectors of our economy and the most important

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080117.cfm[4/29/2014 2:03:32 PM]

A Policymaker’s Perspective on the Economic Outlook :: January 17, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
forces that influence those sectors.
For example, when energy prices rise or fall significantly, I need to
know how these changes are likely to affect consumer spending. And
by extension, I would like to know how changes in consumer spending
will affect business capital spending plans, industrial production,
underlying price pressures, and so on. These models are an absolutely
essential part of the projection because they bring a strict discipline
to the process. They keep track of a huge number of
interrelationships and ensure that, in the end, I have accounted for
all of the major forces that are influencing the economy. In short,
the model helps me ensure that everything adds up.
Data-driven models are a necessary starting point for my projection,
but they are only a starting point. For all of their analytical
sophistication, economic models are really just abstractions. Even the
best of them is a simplification of a very complex world. Let me
describe just three of their shortcomings that I need to keep in mind
when making a projection.
First, economic models are usually based on backward-looking data
that are subject to measurement error. For example, as I speak with
you this morning, the most recent GDP estimate I have is for the
third quarter of last year, and it has been revised higher and higher
with each passing month. I have monthly data on certain sectors of
the economy, of course, but each of these snapshots gives me only a
limited and blurry view of the overall economic picture.
Second, economic models require a host of assumptions that are
obviously imperfect. For instance, I know my economic projection
depends on the behavior of things like the cost of energy and the
wealth of households. But while I must make certain informed
guesses about the outlook for oil prices and the performance of the
stock market, I really can’t know these important influences with
much certainty when I plug them into my economic model.
Third, every model is tied to historical events that may not perfectly
reflect our current economic situation. This weakness is especially a
problem when I think about the important role that expectations play
in the economy and how people form their expectations. For
example, how is the public, especially financial market participants,
interpreting the incoming information today compared to the last
time we faced a similar set of economic circumstances? Is confidence
about the future affecting household spending and saving decisions
differently this time? And what is the public expecting in terms of
economic policy adjustments versus some previous period?
Because of these shortcomings, I choose to temper the economic
projection from my model with a good dose of judgment. I use the
economic insights of economists - and we have many very good ones
at the Bank - but I also take full advantage of a broad collection of
business contacts. Each business leader has a unique perspective on
the economy, and together their perspectives paint a vivid picture.
Business leaders know what is happening right now and, equally
important, they can describe the plans they are making for the
future.
I have been asking the business community a lot of questions lately questions about issues like consumer spending patterns, the strength
of their order books and inventories, and any plans they have made
to add to their payrolls.
I am also considering some pivotal assumptions underlying the
outlook. One question is whether the recent rise in oil prices is likely
to continue. Another is how the dollar’s performance is affecting
pricing power. Yet another question is whether the stresses in the

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080117.cfm[4/29/2014 2:03:32 PM]

A Policymaker’s Perspective on the Economic Outlook :: January 17, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
financial sector are disrupting the normal saving and lending
channels.
Finally, there are all kinds of ’’expectations” issues that I need to
sort through. I need a sense of how households are incorporating
lower housing values into their spending and saving decisions. I need
a sense of how the prospect for slower consumer spending, and
perhaps slower economic growth, is likely to change the business
appetite for investment. And I need a sense of how financial markets
are reappraising risk and how that is affecting the cost and
availability of credit.
As you can imagine, I make a lot of phone calls before I make my
economic projection. Then I go back to my economic model and
adjust it based on what I have learned. Of course, conditioning
economic models to incorporate the judgment of experts without
violating the integrity of the model is often more art than science.
But it is important to try to strike a proper balance between the best
of statistical science and the best of expert opinion to get as clear an
economic roadmap as possible.
That said, there is obviously much room for improvement in the
process. Even the very best of economic forecasts is not particularly
reliable. To be specific, the confidence interval around a one-yearahead real GDP forecast is about 2.4 percentage points. That can
span the difference between an economy that is marching forward
and one that is teetering on a precipice. And it’s the “teetering on a
precipice” that I’d really like to have some forewarning about!
The experience of forecasting around the time of the last recession
illustrates my point. In December 2000, the predominant view among
forecasters was that real GDP would expand at a 3 percent pace in
2001. The actual growth rate turned out to be only V of a percent.
The economy actually began to contract in March 2001, but we did
not have confirmation that the economy was contracting until
November 2001 - just as the economy was climbing out of recession.
As I said earlier, economic statistics are released with a lag and are
often revised substantially over time. Obviously, having such an
imperfect understanding of how the economy is unfolding greatly
complicates our ability to make accurate near-term projections.
At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, we are always working to
improve our modeling process. We are researching how to better
understand business and household expectations for the economy,
inflation, and the likely path of monetary policy. We are rethinking
the way we interpret survey data of households, and we are
improving the ways we pull market sentiment from the financial
data.
Our economists are studying the sources and shifts in productivity
that pin down our economic potential. And we are working on the
development of new models that account for how economic
interactions change over time on the basis of expectations.1 In recent
years, economists have been able to make these very complicated
models more relevant to the policy process, and the models may
soon find their way into my economic projections. But I don’t think
I’ll be pitching my Rolodex of business contacts anytime soon.

III. My Views on the Economy
So that’s the process of making projections. With all of that as
background, how am I thinking about the economy this morning? Of
course, I know that our economy is confronting a number of
challenges as the new year begins. The residential real estate market
still appears to be in freefall. In addition, oil prices have risen, and
housing and equity prices have fallen. These factors are restraining

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080117.cfm[4/29/2014 2:03:32 PM]

A Policymaker’s Perspective on the Economic Outlook :: January 17, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
the economy beyond the housing sector.
Directly and indirectly, the negative influence of housing on overall
economic performance could affect the outlook for some time. We
are also seeing a related slowing in consumer spending, perhaps in
response to reduced household wealth. Tightened credit market
conditions could also hinder economic growth this year for both
businesses and consumers. A weak December employment report,
combined with a falloff in retail spending and flat industrial
production, supports my view that the economy has shifted to a
lower growth track. Although I expect that the restraining influences
to growth will diminish over time, and that the economy will gain
firmer traction later this year and into 2009, I am concerned about
the downside risks to that outlook.
Even as economic growth was slowing, inflation at year-end was
clearly elevated. Rising energy prices were a big part of the increase
in overall inflation, and some of those costs were passing through to
the core inflation measures as well. So, too, the falling dollar seems
to have boosted import prices. But I continue to believe that the
economy’s inflation trend will move lower over the forecast horizon
as the growth rate of the economy slows and the influence of energy
and import prices diminishes.
Risks remain to my inflation outlook, including the risk of losing the
public’s confidence in the Federal Reserve’s commitment to price
stability. I will continue to closely monitor the inflation situation,
including the behavior of inflation expectations.
My FOMC colleagues and I will be discussing the outlook for the
economy in less than two weeks. Needless to say, the economic and
financial environment has been very fluid lately, creating the need to
be highly flexible in responding to changes to the outlook and
associated risks.
I would like to thank Michael Bryan, vice president and economist at
the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, for his insights in the
development of these remarks.
1 These models are called Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium
Models.

Careers | Diversity | Privacy | Terms of Use | Contact Us | Feedback | RSS Feeds

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080117.cfm[4/29/2014 2:03:32 PM]