Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

The following material provides a chronological account of the Federal Reserve's decisions, discussions, and communications related to normalizing the stance of monetary policy, beginning in 2014.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) outlined its approach to monetary policy normalization in the Policy Normalization Principles and Plans that it issued after its September 2014 meeting. The FOMC indicated that there would be two main components to policy normalization: gradually raising its target range for the federal funds rate to more normal levels and gradually reducing the Federal Reserve’s securities holdings. The Committee augmented these Principles and Plans at its March 2015 FOMC meeting by announcing more details about the approach it would use to raise the federal funds rate and other short-term interest rates. At its December 2015 meeting, the FOMC decided that economic conditions and the economic outlook warranted taking the first step in normalizing the stance of monetary policy; accordingly, the Committee voted to raise the target range for the federal funds rate for the first time since December 2008. The postmeeting statement announced the change in policy; the accompanying implementation note provided operational details. The Committee has continued to gradually raise the target range for the federal funds rate as the economy has strengthened and the economic outlook has evolved. Following its June 2017 FOMC meeting, the FOMC announced additional details about its planned approach for gradually reducing the Federal Reserve's securities holdings over time. At its September 2017 meeting, the FOMC agreed to start the program for gradually reducing the Federal Reserve’s securities holdings in October 2017.

Policy Normalization Principles and Plans

Over the spring and summer of 2014, the FOMC discussed ways to normalize the stance of monetary policy and the Federal Reserve's securities holdings. The discussions were part of prudent planning and did not imply that normalization would necessarily begin soon. The Committee continued to judge that many of the normalization principles that it adopted in June 2011 remained applicable. However, in light of the changes in the System Open Market Account (SOMA) portfolio since 2011 and enhancements in the tools the Committee would have available to implement policy during normalization, the Committee concluded that some aspects of the eventual normalization process would likely differ from those specified earlier. The Committee also agreed that it was appropriate to provide additional information regarding its normalization plans. In September 2014, all FOMC participants but one agreed on the following key elements of the approach they intended to implement when it became appropriate to begin normalizing the stance of monetary policy: