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For release: Nov. 17, 2005
Federal Reserve Is “Doing Its Best To Keep the Core Inflation
Horse from Leaving the Barn”: St. Louis Fed’s Poole
Frankfort, Ky. — A key part
of the Federal Reserve’s ability to track and contain inflation
is that the Fed is successful at both extracting information from
observable data used in economic models and applying judgment beyond
observable data.
William Poole, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis,
made that point among others in a speech to students, faculty and
community leaders today at Kentucky State University.
“Policymakers often have to act ‘observation by observation’,
evaluating data and responding to events,” said Poole. He
cited the Asian financial market crisis, international capital market
events that felled Long Term Capital Management, the 9/11 terrorist
attacks and, most recently, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. “Moreover,
large shocks often differ from each other in size and effect, further
taxing the Fed’s knowledge, skills and judgment,” he
said.
Poole noted that some “shocks” appear gradually, surrounded
by controversy and disagreement, citing the 1990s rise of productivity
as an example. “”Federal Open Market Committee transcripts
show that Chairman Greenspan was concerned as early as 1992 that
official data were understating productivity growth, “ he
said. “No model would have substituted for his experience,
intuition and discussions with industry contacts.”
Poole said theoretical price determination models provide a framework
within which detailed judgments based on anecdotal and other information
are brought into policy decisions. “Inflation tracking involves
tracking market expectations of inflation and a careful analysis
of wage trends, productivity and profit margins. All of these help
me frame my outlook for inflation and what monetary policy would
be appropriate to keep inflation low and stable,” said Poole.
“It’s highly desirable that policy practice be formalized
to the maximum extent possible —that’s a clear implication
of modern forward-looking models,” said Poole. “However,
monetary economists have not yet developed a formal rule that is
likely to have better operating properties than the Fed’s
current practice. Current Fed policy practices have a large systematic
component, even though I could not write down that practice in its
entirety in a single equation or set of equations,” he said.
Poole said the Fed’s current policy rule is “a pattern
of behavior which yields an environment in which policy actions
are highly, though not perfectly, predictable in the markets.”
Operating monetary policy by such a rule makes tracking inflation,
he said, “a far simpler task than in the ‘bad old days’
when markets formed their expectations and forecasts without a clear
understanding of the policymaking process.”
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