So, Joe, we have something pretty exciting coming up. That's right, We're going to be doing a live episode of the podcast and listeners are invited to join. Yep, we are going to be playing host to Perry Maryland and Sultan Posar that two of them are going to be debating the future of the dollar. It's on September six at three pm at Bloomberg h Q. And if you want to come, Tracy, how can people sign up? It is totally free. All you have to do is make sure you r s v P in advance. Please send an
email to add Thoughts at Bloomberg dot net. Hello, and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots Podcast. I'm Joe Wis and I'm Tracy Halloway. Tracy, what do you think of when you think of the Federal Reserve and August any sort of traditions or annual events come to mind? Jackson Hole would be the obvious on yes, right, we
are recording this Monday, Augustine. And of course just on Friday, we had Chairman Powell's Jackson Whole speech, which I would say was very brief and the tone was definitely hawkish, very to the point. I mean I think you actually wrote this in the newsletter, but it's clear that the FED means business when it comes to fighting inflation. And the big news out of Jackson Hole was that Jerome Powell is willing to stomach pain for households and businesses
in order to bring prices down. And the brevity of the speech was sort of telling because I sort of think of Jackson Hole typically as like this place for like this venue for theoretical discussions of academic and this was not an academic speech. Who was saying we're here to fight inflation, and that's all I feel like saying right now. I think that's right. But you know you mentioned August traditions. There's another August FED tradition, isn't there?
There is another Fed August tradition, at least one that I think of. That is, of course, having Neil cash Carry, the president of the Minneapolis Fed, on our podcast. This will be the third straight August. I don't know if that's actually intentional. I think it sort of always works out that way. I don't think we've purposely timed it around Jackson Hall of each time. But we have Neil on again. That's fantastic. There is clearly a lot to talk about, and clearly things have changed since the last
time we spoke to him. I mean back then, inflation was that I think it was something like five percent, and now fast forward to the last data for July eight. Yeah, it's a lot higher than it was in the past. And of course over the last year we've seen this fed pivot and this very aggressive attempt to now get inflation under control. Anyway, no more talking from us, Let's get right to our guests. So Neil cash Carry, thank you so much for coming back on the podcast. Thanks
for having me. I was looking forward to it, and I'm glad our tradition is continuing. I love this tradition.
So let's just get right into it. So, you know, one of the lines that caught a lot of attention from Sherman Powell's speech at Jackson Hole was that these higher interest rates, this effort to fight inflation, will bring some pain to households and businesses, and nobody knows exactly how much, but it's clear that you and the rest of the committee are willing to do what it takes, or you're saying you're willing to do what it takes to fight inflation, even if that means pain for the
labor market and an economic slowdown. In your research and analysis, do you have any estimate for where you think the labor market needs to go to? How high does unemployment need to get from your perspective, or might it need to get in order to get inflation under control. Well, it's a good question, it's a very important question, and unfortunately answers we don't know. You know, this is not
a labor market driven surge of inflation. This is not the traditional story where labor market gets tight, wages climb, businesses have to pass those costs on and then that leads to inflation. This inflation has been driven by mostly by supply chains, by the war in Ukraine, and by a lot of fiscal and monetary stimulus putting money into people's pockets, and wages have been climbing, but they've been
a lagging indicator, not a forward indicator of inflation. And so when I think about that, that tells me it really depends on do we get more help on the supply chains, do we get more help from commodity prices, And as fiscal stimulus wanes, that should relieve some of the pressure and then the labor market will have to carry less of the burden, so to speak, through monetary policy. So I don't know the answer to that because it really depends on do we get help from these other sectors.
So I'm sure we're going to dig into wages a bit more. But one more big picture question before we do. Last year, you were on the record saying that inflation is transitory, and I think when we last spoke to you, you were talking about how the FED shouldn't overreact to
temporary inflation measures. But now fast forward to today and you basically transformed from the Fed's biggest dove into the biggest hawk, and you were talking at Jackson Hole about inflation now being a blazing inferno and things like that. What accounts for for that transformation? What made you change your mind? I changed my mind because the data didn't react the way I expected it too. So when a year ago when we were speaking, you know, we talked
about how much fiscal stimulus was in the pipeline. We talked, we talked about workers who were probably going to return to the labor market. And it's true the fiscal stimulus ran its course. But if you look at consumer balance sheets. Generally speaking, at the American consumer is still doing very very well, even relative to where they were before the pandemic. We've seen multiple waves of COVID, We've seen some workers return, they have not returned as quickly as I had expected.
And at some point, even if those things ultimately proved to be true, they're taking so long to resolve themselves that we are running the risk at the feder Reserve of allowing inflation expectations to become unanchored. So even if in the end, when history writes the book, they might say, hey, some of these factors were in fact still transitory, but they're simply taking much longer than I had expected, and that I am willing to tolerate for risk of unanchoring
inflation expectations. If we were to allow that to happen, that would be very devastating to main Street, to our economy, two people all across our country. How do you gauge inflation expectations? Of course they're various private surveys or other surveys. They don't seem to have picked up and in fact recent measures. You know, on Friday, right as a Powell spoke at ten am, you Sterring. We got the latest Humish survey. It actually ticked down a little bit to
two point nine percent over the next five to ten years. Hey, what do you look at on the inflation expectations measure? And then more broadly, like what is the mechanism view which high inflation become could become entrenched? You hear this word a lot or concern of out it may be entrenched. How does entrenched this happen? Well, I'll give you a
few examples. So first of all, we look at all the different measures we can which are survey based measures that you just mentioned, as well as indicators embedded into financial markets, and they're all suggesting that, hey, inflation is gonna come down fairly quickly, especially look at the financial markets. The market seem to think inflation is gonna fall rapidly
next year, and I hope they're right. Now. Part of the reason I think that all of these measures are showing a lot of confidence inflation is going to fall is because they are looking at us, and we're saying we're on the job, we're on the case, we're not going to let it high inflation remain. So partly it's a reflection I think of confidence that we are going to walk the walk, you know, not just talk a big game, but we're actually gonna follow through and make
sure that inflation comes down. And so that it's comforting that they seem to be trusting in us, but that doesn't absolve us from needing to then follow through. It means that more than ever, we need to follow through to make sure that those expectations are vindicated. You mentioned financial market indicators, and of course when you look at treasury yields, and actually this was something you mentioned last year, is something that you were watching which weren't necessarily implying
inflation at that time. And as you mentioned, bond yields further out into next year suggests that inflation is going to come down. But how much of that is predicated on inflation coming down because of something like a recession? How do you gauge that risk? When you look at bond yields, look at the inverted curve, things like that, a traditional recession indicator, what are they telling you? Yeah, it's something I do. Pay a lot of attention to.
Both the nominal you'll curve and the real you'll curve. They usually move together. But because of these inflation and dynamics right now, there are some differences. So the last time I looked, the nominal curve had inverted. I focused mostly on the two ten curve. The real curve had not yet inverted, but was getting close. Something interesting happened in July. You remember the Bank of Canada raised interest rates by a hundred basis points, and there was a
lot of chatter before our prior FMC meeting. Would the FOMC raised by a hundred basis points? And the yield curve did something very interesting. The front end of the Yelk curve went up, as you would expect for a more hawkish expectation of monetary policy, but the back end of the real yo'l curve went down. So why would the back end of the real yolk curve go down? I interpreted it as markets were saying, hey, they may
be more aggressive with monetary policy. That may lead more quickly to some type of slong of the economy and a more a sooner achievement of the dual mandate goals, which would then allow them to back off. Now does that technically mean it would be a recession? I don't know, but I interpreted it to mean markets thought we would more quickly achieve our dual mandate goals and then we would be able to relax somewhat. It's an interesting data
point that I pay attention to. It's it's not driving my recommendations at this point, but it's something that I think is giving us some information. Since we're talking about bond markets, can you maybe talk a little bit about FED communication at this point and how it's evolved. Because when the FED did that first basis point hike after ruling out one just a few weeks before, we did have a bunch of bond traders who were talking about
how this was the death of forward guidance. So I guess my question is was it because before it felt like, even though you were stressing data dependency, you would still try to avoid surprising the market. Yeah. I think this notion of the death afford guidance is premature and probably an exaggeration. What does Ford guidance even mean? I see value and members of the aform C going out and saying we are united in our commitment of getting inflation
back down to our two percent goal. That means we're going to do what we need to do to achieve that and how much we're gonna need to do. It's going to depend on what happens in a lot of the sectors of the economy or supply chains, etcetera. But us expressing our commitment are united commitment to doing what we need to do to get inflation back down. That's a form of forward guidance. Should we not articulate that?
I don't agree with that at all, And so yes, I want to say, there's a lot of uncertainty about what's going to happen at the next meeting, or what's going to happen by the end of the year. It's going to depend on all of these different factors. That's all true, and I think we should be honest about how much uncertain e there is about these factors and what's going to drive where monetary policy needs to go.
But certainly as forward guidance expressing our commitment to getting inflation back down, I think it's very valuable for us all to express that. So you mentioned there was some discussion at the last meeting about whether the FED, like Bank of Canada should go to a hundred basis points, and I think you were among those who supported such a strong move to stamp out this raging inferno of
inflation that we're seeing right now. Fast forward to right now, the last couple inflation data points, and it's just it's not a lot of data to work with. Have not been that bad. We got that zero percent CPR report. The PC for July was actually slight decline in prices sequentially, It's just one month. We've had some pauses. Does that affect your view on September, the meeting that's coming up near the end of September, and you're thinking of whether
fifty versus seventy five basis points would be appropriate. Well, as you said, Joe, it's, you know, basically one data point. You know, we've been surprised for the past year almost every time of inflation, surprising us to the upside. So if we have one surprise somewhat to the downside, I'll happily take it. But I don't take much signal from that. You know, we need to be able, We need to see a lot more before we get convinced inflation as well on its way back down, or that we've seen
pek inflation. I'm not convinced of that yet. So you know, to me, if the inflation reading is that we've gotten since the last meeting. We're surprising us to the upside yet again. Then I think you'd probably see people talking more about Hey, would they consider a hundred basis points? I think the fact that the chatter is fifty verses seventy five, you know, we've got more data to see before I would be ready to draw any conclusions from that. But my guess is we're somewhere in that range of
fifty to seventy five for the next meeting. Based on the data that has come in this week, we're getting a job's report last months was particularly strong in the absence of fresh inflation data. Would another surprisingly strong jobs are port I mean, we got half a million new jobs last month. How would you be thinking about that and would that push you more towards well, I don't know. Certainly, I want to see a strong labor market. I want
to see people getting jobs. I want to see real wages going up, so that gives me more comfort that we're probably not actually in a recession right now. Obviously you've talked a lot about the first two quarters of negative GDP growth and are we in a recession? And as you know, you've talked about a lot. Typically recession comes with a very weak labor market and a lot
of layoffs. So if we continue to see strong job growth, that would give me confidence that we're not actually in a recession, even though some of the data indicates we might be. But ultimately I would be looking at wages. I will be looking at real wage growth, and ultimately I'm very focused more than anything on the inflation data
and the inflation expectation data. So for me, individually, I don't think the labor market itself is going to be determinative of fifty verse seventy five or what the what the subsequent reading needs to be. Actually that reminds me. You know, at Jackson Hole, you made that distinction between running the economy hot and the current situation, which you
called a blazing inferno. Can you elaborate on that a little more, Like, what is the difference between benign heat in the economy me where you have a healthy labor market versus damaging inferno heat? Like how do you gauge those two? Does it just come down to the inflation expectations spiral that you described, or do you look at broader types of damage like you know, people being unable to afford rent and pay off their debt and things like that. Well, I would say it starts with the
actual inflation that American families are experiencing. So let's just go back in time. A few years before the pandemic, we had three and a half percent unemployment. For the four or five years before the pandemic, we at the FED kept thinking, oh, we're at maximum employment, and then we started raising interest rates, and I objected to those because I wasn't sure that we were actually at maximum employment and inflation was coming in under our two percent target.
And then the job, the job market, the economy kept creating jobs, much to our surprise, suggesting we were not in fact in maximum employment because inflation stayed low and wage owth was picking up, picking up only moderately. So in that context, we asked ourselves, is there some way we could provide more of a boost to the economy using monetary policy during times of low inflation. And that's how we came up with our new framework that we
adopted a year or so ago. And that framework is literally designed to provide more stimulus in those low inflation periods. But once you get back to a high inflation period two per cent or above. Then the new framework is the old framework. It just goes back to connecting monetary policy the way we did in the past. So in that context, we were asking, how do we provide a little bit more of a boost to the economy and periods of low inflation. And that's what I would define
is running the economy hot in that context. Now, in contrast, where are we now. We had multi trillion dollars of fiscal stimulus, We have supply chains that were gummed up because of COVID, we have millions of missing workers relative to what we expected. We also have a war Russia launching war in Ukraine, which is up end in commodity markets and energy markets. Those are two wildly different scenarios.
And so that's why in the meeting I was pushing back on the notion of well, this proves that there's really dangerous to running economy hot. This is not what we were talking about a few years ago. This is a completely different situation. And while one might eventually conclude, hey, you don't want to run an economy hot, at least for me, it's entirely premature to draw that conclusion. Right now in the context of what we meant about a hot economy a few years ago. That's an interesting way
to frame it. You know, the flexible average inflation targeting. It was unveiled at the August Jackson Hole, so I think, I think, yeah, so it's it's two years old at this point. Was it basically an example of the FED fighting the last war? Which is a charge that's been levied that's sort of the fiscal expansion, etcetera. That the FED overlearned the lessons of two thousand, two thousand nine. So he is this is fate, uh fighting the last war, and in order to stay consistent with fate, what does
that actually mean in practice? Because in theory, if you're supposed to get a two percent average, we've had like, you know, eight nine percent, we have to run sub two percent inflation for a while in order to actually fulfill that framework. And I think everybody always says that everybody is always guilty of fighting the last war, whether
it's an economics or it's in the military. You know, you you have to learn from the last war, and you have to make yourself stronger so that you're not vulnerable the way you were last time, and so go back in time. The big mistake in hindsight that Congress and the Fed made coming out of the O eight oh nine downturn was we were not aggressive enough collectively in supporting the economy and supporting main street, and it took ten years to put Americans back to work. That
is way too slow. This time, Congress said we're gonna act very They're gonna act very aggressively. In the COVID downturn, they passed big fiscal stimuli, and when most of that stimulus was passed, we had no idea when and if vaccine means would be available. I was talking to the best health experts in the country and they said, we just don't know how long it's going to take. And so it's actually a miracle of science that we have
multiple highly effective vaccines available within a year. And so the economic downturn was much shorter than had been expected at the time the stimulus was passed. And so now we've got a very strong labor market recovery. Did Congress, you know, learn the wrong lesson from OH eight or O nine, I don't think so. I was very I was emphatic better Aaron doing too much than too little. So now we're in a position that we collectively have
done too much and we need to adjust. But I don't want to go to those millions of Americans who are working today and said, you know what, you shouldn't have your job. We should have been much more timid in our recovery because all of a sudden we might have been in a new regime that we didn't foresee. What does it mean to apply flexible average inflation targeting? Now? Does it have to overshoot to the downside? Yeah? I don't think so. I mean we left ourselves a lot
of eagle room, you know, we don't. I've never been a subscriber of rigid monetary rules because strange things happen in the economy, and if you tie yourself to this rigid monetary rule, then you end up doing very damaging things. And so no, I don't think so. I think that we will be able to get inflation back down over
the next several years to our two percent target. And I don't think we're gonna then say, well, we have to go run a one percent inflation for the next X number of years to average mechanically average two percent. I think that would be silly for us to do that. You were talking about time frames just then, and the idea of the vaccine coming out, you know, possibly quicker than a lot of people expected at the time. How
are you gauging policy lags at the moment? Because this is something that f o MC has talked a little bit about in the statement, this idea that you know, an interest rate hike takes some time to filter into the real economy now that rates are higher and presumably closer to you know, neutral, although you tell me if you don't think that's the case, does it get harder to gauge that? Do you have to start thinking more about the impact of previous policy decisions as you start
to make new ones. It's it's hard and it's complicated. We know that interest rate sectors of the economy will be affected most and most quickly, and they already are, housing being the best example of that. But we also know we you know, we study history a lot, and we study what has worked in history for policy and
what has not worked. And one of the biggest mistakes they made in the nineties seventies at the FED is they thought that inflation was on its way down the economy was weakening, and then they backed off, and then inflation flare back up again before they had finally quashed it. And so that to me is something that I'm very focused on. We can't repeat that mistake. So to deal with these lags, You're right, the lags are there. They're hard to see, they're hard to measure exactly. There's a
lot of things happening in the economy. I would be much more comfortable raising rates to some endpoint, you know, let's say it's four, let's say it's four and a half, maybe higher, whatever we think is needed at the time, and then just sitting there and let's just press pause and wait to see how some of these underlying dynamics evolved. To me, the most costly mistake we will make is
if we get fooled thinking, oh, we've got inflation licked. Now, let's go cut interest rates because the economy is showing signs of weakening. That to me has a potential um really dramatically negative effect on our credibility and on people's belief that, hey, they're just going to repeat the mistakes of the nineteen seventies. And so the way to deal with the lags for me is just to get somewhere and sit there until we're really convinced that we've got
inflation licked. Is four or five? Is that your definition of restrictive knowing what we know now, I mean the challenges so we have to look at first of all, I think that the overnight interest rate is interesting, but not that interesting. What's much more important are longer term real rates. That's what I believe lives economic activity, five year real rates, ten year reel rates. They're positive now.
Now the question is, though embedded in those real rates are market expectations for inflation expectations over the next five or ten years. Four to five is probably where I would guess right now the level of restriction needs to be given what we and what financial markets believe about
inflation over the next few years. The biggest risk, not the most likely risk, but the most damaging risk, is if we and financial markets are fundamentally misreading the underlying inflationary dynamics, and if markets believe that inflation is going to come quickly back down to two pc over the next couple of years. If that's just wrong, then you could see markets discovering that we discover that and all of a sudden we need to be in a substantially
higher interest rate environment. I'm not ready to forecast that now, but I'm also not ready to rule it out. So just for your forecast specifically, I think at the last Dot July you indicated your inclination was for FED policy to go three point nine percent by the end of
the year four point four next year. Has anything changed since your last forecast, either to the upside or downside regarding what you see is the sort of optimal trajectory of the FED funds, right, you know, sitting where I am today and there's more data to come in between now and the September meeting, nothing has really changed that would dramatically change my rate path outlook. But again I don't want to prejudge it. I need to look at
the remaining data that comes in. And this is something that I deliberate on a lot with our research department here as we look at different scenarios. But from the data I've seen, it hasn't uh doesn't imply a big
change to my rate path. So let me ask you a slightly bigger picture question about you know, as you think about setting policy, you know One of the things that we've discussed, or that you've discussed with me for a long time, is this idea that economists, both maybe withinside of the FED and outside the FED, have a bad habit of sort of changing their structural outlook of
the labor market after a recession. And so you, um, you know, you have this big shock in two thousand and eight, two thousand nine, and everybody sort of sets lower sights on what full employment actually it looks like. And it turned out after two thousand and eight two thousand nine that actually we could get back to old levels. We just needed more growth. There wasn't some inherent structural barrier, But it seems to be a habit of economists everywhere
in the US Europe. Right now, the employment of population ratio in the US is six whereas pre crisis February two thousand, twenty sixty one point two. So by that measure, by that labor market measure, there hasn't been a recovery. Do you worry that this could again be a mistake where everyone's like, Okay, this time it really is different. There's been a lot of boomers retiring, etcetera. There's a structural shift but that actually is just another cyclical change
and it's going to be a little wild for normalization. Yeah, it's a good question, Joe. The answer is, I don't know. Back in the earlier recovery, the last recovery, people just kind of wave their hands and said mismatches and structural changes. They couldn't point anything. Right now, you actually can point to something, which is, uh, there are a lot of
people who have long COVID. There are people who continue to get sick from COVID multiple times, and even if that doesn't permanently exit them from the labor force, there's some cohort of folks that are not in the labor force today because they're sick with COVID, And so it's this health dimension. It seems to be more real than just this people making stuff up for why why the natural rate of unemployment would be higher or why the epop ratio would be lower. Retirements is another one that
you've mentioned. There is some evidence that retirees can come back if the labor market looks attractive, you know. And the other thing is there's some new technologies that might mean that somebody who used to work forty hours a week they want to retire, but maybe they work twenty hours a week remotely because technology enables it. So some of the developments of the last two years could actually
point in a positive direction. But it's the health the health elements that I think are almost unequivocally negative, and that's the one that I just need to see. We need more time to figure out. So maybe talk to us a little bit about productivity, because it feels like wages kind of get all the attention because everyone's worried about inflation, but productivity has been trending down as well.
So I'm wondering, is that something you're looking at as something that needs to go up in order for inflation to start coming down, or how are you thinking about that aspect of it? It's right now for me, it's a curiosity. I mean a little bit of its math. We talked about earlier Tracy that the labor market has been hiring a lot of people, creating a lot of jobs,
which is good news. Well, you know, if you end up hiring a lot of people and you don't have very strong uh GDP growth, and you put those two things together, you're gonna get up with very low or even negative productivity. Growth. So the negative productivity growth is not really a surprise. It's just it's just those two factors adding together. I think it'll be interesting to see what happens with GDP. Does it get revised up over time,
does it come closer to gross domestic income um? And then more broadly, at some point these firms, you know, one theory is these firms are hoarding labor. They're just hiring a lot of people because they wanted to hire them over the last few years, and when they become available, they hire them. You know, firms can't do that for very long. They're gonna have to make rational decisions. Uh, And so it and it should end up showing up
in the labor market. And so it's something we pay attention to the productivity data, but it's not the driver of the economy as I see it right now, but long term it clearly is critically important. I just want to ask one more question about the labor market, and again, going back to that last jobs report, you know, half a million jobs, it's not you know, the ability of firms to hire half a million people in a month does not necessarily seem consistent with an economy that's sort
of out of workers. On the other hand, other measures such as job things and just sort of the difficulty that firms have with hiring causes of people to say, oh, the account the labor market is extremely tight. Do you think there could still be slack in the labor market right now, especially again given some of these measures of employment to population or LFPR or however you want alternate measures of UH, labor market utilization, Could there still be slack?
I think there could be. I mean, I think it's going to be people's decisions, which is, you know, as unfortunately, this high inflation is really punishing families UH, and lower income folks are the least able to bear it. So you couldn't you could see people saying, Hey, I didn't want to go back to work, but I need to go back to work because this is getting too expensive to put food on the table. And as wages climb, people are saying, I need to go back to work
or I'm going to go back to work. And so you know, to me, ultimately maximum employment is as many people working that is consistent with our underlying two percent inflation objective. Those two things are in my mind tightly linked concepts, and so yes, there may still be slack, but we need to get inflation back down to two percent and then we'll be in a position to understand
is the economy in equilibrium or not so. Setting aside strengthen the labor market and higher inflation, which have been two of the big hallmarks of our economic situation this summer, the other thing that's been going on is the very
very strong dollar. And I'm wondering if the FED takes into account the impact of its rate hikes, particularly, you know, a stronger currency on the rest of the world, because at a time when places like Europe certain emerging markets are having an energy crisis, it feels like the impact of US rate hikes and a stronger dollar could be even greater than before. And it does feel like global pressures are building even as the U s economy remains
relatively strong for now. So how are you thinking about the impact of US economic policy on the rest of the world. Well, we pay attention to it. We have a really talented team of economists who focus on the whole global economy at the Board of Governors, and we've got a lot of international economists here at the Minneapolis Fed. But we pay attention to it because it's a feedback
loop back to the American economy. We have to our charge is to conduct monetary policy to optimum outcomes of our dual mandate for the US economy, And so we run these scenarios. If the dollar goes up, what does that mean for imports, what does that mean for growth around the world, and then ultimately what does it mean
for inflation and employment in America? And so we are we are aware of it, but we are focused on optimizing our polly sees based on what the outcomes are for the U. S economy and for the American people. So you mentioned fiscal stimulus. It was quite a bit of it in and also and it's you know, it's winding down, it's mostly being withdrawn. That being said, it's not entirely being withdrawn. And I think you would one could say that the White Houses student debt relief is
a form of fiscal stimulus. Are you thinking about the inflationary impact of that and do you see that affecting the trajectory of your policy. Well, you know, we analyze whatever Congress passes in terms of phisical the fiscal environment, and then that goes into our models as an input.
My guess is it's not a huge number. You know, if you look at the student loan relief as an example, generally speaking, it's it's pretty regressive, meaning attempts to skew towards people who are relatively better off in our economy. The lowest income American generally didn't go to college and don't have student owned debts, so to speak. And the more it's regressive, which is, you know, not a I
don't think that's a policy objective of the authors. But the more it's regressive in a curious way, the less inflationary it is because those folks are less likely to spend the money on consumption, They're more likely to save the money or pay down other forms of debt as an example. My you know, I haven't studied it very carefully. My best guess is it's not a big deal one way or the other in terms of outlook for inflation in the near term. Just like the the Inflation Reduction Act.
I think the CBO scored it as net deficit reducing over ten years. My guess is it's not going to have a big effect on inflation in the near term, but we will analyze it, we will put it into our economic models and ultimately will factor that in as we come up with an interest rate outlook. So you mentioned the Inflation Reduction Act unlikely, and I think almost all economists agree unlikely to really affect inflation in the short term or perhaps even the medium term in a
meaningful way. That being said, would you would the FED welcome UH the government building out more I guess anti inflationary tools such that the such that the burden or the job of fighting inflation is not entirely tied to the central Bank. And I remember, you know again post Great Financial Crisis, there's a lot of talk about you know, there are fiscal policy, fiscal expansion that it was difficult for the FED to sort of engineer that all by itself.
Would you like to see more work done on non monetary UH anti inflation measures being built out anti anti inflation tools. Well, absolutely. The more help we can get from other parts of the economy and potentially other parts of the government, the less we have to do. As you all know, we can only limit demand. We can't do anything on supply, and if supply comes online, then that limit that reduces how much we need to reduce demand to get those two things into balance. Now, it's
also hard. I mean, it's hard for the fiscal authority in the short run to create more supply. It takes a long time. So actually I'm looking at the government will welcome it, but I'm also looking at the private sector. You know, private sector firms are very focused on trying to fix their supply chains to meet their customer demand to keep their costs low. They're making some progress. From
what I can tell, the progress is uneven. But the more progress that they can make, the less the burden falls to the Federal Reserve, and the more likely we would be able to engineer a soft landing. Yeah. I was going to ask about this sort of short term pain versus long term gain of some of these big inflation reduction um measures or projects, because I can imagine a situation where, you know, if everyone starts building out capacity all at once, then that basically just ramps up
demand further. And like it seems like that would be a particularly problematic for the Federal Reserve if you're trying to reduce inflation as soon as possible. Yeah, I'm not theoretically, I agree with you, Tracy I'm not seeing much evidence of that. You know, just take the oil sector, where
oil prices have been very high. There's been a maybe less investment than I would have guessed going in to try to take advantage of these high prices, in part because if you look at the futures markets for oil, prices are expected to come down over the next few years, and so you can understand why investors are hesitant to pour a lot more money into more more rigs, example,
to take advantage of these high prices. And so theoretically, I agree with you, I'm not seeing much evidence of that, and that would ultimately show up in higher borrowing costs, higher long term interest rates, and those rates still are quite low relative to history. Well, let me ask you the flip side, because one area in which there seems to be widespread agreement um that we're in shortage of is housing. And we've seen rent prices go up quite a bit, and we all know the frustrations of the
public about buying housing the cost of housing. And yet uh likely in large part due to the rise and interest rates and therefore the rise of mortgage rates, were already seeing a significant cooling of home builder activity. Do you worry about the perverse effects of Like, Okay, we
want to expand the supply side. One of the most important areas of the supply side is a resident and yet one of the first order effects of higher interest rates is actually to constrain production in this crucial sector.
I mean, it's a fair point, but I think the effects on the supply side are much slower than the effects on demand, and so our hope is that we can get demand down into some form of equilibrium with two percent inflation over the next couple of years, and then we get the economy back to what we would call something like normal, and then you could really unlock the supply. The supply is just too much slower moving
mechanism than it is on the demand side. So it's a fair point, but I think the timing errors towards effects and demand rather than effects and supply. Looking ahead, is there anything that would make you more comfortable with either smaller rate hikes or a slower pace like because I think one thing that's come through this conversation is that you're very, very keen to air on the side
of being too aggressive versus being too loose. So what would you need to see to give you comfort that maybe things are changing and the Fed can relax a little bit. Well, I think if we if we continue to see inflation readings that inflation is coming down like subsequent multiple subsequent readings, then that would probably argue for
me that we could raise interest rates more slowly. Or maybe we are getting to the point where hey, in a few more hikes, we could get to something and just sit their pause until we really are sure that it has done. To me, you know where how high we get and how fast we get there that is less important than us not backing off. I mean, to me, the bar to actually cut interest rates that is going to be for me, very very high. We can raise
more slowly, we can sit there for longer. All of that I'm open minded about, and the inflation data should guide us. But to me, the big error that we could make but I don't expect us to, is cutting interest rates prematurely. Have you been surprised? I mean, everyone seems to be scratching their head. You guys keep coming out and saying it. You know, we're not gonna We're not gonna cut rates, and yet the market has had raid cut pricing for a while what do you attribute
that disconnect to? You know, I don't know. I have said publicly I didn't event um at Aspen at the Aspen Institute a few weeks ago, and I said, the markets are not consistent with my outlook for interest rates and inflation. All I can read from that is they think we are going to achieve our dual mandate goals more quickly than I do, and then we would be in a position to cut interest rates. And I certainly
hope they're right, but that's not my forecast right now. Yeah, I was actually going to ask about financial conditions, but you know, just to quickly get on that, like achieving the dual mandate, and I think this is the key thing, achieving goals. Let's say, okay, inflation comes down much faster than everyone's expecting, sometime in the middle of the next year, you're on two percent. That's still like the point is, though,
that's not a reason to cut right. No, if we achieve the goals, absolutely that would be a reason to relax our contraction and monitory and policy. I'm just surprised that markets would think that we're going to achieve that goal as quickly as they seem to again. I hope they're right. Uh, and we'll take that data on board if they are right. But that's where that's where I think the disconnect is. Is there attention They're just going
back to financial conditions. But you know, one of the things that has surprised people is that financial conditions have remained relatively loose even as the FED hikes at the fastest pace in decades. Is there attention between the market thinking that the FED is going to succeed in bringing inflation down and then not actually taking into account the impact of some of these rate hikes, like bond yields
should be higher, stock should be lower. We're not necessarily seeing that reflected, and so financial conditions remain relatively loose. I mean, I think it goes back to something we spoke about a few moments ago, which is markets expectations and our expectations that inflation expectations are well anchored and then inflation is going to come down, you know, rather quickly over the next few years. If that assumption is wrong that we share and financial markets share even though
they're more bullish than I am. If we're all collectively wrong about the underlying inflationary dynamics. When that reality is revealed and we realize it and they realize it, then you would expect to see financial markets fundamentally reset at a much tighter setting and you see longer term real yields much higher than they are today. That's not my forecast, but that's why I think what it would take to really see a dramatic tightening of financial conditions from here.
Chuer Polo has said press conferences like look, FED policy works through financial conditions, and financial conditions as what we just talked about it, it's like, you know, it's spreads on the corporate debt, it's you know, mortgage rights and stock market. The stock market is a component of it. When you see the stock market rallying as it did, you know, from and I know, like the stock market
is not your goal by any stretch. But when you see the stock market rallying from you know, the bottom in June to what we saw at least up until like two weeks ago, is that interpreted as working as cross purposes for your goals? You know? I think so. I certainly was not excited to see the stock market rallying after our last Federal Open Market Committee meeting because I know how committed we all are to getting inflation down, and I somehow I think the markets were misunderstanding that.
And I was actually happy to see how chare Pell's Jackson Hole speech was received. You know, people now understand the seriousness of our commitment to getting inflation back down to two percent. But you know, if it goes back, think about it. We talked about real bond yields, so think long term real yields. They're positive, you know, depending on your measure, slightly positive, up to zero plus zero point five percent, maybe up to one percent by some
measures over the last several months. It's kind of an intellectual exercise. If we wanted to push long reel yields to plus two percent or plus three percent, could we even do that? And the reason why we're limited in our ability to do that is because embedded in those markets our market expectations of what's going to happen to
inflation over the next few years. And that's where I keep going back to until and unless we and markets collectively believe the inflation inflation and dynamics are different, are hotter and more embedded than we understand them to be. Right now, I think there's a limit to how much we can drive long term really yields higher, and so that's gonna be a limit to how tight we can make broader financial conditions until that recognition of the different
inflation and dynamics becomes clear. So one thing we haven't really spoken about is the impact of quantitative tightening on inflation um and I mean things like bond yields and asset prices. So the FED started winding down the balance sheet or reducing the balance sheet in the summer, but it hasn't really ramped that effort up, and I think it's expected to start doing so in September. What would be the impact of that on inflation and the market
as well, you know, unclear. If you look at a lot of different models of how cute quantitative easing works, it suggests that it doesn't a big impact. You know, Chairman bernanke famously equipped many years ago QUI works in practice, but not in theory, and the way we think it works that those models cannot capture is really about a signaling mechanism for the future overall stands of monetary policy, and so a lot of the effects of QUEI or QT get priced in right away, as soon as we
lay out here's our plan for the balance sheet. So when we announced here's our plan for the roll off, here's how many billion dollars a month, here's the path, A lot of that gets priced in right away. And that's why if you look at long term real yields, you can see that they reversed themselves this spring really rapidly. I mean they climbed in the spring much faster than they fell in the spring of when we were flooding
the economy with liquidity. And I think the reason that they tightened so quickly is because markets were pricing in the quantitative tightening to come in addition to the federal funds rate hikes. So it's a it's an inexact science. I mean, I don't think a hundred percent of it gets priced in. I think some of it does actually happen over time as the balance sheet actually shrinks, but I think some a lot of the action has already
taken place. Would be my guests, So one of the you know, one of the since you became the president of the Minneapolis FED, you've been innovative in your communication, writing blog post, medium posts, even tweeting and I remember one of I think it might have been your first post after after getting the job, and you were talking about your non dogmatic and you talked about salt water versus freshwater economics and say, you don't you don't belong to his school. You want to see what the data is.
You want to always be reevaluating. And I think you know, you've definitely demonstrated that by going from someone who had a reputation as being one of the biggest doves on the committee to now being up there with the biggest hawks and the most aggressive pace of hiking. What is that like? What's that? What's that been like? To go from uh, one of the yeah to that evolution from someone who has seen as a major dove to someone
who's now seen as a major hawk. You know, it's actually been um it's been easy for me because I just look at the data with our economist here and we try to assess where the economy is and what monetary policy makes sense. You know, these labels of dove and hawk, I understand why people give them their convenient shorthand, but they're really flawed. I mean, if if I always were dobbish, no matter what the state of the economy was I always said we need to keep interest rates low.
I wouldn't be a very useful policymaker. And so, you know, uh, the economy changeing now. Esther George, my good friend from the Kansas City FED, who was considered to be one of the more hawkish, has now been identified as one of the more dovish in this scenario. You know, Esther is a very thoughtful, experienced policymaker. She's looking at the data, she's making her best recommendations based on how she sees the economy. And that's what all of my colleagues are
trying to do. And so the labels are shorthands, but
they're pretty they're pretty imperfect. So that's interesting too about you know that not everyone has sort of traveled in the same direction, and there are differences of views on the trajectory of inflation in the economy within uh, you know, at the Federal Reserve that Big said, I think there is, obviously, going back to last year, a fair amount of regret that the FED misread or sort of the use of the term transitory perhaps waiting too long from the Fed's
perspective on hiking rates. Is there anything that you know, maybe it's the intellectual climate or sort of like different approach that you take from the any lessons of the last year that you think the FED should or could internalize to make better decision to have a better decision making process going forward. You know, it's tough. It's something I think about a lot, and I go back in time.
So for the eight or ten years before the pandemic hit, we struggle with inflation and that was a little too low. And as we talked about earlier, Joe and Tracy, we kept getting surprised that we thought we were a maximum employment and there were a lot more workers to come. And before the pandemic we had three and a half percent unemployment rate and modest wage growth and low inflation.
So then the pandemic hits a lot of fiscal stimulus, and in May one, just over a year ago, core inflation finally ticked above two and the unemployment rate was still five point nine percent. So we had achieved three point five percent with no real inflation before now it was five point nine percent at that moment. Should we have just declared, oh my gosh, we're in a new regime.
I actually don't think so. I think, I mean, yeah, sure, knowing what we know now, but knowing what we knew at the time, I think it's eminently sensible that we would take a few months to figure out is this really a new world or are we going back to the old world before we adjusted our stance of policy. You know, people call us all the time with all sorts of predict actions about how the world is totally
different and we're totally missing something here or there. If we listen to all of them, or if we listen to all the cranks on Twitter, we would be completely paralyzed for making any decision because somebody is always predicting something one direction or another. And so to me, I think we need to be very thoughtful when we just abandon what we have recently experienced and just assuming we're in a whole new world. In this case, we are in a new world. How long is that we're gonna last?
I don't know. We got to see it in the data cranks on Twitter. I have no idea the cranks on Twitter. I I don't see it. I've never seen cranks, never seen it never. Neil cash Carry, president of Minneapolis FED, thrilled to have you back on the podcast. That was great and we will we will talk to you next dog all right, thank you both. Great to be with you. Thanks. That was fantastic. Well, I feel like we packed a lot in there, Tracy. I'm trying to remember everything that
we just talked about. There was a lot. I mean, okay, so I mentioned this already, but one thing that clearly comes through in that conversation is just the extent of Neil's um change from Dove to Hawk and the idea that he is much more comfortable with getting to a very very restrictive level of policy and then sort of pausing as opposed to starting to cut or even slow down. Right. And I think you know this was do you think about the mood music or what Powell said Jackson Hole.
He was very specific about the lessons of the nine seventies, and I think he said that, you know, sort of modern central bank fury was born out of that inflationary period, and there's no reason not to take the lessons of that period. And as Neil said, you know, one of the lessons from that period of was don't declare victory on inflation too soon, don't get comfortable, don't just be oh here's a month or two of we're going in
the right direction, let's ease off. So the bar is going to be very high before something I would say resembling a pivot, whatever that means. Yeah, But of course with that very aggressive stance comes the question of are they going to overshoot? And I know we asked Neil the question about policy lags, and that seems to be
possibly problematic for the FED. And then the other thing that was interesting to me was his response on the global economy and the impact of the dollar, and he mentioned that boomerang effect and the FED viewing the rest of the world, what's happening there as something that can come back and impact the US. And I think that's still a big question as well. Right we're going into
the winter, almost everyone expects Europe to be in a recession. Now, it's quite clear that emerging markets are suffering from higher dollar, tighter financial conditions in the US, plus higher energy costs, weather related disruptions, all of that. What is the impact going to be on the US and does that potentially become problematic for the FED? You know what I found striking was Neil saying that he welcome welcomed the market reaction to Jackson hole, Yeah, there's quite a sell off
on Friday right afterwards. And there is that cliche the traders say all the time, don't fight, and here he's saying, yeah, there's a good reason for that cliche because when the FETE is fighting inflation, higher stock prices don't help that goal because monetary policy works through financial conditions. So he's kind of saying, he's like, yeah, there's a good reason
not to fight us. Yeah. I feel like the FED is explicitly saying that it thinks that stocks should be lower, or not explicitly, but I mean that is the explicit conclusion from the conversation. And this is something that we've actually written about in the newsletter a number of times, and I think we said it before we had the big bearer market in the summer, Like the FED is telling you that asset prices are too high because financial
conditions need to tighten. Right, they talked about financial conditions. Financial conditions means something is commonly understood, it's spreads in the stock market and so forth. So there FED is saying we work through financial conditions and they need financial conditions to tighten. In order to defeat inflation. They're telling you something about where they think the market should go. Or also you can disaggregate what makes up financial conditions.
Mortgage rates are a lot tighter, Bond yields to some extent, you know, have gone up. It's really stocks that are the sort of odd one out here. Yeah, I gotta get bitcoined down to tent though. That's when Yeah, actually, you know, that's a good argument for putting crypto into the financial conditions index. That would be interesting. One day, it will probably happen. Okay, let's leave it there. Oh,
I was gonna say. We also we need to start thinking up like a tradition for the Neil kush Cary episode. I feel like we have to like unboxed like gifts or sing carols or something thing something August or something seasonal. Let's do it live next year, and let's do it in a really nice location, because I'm always super jealous of like late August in Jackson's Let's find you know, let's find a nice place to do it somewhere where we have an excuse to wear cowboy hats. I love
it all right, shall we leave it there? Let's leave it there This has been another episode of the All Thoughts podcast. I'm Tracy Alloway. You can follow me on Twitter at Tracy Alloway, and I'm Joe Wisn't All. You can follow me on Twitter at the Stalwart. Follow our guest, Minneapolis FED President Neil cash Cary. He's at Neil cash Cary. Follow our producer Carmen rod Reguez at Carmen Arman. And check out all of our podcasts at Bloomberg On Twitter
onto the handle at podcasts. Thanks for listening to