You don't need a PhD anymore to read Fed's statements
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[February 27, 2019]
By Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Fed's policy
statements grew so complicated after the recession that standard gauges
of readability suggested people needed four years of university or more
to understand them.
That is changing under the Fed's new leadership, a Reuters analysis has
found.
Since Fed Chairman Jerome Powell took the helm in February 2018,
statements have grown less complex and opening remarks at the central
bank's news conferences have become easier to follow.
While the change in remarks reflects Powell's effort to simplify the
Fed's communications, less complex statements appear at least in part to
result from the central bank phasing out the exotic instruments deployed
during and after the 2007-09 recession, including bond purchases and
forward guidance on policy, and replacing them with more conventional
tools.
While experts say more clarity might help reduce financial market
volatility, some of Powell's comments appeared to have had an opposite
effect, a sign being plain-spoken also carries risks.
In January, readers needed about three years of college to easily parse
the Fed's policy statement, according to the Reuters analysis, which
used a standard readability index known as the Flesch-Kincaid
grade-level formula.
The formula calculates a text's reliance on big words and long
sentences. Reading-grade levels for Fed policy statements rose after the
recession and peaked in late-2013 at around 20 - equivalent to a PhD -
as the Fed detailed complex tools like purchases of government bonds and
asset-backed securities.
The scores declined in 2014, the first year under Janet Yellen, Powell's
predecessor. During Yellen's last three years the scores averaged around
16, roughly equivalent to a four-year university degree.
Under Powell, that average has eased to about 15, above a high-school
reading level but close to scores from before the recession.
Researchers have found evidence in the past that more complex Fed
communications led to larger market swings. It is not clear, though,
whether the recent drop in statement complexity has improved the
public's understanding of Fed actions and how financial markets
interpret the statements.
"You would expect less volatility from a drop in complexity," said
Charles Calomiris, an economist and text mining expert at Columbia
University, referring to the drop in the Flesch-Kincaid scores
identified by Reuters.
Calomiris stressed, however, that deciphering market movements and
measuring what role recent changes in Fed's language played was a
complex task.
Market volatility has actually increased in recent months as investors
grew less certain about the direction of the global economy and Fed
policy.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell waits to testify
at a Senate Banking and Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing
on "The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to Congress" on Capitol
Hill in Washington, U.S., February 26, 2019. REUTERS/Jim Young
For example, in December, Powell effectively reiterated past Fed
guidance when he said the Fed's plan to trim bond holdings was on
"automatic pilot," Still, stocks sank on disappointment that he did not
indicate more flexibility.
The reading grades calculated by Reuters closely tracked those found in
a 2016 research paper by Dallas Fed economists who analyzed policy
statements from 1994 through early 2014. They found larger market moves
after statements with higher reading grade levels.
David-Jan Jansen, an economist at the Dutch central bank, found evidence
medium-term interest rates were less volatile after easier-to-read
congressional testimonies by Fed chairmen.
"It's not just what you say. It's how you say it," said Jansen.
Yet Jansen and Calomiris both noted one limitation of the readability
analysis: It does not consider the meaning of the words being analyzed.
Some researchers are trying to do this by counting word combinations
associated with tighter or looser monetary policy. This research has
focused on larger collections of texts, such as policy meeting minutes
and speeches by central bankers.
A Fed spokesman declined to comment. Powell said on Feb. 6 that while
policymakers try to craft the policy statement in language understood by
Wall Street he fashioned his own remarks to be understood more broadly.
"You just have to say it in a way that's more accessible," Powell said
at a meeting with educators.
Powell's five opening statements have had an average reading grade level
of 12, equivalent to the last year of U.S. high school. Yellen's last
five opening statements averaged about 14, or two years of college.
Powell's opening statement in September, which conveyed the view that
the U.S. economy was simply strong and interest rates were set to rise,
was easy enough for a U.S. 10th-grader.
In January, however, Powell's opening statement got more complex as he
offered more nuanced views on the economic outlook and explained why the
Fed decided to put rate increases on hold.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Dan Burns and Tomasz Janowski)
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