The Fed Needs to Keep It Simple

I take Jerome Powell at his word when he says that he and his colleagues at the Federal Reserve are determined to get inflation back to its 2% target. And I’m sure they understand how important it is that people believe this promise. Any doubt on the matter will make their job vastly more difficult. So, as conditions change, they have to explain adjustments to monetary policy in a way that makes the commitment credible rather than calling it into question.

Quite a challenge, especially when the economy is being shocked from various directions. The recent cut in the policy rate and subsequent discussion of the Fed’s thinking illustrate the problem. The cut made sense, and the reasoning could have been simply explained. But the actual explanation was needlessly complicated and, partly as a result, less persuasive. By blurring the message, this excess of complexity runs the risk of unsettling expectations.

A simpler explanation would have gone something like this:

Consistent with our 2% inflation target and our estimate of trend growth in output of roughly 2%, we wish to see demand increasing by roughly 4% a year. Demand has been growing faster than that, but it’s gradually decelerating and we think it will continue to decelerate at an appropriate pace with the policy rate cut to 4%-4.25%. If it doesn’t decelerate as we expect, we’ll raise the rate; if it decelerates too abruptly, we’ll cut again.

Compare this with the actual explanation. I’m paraphrasing:

There are so many moving parts, our heads are spinning. Depending on how you measure it, inflation seems to be stuck above the 2% target. Tariffs are pushing prices up — less than many expected, for now, but more is to come. Then again, this bump in inflation will most likely be short-lived. At the same time, the labor market is cooling. We’re still at full employment but maybe not for long if we don’t adjust the policy rate. Hard to be sure because the jobs numbers are all over the place, partly thanks to the immigration crackdown. Heightened uncertainty could depress consumption and investment. Yet asset prices are soaring. Overall, the balance of risks to the dual mandate (full employment and low inflation) has changed, suggesting a cut in the policy rate. But rest assured, after this modest cut, monetary policy remains slightly and appropriately restrictive, based on where we stand in relation to the “neutral rate” that neither adds to nor subtracts from demand. By the way, we think that rate is about 1%, inflation-adjusted, but we don’t really know.