Key Takeaways

  • Assessing the “true” stance of monetary policy requires an estimate of the equilibrium rate of interest, otherwise known as r*. This is because the impact of any given level or change in policy rates can only really be understood by reference to r*. 
  • We distinguish between short-term and long-term r*,

    and show how short-term US r* seems to have moved

    much higher following the pandemic.

  • This movement higher seems to have surprised the

    Fed, and helps explain the large inflation overshoot in

    the US. Real policy rates fell substantially below short-term

    r*, exerting excessive stimulus to the economy.

  • Policy appears to have only become “truly” restrictive

    around the middle of last year, when the real policy

    rate finally exceeded short-term r*. We think the

    current stance of policy and the timing that policy

    became “truly” tight are broadly consistent with our

    forecast for a US recession later this year.

  • Meanwhile, the factors that pin down long-term r*, are

    unlikely to have moved significantly since the

    pandemic. As such, the underlying drivers are likely to

    be exerting downward pressure on policy rates over

    time.

  • Short-term r* is also likely to fall as the recession we

    forecast unfolds, which we think will eventually see

    nominal policy rates decline substantially.

     

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