Powell Signals 2020 Fed Framework Language on Chopping Block

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said policymakers are weighing changes to key parts of the framework that guides their monetary policy decisions, including how they think about shortfalls in US employment and approach their inflation target.

Officials “have indicated that they thought it would be appropriate to reconsider the language around shortfalls. And at our meeting last week, we had a similar take on average inflation targeting,” Powell said Thursday in remarks prepared for a research conference on the Fed’s monetary policy framework.

Powell acknowledged the current framework was designed at a time of persistently low interest rates and low inflation.

“We will ensure that our new consensus statement is robust to a wide range of economic environments and developments,” he said.

Fed officials this year began a periodic review of the central bank’s longer-run strategy — or framework — for implementing monetary policy and its communication tools. The framework serves as a guide for officials on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee as they aim to meet the broad goals assigned to them by Congress of fostering stable prices and maximum employment. Fed officials target 2% inflation.

Following the last review, which concluded in 2020, the Fed adopted a new framework that aimed to achieve inflation moderately above 2% for “some time” after periods when inflation ran persistently below that level — an approach known as flexible average inflation targeting.

Critics have since said the new framework was overly-tailored to the low-rate, low-inflation environment of the time and wasn’t applicable following the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.