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President's Speech
Speech at The Euro and the Dollar
in a Globalized Economy Conference
U.C. Santa Cruz,
Santa Cruz, CA
By Janet L. Yellen, President and CEO of the Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco
For delivery on Saturday, May 27, 2006, 9:00 PM Pacific
Time
Monetary Policy in a Global Environment
My topic tonight is globalization and the conduct of U.S.
monetary policy. At issue is whether globalization has altered
the inflation process in the United States and, if so, whether
such changes impair the Fed's ability to assess the state
of the economy or to conduct monetary policy to achieve its
dual objectives of price stability and full employment.
Proponents of the view that globalization has affected
U.S. inflation commonly claim that it has resulted in disinflationary
pressures over the last decade. For example, Alan Greenspan
made precisely this argument in Congressional testimony last
year, citing the massive new "army" of workers that has become
available to engage in the world's markets—some 100
million plus from the former Soviet bloc, some 750 million
from China, and the growing powerhouse of talent that India's
workers represent.
Beyond its direct impact on the level of U.S. inflation,
proponents of this "new view" contend that globalization
has altered the dynamics of inflation—the
linkages between current inflation, lagged inflation, domestic
unemployment,
and supply shocks that are summarized by the Phillips curve.
In particular, their view is that globalization has weakened
the traditional link between domestic resource utilization
and inflation: With prices increasingly set in global markets,
firms have less room to pass on higher costs—whether
due to wages, energy, or materials prices; instead, they
have to do what they can to control costs, identify productivity
improvements to offset cost increases, and ultimately absorb
any fluctuations in unit costs in their profit margins. As
The Economist recently opined: "This makes a nonsense
of traditional economic models of inflation, which virtually
ignore globalization…." Some
observers go even further, arguing that the slack that matters
to inflation is not domestic
slack but global slack.
My objective in these remarks is to discuss several conceptually
distinct channels through which globalization might affect
the process of inflation in the United States, to assess
some empirical evidence bearing on the strength of such linkages,
and to reflect on the implications for monetary policy.
To preview my conclusions, some very tentative evidence
supports the proposition that increasing global capacity,
on balance, has held inflation down over the last decade.
But, the magnitude of the dampening effect appears to be
modest, and exchange rate fluctuations, possibly related
to other shocks, have played a significant role. There is
also evidence that the (price-price) Phillips curve has become
flatter—a phenomenon that may be related to globalization.
With respect to monetary policy, I find nothing either in
theory or the existing empirical evidence to overturn the
conclusion that a country like the United States, operating
under a flexible exchange rate regime, can ultimately achieve
the inflation target of its choice. That said, global factors
may impact inflation in the medium term, just as higher productivity
growth is now widely recognized to have put downward pressure
on inflation during the second half of the 1990s. And insofar
as globalization has affected the dynamics of inflation—through
changes in the slope of the Phillips curve or the NAIRU (non-accelerating
inflation rate of unemployment)—it may require some
recalibration of policy responses.
Linkages between globalization and inflation
In discussing how globalization potentially affects the inflationary
process, it is common to focus on a number of distinct
channels, and I will follow that approach here. However,
I want to emphasize that, at least in some cases, these
channels represent partial effects that may have repercussions
on other variables—such as the exchange rate—in
a fully specified model. Movements in these other variables
may materially affect one's views on the impacts of globalization.
However, I will defer that consideration until I turn to
assessing the interpretation of the empirical results in
the literature.
The first channel is the most obvious one—the direct
effect of the reductions in the prices of imported goods
and services that may be caused by globalization, and which
are included in the indices of consumer prices that central
banks commonly target.
Import prices also could have indirect impacts on inflation.
One such indirect linkage might operate through the labor
market if nominal wage demands are influenced by the prices
of imported consumer goods. The argument here is that a decline
in the price of imports raises the real reward to work, namely,
the purchasing power of a given nominal wage. Such real wage
increases may raise labor supply. Alternatively stated, lower
import prices could reduce workers' demands for nominal wage
increases.
Another indirect channel reflects the possibility that lower
import prices may restrain the prices charged by domestic
producers of competing products. Increased global competition,
as the "new view" emphasizes, may have made the demand curve
facing American producers more elastic, resulting in larger
feedbacks from lower import prices into core inflation. The
now standard practice of including import prices in the price-price
or wage-price Phillips curve provides a way to capture both
direct and indirect linkages from import prices to domestic
inflation.
In addition, this constraint on pricing ability could affect
other parameters in Phillips curves. This effect might operate
in a couple of ways. First, when lower domestic unemployment
leads to higher wage demands, firms may not be able to pass
through the higher costs, but must absorb them in their markups.
As a result, a Phillips curve that expresses inflation as
a function of slack, lagged inflation, and other variables
(the so-called price-price Phillips curve) would become flatter—with
a smaller response of inflation to measures of slack—as
the "new view" emphasizes. This result would hold even if
the response of wage growth to slack were unchanged.
However, it is also possible that globalization could reduce
the sensitivity of domestic wages to changes in domestic
labor market slack—in other words, it also could make
the wage-price Phillips curve flatter. Suppose, for example,
that globalization has enhanced the opportunities for firms
to substitute imports for domestic output. This could occur
in part because firms operating plants in several countries
may be able to shift production from plants in the U.S. to
those in lower-cost countries. As such opportunities for
substitution increase, firms might become less willing to
grant wage increases that would impair their cost competitiveness,
even in the face of tight domestic labor markets. Such substitution
effectively increases the degree of competition between domestic
and foreign workers. In the limit—when such substitution
in effect creates a single global labor market—it could
be that global, not domestic, labor market slack explains
changes in U.S. wages and inflation.
A distinct but related possibility is that globalization
may be undermining the bargaining power of U.S. workers,
making them more fearful of job loss, thus lowering wage
demands and holding inflation down. This might show up as
a downward shift in the Phillips curve, similar to the impact
of more rapid productivity growth in the second half of the
1990s. However, globalization is but one of several structural
shifts that may have deepened worker insecurity, especially
among less-skilled workers. These shifts include increased
use of domestic outsourcing and skill-biased technological
changes that have decreased the demand for less-skilled workers
and constrained their wages in most sectors of the U.S. economy.
Alternatively, globalization, coupled with technological
change, may simultaneously have raised the bargaining power
of many skilled workers with opposite effects on the Phillips
curve.
A final linkage from globalization to inflation worth noting
pertains to productivity. Some have argued that increased
global competition has raised firms' incentives to innovate
and their ability to achieve productivity improvements in
part via foreign outsourcing of intermediate goods, IT services,
and back-office functions. Productivity growth (or its change),
as we saw during the boom of the 1990s, may affect the dynamics
of inflation. In essence, faster productivity growth matters
to inflation, at least for a time, because it holds down
cost pressures. Stated differently, more rapid productivity
improvements make it easier for firms to satisfy workers'
aspirations for real wage gains. Faster productivity growth
thus tends to lower inflation unless or until workers real
wage aspirations rise to match the productivity gains.
Evidence from import prices
Several recent studies, employing different empirical strategies,
have attempted to assess the magnitude of direct and indirect
linkages between import prices and inflation for the U.S.
and other industrial countries.
For example, a recent IMF (International Monetary Fund)
analysis estimates (price-price) Phillips curve relations
for a panel of eight industrial countries, including the
U.S. The study finds that the slower rise in relative import
prices in recent years has had only a fairly small impact
on overall inflation. For the U.S., the study estimates that
a 1 percent decline in relative import prices lowers CPI
inflation by only 15 basis points after one year and 6 basis
points after three years. Based on such estimates, the IMF
calculates that non-oil import price reductions lowered U.S.
inflation by an average of ½ percentage point a year
over 1997 to 2005. These results are in line with those from
a recent analysis at the Federal Reserve Board that estimates
that lower (core) import prices have reduced core U.S. inflation
by an annual average of ½ to 1 percentage point over
the past 10 years.
Another empirical strategy that has been used to identify
possible indirect effects of globalization on pricing by
domestic producers involves the use of sectoral data. The
IMF study I mentioned is representative. It finds that a
10 percent increase in a sector's import ratio—that
is, the ratio of imports to domestic production—reduces
its price relative to an index of aggregate producer prices
by 1 percent. There is also some limited evidence that manufacturing
sectors with rising import shares experienced lesser increases
in domestic unit labor costs and intermediate goods costs
than the average industry. This result is consistent with
the hypothesis that globalization is holding down wages in
some industries and outsourcing may be lowering the costs
of intermediate goods. Nevertheless, the estimated magnitude
of the effects of openness on producer prices is still rather
small. Thus in manufacturing, which has perhaps been most
impacted by globalization, the IMF estimates that increased
trade openness has reduced relative producer prices by 0.3
percent per year between 1987 and 2003.
In light of China's rapidly growing economy and exports
and the limited flexibility of its exchange rate against
the dollar, proponents of the "new view" commonly single
that country out as a source of global disinflationary pressures.
However, a Federal Reserve Board study focusing on the specific
impact of China on U.S. prices finds only modest effects.
It estimates that a rise in China's share of imports in a
particular sector lowers U.S. import prices, but this effect
is not substantial. The results imply that the roughly 0.6
percentage point per year rise in China's share of U.S. imports
since 1993 has lowered U.S. import inflation by about 0.8
percentage point per year. With imports now only about 16
percent of U.S. GDP (in nominal terms), this translates into
an annual decline in U.S. consumer prices of about 0.1 percentage
point. This study finds no evidence of indirect effects of
Chinese import prices on U.S. producer prices.
The array of evidence I have summarized thus far suggests
that foreign factors have had some impact on U.S. prices—an
impact that may be increasing—but overall it has been
rather limited. Such findings should not come as a great
surprise. Despite the growing trend toward integration,
the U.S. is far—very far—from being fully integrated
with the rest of the world's markets. As I just mentioned,
imports still amount to a fairly small fraction of U.S. GDP.
In addition, many U.S. goods are not traded, and despite
stories about U.S. firms hiring programmers in Bangalore
and typesetters in Beijing, they still have to "buy American" when
it comes to a host of other services and trades, such as
health care, entertainment, and construction. The prices
of these non-traded goods and services, which represent the
large majority of domestic consumption, are not directly
affected by foreign price developments. Therefore, domestic
price developments arguably still weigh far more heavily
in the overall domestic price level than do foreign price
developments.
Moreover, the evidence of small foreign effects that I've
discussed may actually overstate the true effects of globalization.
The reason has to do with exchange rate adjustments. It might
seem obvious that if low-wage countries like China and India
have a growing capacity to supply labor-intensive goods to
global markets, that would produce a persistent downward
trend in the dollar prices of U.S. imports. However, the
dollar prices of imported goods reflect not only the selling
price of these goods in foreign currencies but also movements
in the value of the dollar vis-à-vis those currencies.
In many theoretical models of an open economy with flexible
exchange rates, however, a country's real exchange rate and
its import prices are not ultimately determined by foreign
price trends. In simple models, changes in the foreign currency
prices of imports tend to be offset by movements in the exchange
rate, leaving domestic import prices unchanged. In other
words, a flexible exchange rate hypothetically shields a
country from the direct effects of globalization.
Furthermore, the fluctuations that we have observed in import
prices—fluctuations which the Phillips curve studies
I've discussed implicitly attribute to greater world capacity—may
actually have resulted from conceptually distinct causes,
such as "capital account shocks" affecting global capital
flows. For example, an appreciation of the dollar, and a
corresponding reduction in import prices, would be expected
in the aftermath of a shock that widens the gap between desired
foreign saving and investment. Such a shock arguably occurred
in the wake of the global financial crisis in 1997-98 and
as a consequence of Japan's banking crisis. An increase in
the return to investment in the U.S. could similarly have
induced capital inflows that appreciated the dollar.
In support of the view that import price movements have
actually been driven at least in part by factors unrelated
to "globalization," the Board study I mentioned finds that
movements in exchange rates have been at least as important
as movements in the foreign currency prices of imported goods
in accounting for fluctuations in U.S. import prices. The
importance of exchange rate fluctuations as a source of variation
in import prices explains why the IMF study finds large year
to year variability in the impact of import prices on inflation.
According to their estimates, significant declines in non-oil
import prices, largely due to the appreciation of the dollar,
held down U.S. inflation by about 1 percentage point during
1998-1999, following the Asian financial crisis, and by ¾ percentage
point during the 2001-02 global slowdown. Such movements
in the dollar are neither simply nor obviously related to
the growing global capacity often cited by proponents of
the "new view."
Other findings
I have thus far summarized the findings of studies that attempt
to gauge the direct and indirect effects of import price
movements on inflation. As I noted earlier, globalization
could also affect the Phillips curve in other ways. Unfortunately,
research bearing on some of the linkages I discussed is
scanty. But a review of the literature suggests that there
is substantial empirical evidence supporting the "new view" conclusion
that the (price-price) Phillips curve has flattened. The
evidence pertains to the U.S. and also to other industrial
countries.
For example, a study at the Federal Reserve Board finds
that the responsiveness of U.S. inflation to measures of
domestic capacity has fallen by roughly a third since the
mid-1980s. The IMF study cited earlier finds a similar result
for the eight advanced countries, including the U.S., in
their sample. While the empirical finding of a flatter Phillips
curve appears pervasive, this result could be open to differing
interpretations. The IMF study presents evidence suggesting
that greater openness explains over half of this reduced
sensitivity.
A BIS (Bank for International Settlements) study attempts
to sort out the relative importance of domestic and global
capacity pressures by including both measures in Phillips
curve equations for a sample of 16 countries. It finds that
a measure of world capacity is significant in explaining
inflation and reduces the effect of domestic capacity on
inflation. Taken at face value, this analysis implies that
inflationary pressures could remain contained in countries
where domestic resources are fully or more than fully employed
as long as there is excess capacity in the global economy.
However, I would need to see more evidence to be convinced
of this result. The use of aggregate Phillips curve methodology
to analyze national wage and price trends is commonly justified
by the assumption that labor and capital are sufficiently
mobile across localities and regions in a single country
to justify the vastly simplifying assumption of a single
national labor market. Measures of sectoral shifts are sometimes
included as an additional variable in the Phillips curve
because such an assumption is stretched, even in the case
of a single country. But if the assumption of perfect labor
mobility seems stretched at the national level, it remains
far, far less plausible at the global level. I would urge
additional research to assess its robustness and clarify
its appropriate interpretation.
Moreover, San Francisco Fed staff found that measures of
world capacity are not significant when added to the Phillips
curves that they use to forecast inflation, and that the
usual measures of domestic labor and product market slack
retain their significance. In addition, the staff examined
a wage-price Phillips curve and found no change in the coefficient
on the unemployment rate in recent years. In other words,
this exercise also suggests that domestic slack plays about
the same role in the inflation process as it did previously.
As I indicated in my discussion of possible linkages from
globalization to U.S. inflation, the result also suggests
that, insofar as globalization has led to a flatter price-price
Phillips curve, it is more likely to have done so through
changes in firms' ability to mark up costs in setting prices
than through changes in the effects of domestic slack on
wage growth.
Implications for monetary policy
Let me now turn to the final portion of my remarks and attempt
a response to the question: What implications does globalization
have for the Fed's conduct of monetary policy? My main
conclusion is that globalization has no impact on the Fed's
ability to control inflation in the long run, although
structural shifts associated with globalization could,
in principle, affect the NAIRU, the level of labor market
slack associated with price stability. That said, I am
not aware of persuasive evidence that it has done so. However,
globalization may have an effect on wage/price dynamics
and, as such, may require that monetary policy be recalibrated
to take these changes into account, much as was required
in the latter half of the 1990s in response to the surge
in productivity growth.
Since the focus of so much empirical work pertaining to
globalization centers on import prices, it seems logical
to begin by considering the consequences of import price
shocks for monetary policy. The implications are straightforward,
because changes in the prices of imported goods, whatever
their cause, are akin from a policy perspective to other "supply
shocks," such as a change in the price of oil. Ever since
the 1970s, such "shocks" have routinely been incorporated
in the Phillips curve models used to forecast inflation,
and their policy implications are well understood. The consensus
among economists is that "one-shot" changes in the prices
of imported commodities, such as oil, impact inflation for
a time, but not permanently, unless they touch off a change
in inflation expectations, setting off a wage-price spiral
as in the 1970s. Appropriate policy actions by the Fed—a
credible commitment to price stability consistently backed
by actions to anchor inflation to price stability—are
essential to ensure that such supply shocks do not become
embedded in inflation expectations. The Fed has learned a
great deal since the 1970s about the dangers such shocks
pose to inflation outcomes absent appropriate monetary policies
and a commitment to price stability. Indeed, the Fed by now
has established such a strong and credible record that empirical
evidence suggests that there has actually been less spillover
of import prices, including energy prices, into core inflation
since the mid-1980s.
It is conceivable, of course, that the forces associated
with globalization might result not in "one-shot" type shifts,
affecting the level of relative import prices over a short
period, but a tendency instead for upward or downward pressures
over a prolonged period. Such long-lasting shifts in the
relative price of imports would create tailwinds for policymakers—if,
for example, rapid growth in global supply places prolonged
downward pressure on import prices—or headwinds, if,
for example, strong global growth instead produces a chronic
upward trend in relative commodity prices. The possibility
of prolonged downward pressure on import prices due to the
integration of China and other emerging markets in the global
economy is presumably what Greenspan and others
have in mind when they describe globalization as a disinflationary
force. As the logic of the Phillips curve makes apparent,
such long-lasting shifts in import prices would indeed require
the Fed to adjust its monetary policy to keep overall inflation
in the vicinity of the Fed's preferred target. To combat
the "headwinds" associated with chronically rising import
prices, monetary policy must be tighter, which entails greater
slack in the labor market. Tailwinds due to falling import
prices, in contrast, lower the degree of slack required to
attain a fixed inflation objective. It is in this sense that
ongoing negative supply shocks raise the NAIRU, while ongoing
positive supply shocks lower the NAIRU.
A continued and pronounced downward trend in relative import
prices would impact the U.S. inflation process in a manner
akin to the productivity speedup in the 1990s—a prolonged,
positive supply shock from a Phillips curve perspective.
Indeed, some have hypothesized that globalization may actually
have spurred some of the innovations that caused productivity
to surge. More rapid productivity growth, which the U.S.
still enjoys, enabled the Fed to keep unemployment at extraordinarily
low levels for an extended period while simultaneously bringing
inflation down to levels consistent with price stability.
The productivity speedup, coupled, in fact, with a marked
reduction in import prices associated with the appreciation
of the dollar in the latter half of the 1990s, made the Fed's
job a great deal easier.
In addition to linkages to inflation that operate through
the channel of import prices, my earlier discussion highlighted
the possibility that globalization could account for the
flatter (price-price) Phillips curve. To my mind, such changes
in the slope of the Phillips curve have no obvious implications
for the Fed's ability to achieve its dual objectives of price
stability and full employment. However,
a flatter Phillips curve could complicate the Fed's job by
making policy errors
both easier to commit and more costly to repair. Reduced
sensitivity of inflation to domestic unemployment means that
emerging inflationary pressures take longer to become evident
and are more difficult to discern. As a consequence, the
Fed might be tempted to let these pressures build up, taking
comfort from the fact that the inflationary consequences
appear to be small or nonexistent. Such reasoning is misguided,
however, because reduced sensitivity of inflation to slack
simultaneously raises the sacrifice ratio, which is the cost
of restoring price stability once inflation has unacceptably
risen.
I have implicitly assumed in my discussion so far that the
Fed's ability to influence aggregate demand and thereby inflation
is unaffected by globalization. This assumption arguably
requires some defense because the growing integration of
capital markets—another aspect of globalization—has
increased the sensitivity of global capital flows to interest
rate differentials and expectations concerning exchange rate
movements. Do linkages among interest rates rob monetary
policy of its power to affect demand? My answer to this question
is no. I base it on both economic theory and the evidence.
Of critical importance to the effectiveness of monetary policy
with highly integrated global capital markets is that the
U.S. operates under a regime of flexible, not fixed, exchange
rates. Under a fixed rate regime, the Fed would indeed have
little or no scope to influence spending. For example, a
contractionary open market operation intended to decrease
bank reserves and raise domestic interest rates, thereby
inhibiting spending, would induce capital inflows forcing
the Fed to defend its currency peg by acquiring foreign exchange.
Such offsetting exchange reserve flows add to bank reserves,
in effect nullifying the original policy action.
A flexible exchange rate regime makes a world of difference
to monetary policy. Free of the obligation to defend any
currency peg, the Fed retains control over its monetary base.
Since the U.S. is a large player in the global economy and
in capital markets, U.S. monetary policy commonly impacts
both interest rates and the value of the dollar. Repercussions
of monetary policy on the dollar typically occur to the extent
that capital flows are sensitive to global interest rate
differentials. The transmission mechanism for U.S. monetary
policy operates through both channels of influence which
work in tandem to affect aggregate demand. The tendency of
the dollar to appreciate in response to a tighter monetary
policy also creates a direct link to inflation via lower
import prices.
From the perspective of monetary policy, there is one notable
asymmetry affecting the Fed's ability to combat any "headwinds" or "tailwinds" associated
with globalization. The asymmetry results from the so-called
zero bound on nominal interest rates—which sets a lower
limit on the federal funds rate below which it cannot go
should the Fed need to stimulate the economy to counter deflation.
With sufficiently intense deflationary "tailwinds," the Fed
could conceivably exhaust its scope for response, at least
using conventional policy approaches. In fact such risks
became palpable in 2003—for the first time in half
a century. This episode stimulated not only thoughtful policy
research but also a creative and constructive response on
the part of the Fed.
I will conclude by summarizing the main themes in this talk
and emphasizing the value of additional research. The evidence
I reviewed suggests that shifts in the relative price of
imports—one mechanism through which globalization might
affect U.S. inflation performance—have thus far been
relatively modest. Evidence also suggests that the Phillips
curve has flattened, a phenomenon that could be related to
globalization. There are a number of additional channels
through which structural changes associated with globalization
could affect labor and product markets, and these changes
could, in turn, alter the NAIRU, possibly for an extended
time. Unfortunately, existing evidence pertaining to the
operation of these various linkages is scanty or nonexistent.
To the best of my knowledge, econometric estimates of the
U.S. Phillips curve provide no obvious evidence of any pronounced
shift in the NAIRU in recent years.
From the perspective of monetary policy, globalization does
matter. Shocks and persistent economic trends associated
with America's involvement in the global economy must be
factored into the design of an appropriate monetary policy.
Even so, globalization does nothing to imperil the Fed's
ability to attain its inflation objectives. We still have
a lot to learn about the mechanisms through which globalization
is impacting the U.S. economy. As the globalization trend
unfolds, we policymakers will turn to you, our colleagues
in the economics profession, for the best in theory and evidence
to guide us.
1. "A
Foreign Affair," The
Economist,
p. 81, October 22, 2005, print version.
2. Richard Fisher, "Globalization and Monetary Policy," Warren
and Anita Manshel Lecture in American Foreign Policy, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Mass, November 3, 2005.
3. As a result, markups would show stronger cyclical variation.
4. For an analysis of how greater openness and increasing
elasticity of substitution can affect the slope of the Phillips
curve, see Richard Clarida, Jordi Gali, and Mark Gertler, "Optimal
Monetary Policy in Open versus Closed Economies: An Integrated
Approach," American Economic Review, Vol. 91, No. 2,
(May 2001), pp. 248 252.
5. A model that captures many of the factors described
here is in Charles R. Bean, "European Unemployment: A Survey," Journal
of Economic Literature, Vol. 32, No. 2 (June 1994), pp. 573-619.
6. IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2006, Ch.3
7. Since the 1960s, U.S. import prices, both core and overall,
have risen at about the same annual rate as consumer prices—roughly
4 percent. But since 1997, core import prices (excluding
petroleum, natural gas, computers, and
semiconductors) have risen only 0.4 percent per year, versus 1.7 percent
for core consumer prices (PCE price index).
8. The IMF's counterfactual
calculations assume that relative non-oil import prices moved
during the
1997-2005 period in line with an historical trend decline
of 1.6 percent per year. Note, however, that this decline reflects the inclusion
of computers and semi-conductors; if those elements are removed, as they
are in the Federal Reserve Board's measure of core import prices, then
there
is no trend decline.
9. Cited in Donald
L. Kohn, "Globalization, Inflation, and Monetary Policy,"
remarks delivered at the James R. Wilson
Lecture Series, The College of Wooster,
Wooster,
Ohio, October 11, 2005.
10. Steven Kamin, Mario Marazzi, and John Schindler, "Is
China 'Exporting Deflation'?" Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve,
International Finance Discussion Paper 2004-791.
11. For a fuller discussion
of these points and their implications for the U.S. current account deficit,
see Ben S. Bernanke, "The Global Saving Glut
and the U.S. Current Account Deficit," remarks delivered at the Homer
Jones Lecture, St. Louis Missouri, April 14, 2005.
12. Kohn, op. cit.
13. It should be noted that in the case of the U.S. the
impact of lower foreign prices during this time was augmented
by
an appreciating dollar, part of which may have endogenously
reflected currency depreciations by emerging markets needing
to improve their current account balances.
14. See John Roberts, "Monetary
Policy and Inflation Dynamics," Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Finance and Economics Discussion
Paper 2004-62, 2004.
15. Claudio Borio and Andrew Filardo, "Globalisation
and Inflation: New Cross-Country Evidence on the Global Determinants
of Domestic Inflation," mimeo, BIS, March 2006.
16. In the
limiting case in which domestic inflation is completely unresponsive
to movements in domestic slack, Fed-engineered changes in aggregate demand
would have no direct impact on inflation, nullifying the normal mechanism
by which the Fed controls inflation. However, tighter monetary
policy would likely
still affect inflation directly, to the extent that interest rate differentials
induce capital flows that appreciate the exchange rate.
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