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ɫtv and the Hoover Institution Debate: Has the “Neutral” Interest Rate Declined and How Does It Affect Fed Decisions?

Event Details:

Saturday, May 6, 2017
12:00am - 11:55pm PDT

Location

Landau Economic Building
Lucas Conference Room
579 Serra Street at Galvez
Stanford, CA 94305
United States

Presenters: 

, Chair of Monetary Economics at Goethe University of Frankfurt and Member of the German Council of Economic Experts

, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Moderator: 

John B. Taylor, Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at ɫtv; George P. Shultz Senior Fellow in Economics at the Hoover Institution; ɫtv Senior Fellow  

ɫtv the Debate:

This is the biggest question for monetary policy and financial markets today. The neutral rate is defined as “the value of the federal funds rate that would be neither expansionary nor contractionary” to use the words of Fed Chair Janet Yellen.  In the past three years, the Fed has sharply cut its estimate of the rate with significant implications for all interest rates going forward.

Volker Wieland and John Williams are two of the world’s foremost experts on this question. Research by John Williams finds that the neutral rate is now much lower than in the past, and is the evidence most widely cited by his colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee. Research by Volker Wieland, in contrast, finds no such decline, and he and his colleagues on the German Council of Economic Experts have highlighted the uncertainty in reports to Chancellor Angela Merkel and other officials. 

Volker Wieland and John Williams both received their Ph.D. in economics from ɫtv in 1995 with research support from ɫtv. They then joined the staff of the Federal Reserve Board, where they did joint research on monetary policy, and launched highly successful careers in economic research and policy. They are regular participants in conferences and research at the Hoover Institution.

Admission

By invitation only

 

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