Updated May 4th, 2024 at 12:13 IST

Chicago Fed President calls for enhanced transparency in Fed's 'Dot Plot'

The dot plot illustrates the anticipated trajectory of the Fed's policy rate as projected by each of the 19 US central bankers for the upcoming years.

Reported by: Business Desk
Fed's interest rate projections | Image:US Federal Reserve
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Fed's 'Dot Plot': Austan Goolsbee, president of the Chicago Federal Reserve, stressed the need for enhanced transparency in the US Federal Reserve's quarterly "dot plot" of policymakers' interest-rate-path views. Speaking at a monetary policy conference hosted by Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Goolsbee suggested that the dot plot should incorporate individual economic expectations to provide more meaningful context.

The dot plot, introduced in 2012, illustrates the anticipated trajectory of the Fed's policy rate as projected by each of the 19 US central bankers for the upcoming years. However, Goolsbee argued that the current format of the dot plot lacks substantive economic content, presenting merely a collection of opinions without underlying economic rationale.

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In his prepared remarks, Goolsbee highlighted the ambiguity inherent in the dot plot, where it's challenging to discern the reasoning behind policymakers' rate projections. Without insight into the economic conditions informing each participant's interest rate forecast, it remains unclear whether a projection for fewer rate cuts reflects concerns about overheating or an optimistic outlook on economic growth.

According to Goolsbee, the primary objective of Fed communications should be to elucidate the rationale behind policy decisions, a goal that the existing dot plot fails to achieve. He proposed a solution wherein an anonymised matrix would align economic forecasts with each participant's rate path, offering clarity and answering pertinent questions regarding policymakers' decisions.

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Goolsbee's remarks coincide with discussions surrounding the potential introduction of a similar "dot plot" by the European Central Bank (ECB). Moreover, they precede an upcoming review of the Fed's policy framework, slated to commence later this year.

While Goolsbee refrained from sharing his own rate-path view or elaborating on the economic assumptions underlying it, he earlier indicated that recent moderation in the US labour market bolstered his confidence in the economy's resilience against overheating.

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(With Reuters inputs.)

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Published May 4th, 2024 at 12:13 IST