An Overhaul of Federal Reserve Doctrine: Nominal Income and the Great Moderation Joshua R. Hendrickson Department of Economics, University of Mississippi, 229 North Hall, University, MS 38677

Abstract The Great Moderation is often characterized by the decline in the variability of output and inflation from earlier periods. While a multitude of explanations for the Great Moderation exist, notable research has focused on the role of monetary policy. Specifically, early evidence suggested that this increased stability is the result of monetary policy that responded much more strongly to realized inflation. Recent evidence casts doubt on this change in monetary policy. An alternative hypothesis is that the change in monetary policy was the result of a change in doctrine; specifically the rejection of the view that inflation was largely a cost-push phenomenon. As a result, this alternative hypothesis suggests that the change in monetary policy beginning in 1979 is reflected in the Federal Reserve’s response to expectations of nominal income growth rather than realized inflation as previously argued. I provide evidence for this hypothesis by estimating the parameters of a monetary policy rule in which policy adjusts to forecasts of nominal GDP for the preand post-Volcker eras. Finally, I embed the rule in two dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models with gradual price adjustment to determine whether the overhaul of doctrine can explain the reduction in the volatility of inflation and the output gap. Keywords: monetary policy rules, real-time data, Greenbook forecasts, nominal income target, Great Moderation

1. Introduction Over the period beginning around 1984 through 2007, there was a substantial decline in macroeconomic volatility. Specifically, Blanchard and Simon (2001) have shown that the standard deviation of quarterly output growth declined by half and that of inflation declined by two-thirds over this period.1 Given the increased stability, this time period has been characterized as “The Great Moderation.” There are three general explanations for the Great Moderation. The first view is that the moderation of economic fluctuations is the result of inventory dynamics (McCarthy and Zakrajsek, 2007).2 A second view presented by Stock and Watson (2003) is that the increased stability is the result of smaller macroeconomic shocks. Finally, others such as Taylor (1999), Clarida et al. (2000), and Bernanke (2004) have attributed this decline in the United States to a significant change in monetary policy. Specifically, these authors argue that monetary policy after the appointment of Paul Volcker to the Federal Reserve is characterized by an increased responsiveness of monetary policy to realized inflation. If any part of the decline in volatility can be attributed to monetary policy, it is important to understand precisely the change in policy to ensure that past mistakes are not repeated. The purpose of this paper is to present an alternative perspective to the earlier work on monetary policy and the Great Moderation that views the changes in policy as the result of an overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine rather than as a change in the parameters of the Taylor rule. Specifically, this paper provides empirical support for a view put forth by Nelson (2005), Hetzel (2008a,b), and Dicecio and Nelson (2009) that the change in monetary 1 This 2 The

change was also noted earlier by McConnell and Perez-Quiros (2000) and Kim and Nelson (1999). authors acknowledge that changes in monetary policy are likely to have played a significant role as well.

Preprint submitted to Elsevier

February 9, 2012

policy beginning with Paul Volcker represented an overhaul of the previous doctrine that largely viewed inflation as a cost-push phenomenon. The paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 presents two views of monetary policy that can potentially explain the Great Moderation. The first view emphasizes the increased emphasis of the Federal Reserve in responding to realized inflation. The second view emphasizes an overhaul of the doctrine within the Federal Reserve in which the central bank changed its beliefs about the underlying causes of inflation. Specifically, this overhaul can be reflected in the Federal Reserve’s responsiveness to its forecast of nominal income growth rather than that of realized inflation. Section 3 provides empirical support to the overhaul of doctrine hypothesis. Section 4 examines the macroeconomic implications of the shift in policy and section 5 concludes. 2. Two Stories of Macroeconomic Stability 2.1. The Taylor View and the Great Moderation Evaluation of monetary policy and the Great Moderation often begins with a description of the Taylor (1998) curve, shown in Figure 1. The Taylor curve is an efficiency locus for monetary policy that describes the trade-off between the variability of inflation and variability of output.3 Assuming that monetary policy is optimal, the Taylor curve suggests that policymakers can only cause movements along the curve. By contrast, shifts in the curve result from structural changes in the economy. Thus, for monetary policy to explain the Great Moderation, it must be true that monetary policy was not optimal (operating beyond the Taylor curve, as shown by point A) in the prior period. It follows that in order to explain a potential role for monetary policy in the Great Moderation, one must be able to show a sizable shift in policy starting after the Volcker disinflation. The Taylor View outlined below suggests that the move from point A to point B is the result of a more aggressive response on the part of the Federal Reserve to realized inflation. Advocates of the Taylor View suggest that empirical analysis of the behavior of the federal funds rate provides evidence for the conjecture that policy was suboptimal. Following Taylor (1993), this research has emphasized a monetary policy rule in which the Federal Reserve adjusts the federal funds rate in response to inflation and economic activity commonly known as the Taylor rule. The adoption of the framework has been aided by the ability of this rule to explain the behavior of the federal funds rate quite well (Taylor, 1993; Orphanides, 2003a). In addition, such analysis generally identifies the shift in policy that could potentially explain the Great Moderation coincides with the appointment of Paul Volcker to the Federal Reserve in October 1979 as a result of the significant and lasting reduction in inflation since the start of his tenure. Taylor (1999) conducts an historical analysis for the era of the international gold standard and the period after World War II. His analysis aims to measure the particular response of the federal funds rate characterized by the Taylor rule: Rt = r¯t + πt + φπ (πt − πt∗ ) + φy y˜ + et where r¯ is the real rate of interest, π is the inflation rate, π ∗ is the target rate of inflation, and y˜ is the output gap. The coefficient estimates given by Taylor for this model are shown in Table 1. Taylor’s coefficient estimates show a clear shift in policy between the pre-1979 era and the era in which Alan Greenspan oversaw the Federal Reserve. For the period prior to 1979, the coefficient on inflation is nearly half and that on output is one-third of those estimated for the Greenspan era. What’s more, the latter results are also consistent with the normative suggestions given by Taylor (1993). Particularly important to Taylor’s analysis is the fact that the response of the federal funds rate to inflation in the pre-1979 period is less than unity. As Taylor emphasizes, this tepid response to rising inflation implies that when the inflation rate rises, the real interest rate declines. The decline in the real interest rate stimulates aggregate demand and stokes further inflationary pressures. This type of policy 3 For examples of analyses of the Great Moderation that focus on the Taylor curve, see Stock and Watson (2003) and Bernanke (2004).

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leads to instability as inflation is able to increase without bound. By contrast, if the coefficient on inflation is greater than unity, an increase in inflation will result in an increase in the real interest rate and would generate stability. Thus, the shift in policy from the Great Inflation of the late 1960s and 1970s to that of the Great Moderation is a more aggressive response to inflation. Specifically, monetary policy in the latter period is one in which the real interest rate increases in response to rising inflation. A similar analysis to that of Taylor is undertaken by Clarida et al. (2000). This latter analysis, however, differs in two important respects. First, one common criticism of the Taylor rule is that policy decisions require access to contemporaneous data.4 As emphasized in McCallum and Nelson (1999a, 18), rules that require knowledge of contemporaneous data are non-operational because “there is uncertainty regarding the realized value of real GDP even at the end of the quarter in actual economies.” To overcome this problem, Clarida, et. al posit a forward-looking rule in which the central bank responds to deviations of expected inflation and output from their respective targets. The second difference from the earlier analysis stems from the fact that the basic Taylor rule seems much too crude to fully capture the actual behavior of the federal funds rates in that it ignores the Federal Reserve’s tendency to smooth interest rates over time.5 Thus, while the long run behavior of the central bank can be considered to be consistent with the Taylor rule, the behavior of the federal funds rate can be characterized as follows: Rt = ρRt−1 + (1 − ρ)[¯ rt + πt + φπ (πt − πt∗ ) + φy y˜] + ηt where monetary policy gradually moves toward its long run target. As shown in Table 1, the estimation results corresponding to this model highlight a clear shift in monetary policy after 1979. Consistent with the results given by Taylor, the magnitude of the estimated coefficients on inflation and the output gap each increased in the post-Volcker era. Specifically, the coefficient on inflation is two-and-a-half times larger and the coefficient on the output gap is over three times as large as the corresponding estimates from the earlier period. What’s more, the response of the Federal Reserve to inflation in the pre-Volcker era is again insufficient to increase the real interest rate. The differences in policy have important implications for macroeconomic dynamics as the authors find that when using the monetary policy rule outlined above in a standard New Keynesian model, the estimated rule from the earlier period results in an indeterminacy of equilibrium. They argue that the indeterminacy results from the insufficient response of the central bank to higher rates of inflation. In this case, shocks that are not related to economic fundamentals can cause increases in prices. In other words, the existence of multiple equilibria is the result of the potential for self-fulfilling expectations. When coupled with the weak response of monetary policy to changes in inflation, large shocks can have a significant impact on the the volatility of output and prices.6 Finally, Clarida et al. (2000) argue that the volatility of inflation and output varies inversely with the magnitude of the coefficient on inflation. In fact, when the coefficient on inflation rises from one to two, the volatility of inflation and output decline by more than half. The authors argue that this provides evidence that the shift in policy beginning in 1979 can explain the sizable declines in volatility experienced during the Great Moderation. 2.2. Problems with the Taylor Construct A recent series of research by Orphanides (2001, 2002, 2003c, 2004), however, calls into question the shift in how monetary policy responds to inflation. Orphanides (2002) shows that, when using data available to policymakers in real-time, monetary policy during the 1970s was characterized by a rule that is consistent with the estimated rules for the period after 1979. The distinction between using ex post data and data that is available in real-time is important because there is often considerable noise in variables in real-time. 4 It

should be noted that the original Taylor rule (Taylor, 1993) related the interest rate instrument with lagged values of inflation and the output gap. 5 For a discussion of theoretical justifications for interest rate smoothing see Sack and Wieland (2000). 6 Note that indeterminacy is different than the instability argument put forth by Taylor. In this case, the equilibria are stable.

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Table 1: Estimated Taylor Rules

Coefficient on: π



Taylor 1960 - 1979 1987 - 1997

0.81 1.53

0.25 0.77

Clarida, Gali, Gertler 1960 - 1979 1979 - 1996

0.83 2.15

0.27 0.93

0.68 0.79

Orphanides 1966 - 1979 1979 - 1995

1.49 1.89

0.46 0.18

0.68 0.77

Rt−1

Clarida, Gali and Gertler as well as Orphanides estimate the Taylor rule with an autoregressive component, ρ, to capture interest rate smoothing evident in policy.

What’s more, macroeconomic aggregates often undergo significant revisions in the aftermath of their release. In order to capture the actual intent of the policy, one must rely upon data or forecasts that were available at the time the decision was made. In a more comprehensive analysis, Orphanides (2004) estimates the Taylor rule given in Clarida et al. (2000) for the periods 1966 - 1979 and 1979 - 1995 using the Greenbook forecasts from the Federal Reserve. The results are shown in Table 1.7 These results show two clear differences between those of Taylor (1999) and Clarida et al. (2000). First, the response parameter to inflation is greater than unity in each time period. These results cast serious doubts on the explanations of both an unstable equilibrium and the existence of sunspot equilibria highlighted in the earlier work. Second, for the period after 1979, the response parameter to the output gap is noticeably smaller when estimated using real-time data. Thus, while the results of Taylor and Clarida, et. al suggest that the Federal Reserve became more activist toward the output gap, Orphanides’s results imply a more tepid response. Overall, the results of Orphanides (2004) demonstrate a behavior of the federal funds rate that seems quite consistent over each period. In fact, the one exception is the decline in the response to the output gap. This would seem to imply that any success of post-1979 policy is due to the decline in the response to the output gap from the earlier period. Again, this runs counter to hypothesis that the success of the Federal Reserve was due to the increased responsiveness to inflation. The view held by Taylor (1999) and Clarida et al. (2000) is broadly defined as one in which the Federal Reserve did not have a strong enough response to realized inflation. There are a wide variety of reasons why this might be the case. For example, DeLong (1997) argues that the Fed’s stronger commitment was reduce unemployment. Clarida et al. (2000) argue that Federal Reserve served to accommodate higher inflation expectations. Similarly, Christiano and Gust (2000) argue that the central bank simply responded to expectational shocks with expansionary policy. Finally, Taylor (1992) suggests that the Fed underestimated the costs of inflation. There are substantial reasons to doubt each of these hypotheses. For example, the work of Barsky and Kilian (2001) suggests that the monetary policy expansion started before the expectational shocks and that rising commodity prices were the result, not the cause, of policy easing. This would seem to cast doubt on the views put forth by Clarida et al. (2000) and Christiano and Gust (2000). What’s more, the view that inflation was somehow of lesser concern to the Federal Reserve during the late 1960s and 1970s is similarly not supported by the views of the policymakers themselves. For example, Hetzel (1998, 21) notes that 7 Orphanides

estimates these rules over various forecast time horizons. The results are robust to the alternative specifications.

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Arthur Burns, Federal Reserve chairman throughout much of the 1970s, “was fiercely opposed to inflation.” In addition, the views of Taylor (1992) and DeLong (1997) require that the Fed had a belief in a permanent trade-off between inflation and unemployment. In other words, this view implies that the Federal Reserve deliberately created inflation to lower unemployment. However, in a variety of public statements Arthur Burns explicitly rejected this notion (Dicecio and Nelson, 2009). Statements by others within the Federal Reserve at the time also confirmed the view that the long run Phillips curve was vertical (Meltzer, 2010). When taken together with the work of Orphanides discussed above, it seems that the change in Federal Reserve policy was not summarized by an adjustment of the weights on inflation and unemployment (or the output gap) in a Taylor-type rule. 2.3. An Alternative View An alternative view of the change in monetary policy from the Great Inflation to the Great Moderation is that there was an overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine. The radical change in monetary policy was that the Federal Reserve placed emphasis on the role of inflation expectations, knowing that if inflation expectations were stabilized, the price system would restore full employment. The mechanism through which the Federal Reserve sought to achieve this goal was in maintaining low, stable rates of nominal income growth. The commitment to a low, stable rate of nominal income growth regardless of fluctuations in output and employment would give the central bank credibility and therefore stabilize inflation expectations. Full employment was left to the price system. This contrasts significantly with the Taylor view which suggests that there is a second-order Phillips curve and that the primary change in policy post-1979 was an adherence to the Taylor principle. Beginning in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, the emerging view was that inflation was a cost-push, and therefore non-monetary, phenomenon. This was increasingly reflected in views expressed in newspaper columns, statements by politicians, and most importantly within the Federal Reserve (Nelson, 2005). Hetzel (2008b, 161) notes that the “Keynesian orthodoxy held that the optimal combination of fiscal and monetary policy could deliver sustained real growth and high output while incomes policies could limit the resulting inflation.”8 As early as 1970, Federal Reserve chairman Arthur Burns argued that “monetary and fiscal tools are inadequate for dealing with sources of price inflation such as are plaguing us now – that is, pressure on the costs arising from excessive wage increases” (Nelson, 2005, 17). What’s more, Meltzer (2009, 15) argues that Burns often “blamed inflation on labor unions, monopolies, and the welfare state.” Each of which could be interpreted as cost-push shocks. Further, as Nelson (2005) points out, Burns routinely denied any role of the Federal Reserve in generating inflation and repeatedly argued against a tighter monetary policy. Perspective on the monetary policy views of Arthur Burns are difficult given that he was not wedded to a particular school of monetary thought. Nonetheless, entries in a diary that Burns kept during the Nixon administration provide support for the claims of Nelson (2005), Hetzel (2008b), and Meltzer (2009) above.9 For example, in summarizing a meeting with President Nixon and his advisors in November 1970, Burns writes: What the boys that swarm around the White House fail to see is that the country now faces an entirely new problem – namely, a sizable inflation in the midst of recession; that classical remedies for fighting inflation or recession will simply not do; that new medicine is needed for the new illness . . . [a] market-oriented range of policies – popularly labeled “incomes policy” – is absolutely necessary to shorten the transitioning phase, in which we are now caught, of moving from cost-push inflation to economic balance. (Ferrell, 2010, 28) 8 The term “incomes policy” refers to some type of wage and price controls. For a sample of the “Keynesian orthodoxy” see Samuelson and Solow (1960). 9 It is not clear whether Burns intended for the diary to ever become public and potentially provides insight into Burns’s private thinking. The diary was donated by Burns’s wife to the Gerald Ford Library in Ann Arbor. The diary was published in 2010 by the University Press of Kansas and edited by Robert H. Ferrell.

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The emphasis on cost-push factors in causing inflation is a recurring theme across later entries as well. In May 1971, Burns “urged the President to reconsider his objection to a price and wage review board” (Ferrell, 2010, 40). Later, in April 1973, Burns wrote that he “urged action on inflation first, repeating an earlier warning, and stressing the need to stabilize food prices – perhaps through a temporary freeze” (Ferrell, 2010, 94) and “pointed out that a return to free markets was good rhetoric, that rhetoric must not be confused with substance, [and] that removal of controls would mean a return to monopolistic tactics of trade unions and many corporations” (Ferrell, 2010, 98). In June 1973 Burns “argued for stronger incomes policy” (Ferrell, 2010, 103) and even advocated a 30-day price freeze as an anti-inflation measure in a meeting with President Nixon and his advisors. The idea that the Fed was using an incorrect doctrine was recognized early by Friedman (1972, 13) who noted that the “failure of monetary policy . . . has scientific interest because the erratic and destabilizing monetary policy has largely resulted from acceptance of erroneous economic theories.” He concluded that “monetary policy did not fail in the past three years in the relevant scientific sense. The drugs produced the effect to be expected though the wrong drug was administered” (Friedman, 1972, 17). Friedman’s statements were motivated by then-recent remarks by Arthur Burns that “the rules of economics are not working in quite the way they used to” (Friedman, 1972, 11) with regards to inflation. Given the belief within the Federal Reserve that its ability to correct inflationary forces was limited, the central bank would likely respond to these misinterpreted shocks with either a tepid response or, worse yet, expansionary policy while advocating wage and price controls. In point of fact, the latter was precisely the policy advocated by Arthur Burns and later the Nixon administration (Hetzel, 1998). This view was similarly supported by Burn’s replacement G. William Miller in 1978 (Nelson, 2005; Dicecio and Nelson, 2009). An expansionary monetary policy could be rationalized by those who favored the cost-push view because they denied “that upward shifts of output toward potential were a source of inflationary pressure” (Nelson, 2004, 20).10 The implication is that cost-push shocks could drive prices higher and output lower. Meanwhile, monetary policy could successfully increase aggregate demand without generating inflationary pressures. On the contrary, under this view, “a markedly more restrictive policy would have led to a still sharper rise in interest rates and risked a premature ending of the business expansion, without limiting to any significant degree this year’s upsurge of the price level” (Burns, 1973, 21). This viewpoint changed with the appointment of Paul Volcker as Federal Reserve chairman. Following his appointment as Fed chairman, Volcker elevated inflation reduction as the top priority of the FOMC, specifically through an emphasis on inflation expectations (Hetzel, 2008a; Meltzer, 2009, 2010). As Hetzel (2008a, 150) notes, “Volcker challenged Keynesian orthodoxy, which held that the ‘high’ unemployment of the 1970s demonstrated that inflation arose from cost-push and supply shocks.” In direct contrast to policies during the Great Inflation, Volcker argued that the policy adopted by the FOMC “rests on a simple premise – one documented by centuries of experience – that the inflationary process is ultimately related to excessive growth in money and credit” (Hetzel, 2008a, 151). The difference in monetary policy under Volcker was thus one in which “the FOMC accepted responsibility for inflation without regard to its presumed origin as aggregate-demand or cost-push” (Hetzel, 2008b, 165). The monetary targeting period from 1979-1982 can be seen as a commitment to influence inflation expectations.11 While the period of monetary control is largely viewed as a failure in hindsight, this and subsequent policy reflected the real commitment exhibited under Volcker, which was the maintenance of nominal income growth consistent with lower rates of inflation.12 The commitment to low, stable nominal income growth reflected an overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine in that it signaled a move to low, stable rates of inflation regardless of whether a recession and high unemployment would result.13 This change 10 Emphasis

is in the original. is reflected in public statements by Volcker and Greenspan. See the two quotations in Hetzel (2008b), for example. 12 The period of monetary targeting is viewed as a failure because of the Federal Reserve’s inability to hit monetary targets. However, it is not clear the extent to which the Federal Reserve was committed to the monetary targets Gilbert (1994). 13 There is little evidence that nominal income growth was an explicit target. However, on quantity theoretic grounds, the shift from monetary targeting to nominal income stabilization is a natural one given the perceived erratic behavior of 11 This

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was significant because it implied that the price system would restore full employment given the stability in nominal income growth. The predominant difference between this view and the Taylor view presented above can be expressed in terms of whether the Federal Reserve can be seen as an inflation fighter or an inflation creator, as summarized by Hetzel (2008a). The inflation-fighter view suggests that “inflation shocks are the initializing factor in inflation” and “explanations of inflation stress FOMC failure to respond aggressively to realized inflation” (Hetzel, 2008a, 273). The inflation-creator view of monetary policy emphasizes that the central bank influences the price level through the control of a nominal variable. Within the context of these classifications, the Taylor view is consistent with the belief that the Federal Reserve is an inflation fighter. To understand why consider that the Taylor view of the Great Moderation can be summarized as a combination of three major theoretical and empirical assumptions. The first assumption is that there is a trade off between the variability of inflation and that of output, a second-order Phillips curve. Second, there was an increased responsiveness to inflation in the post-1979 era. And finally, that the Taylor principle is necessary to monetary policy stabilization. The last two points imply that the change in monetary policy was simply the adherence to the Taylor principle in the post-1979 era. According to the Taylor view, the change in post-1979 policy was the more steadfast commitment to respond to inflation. The Federal Reserve became an effective inflation fighter.14 The alternative view put forth in this paper suggests that the change in policy was not simply a renewed commitment to fighting inflation, but rather an acceptance of the Federal Reserve’s role as inflation creator. The nominal variable that the Federal Reserve sought to control to influence the price level was expected inflation and the means of doing so was a commitment to low, stable rates of nominal income growth. This view represents a stark contrast with the Taylor view described above and this policy represented a radical shift from the policies adopted during the Great Inflation. It is this latter view, however, that is consistent with existing empirical evidence and public statements by Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan. For example, the first characteristic of the Taylor view suggests that post-1979, Federal Reserve policy was operating along the Taylor curve. The trade-off between inflation and unemployment exemplified by the Phillips curve was replaced by a trade-off between the variability of inflation and output. Thus, the central bank is left to balance the dual objectives of inflation and real output. A strict adherence to the Taylor rule would require the Federal Reserve to know the benchmark real interest rate as well as inflation and the output gap in real time. Even if the central bank is not a strict adherent to the rule, as it clearly is not, the Taylor view still suggests that policymakers navigate a trade-off. One would therefore expect explicit references to estimates of the benchmark real interest rate and the output gap in Federal Reserve transcripts. However, as Hetzel (2004) notes, references to the output gap are scant post-1983, despite figuring prominently as an indicator variable pre-1979. In addition, the empirical evidence from estimates of Taylor rules using real-time data that were outlined above suggest that the Federal Reserve was following the Taylor principle pre-1979. This severely undermines the Taylor view. In fact, the primary change in policy identified in those real-time estimates was the more tepid response to the output gap. This is consistent with the alternative view put forth in this paper that the Federal Reserve sought to control inflation expectations through low, stable nominal income growth thereby allowing the price system to generate full employment. Also, public statements by Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan clearly indicate the importance of inflation expectations rather than a commitment to fighting realized inflation.15 Overall, this section presents evidence that the change in monetary policy post-1979 is not one in which the Federal Reserve became a stronger inflation fighter by adhering to the Taylor principle. The change in money demand reflected in velocity. In a December 1982 FOMC meeting discussion about the use of monetary aggregates and monetary policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Frank Morris remarked that, “I think we need a proxy – an independent intermediate target – for nominal GNP, or the closest thing we can come to as a proxy for nominal GNP, because that’s what the name of the game is supposed to be” (Minutes of the Open Market Committee, Dec. 1982, 20). 14 The Taylor view thus implicitly, or perhaps explicitly, accepts the premise that inflation is a non-monetary phenomenon. If what is needed to control inflation is strong action of the central bank, this begs the question as to what caused inflation in the first place. 15 For representative statements, see Hetzel (2008b).

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monetary policy was an overhaul of doctrine in which the Federal Reserve not only disavowed the notion of cost-push factors in generating inflation, but took responsibility as the creator of inflation. The explicit recognition as the creator of inflation placed particular importance on inflation expectations. Through the maintenance of low, stable nominal income growth, the Federal Reserve was able to anchor inflation expectations, which enabled a well-functioning price system to generate full employment. Consistent with this view, the subsequent section presents empirical evidence that Federal Reserve policy was directly and more strongly tied to expectations of nominal income growth post-1979 and therefore represents an implicit commitment to a low, stable rate of nominal income growth. In addition, evidence from simulations suggest that this change is consistent with the observed reductions in the variability of inflation and output observed during the Great Moderation. 3. Empirical Evidence 3.1. Reduced Form Evidence A cursory examination of the period labeled the Great Moderation demonstrates that the period is not only one of moderation in the volatility of real output and inflation, but also of nominal spending. The behavior of the growth of nominal spending over the last 50 years in the United States is shown in Figure 2. The time period classified as the Great Moderation is characterized by relative stability in the growth rate of nominal spending. By contrast, the period of the late 1960s and 1970s demonstrates a clear upward trend in nominal spending growth, reflecting the significant increases in the inflation rate. The overhaul of doctrine hypothesis suggests that the relative stability in nominal income growth can be attributed to a commitment on the part of the Federal Reserve to a stronger responsiveness to expectations of nominal income growth. One way to test the overhaul of doctrine hypothesis is through the use of a historical analysis of monetary policy based on a nominal spending target rule analogous to the aforementioned research on the Taylor rule. The hypothesis that monetary policy has become more responsive to expected changes in nominal income can assessed by estimating the following regression for the pre- and post-Volcker era:16 Rt∗ = α + βEt−1 ∆xt

(1)

where Rt∗ is the long run target of the federal funds rate, Et−1 ∆xt is the forecast of nominal spending for period t at the beginning of the period. Thus, while it was clearly not an explicit goal of the Federal Reserve to stabilize nominal spending, this empirical analysis examines whether the responsiveness of monetary policy to expected nominal income growth changed as implied by the overhaul of doctrine. Nevertheless, even if the monetary policy rule outlined in equation (1) is consistent with how the target of the federal funds rate is determined, it is unlikely to capture the actual behavior of the federal funds rate itself over the time period in question. As previously mentioned, the Federal Reserve tends to smooth the interest rate. As a result, the federal funds rate is modeled to be consistent with Clarida et al. (2000): Rt = ρRt−1 + (1 − ρ)Rt∗ + εt

(2)

where Rt is the actual federal funds rate and Rt∗ is the long run response of the federal funds rate as modeled in equation (1). The actual behavior of the federal funds rate is therefore captured by substituting equation (1) into equation (2) such that:17 Rt = ρRt−1 + (1 − ρ)(α + βEt−1 ∆xt ) + εt

(3)

In order to examine the responsiveness of the Federal Reserve to nominal spending, I estimate equation (3) for the pre- and post-Volcker eras. Expected nominal GDP growth is given by the quarter-to-quarter 16 Formally, this rule could be expressed as follows: R = R ¯ + β(∆xt − ∆x∗ ) where R ¯ is the equilibrium nominal interest rate t ¯ − β∆x∗ . and ∆x∗ is the nominal income growth target. It follows that the constant term is given by α = R 17 A similar equation is estimated by McCallum and Nelson (1999b) for the period 1979 - 1997 using ex post data.

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Table 2: Smoothing Rule Results

Time Period 1966:I - 1979:III 1979:IV - 2003:IV 1966:I - 2003:IV

α ˜ 0.18 (0.77) -0.67 (0.42)* -0.49 (0.30)*

β˜ 0.11 (0.04)*** 0.41 (0.14)*** 0.17 (0.05)***

ρ 0.86 (0.10)*** 0.77 (0.09)*** 0.91 (0.03)***

˜ This corresponds to the rule Rt = ρRt−1 + α ˜ + β∆x ˜ = (1 − ρ)α and β˜ = (1 − ρ)β t + εt where α Significance levels: *** 1%, ** 5%, * 10%

Greenbook forecast expressed in annual rates thereby assuring that the rule is estimated with data available to the FOMC at the time policy was made.18 The results are shown in Table 2. Before discussing the results, a note about the estimation seems prudent. When the model is estimated using least squares, there is some evidence of serial correlation in the error term. In order to accurately evaluate and examine the robustness of the results, two techniques are used. In the first method, the parameters are estimated using least squares and evaluated for significance using Newey-West standard errors that are robust to serial correlation. The second method uses a vector of instruments to estimate the parameters using Generalized Method of Moments with a spectral density matrix that accounts for serial correlation. Each of the techniques produced similar results. The least squares estimates are given in the corresponding table with the Newey-West standard errors in parentheses. As shown in Table 2, there is a sizable difference in the response of both the federal funds rate and the implied long run response of the federal funds rate to a change in nominal GDP. Forecasts of nominal GDP have a positive and significant impact on the actual federal funds rate in both the pre- and post-Volcker era. However, this effect is 4 times smaller in the pre-Volcker era than that of the post-1979. In addition, the estimates suggest that the long-run response of the federal funds rate for each period is given by the following:19 Rt∗ = .79∆xt (4) Rt∗ = 1.78∆xt

(5)

where equations (4) and (5) represent the pre- and post-Volcker eras, respectively. These results bear some similarity to those of Taylor (1999) and Clarida et al. (2000) regarding the Federal Reserve’s response to nominal variables. In this earlier work, a coefficient on inflation less than unity implies that that the real interest rate falls when inflation rises creating the potential for instability or sunspot equilibria. By contrast, this model suggests a similar increased responsiveness to nominal income. Given that the results of this earlier work are not robust to estimation using real-time data, the results presented here suggest that policy was indeed much more tepid to a nominal variable in the pre-Volcker era, albeit one different than previously suggested. The macroeconomic implications of the policy shift are considered below. 3.2. Robustness of the Results The reduced form estimates above potentially suffer from the identification problem that similarly affects estimates of the Taylor rule. As a result, it is important to consider the robustness of the results. One method of doing so is to consider the effects of rising expectations of nominal income growth on changes in the federal funds rate. Formally, this can be done by estimating the following reduced form across subsamples: ∆Rt = α + βEt−1 ∆xt

(6)

This equation could be justified as a reduced form of a Federal Reserve reaction function: Rt = Rt−1 + βEt−1 [∆xt − (π ∗ + ∆¯ y )] 18 Greenbook forecast data is available through the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Data on the federal funds rate was obtained through the St. Louis Federal Reserve’s FRED database. 19 The variables included in the target are only those in which the corresponding parameters are statistically significantly different from zero in estimation.

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Table 3: Robustness estimates

Period 1970:1 - 1979:3 1983:1 - 1987:3 1987:4 - 1997:4

α -0.01 (1.51) -0.93 (0.52)* -0.87 (0.38)**

β 0.03 (0.13) 0.18 (0.11)* 0.20 (0.05)***

Significance levels: *** 1%, ** 5%, * 10%

where ∆¯ y is the growth in trend real output and π ∗ is the target rate of inflation. This reaction function differs from that above in assuming that the change in the federal funds rate, rather than the level, is adjusted to deviations of the nominal income growth forecast from its implicit target composed of the desired rate of inflation and trend real output growth. Equation (6) is estimated over three subsamples: 1970:1 - 1979:3, 1983:1 - 1987:3, and 1987:4 - 1997:4. These periods correspond to the stop-go era, the post-monetary targeting Volcker era, and the Greenspan era prior to the period of unpredictable changes in productivity. As was argued above, if the overhaul of doctrine hypothesis is correct, one would expect to see greater responsiveness of monetary policy to nominal income growth. The estimation results are shown in Table 3 with Newey-West standard errors in parentheses. The results shown in Table 3 lend support to those presented above as the responsiveness of the Federal Reserve to its forecast of nominal income growth is stronger in the post-Volcker era. In fact, for the 1970s, one cannot reject the null hypothesis that the Federal Reserve was unresponsive to its forecast of nominal income growth. It has been argued that the weak response to rising nominal income growth is the result of the fact that the Federal Reserve viewed inflation as a cost-push phenomenon. While the stronger responsiveness to the nominal income growth forecast in the post-Volcker era provides some evidence in support of this hypothesis, it remains possible that the weak responsiveness is due to a systematic under-forecasting of nominal income growth during the 1970s. For example, if the forecasts of nominal income growth were systematically lower than actual nominal income growth, even a central bank with a demand-pull view of inflation would have had a weak response. Figure 3 plots the one-period ahead forecast of the annualized quarterly percentage change in nominal income from the Federal Reserve’s Greenbook and the actual annualized percentage change.20 As shown in Figure 3, there is no evidence that the Federal Reserve systematically under-forecast nominal income growth. This therefore lends credence to the view that the Federal Reserve viewed inflation as a cost-push phenomenon. Further support can be illustrated by contrasting the Federal Reserve forecasts with the actual behavior of inflation and real output growth. Figure 4 plots the one-period ahead forecast of the annualized quarterly change in the GDP deflator from the Federal Reserve’s Greenbook and the actual change. The difference between the actual inflation rate and the Federal Reserve forecast is shown in Figure 5. As these figures clearly show, the Federal Reserve routinely under-forecast inflation throughout the 1970s as a result of the assumption that cost-push factors were transitory events.21 This systematic bias is absent after 1979. Figure 6 plots the one-period ahead forecast of the annualized quarterly change in real GDP and the actual change. The difference between actual real GDP growth and the forecast is shown in Figure 7. While the differences between real GDP and forecast are larger for the period encompassing the 1970s, there is no clear indication that the Federal Reserve consistently systematically erred in their forecasts. Nonetheless, as shown by Orphanides (2003c, 2004), the Federal Reserve’s real-time estimate of the output gap was systematically lower than that available ex post. This difference, however, might be missed by considering the growth rate of real GDP as opposed to its level.22 20 Realized data on nominal GDP growth, inflation, and real GDP growth was obtained through the St. Louis Federal Reserve’s FRED database. 21 See Cullison (1988). 22 In fact, Figure 2 in Orphanides (2003c) would seem to verify this point.

10

The systematic under-forecasting of inflation combined with the pessimistic view of the output gap lends further support to the hypothesis of an overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine. By systematically underestimating inflation, the Federal Reserve was much more likely to pass off unexpected changes in the inflation rate to cost-push factors, especially in light of their erroneous real-time estimates of the output gap.23 When combined with the reduced form estimates, this suggests that the change in monetary policy in the post-Volcker era can be attributed to a change in Federal Reserve doctrine. 4. Nominal Income Responsiveness and Volatility Despite empirical evidence that the response of the federal funds rate to the Greenbook forecast of nominal income was stronger in the post-Volcker era than in the preceding period, this empirical fact does not offer any conclusions regarding volatility. In an attempt to examine macroeconomic implications, I embed the rule in two DSGE models and compare the implications under the alternative parameter estimates for each period. The first model is the standard New Keynesian model with Calvo price adjustment.24 The second model is the semi-classical P-bar model, in which prices are fixed at the beginning of each period and the natural rate hypothesis is satisfied.25 The choice of these models is motivated by their ability to capture the empirical properties of the business cycle reasonably well. Two models are employed to examine the robustness of the results to different structural specifications. 4.1. Framework for Analysis The standard New Keynesian model consists of the following log-linearized equations that, when coupled with a monetary policy rule, solve for real GDP, the output gap, the nominal interest rate, and inflation: ytn = φnya at

(7)

1 (rt − Et πt+1 ) + eIS t σ y˜t = yt − ytn

yt = Et yt+1 −

(8) (9)

πt = ΘEt πt+1 + κ˜ yt

(10)

at = ρa at−1 + eat

(11)

ytn

where is the natural rate of output, at is a technology shock, yt is real output, y˜t is the output gap, rt is the nominal interest rate, Θ is the discount factor, and πt is the inflation rate. The corresponding log-linearized set of equations in the P-bar model are as follows: y˜t = Et y˜t+1 − b(rt − Et πt+1 ) + eIS t

(12)

Et−1 y˜t = φ˜ yt−1

(13)

y˜t = yt − y¯t

(14)

y¯t = ρy y¯t−1 +

eyt

(15)

where y¯ is the natural rate of output. Here, equations (8) and (12) are dynamic, forward-looking IS equations. Equations (9) and (14) define the output gap. Equation (7) defines the natural rate of output. In the P-bar model, the natural rate is 23 As Orphanides (2004) notes, the incorrect estimates of the output gap do not imply that these were easily identifiable mistakes in real time. 24 For a textbook treatment, see Gali (2008) or Woodford (2003). 25 For a discussion of this model, see McCallum and Nelson (1999a) and McCallum (2008). As is pointed out in McCallum (2008), the natural rate hypothesis is not satisfied in other models of gradual price adjustment.

11

Table 4: Volatility (Nominal Income Rule)

New Keynesian Model

P-bar Model

β 1.01 1.78 2.00 1.15 1.78 2.00

σπ 0.83 0.50 0.46 3.29 1.75 1.61

σy˜ 1.53 1.03 0.97 11.12 4.73 4.27

assumed to follow an AR(1) process as shown in (15). Equations (10) and (13) capture the price adjustment process in each model, with the former being the New Keynesian Phillips curve.26 Monetary policy is conducted using the following interest rate rule, expressed in log-deviations: rt = ρr rt−1 + (1 − ρr )β∆xt + ert where ∆xt is the change in nominal spending, (1−ρr )β corresponds to the estimates of β˜ in the section above. Together with an identity for nominal income, these equations are sufficient to solve for the equilibrium for the corresponding model. 4.2. Simulation Results The model is calibrated using standard values in the literature. The discount factor, Θ, is set equal to 0.99. Consistent with Gali (2008) and McCallum (2008), σ1 = b = 1. Following McCallum, the autoregressive parameter in equation (12) is set to 0.89. Also, following Gali (2008), the parameters φnya and κ are set to 1 and 0.3, respectively. The monetary policy shock, ert is assumed to be white noise with standard deviation 27 of 0.002. The IS shock, eIS The technology shock, t , is also white noise with standard deviation of 0.01. eyt in the P-bar model and eat for the New Keynesian model, has a standard deviation of 0.007 and the autoregressive coefficient on the technology shock, ρy and ρa , is 0.95. These values are consistent with those reported in the real business cycle literature. Each model is solved using the solution algorithm given by King and Watson (2002). A major characteristic of the Great Moderation is the reduction in the volatility of inflation and output. The objective of these simulations is to provide insight into whether a stronger response of monetary policy to changes in nominal income can explain the reductions in volatility. The standard deviations of the output gap and inflation for different parameter estimates are given in Table 4 and expressed as percentages.28 The results shown in Table 4 show clear and sizable reductions the volatility of inflation and the output gap as the size of the response to changes in nominal income become larger. In the New Keynesian model a doubling of the parameter β from near unity to two results in a decline in the volatility of the output gap of one-third and a reduction in the volatility of inflation of nearly one-half. In the P-bar model, an increase in the coefficient on the growth of nominal income from 1.15 to 2 leads to a decline in the volatility of output by over one-half and a decline in the volatility of inflation by approximately one-half.29 These results give further credence to the importance of the increased responsiveness of the Federal Reserve to nominal income growth in the period after 1979. In addition, there is reason to believe that the increased responsiveness in the latter period not only stabilized nominal income growth, but also led to reductions in the volatility of inflation and output. Finally, these results are robust to model specification. 26 Equation (13) captures price adjustment in the sense that the minimal state variable solution allows one to express Et−1 pt = φpt−1 as Et−1 y˜t = φ˜ yt−1 . See McCallum and Nelson (1999a) or McCallum (2008) for further explanation. 27 These match those estimated in McCallum and Nelson (1999a). 28 The value of β for the pre-Volcker era is less than unity. However, that parameterizations results in an indeterminacy of equilibrium. 29 The value of 1.15 is chosen because volatility increases considerably as β approaches unity. For each model, when the value of the coefficient on nominal income in the long run target is less than or equal to unity, an indeterminacy of equilibrium results thereby explaining the results of the previous subsection.

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5. Conclusion Given the reductions in the volatility of output and inflation during the Great Moderation, it is important to consider whether these reductions can be attributed to policy. The work of Taylor (1999) and Clarida et al. (2000) suggests that the period following the appointment of Paul Volcker to the Federal Reserve was characterized by an increased responsiveness of monetary policy to realized inflation. Recent research has cast doubt on this conclusion by showing that when estimating a Taylor rule using real time data, the Federal Reserve’s reaction to inflation during the Great Inflation was quite similar to that followed in the years after Volcker’s appointment. This paper presents an alternate view that emphasizes the overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine from the Great Inflation to the Great Moderation. Specifically, during the late 1960s and 1970s the Federal Reserve operated under the belief that inflation was largely driven by cost-push forces and the parameter on the output gap in the Phillips curve was only positive when the output gap was positive. Following the appointment of Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve not only abandoned the notion of inflation as a costpush phenomenon, but also took explicit responsibility for generating inflation. As a result, the subsequent policy represented an overhaul in Federal Reserve doctrine whereby the FOMC sought to stabilize inflation expectations by maintaining low, stable rates of nominal income growth. This view is not only consistent with existing empirical evidence using real-time data, but is also consistent with public statements by Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan. The empirical evidence presented in this paper supports the view that the Federal Reserve increased its responsiveness to the expected growth rate of nominal spending. Thus, in conjunction with evidence from previous research this paper demonstrates that the change in policy was a change in Fed doctrine rather than simply a change in the parameter of a Taylor-like feedback rule. Unlike the earlier research, these models are estimated using the Greenbook forecasts of the Federal Reserve and therefore are able to capture the actual intent of policy and are not biased by ex post data revisions. In addition, it was shown that an increased responsiveness of monetary policy to expected nominal income growth can reduce the volatility of inflation and output in simulations based on standard monetary policy frameworks. This research therefore suggests that the Great Moderation can be explained by an increased responsiveness of monetary policy to nominal income growth and an overhaul of Federal Reserve doctrine. References Barsky, R. B., Kilian, L., 2001. Do we really know that oil caused the great stagflation? a monetary alternative. NBER Macroeconomics Annual 16 (1), 137 – 183. Bernanke, B. S., 2004. The great moderation. Remarks at the Eastern Economic Association Meetings, February 20. Blanchard, O., Simon, J., 2001. The long and large decline in u.s. output volatility. Brookings Papers on Economics Activity, 135 – 164. Burns, A., November 1973. Letter on monetary policy. St. Louis Federal Reserve Review, 15 – 22. Christiano, L. J., Gust, C., 2000. The expectations trap hypothesis. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Economic Perspectives 24 (2), 21 – 39. Clarida, R., Gali, J., Gertler, M., 2000. Monetary policy rules and macroeconomic stability: Evidence and some theory. Quarterly Journal of Economics 115, 147 – 180. Cullison, W., 1988. On recognizing inflation. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Review, 4 – 12. DeLong, J. B., 1997. America’s peacetime inflation: The 1970s. In: Romer, C. D., Romer, D. H. (Eds.), Reducing Inflation: Motivation and Strategy. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 247 – 276. Dicecio, R., Nelson, E., 2009. The great inflation in the united states and the united kingdom. NBER Working Paper No. 14895. Ferrell, R. H. (Ed.), 2010. Inside the Nixon Administration: The Secret Diary of Arthur Burns, 1969 - 1974. University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. Friedman, M., 1972. Have monetary policies failed? American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 62 (2), 11 – 18. Gali, J., 2008. Monetary Policy, Inflation, and the Business Cycle. Princeton University Press, Princeton. Gilbert, R. A., 1994. A case study in monetary control: 1980 - 1982. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 35 – 58. Hetzel, R. L., 1998. Arthur burns and inflation. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 84 (1), 21 – 44. Hetzel, R. L., 2004. How do central banks control inflation? Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 90 (3), 47 – 63. Hetzel, R. L., 2008a. The Monetary Policy of the Federal Reserve: A History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

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Hetzel, R. L., 2008b. What is the monetary standard, or, how did the volcker-greenspan fomcs tame inflation? Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 94 (2), 147 – 171. Kim, C.-J., Nelson, C., 1999. Has the u.s. economy become more stable? a bayesian approach based on a markov-switching model of the business cycle. Review of Economics and Statistics 81, 608 – 616. King, R. G., Watson, M. W., 2002. System reduction and solution algorithms for singular linear difference systems under rational expectations. Computational Economics 20, 57 – 86. McCallum, B. T., 2008. Reconsideration of the p-bar model of gradual price adjustment. European Economic Review 52, 1480 – 1493. McCallum, B. T., Nelson, E., 1999a. Performance of operational policy rules in an estimated semi-classical structural model. In: Taylor, J. B. (Ed.), Monetary Policy Rules. Chicago University Press, Chicago. McCallum, B. T., Nelson, E., 1999b. Nominal income targeting in a open-economy optimizing model. Journal of Monetary Economics 43, 553 – 578. McCarthy, J., Zakrajsek, E., 2007. Inventory dynamics and business cycles: What has changed? Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 39 (2 - 3), 591 – 614. McConnell, M., Perez-Quiros, G., 2000. Output fluctuations in the united states: What has changed since the early 1980s? American Economic Review 90, 1464 – 1476. Meltzer, A. M., 2009. Learning about policy from federal reserve history. Keynote Address, Cato Monetary Conference. Meltzer, A. M., 2010. A History of the Federal Reserve, Volume 2, Book 2, 1970 - 1986. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Nelson, E., 2004. The great inflation of the seventies: What really happened? St. Louis Federal Reserve Working Paper, 2004 - 001. Nelson, E., 2005. The great inflation of the seventies: What really happened? Advances in Macroeconomics 3. Orphanides, A., 2001. Monetary policy rules based on real-time data. American Economic Review 91 (4), 964 – 985. Orphanides, A., 2002. Monetary policy rules and the great inflation. American Economic Review 92 (2), 115 – 120. Orphanides, A., 2003a. Historical monetary policy analysis and the taylor rule. Journal of Monetary Economics 50 (5), 983 – 1022. Orphanides, A., 2003c. The quest for prosperity without inflation. Journal of Monetary Economics 50, 633 – 663. Orphanides, A., 2004. Monetary policy rules, macroeconomic stability, and inflation: A view from the trenches. Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 36 (2), 151 – 175. Sack, B., Wieland, V., 2000. Interest rate smoothing and optimal monetary policy: A review of recent empirical evidence. Journal of Economics and Business 52, 205 – 228. Samuelson, P. A., Solow, R. M., 1960. Analytical aspects of anti-inflation policy. American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 50 (2), 177 – 194. Stock, J., Watson, M., 2003. Has the business cycle changed? evidence and explanation. FRB Kansas City symposium, Jackson Hole Wyoming, August 28 - 30. Taylor, J. B., 1992. The great inflation, the great disinflation, and policies for future price stability. In: Inflation, Disinflation, and Monetary Policy. Ambassador Press, Sydney, pp. 9 – 31. Taylor, J. B., 1993. Discretion versus policy rules in practice. Carnegie-Rochester Series on Public Policy 39, 195 – 214. Taylor, J. B., 1998. Monetary policy guidelines for employment and inflation stability. In: Friedman, B., Solow, R. (Eds.), Inflation, Unemployment, and Monetary Policy. University of Chicago, Chicago. Taylor, J. B., 1999. A historical analysis of monetary policy rules. In: Taylor, J. B. (Ed.), Monetary Policy Rules. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Woodford, M., 2003. Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy. Princeton University Press, Princeton.

14

15

Figure 2: Nominal GDP Growth 25

1970 - 2003

20

15

10

5

0

-5 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database

16

1991

1994

1997

2000

2003

Figure 3: Actual and Forecasted Nominal GDP Growth 25

1970 - 2003 ACTUAL FORECAST

20

15

10

5

0

-5 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

17

Figure 4: Actual and Forecasted Inflation 12

1970 - 2003 ACTUAL FORECAST

10

8

6

4

2

0 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

18

Figure 5: Actual Minus Forecasted Inflation 5

1970 - 2003

4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

19

Figure 6: Actual and Forecasted Real GDP Growth 20

1970 - 2003 ACTUAL FORECAST

15

10

5

0

-5

-10 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

20

Figure 7: Actual Minus Forecasted Real GDP Growth 12.5

1970 - 2003

10.0 7.5 5.0 2.5 0.0 -2.5 -5.0 -7.5 1970 1973 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 Sources: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

21

An Overhaul of Federal Reserve Doctrine: Nominal ...

Feb 9, 2012 - Specifically, this overhaul can be reflected in the Federal Reserve's responsiveness to its forecast of nominal income growth ... interest rate stimulates aggregate demand and stokes further inflationary pressures. This type of ..... evaluate and examine the robustness of the results, two techniques are used.

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