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For release: May 11, 2005
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Joe Elstner |
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Charles Henderson |
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Trends in Inflation, Economic Growth, Price Stability Continue
at FOMC Center Stage: St. Louis Fed’s Poole
link to speech
St. Louis, MO. — Over the next 18 months or
so, Federal Reserve policy-makers will be looking closely at three
unfolding developments:
- Will inflation pressures continue to intensify or be a blip
on a steady long-term
outlook?
- Will the recent moderation in economic growth persist into mid-2005
or will the
economy return to the glide path that the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) projected early this year in its Monetary Policy
Report to Congress?
- At what point will the FOMC believe that its policy actions
have been enough to maintain its price stability obligation?
Those were the key points emphasized by St. Louis Federal Reserve
Bank President William Poole in a speech to the AAIM Management
Association. “As I see it, there’s little reason why
one should walk away from the output and inflation projections the
FOMC presented to Congress in February,” said Poole. “The
central tendency of the Board of Governors and Reserve Bank Presidents
was that real GDP would increase by between 3¾ and 4 percent
this year, and that core PCE inflation would most likely come in
at 1½ to 1¾ percent. As the April employment report
vividly showed, the data can sometimes turn on a dime. When we put
it all together, we get a mixed picture that doesn’t require
a fundamental change in the outlook.”
Poole noted that the Fed’s strategy for encouraging maximum
sustainable economic growth has depended on maintaining stable prices.
Forecasters, he said, were surprised by the pickup in inflation
last year. “The CPI, the best known measure of consumer prices,
rose by 3½ percent over the 12 months of 2004, about 1½
percentage points higher than forecasters expected,” said
Poole. “Much of this error was due to unexpectedly higher
energy prices. Still, when we strip out food and energy prices,
we find that CPI ‘core inflation’ rose about 2¼
percent.”
Poole emphasized that in 2005, nominal interest rates haven’t
moved in a manner that suggests the market is beginning to price
in a larger inflation premium. “If anything,” he said,
“yields on 10-year Treasury securities suggest just the opposite.
Not only are they little changed since the first of the year, they
are still below last June’s level when the FOMC first began
its policy of bringing the federal funds target rate toward an equilibrium
level. To me, that suggests that the market is confident of the
FOMC’s resolve to keep inflation well-controlled.”
Poole said the only surprise he’s seen in the past year
“is that there has not been a major surprise, except for energy
prices.” At some point, he added, “we’ll almost
certainly see some surprises in the data. What should not be uncertain,
however, is the Fed’s ironclad commitment to maintaining price
stability. Maintaining fundamental price stability is central to
maximizing sustainable economic growth and the economy’s ability
to adjust successfully to inevitable shocks.”
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