(The WSJ ran the story below on its front page, which is stark contradiction to 
its editorial line and that of conservative Republicans who are strongly 
opposed to the Fed's policy of quantitative easing. It vindicates the 
Keynesians who suggested monetary easing would not lead to inflation in a slack 
economy with high unemployment, and is a repudiation of the nostrums peddled by 
the monetarist followers of Milton Friedman. The irony is that the Journal's 
most loyal Wall Street readers, whatever their ideological predilections, have 
benefited most from the Fed's robust asset purchases since the near-collapse of 
the financial system in 2008, and any hint of a Fed retreat has caused their 
stock and bond portfolios to plummet. The Journal article lends support to 
those economists and investors who have been warning against any tapering off 
of Fed bond purchases, especially those who see monetary policy as a more 
palatable alternative to fiscal spending. It will also lend support, 
intentionally or otherwise, to Janet Yellen's candidacy for the Fed chair. If 
the Obama administration is looking for right-wing cover to appoint Yellen 
ahead of Larry Summers, which its liberal base has been demanding, the WSJ has 
just provided it.)

Federal Reserve 'Doves' Beat 'Hawks' in Economic Prognosticating
Slow Growth, Low Inflation Give Yellen, Dudley Upper Hand on Forecasts
By JON HILSENRATH and KRISTINA PETERSON
Wall Street Journal
July 29 2013

As the U.S. emerged from recession in the summer of 2009, Janet Yellen, then 
president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, took a grim view of the 
economy's prospects.

"I expect the pace of the recovery will be frustratingly slow," she said in a 
San Francisco speech. A month later, addressing fears that money flooding into 
the economy from the Federal Reserve would stoke inflation, Ms. Yellen said not 
to worry in a speech to Idaho bankers: High unemployment and the weak economy 
would tamp wages and prices.

Others at the Fed spoke forcefully in the other direction. Unless the central 
bank reversed the easy money course, Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser 
warned in December 2009, "the inflation rate is likely to rise to levels that 
most would consider unacceptable."

Ms. Yellen was proved right.

Predicting the direction of the U.S. economy with precision is impossible. But 
the Fed must forecast growth, inflation and unemployment to guide its decisions 
on interest rates. Central bank miscalculations—when the Fed pushed interest 
rates too low or too high—have historically turned problems into catastrophes, 
fueling the Great Depression, for example, and the wealth-eroding inflation of 
the 1970s.

The Wall Street Journal examined more than 700 predictions made between 2009 
and 2012 in speeches and congressional testimony by 14 Fed policy makers—and 
scored the predictions on growth, jobs and inflation.

The most accurate forecasts overall came from Ms. Yellen, now the Fed's vice 
chair. She was joined in the high scores by other Fed "doves," policy makers 
who wanted aggressively easy money policies to confront a weak U.S. economy and 
low inflation. Collectively, they supported Fed Chairmen Ben Bernanke's 
strategy to pump money into the U.S. economy.

The least accurate forecasts came from central bank "hawks," those who feared 
Fed policies would trigger rising inflation.

Examining such predictions is more than a parlor game. Fed forecasts are 
important now because the central bank is near a turning point that will have a 
substantial impact on the U.S. economy.

Fed officials are considering whether to scale back an $85-billion-a-month 
bond-buying program this year, a move that could pull stock prices down and 
send interest rates higher.

If the Fed believes growth and hiring will pick up—and inflation will rise to a 
more normal 2%—the central bank will start to pull back on the purchases.

But if forecasts are wrong—if the Fed overestimates the economy's strength and 
pulls back too soon, for example—then economic growth could falter, stalling an 
incipient housing recovery and fueling the jobless rate.

"We should be keeping track of these forecasts and having some accountability," 
said Mark Gertler, a New York University economist who reviewed the Journal 
analysis.

Of course, forecasting ability doesn't always translate into wise central bank 
leadership. Arthur Burns, who led the Fed during the high inflation of the 
1970s, was known for his forecasting prowess.

But New York Fed President William Dudley said forecasting errors have had 
serious consequences. "We were consistently too optimistic about growth over 
the 2009-2012 period," he said in a May speech. "As a result, with the benefit 
of hindsight, we did not provide enough stimulus."

Richard Fisher, the Dallas Fed president and another high scorer, took a 
different view. He has said slow growth was evidence the Fed's easy money 
medicine wasn't working and the economy needed less of it.

The Fed issues a quarterly forecast based on the views of its 12 regional Fed 
bank presidents and seven Fed governors. Over the past four years, these 
forecasts included errors, mostly from overestimating the economy's strength. 
None of the Fed forecast reports indicate who said what.

To evaluate the performance of individual Fed officials, the Journal looked at 
texts of speeches and congressional testimony. Forward-looking comments about 
the economy were rated for accuracy.

The Journal gave a mark ranging from -1.0—far off the mark—to 1.0—nearly 
perfectly correct—for each comment and averaged the total. A final score of 
zero showed someone was wrong as often as correct.

The analysis was shared with the Fed policy makers. Five of the 19 policy 
makers weren't ranked because they hadn't been at the Fed long enough or hadn't 
spoken publicly enough about the economy.

Ms. Yellen and Mr. Dudley—both in Mr. Bernanke's inner circle—ranked first and 
second in the Journal analysis. Both predicted slow growth and low inflation 
over the past four years. Ms. Yellen had the highest overall score in the 
Journal's ranking, 0.52. Mr. Dudley scored 0.45.

The lowest scores were tallied by Mr. Plosser, -0.01; St. Louis Fed President 
James Bullard, 0.00; Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker, 0.05, and 
Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota, 0.07.

Investors who closely follow every comment by Fed officials don't appear to 
distinguish policy makers by the accuracy of their economic forecasts.

Macroeconomic Advisers LLC, a research firm, determined Mr. Plosser, Mr. 
Bullard and Mr. Lacker consistently moved markets more than Ms. Yellen. Messrs. 
Plosser, Lacker and Bullard and Ms. Yellen declined to comment for this article.

Forecasts by Fed officials depend on their view of how the economy works. Ms. 
Yellen, for instance, places great weight on the role of economic slack—high 
unemployment or idle factories—in driving inflation. Lots of slack, she has 
argued, holds down inflation. On the other hand, prices are more likely to rise 
when there are few available workers and factories are operating near capacity 
in this view.

"With slack likely to persist for years, it seems likely that core inflation 
will move even lower," Ms. Yellen said in September 2009. Her views warrant 
scrutiny because she is a candidate to succeed Mr. Bernanke when his term ends 
in January.

Mr. Dudley did especially well forecasting growth. Some Fed officials believed 
the current recovery would behave like past recoveries and the economy would, 
for a while, grow faster than its long-term trend of 3.2%.

But in May 2010, Mr. Dudley returned to his alma mater, New College of Florida, 
with a grim counter argument during a commencement address.

"The recovery is not likely to be as robust as we would like for several 
reasons," he said, pointing to the fragile banking system and the debt weighing 
down many households. He declined to comment for this article.

Other Fed officials, including Mr. Bernanke consistently predicted that faster 
growth was just around the corner.

"Although the pace of recovery has slowed in recent months and is likely to 
continue to be fairly modest in the near term, the preconditions for a pickup 
in growth next year remain in place," Mr. Bernanke said in October 2010, just 
before launching a bond-buying program. Growth slowed the following year.

Mr. Bernanke finished in the middle of the pack in the Journal's analysis, in 
part because he often relayed the consensus of Fed officials. He declined to 
comment for this article.

Luck also played a role in forecasts. In 2011, for instance, the economy looked 
like it was moving to faster growth when a tsunami struck Japan, disrupting the 
global economy.

The Fed's hawks had some of the worst forecasters. Mr. Plosser overestimated 
growth, while Mr. Bullard, Mr. Lacker and Mr. Kocherlakota warned of looming 
inflation. Their forecasts were wrong almost as often as they were correct.

While Ms. Yellen focused on the impact of slack on inflation, some hawks 
focused on money. The late Milton Friedman, the Nobel Prize-winning University 
of Chicago economist, said inflation was always and everywhere a byproduct of 
monetary policy: Prices only shoot higher when a central bank pumps too much 
money into the economy.

Hawks worried the Fed's decision to pump trillions of dollars into the U.S. 
financial system after the crisis would result in fast-rising prices. They 
sometimes couched their worries as risks, rather than predictions. In 2009, for 
instance, Mr. Bullard warned that the Fed's bond-buying programs had created a 
"medium-term inflation risk."

"The hawks have been issuing warnings, but there has been no sign of the things 
they've been warning against," said Martin Eichenbaum, an economist at 
Northwestern University and a Fed dove.

Mr. Kocherlakota of the Minneapolis Fed changed his hawkish views in 2012. 
"Inflation is not coming in as hot as I expected," he said in an interview last 
year. "You have to learn from the data." He declined to comment for this 
article.

Mr. Bullard changed his focus at times. In 2010, and again more recently, he 
signaled concern about inflation getting too low. A St. Louis Fed spokeswoman 
said the Journal analysis failed to account for the role Mr. Bullard's warnings 
played in formulating policies that helped to prevent inflation from getting 
too high or too low.

Some of the Fed's best forecasts came from noneconomists, including Fed 
governor Elizabeth Dukeand Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart—former 
bankers—and Mr. Fisher, a former investment manager. Some of the Fed's most 
brilliant Ph.D.s, including Mr. Kocherlakota, generated the most subpar scores.

Economists generally rely on economic models based on past behavior. These 
models are used heavily by the staff at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington 
and at regional Fed banks. But the recession and the current recovery were 
unlike most past cycles.

"The models have been wrong," Mr. Bullard, one of the Fed's many Ph.D. 
economists, said in an interview with the Journal in November.

James Hamilton, an economist at the University of California at San Diego who 
also reviewed the Journal's analysis, warned against betting that the doves' 
recent winning streak would continue.

"This was a period of subpar GDP growth and low inflation," he said. "Whether 
these same individuals would also prove to be better forecasters during a 
period of strong GDP growth and rising inflation is difficult to determine on 
the basis of the last four years."

One reason the hawks have been wrong about inflation is that the money the Fed 
has pumped into the financial system has tended to sit at banks without being 
lent to customers.

Economists say it is possible inflation can still catch fire if banks lend more 
aggressively and money starts circulating more widely.

If that happens, Mr. Eichenbaum said, the hawks would be proven right and 
"everybody else is going to look real bad."
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