| For release: Sept 7, 2007
How Effective Has Monetary Policy Been?
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — Central banks
that have a specific, numeric target for inflation appear to have
a good record of hitting those targets, but an analysis from the
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis suggests that such targets may
not be a prerequisite for achieving low and stable inflation.
The analysis was conducted by Marcela M. Williams,
a senior research associate, and Robert H. Rasche, a senior vice
president and director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis. Their research appears in the September/October issue
of Review, the Reserve Bank's bimonthly
journal of economic and business issues. The publication is also
available online at the St. Louis Fed's web site: http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review.
Williams and Rasche looked at 23 inflation-targeting
countries and measured the moving
average of their inflation rates. Generally speaking, they found
these countries have been quite successful at keeping their long-term
inflation rates within their target ranges.
The most successful in meeting their targets are
New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland, Thailand and the United Kingdom,
which have all maintained an average inflation rate well within
their target ranges, even before those ranges were explicitly defined.
The exceptions are Brazil, Mexico and the Philippines, while some
countries, such as Chile, Colombia and Hungary have been able to
bring their inflation rates down over time.
To assess the disposition on the subject by members
of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), Williams and Rasche
compiled transcripts and public statements of various Fed officials
and FOMC members for the past decade or so.
Although the Fed does not set an explicit inflation
target, some Fed officials have publicly stated their preference
for doing so, including Governor Ben Bernanke, Dallas Fed President
Jeffrey Lacker, San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen and Philadelphia
Fed President Anthony Santomero. Williams and Rasche describe St.
Louis Fed President William Poole's statements regarding explicit
inflation targets as "ambivalent."
Governor Donald Kohn, among others, has expressed
opposition to an inflation target for the central bank.
Williams and Rasche emphasized that that the Fed's
success over the past two decades in stabilizing the inflation rate
without using explicit inflation targets would seem to question
the marginal benefit of targeting, at least in the United States.
In addition, they surveyed historical research and
commentaries to examine why evidence of the effects of monetary
policy on output stabilization are so elusive. While a number of
studies show the contractionary effects of monetary policy, results
from econometric models often conflict with historical evidence,
and economists debate how to reconcile those discrepancies.
Finally, Williams and Rasche concluded that the case
for consistently effective short-run monetary stabilization policies
is problematic because there are just too much uncertainties in
the environment in which central banks operate.
With branches in Little Rock, Louisville and Memphis, the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis serves the Eighth Federal Reserve District,
which includes all of Arkansas, eastern Missouri, southern Indiana,
southern Illinois, western Kentucky, western Tennessee and northern
Mississippi. The St. Louis Fed is one of 12 regional Reserve banks
that, along with the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., comprise
the Federal Reserve System. As the nation’s central bank,
the Federal Reserve System formulates U.S. monetary policy, regulates
state-chartered member banks and bank holding companies, and provides
payment services to financial institutions and the U.S. government.
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