A speech given by Janet Yellen at the Jackson
Hole, Wyoming "Designing Resilient Monetary Policy Frameworks for the
Future" provides us with a glimpse into how the Federal Reserve will tackle
the next recession.
Let's start with this
quote:
"My focus today will
be the policy tools that are needed to ensure that we have a resilient monetary
policy framework. In particular, I will focus on whether our existing tools are
adequate to respond to future economic downturns. As I will argue, one lesson
from the crisis is that our pre-crisis toolkit was inadequate to address the
range of economic circumstances that we faced. Looking ahead, we will likely
need to retain many of the monetary policy tools that were developed to promote
recovery from the crisis. In addition, policymakers inside and outside the Fed
may wish at some point to consider additional options to secure a strong and
resilient economy."
In her speech, Ms.
Yellen notes that the FOMC expects moderate real growth in GDP and that
inflation will rise to 2 percent over the next few years. Despite
the Fed's best efforts, as you can see on this
graph, inflation as measured using Personal Consumption Expenditures
(PCE) remains uncomfortably below the Fed's target:
The last time the
year-over-year increase in PCE was in excess of 2 percent was back in
early 2012 when it hit 2.1 percent for a very short time.
Now that we've looked at the inflation conundrum, let's look at another
quote from Ms. Yellen's speech:
"And, as ever, the
economic outlook is uncertain, and so monetary policy is not on a preset
course. Our ability to predict how the federal funds rate will evolve over time
is quite limited because monetary policy will need to respond to whatever
disturbances may buffet the economy. In addition, the level of short-term
interest rates consistent with the dual mandate varies over time in response to
shifts in underlying economic conditions that are often evident only in
hindsight. For these reasons, the range of reasonably likely outcomes for the
federal funds rate is quite wide..."
In fact, here's how wide
the 70 percent probability projections for the federal funds rate are
with the median pathway shown as a dark line:
That's a spread of 4.5
percentage points between the low and high estimates by the time we get out to
the end of 2018. I guess that allows the FOMC to cover themselves for
just about any contingency!
Now, let's look at Ms.
Yellen's comments on the Federal Reserve's toolkit prior to the Great Recession
"Prior to the
financial crisis, the Federal Reserve's monetary policy toolkit was simple but
effective in the circumstances that then prevailed. Our main tool consisted of
open market operations to manage the amount of reserve balances available to
the banking sector. These operations, in turn, influenced the
interest rate in the federal funds market, where banks experiencing reserve
shortfalls could borrow from banks with excess reserves. Before the onset of
the crisis, the volume of reserves was generally small--only about $45 billion
or so. Thus, even small open market operations could have a
significant effect on the federal funds rate. Changes in the federal funds rate
would then be transmitted to other short-term interest rates, affecting
longer-term interest rates and overall financial conditions and hence inflation
and economic activity. This simple, light-touch system allowed the Federal
Reserve to operate with a relatively small balance sheet--less than $1 trillion
before the crisis--the size of which was largely determined by the need to
supply enough U.S. currency to meet demand."
The problem
with this "simple monetary policy toolkit" was that it
meant that the Fed could no longer control the federal funds rate when
bank reserves were no longer scarce, largely because banks simply weren't lending. This meant that the Federal Reserve
had to create programs that would keep credit flowing to both households and
Corporate America. Even with those actions, bank reserves still kept
growing, resulting in the Fed nearly losing control over its own interest
rate policies. This meant that the Federal Reserve had to lower the
target for the federal funds rate to near zero where it has been ever since, a
drop of five percentage points over its previous level as you can see on this
graph:
Now, let's look at the
most interesting comments of the speech:
"Nonetheless, a
variety of policy benchmarks would, at least in hindsight, have called for
pushing the federal funds rate well below zero during the economic downturn. That
doing so was impossible highlights the second serious limitation of our
pre-crisis policy toolkit: its inability to generate substantially more
accommodation than could be provided by a near-zero federal funds rate."
Let me repeat that; if
the Fed had only used its traditional influence over the federal funds
rate to prop up the economy, it would have had to push interest rates well
below zero.
It's at this point that readers
of Ms. Yellen's speech have to note the small "8" that comes after
the highlighted sentence. It refers to a note which is attached to the
bottom of the speech as quoted here (and please pardon the inclusion of
the policy rule equation and focus on the highlighted portion):
"Consider the
following policy rule: R(t) = R* + p(t) + 0.5[p(t)-p*]-2.0[U(t)-U*], where R is
the federal funds rate, R* is the longer-run normal value of the federal funds
rate adjusted for inflation, p is the four-quarter moving average of core PCE
inflation, p* is the FOMC's target for inflation (2 percent), U is the
unemployment rate, and U* is the longer-run normal rate of unemployment. Based
on the medians of FOMC participants' latest longer-run projections, R* is
approximately 1 percent and U* is about 4.8 percent. Accordingly, with the
unemployment rate climbing to 10 percent and core PCE inflation falling to 1
percent in 2009, this rule would have prescribed lowering the federal funds
rate to minus 9 percent at the depths of the recession. In contrast, the
standard Taylor rule, which is half as responsive to movements in resource
utilization, would have prescribed lowering the federal funds rate to minus
3-3/4 percent using the same estimates for R* and U*."
Basically, what Ms.
Yellen is telling us is that, without the creative use of quantitative easing
and other non-traditional monetary policies like forward guidance and "The
Twist", the Federal Reserve would have been powerless to breathe life back
into the near-dead economy unless interest rates had dropped to between -3.75 and -9
percent!
Let's close this posting
with an observation; given that several of the world's influential central banks, most
particularly Japan, have had to resort to the use of negative interest
rates in a last ditch effort to restart their sluggish economies and spark some
inflation and with the added complication of a lethargic global and American
economy, the Federal Reserve will have to be even more creative during the
next recession since their non-traditional policies have been less than
spectacularly successful since 2008. My guess is that negative
interest rates are sure to appear on this side of the Atlantic and
Pacific Oceans since they seem to be the current choice of desperate and
monetarily cornered central bankers and Ms. Yellen's speech shows us that the Fed is at least considering the potential impact of negative rates on the American economy.
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