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Issue 3, May/June 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Monetary Policy Prospects
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan and other Federal Reserve officials have publicly
remarked that current monetary policy is highly accommodative
and that short-term interest rates “will eventually
need to rise toward a more neutral level.” However,
Federal Reserve pronouncements have also emphasized
that with inflation low and resource use slack, “policy
accommodation can be removed at a pace that is likely
to be measured.” [1]
This article looks at the Federal
Reserve’s policy stance and discusses why short-term
interest rates will almost certainly have to increase
at some point. The article also examines the historical
relationship between Federal Reserve policy, inflation
and resource slack for insights on future rate changes.
The examination suggests that a wide range of policy
outcomes are plausible over the next two years, depending
on the strength of the recovery, the economy’s
growth potential and the sustainable unemployment rate—variables
that economists can’t, unfortunately, pin down
with much confidence.
The Current Stance of U.S. Monetary
Policy
The Federal Funds Rate.
The Federal Reserve’s
principal policy tool is the interest rate on overnight
loans between banks—the federal funds rate. The
Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) meets eight times each year to set a target for
the funds rate. The Domestic Trading Desk at the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York then adds or withdraws reserves
from the banking system, as needed, to keep the actual
funds rate near the agreed target level.
At 1 percent, the current funds-rate
target is the lowest in over 45 years. However, the
Great Depression and 1990s Japan teach us that low interest
rates need not signal that policy is accommodative.
To determine how much stimulus policy is providing,
we must have a reference against which to compare the
funds rate. To this end, we compare the funds rate with
the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds and then with expected
inflation.
The Yield Curve. The
real yield on 10-year bonds—the market yield less
expected inflation—varies mostly for nonmonetary
reasons (such as changes in long-term productivity trends).
However, monetary policy actions can have a temporary
impact on short-term real interest rates. A policy that
drives short-term real rates down relative to the 10-year
real rate encourages current investment and consumer-durables
spending, stimulating real activity. Conversely, a policy
that drives short-term interest rates up relative to
10-year real rates discourages current spending and
restrains real activity.
Surveys of professional forecasters
suggest that long-term and short-term inflation expectations
have tended to move together over the past 20 years
(Chart 1 ). Consequently, the gap between the
market yields on 10-year bonds and federal funds—the
slope of the market yield curve—has been a reliable
indicator of the difference between real long-term and
short-term interest rates and, by the arguments given
above, has also been a good guide to the stance of monetary
policy and a useful indicator of the economy’s
future strength.[2]

The dividing line between policy
accommodation and policy restraint isn’t always
clear-cut and varies over time, but a negatively sloped
yield curve (when the 10-year bond yield is below the
federal funds rate) is a reliable signal of restraint
and a precursor of sluggish output growth, if not outright
recession. The yield curve was negatively sloped in
1989, 1998 and 2000 and almost turned negative in 1995.
Currently, in contrast, the yield curve is far steeper
than average, reflecting that the federal funds rate
is unusually low relative to the 10-year Treasury rate.
According to the yield curve, then, policy is highly
accommodative.
The Real Funds Rate.
It was argued above that
by comparing the federal funds rate with a long-term
bond rate, analysts approximate a comparison between
the real federal funds rate and a real long-term interest
rate. The approximation works well provided long-term
and short-term inflation expectations move together.
An alternative approach is to focus on the real federal
funds rate alone, calculated as the difference between
the market funds rate and a measure of short-term inflation
expectations. Little is lost by excluding the long-term
real interest rate from consideration provided it is
fairly stable.
To calculate the real federal
funds rate, we need a measure of inflation expectations.
This article uses, first, actual core personal consumption
expenditure (PCE) inflation over the prior 12 months
and, second, consensus one-quarter-ahead gross domestic
product (GDP) price inflation forecasts from the monthly
Blue Chip survey of professional forecasters. The two
resulting series for the real federal funds rate, plotted
in Chart 2, are very much alike.

Chart 2 also includes Congressional
Budget Office estimates of potential real GDP growth.
A real funds rate below this level is probably not sustainable
over the long term and signals accommodative policy.[3]
Conversely, the further the real funds rate exceeds
this level, the more likely it is that policy is restrictive.
By this standard, the real funds rate was notably high
in 1989 and at least somewhat elevated in 1995, 1998
and 2000. On the other hand, the real funds rate was
exceptionally low in 1992–93. Similarly, after
a sharp drop in 2001, the real funds rate was highly
accommodative in 2002 and 2003.
Three Determinants of Fed Policy
Policymakers recognize that
current policy is unsustainably accommodative but have
argued that the Fed can afford to be patient in moving
toward a more neutral policy stance. Without drawing
conclusions on the merits of this position, we might
hope to assess whether patience is consistent with the
Federal Reserve’s past behavior and to determine
which economic variables are most likely to drive future
policy changes. Of course, any such analysis will only
be as accurate as our characterization of past actions.
A good starting point for this characterization is the
Taylor rule.
The Taylor Rule. The
Federal Reserve has a dual mandate to seek full employment
and price stability. Work done by Stanford professor
John Taylor suggests that Fed policymakers take this
dual mandate seriously. Taylor showed that a simple
formula relating the federal funds rate to recent inflation
and current economic slack does a fairly good job of
explaining Fed policy decisions.[4] This formula has
come to be known as the Taylor rule.
A number of researchers have found
that the Taylor rule’s performance improves if
it is made forward-looking.[5] For example, the version
of the Taylor rule estimated for this article explains
policy using forecasted inflation instead of inflation
in the recent past. Current slack—measured by
the unemployment rate—is included in the funds-rate
formula, but so is forecasted growth in the ratio of
actual to potential real GDP, which determines future
changes in slack.[6]
Just how important are each of
the three funds-rate determinants? Suppose inflation
forecasts for the coming year are revised upward by
a full percentage point. The track record of the Greenspan
Fed suggests the FOMC would respond initially with a
1-percentage-point tightening move, all else constant.
If the inflation forecast remains elevated, the FOMC
eventually hikes the funds rate by nearly 2 percentage
points (Table 1). Similarly, a 1-percentage-point increase
in the unemployment rate would initially be met with
a 1-percentage-point funds-rate cut, and eventually
with just over a 2-percentage-point decline. Real growth
prospects appear to play a smaller role in the policy
process. Thus, a 1-percentage-point increase in expected
GDP growth, relative to potential-GDP growth, triggers
only a 40-basis-point immediate rate hike and a 70-basis-point
long-run response. However, this last figure is misleading
because it ignores potentially important indirect effects.
Thus, if faster growth materializes, it will put gradual
downward pressure on the unemployment rate and may eventually
put upward pressure on inflation. The fall in unemployment
and the rise in inflation trigger a second round of
interest-rate hikes that are not captured in the table.
A good portion of the remainder of this article will
be devoted to correcting this omission.

Assessing the Modified Taylor
Rule. First, though,
let’s put the modified Taylor rule to the test.
As shown in Chart 3, the rule has done a good job, with
errors generally a quarter point or less. However, the
funds rate fell significantly faster than predicted
in early 2001. From published FOMC minutes, it appears
that policy was unusually aggressive during this period
out of concerns that the stock market might act as a
drag on consumer spending and that a large capital overhang
might reduce the interest-rate sensitivity of investment
spending. Since 2001, the rule has done fairly well.
For example, the predicted value for the end of 2003
is 1.09 percent—quite close to the actual target
value of 1 percent.

Clearly, the modified Taylor rule
oversimplifies policymaking. It omits considerations
that are, from time to time, important in policy discussions.
More generally, the fact that the rule has done a good
job of tracking the Federal Reserve’s policy stance
to date is no guarantee that it will continue to do
so in the future. With the federal funds rate so near
its zero lower bound, for example, it may be that policymakers
would respond especially quickly or forcefully to any
sign that the recovery might be weakening or that inflation
might be falling. Moreover, the relationship between
the unemployment rate and other measures of slack, such
as manufacturing capacity utilization, appears to have
shifted—partly, perhaps, because labor-force participation
rates have become more sensitive to economic conditions.[7]
These factors are not captured by the analysis that
follows.
Alternative Unemployment-Rate
and Inflation Paths
As noted above, the prospective
growth in GDP relative to potential GDP may have important
indirect effects on policy through future changes in
the unemployment rate and inflation. Before we can get
very far in our policy analysis, we must explore these
indirect channels of influence.
The
Unemployment Channel. As
shown in Chart 4, the unemployment rate reached a cyclical
peak of just over 6.1 percent in second quarter 2003
and averaged 5.9 percent in the fourth quarter. Contingent
forecasts of the unemployment rate’s future path
are straightforward using Okun’s law, which says
we can expect to see the unemployment rate decline by
about 0.5 percentage points per year for each 1 percentage
point that real GDP growth exceeds potential-GDP growth.[8]
If we have a weak recovery during 2004 and 2005, for
example, with GDP growth only 0.5 percentage points
above potential-GDP growth, then the unemployment rate
will likely fall to 5.4 percent in fourth quarter 2005.
If we have a strong recovery, with GDP growth 1.5 percentage
points in excess of potential-GDP growth, the unemployment
rate will fall to 4.4 percent. Finally, a moderate recovery,
with GDP growth 1 percentage point above potential-GDP
growth, should produce a 4.9 percent average unemployment
rate in fourth quarter 2005.
The Inflation Channel.
Most empirical studies suggest
that the unemployment rate is an important determinant
of future changes in inflation. Unfortunately, the unemployment
rate that is consistent with stable inflation is not
constant over time, and shifts in this critical unemployment
rate—called the non-accelerating inflation rate
of unemployment, or NAIRU—are imperfectly understood
and often not recognized until well after the fact.[9]
Thus, policymakers’ inflation expectations depend
on their beliefs about the NAIRU as well as on their
beliefs about the future path of the unemployment rate.
Chart
5 shows four-quarter-ahead GDP price inflation forecasts
from the Blue Chip survey of professional forecasters.
For example, the plot shows that at the end of 2003,
Blue Chip forecasters were expecting 1.5 percent inflation
in 2004. The chart also contains three alternative inflation
simulations, which are contingent on the strength of
the economic recovery (and, hence, the path of the unemployment
rate) in a manner consistent with historical experience.[10]
Each simulation assumes a 5.0 percent NAIRU. Each shows
a V-shaped pattern, with prospective inflation first
dipping and then turning upward. In no case does forecasted
inflation ever drop below 0.5 percent per year or rise
above 1.5 percent per year.
Chart
6 shows the sensitivity of prospective inflation to
the value of the NAIRU. The simulated inflation paths
labeled “high NAIRU,” “medium NAIRU”
and “low NAIRU” assume 5.5 percent, 5.0
percent and 4.5 percent NAIRUs, respectively, beginning
in 2004.[11] In each case, the strength of the recovery
is “moderate.” According to the simulations,
a 0.5-percentage-point difference in the NAIRU translates
into a 0.3-percentage-point difference in inflation
that remains constant throughout the simulation period.
(If the simulated paths were extended further, gaps
between them would begin to widen.) Comparing Charts
5 and 6, prospective inflation is more sensitive, in
the near term, to the NAIRU assumption than to the strength-of-recovery
assumption. Even so, inflation stays between 0.5 and
1.5 percent during the entire simulation period, regardless
of the NAIRU. Moreover, the range of inflation forecasts
in fourth quarter 2005 is equally wide in the two charts.
Policy Implications
The
Strength of the Recovery and the Funds Rate.
We’ve looked at how
the unemployment rate and inflation might behave, depending
on whether the recovery is weak, moderate or strong.
What does the modified Taylor rule say about the federal
funds rate? Chart 7 shows the wide range of funds-rate
paths implied by the rule, depending on the strength
of the GDP growth relative to potential-GDP growth in
2004 and 2005. (All three simulations assume a 5.0 percent
NAIRU.) We’ve seen that a weak recovery produces
only a very modest decline in the unemployment rate
(see Chart 4), while prospective inflation
drops initially and then partially rebounds (see
Chart 5 ). Fed policymakers respond by lowering
the target funds rate to zero by the end of 2004 and
then gradually increasing the funds rate to just under
75 basis points in fourth quarter 2005. In contrast,
the strong recovery scenario produces an immediate 25-basis-point
funds rate hike, followed by a series of additional
rate increases. By the end of 2005, the funds rate is
over 4 percent. Finally, with a moderate recovery the
Fed holds the funds rate steady through the end of 2004,
then gradually raises rates to about 2.5 percent in
fourth quarter 2005.
Comparing the weak recovery and
strong recovery scenarios, a 1-percentage-point difference
in output growth relative to potential output growth
produces roughly a 3.5-percentage-point difference in
the funds rate over two years. Thus, indirect effects
quintuple the “eventual” impact of a change
in expected output growth, as listed in Table 1.
The
NAIRU and the Federal Funds Rate. Finally,
Chart 8 examines the sensitivity of the modified Taylor
rule’s prescriptions to the value of the NAIRU,
given a moderate recovery. Results depend very much on
whether policymakers are aware that a NAIRU shift has
occurred. An increase in the NAIRU from 5.0 to 5.5 percent
produces the “high NAIRU” policy response
in the chart, assuming that Fed policymakers are immediately
aware of what’s happened. The funds rate is given
an immediate 75-basis-point boost, and then rises steadily
to 4.0 percent in fourth quarter 2005. Conversely, a sudden
decrease in the NAIRU to 4.5 percent (the “low NAIRU”
scenario) causes the Fed to slash the funds rate to zero
and hold it there through first quarter 2005. Even at
the close of 2005, the funds rate is less than 1 percent.
Finally, if policymakers believe the NAIRU is 5.0 percent—regardless
of whether that view is correct—the funds rate follows
the middle path in Chart 8, which is identical to the
path labeled “moderate recovery” in Chart
7. Looking at Charts 7 and 8, it’s easy to understand
why the FOMC revised its policy directive to eliminate
language that suggested policymakers were unconditionally
committed to a 1 percent federal funds rate “for
a considerable period.” There are clearly plausible
scenarios under which policymakers would not want to have
their hands tied. Policy is determined by economic time—the
pace at which slack resources are put back to work and
inflation pressures rise—rather than chronological
time.
Summary and Conclusions
By several measures, U.S.
monetary policy is currently highly accommodative. Short-term
interest rates will have to rise substantially at some
point because a federal funds rate held permanently
at 1 percent is inconsistent with the current level
of inflation. The interesting question isn’t whether
interest rates are going to rise but how soon they’ll
rise and how fast they’ll go up once they start.
Policy simulations presented here suggest the answers
depend strongly on how much slack is thought to remain
in the economy and on how quickly slack is eliminated
in coming quarters. The fact that short-term interest
rates must eventually rise does not necessarily mean
that they should increase immediately or sharply. By
imposing various simplifying assumptions, this article
has, if anything, understated uncertainty about the
future course of policy.
An important corollary is that
even if Fed policymakers followed a mechanical rule—which
they emphatically do not—small differences in
economic forecasts and assumptions might produce strong
differences of opinion about current policy and about
how policy ought to evolve in the future.
—Evan F. Koenig
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| About
the Author
Koenig is a senior
economist and vice president in the Research
Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas.
Notes
The author thanks
Anna Berman and Priscilla Caputo for helpful
research assistance.
-
See Alan Greenspan’s testimony
before the Committee on Financial Services,
U.S. House of Representatives, February
11, 2004, and the public statement released
by the FOMC following its May 2004 meeting,
www.federalreserve.gov
[off-site].
-
The Conference Board, for example,
includes the slope of the market yield
curve in its Composite Leading Index.
-
Under standard technology assumptions,
capital income should equal a constant
fraction of GDP. Hence, the present
discounted value of the future stream
of capital income would be infinite
if the real interest rate were expected
to remain below the economy’s
real growth rate. The usefulness of
the interest-rate–growth-rate
comparison is less clear in an economy
subject to uncertainty. See “Assessing
Dynamic Efficiency: Theory and Evidence,”
by Andrew B. Abel, N. Gregory Mankiw,
Lawrence H. Summers and Richard J. Zeckhauser,
Review of Economic Studies,
vol. 56, January 1989, pp. 1–20.
-
“Discretion Versus Policy Rules
in Practice,” by John B. Taylor,
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series
on Public Policy, vol. 39, December
1993, pp. 195–214.
-
Early examples of the forward-looking
approach are “Modeling the Fed:
A Forward-Looking Monetary Policy Reaction
Function,” by Stephen K. McNees,
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston New
England Economic Review, November/December
1986, pp. 3–8, and “A Forward-Looking
Monetary Policy Reaction Function: Continuity
and Change,” by Stephen K. McNees,
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston New
England Economic Review, November/December
1992, pp. 3–13.
-
Details are given in the forthcoming
“Monetary Policy Prospects,”
by Evan F. Koenig, Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Economic and Financial
Policy Review, www.dallasfedreview.org.
-
See “New Economy, New Recession?”
by Evan F. Koenig, Thomas F. Siems and
Mark A. Wynne, Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas In Depth, March 2002,
www.dallasfed.org/research/indepth/2002/id0203.pdf.
-
See the intermediate macroeconomics
textbook Macroeconomics, 9th
edition, by Robert J. Gordon, Boston:
Addison Wesley, 2003.
-
The NAIRU is often associated with
the accelerationist-Phillips-curve inflation
model, which assumes that monetary policy
affects inflation only indirectly, by
creating or removing economic slack.
This article interprets the NAIRU more
broadly and, in particular, does not
rule out a direct, inflation-expectations
channel for monetary policy. For example,
an inflation scare (fear that the Fed’s
commitment to a low long-run average
inflation rate might be wavering) would
have the same effects as a high NAIRU
in the simulations presented here.
-
Koenig (forthcoming) gives details
of the inflation equation used in the
simulations.
-
The NAIRU is assumed to equal 5.0 percent
in 2002 and 2003—an estimate taken
from Gordon (2003).
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
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Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
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