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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2006 > Economic Conditions and Monetary
Policy

D _shrre

Economic Conditions and
Monetary Policy

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

As I am sure you are all very well aware, the Federal Reserve's
policymaking body, the Federal Open Market Committee, or FOMC,
will meet again at the end of this month to consider the course of
U.S. monetary policy.

President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Over the next couple of weeks, everyone involved with the FOMC will
study a vast amount of data and many economic forecasts. During
those same two weeks, we will also see a lot of speculation in the
media and elsewhere about what the FOMC will do when we meet on
June 28th and 29th. Today, I will talk about how I am thinking about
current economic conditions and monetary policy.

Buena Vista Palace, Orlando, Florida

Broadcast Cable Filnancial
Management Association

June 12, 2006

I will begin with some background on how we make monetary policy
decisions. Next, I will explore how our economy's performance is
influencing the Federal Reserve's monetary policy decisions. Finally, I
will discuss a topic that is near and dear to both of our professions communications - and talk about how clear communications can
factor into the policymaking process.
Please note that the opinions I express here today are mine alone. I
do not presume to speak for any of my colleagues in the Federal
Reserve System.

I. What We Do at the Federal Reserve
Let me begin, then, with a few words about what we do and how we
operate at the Federal Reserve.
When news reports talk about "the Fed," they are really talking about
a combination of two entities: the seven-member Board of Governors
based in Washington and led by Chairman Ben Bernanke, and the 12
Federal Reserve Banks around the country.
I lead the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland - the Fourth District in
the 12-district system. The Fourth District includes all of Ohio,
western Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the panhandle of West
Virginia.
Like the other 11 Reserve Banks, the Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland supervises banks; conducts research on economic
conditions; provides financial services to banks and the U.S.
Treasury; and serves as a resource for community economic
development. And, yes, we also participate in conducting monetary
policy-an area that has been dominating the headlines recently.
Monetary policy is conducted by the FOMC, which brings together the

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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
seven governors and 12 Reserve Bank presidents. We meet eight
times a year in Washington, D.C.
Let me give you a quick run-through of a typical meeting. One of the
first things we consider are projections for domestic and international
economic conditions. These projections are developed by the
economists at the Board of Governors and are contained in a
document known as the Green Book. The projections are reviewed
with the Committee, and we use this time on the agenda to raise
questions about the projections and discuss issues associated with
them.
Next, we discuss what we have been hearing from business leaders in
our respective districts about international, national and regional
business conditions. In FOMC meetings, we have what we call a "go
'round." We literally go around the conference table, with each of the
19 members offering his or her viewpoint on economic conditions and
the economic outlook.
After each member has spoken, it is time to consider policy options,
which are outlined for the Committee members in advance, in a
document called the Blue Book. Then it is time for a second "go
'round," with members stating their views on which policy option
should be adopted. If it is obvious that members generally agree, this
"go 'round" can be fairly brief. Otherwise, a more in-depth discussion
takes place.
When we feel that we have enough information to make a decision
on monetary policy, we proceed with a vote. Then we publish a
public statement about our decision, summarizing what we did and
why. Three weeks later, we publish the minutes of our meeting.
Today, market watchers are focused on what we will decide to do
later this month with our main policy instrument - the target for the
federal funds rate. The federal funds rate is the rate at which banks
lend each other money overnight. Movements in this rate have a
powerful, if indirect, effect on the interest rates that have an impact
on you and other consumers - on loans for cars, home mortgages, and
business finance.
The FOMC has a dual mandate: first, to maintain price stability over
the long term, and, second, to promote maximum sustainable
economic growth. Ultimately, we want the public to be confident
that inflation will remain low and stable over time, and that the
economy will continue to expand.

II. How Economic Performance Influences
Monetary Policy
Now let me explain how we go about deciding where to set the
target for the federal funds rate. Our national economy today is in
reasonably good condition. But in order to set policy appropriately,
we have to analyze not just where we are now, but also how we got
here and where it looks like we're heading.
So, how did the current business cycle unfold, and how did the FOMC
respond? The economic downturn that began in 2001 called for a
significantly lower federal funds rate. In light of weakening economic
growth, falling market interest rates, and a general increase in
perceived risks in the global economic outlook, the FOMC reduced
the federal funds rate from 61V percent to 1V percent by late 2002 a level that had not been seen since 1961.

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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
In early 2003, in addition to maintaining an accommodative monetary
policy to support the economic expansion, the FOMC also became
concerned with the possible emergence of an unwelcome disinflation.
In response, in June 2003, we lowered the federal funds rate one
more time, to the historically low level of 1 percent.
Starting in mid-2004, as the threat of unwelcome disinflation passed,
and as economic conditions began to normalize, it made sense to
begin the process of removing our policy accommodation. We
accomplished that by raising our target for the federal funds rate.
We did not know, at the time, how high we would have to raise the
federal funds rate target. But we knew that the direction had to be
considerably northwards. Step by step, in a series of 16 quarter-point
adjustments, the FOMC has raised the federal funds rate to where it
is today - 5 percent.
Looking at the nation's current economic situation, do the data
suggest that we have adjusted the federal funds rate appropriately?
How are we doing in achieving our objectives of sustainable economic
growth and price stability?
Let's start by looking at economic growth. After a weak fourth
quarter in 2005, mainly due to significant energy-price shocks and
devastating hurricanes, the economy bounced back quite strongly in
the first quarter of this year. Looking ahead, most forecasters are
expecting economic growth to be about 3 percent for the second half
of this year and for 2007. These growth rates, while consistent with a
healthy economy, are lower than what we experienced for most of
2004 and 2005.
The sectors of the economy that will support our economic growth
this year are expected to be somewhat different from those that
prevailed in the past few years. The housing market, after several
years of strong expansion, is already showing signs of cooling off this
year. Consumer sentiment has been deteriorating, according to the
latest survey responses, and recent data show signs that consumer
spending is softening from its strong first-quarter performance.
Consumers have sustained their spending during the past several
years, in part, by cashing out some of their home-equity dollars. This
extra source of financing is likely to slow down in a softening housing
market. Fortunately, though, I expect to see enough employment and
income growth coming out of the labor market to keep consumer
spending advancing at a moderate rate.
On the business side, I look for capital spending to continue to
expand at a decent pace again this year. Stronger economic growth
abroad will also boost American exports. These two sectors - business
spending and exports - are likely to mitigate the effects of a
slowdown in the consumer and housing sectors.
In summary, as the year progresses, I anticipate that the pace of
economic expansion will slow from its rapid rate of growth in the
first quarter. Nevertheless, I believe that we are on track to achieve
our objective of sustainable economic growth.
What about our objective of price stability? Inflation rates can be
affected by all kinds of unusual events in the short term, especially
large swings in energy prices. Of course, all of us are painfully aware
of the huge increases we have seen in energy prices. We feel it every
time we fill up our gas tanks. Americans are complaining that the
energy-price increases have hit them hard - and they're right. The
price of a barrel of oil has gone from about $20 in 2002 to roughly
$70 today.

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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Price pressures are also being felt across an array of other
commodities, goods and services. As a result, the core rate of
inflation has also been edging up lately. The Consumer Price Index
has increased by 3.5 percent during the past year. The so-called core
rate - that is, the CPI excluding food and energy - hasn't risen as
much: It rose slightly more than 2 percent during the past year. But
the core CPI has increased at an annualized rate of more than 3
percent during the past three months. This inflation picture, if
sustained, exceeds my comfort level.
Fortunately, the public is, for the most part, looking at this
disappointing inflation news as a transitory development. Measures of
long-term inflation expectations have been mixed lately, but, on the
whole, I regard them as remaining contained. The FOMC's challenge is
to make sure that they stay contained.
The recent news on inflation troubles me, but the news has not come
as a complete surprise. Last year I began to anticipate that we might
confront some disappointing inflation data in the first half of this
year, although I was not expecting quite as much inflation as we
have seen. Still, I have been expecting price pressures to diminish.
This juncture in the policymaking process is the most difficult. There
is, after all, a time lag between monetary-policy actions and their
ultimate effect on inflation. That is, even though the recently
reported inflation numbers have been edging upward, I think that the
current 5 percent level of the federal funds rate is near a point that
is consistent with a gradual improvement in the inflation outlook.
Of course, my current inflation outlook depends on the rest of the
economy developing along the lines of my broader forecast.
Specifically, I expect a flattening-out of energy prices, a cooling
housing market, continued strong productivity growth, and a
moderation in the overall pace of economic activity.

III. Communications in Monetary Policy
By now, it should be clear that setting monetary policy consists of
several forward-looking elements - forecasts, inflation expectations,
and the lagged effects of current and recent policy actions, to name
just a few. Communications also play an important role in the entire
enterprise of policymaking, especially in light of these forwardlooking factors.
Our communications not only inform the public of our interest rate
actions, but also provide a context for understanding why the actions
were taken, and, more broadly, help the public to form expectations
about future economic and inflation conditions. For the FOMC to
anchor the public's inflation expectations - which I have argued is
essential to meeting our objectives of sustainable economic growth
and price stability - our policy decisions and communications must
give the public confidence that we will produce low inflation over
the long run.
The FOMC does not have long experience with frequent and detailed
monetary policy communications. The Committee only began its
current practice of immediately announcing its policy decisions in
1994. In a previous speech, I characterized the period since then as
one in which the FOMC started learning how to talk.
To me, that process is in some sense like a person learning how to
walk through a dark room without knowing where the furniture is.
You move very slowly, feeling your way. Sometimes you discover
you're a bit off course. You may stumble, but you learn to adapt and

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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
move toward your destination. From my perspective, changes in the
Committee's communications process since 1994 reflect an institution
that is becoming more comfortable with greater transparency.
Let me give you an example of how our more recent communications
have evolved. Recall the episode that I mentioned earlier in my
remarks, about our concern over unwelcome disinflation in 2003 and
early 2004. To address that particular problem, the Committee
explained that it expected to maintain its low federal funds rate for
a considerable period. This language guided market participants to
expect no policy changes for a while.
As the threat of unwelcome disinflation passed, the language was
gradually modified, eventually to be replaced by language suggesting
that the accommodative policy could be removed at a measured
pace. This phrase signaled that the funds rate would rise, but that it
would be rise slowly and predictably.
That language was altered once again last December, in an important
way. Rather than repeating that accommodation could be removed at
a measured pace, the Committee said that some further measured
firming might be required. This change indicated, for the first time,
that the Committee was focused on the risks of higher inflation. In
January, the word "measured" was eliminated, signaling that the
timing and magnitude of future actions would be less certain.
As our experience demonstrates, communicating to markets is
complicated because incoming data can affect not only how we
evaluate current economic conditions, but also our view of where the
economy is heading. Also, FOMC members may not all interpret the
data in the same way at the same time.
The minutes of our meetings, including the last one, indicate that
there can be differences of opinion. Although these differences lead
to better policy decisions over time, they add to the challenge we
face as a Committee in communicating with the public.
So, what are financial markets expecting? Well, as you may know,
there is a market that deals with federal funds futures, and at the
moment, market participants place much higher odds on another 25basis-point rate hike than on a pause at the FOMC's meeting later this
month.
However, before the next FOMC meeting, more information on both
prices and real economic activity will be available. Even if those
numbers fail to change my outlook for inflation and economic
growth, they may push my assessment of risks in one direction or
another. New data, including statements from FOMC members, could
also shift the odds that market participants place on the FOMC's
upcoming decisions, in much the same way as they have during the
past few weeks.
It is important to emphasize that a good communication policy does
not mean that the public will always be able to anticipate what the
FOMC will do next. Sometimes the economic situation is simply too
fluid to admit such certainty.
What good communications can do is help people appreciate the
Committee's objectives, understand how policymakers are thinking
about the prospects for meeting those objectives, and consider how
new information might affect policy choices.
I hope that my remarks have given you a better understanding of how
I think about economic conditions and the challenges we are facing
as monetary policymakers.

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Economic Conditions and Monetary Policy :: June 12, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

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