Fed hints at another side of good-news story on US jobs

Bloomberg

It began as an inquest into what went wrong. Now the Federal Reserve’s policy rethink may be widening to include the part the central bank thought it had gotten right.
Inflation keeps falling short of the Fed’s target, and that was the trigger for what’s supposed to be a months-long review of strategy. Now, policy makers are being drawn into a conversation about the full-employment side of their mandate too. The record there looks impressive, with jobless rates near a half-century low. But Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida is hinting at another side of the story.
At a Minneapolis Fed conference on April 9, panelists were discussing the connection between monetary policy and the portion of national income that goes to wage-earners — the so-called labour share. A measure Clarida devised before joining the central bank last year indicates the labour share has yet to rebound after spending much of the current expansion at the lowest levels in many decades.
“I’ve been thinking for several years about this,” he commented from the audience during the question-and-answer portion of the presentation. “I hadn’t seen a lot of macro work. So I’m really delighted that folks are thinking about it now.’’
In recent expansions, when labour markets tightened and wage growth accelerated, the outcome wasn’t higher inflation. Workers managed to claw back at least some of their lost slice of the pie, but businesses didn’t pass the higher payroll costs on to consumers. Clarida asked a panelist if his model addressed this. The answer was no.
For decades, the Fed’s interest-rate policy has been guided by the belief that pushing unemployment below its so-called “natural’’ level is inflationary. The theory was worked out by conservative economist Milton Friedman in the 1960s, and gained widespread acceptance in the high-inflation decade that followed.
Acting on that logic, Fed officials tightened policy from 2015 to 2018, as unemployment fell towards and then below their estimates of the natural rate. But inflation didn’t pick up as the models predicted it would.

‘INSUFFICIENT VIGILANCE’
Hence the current review — largely focussed on how to influence public expectations about prices. But critics are also asking whether central bankers have simply been too quick to sacrifice further job gains, and not just in the current expansion, but for decades.
“There has been insufficient vigilance in fighting unemployment since the late 1970s,’’ Josh Bivens, director of research at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, argued at the Minneapolis Fed conference. He said the “natural rate” framework was at least partly to blame.
In the period from 1949 to 1979, before that idea took a firm hold at the central bank, the US economy was at full employment two thirds of the time, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates. The ratio has dropped to one third since 1980.
It wasn’t the first time this year that Clarida had raised the connection between the labor share and inflation during Q&A from his seat in a conference audience. He did the same in New York in February.

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