Jan 23 (Reuters) - The labels "dove" and "hawk" have
long been used by central bank watchers to describe the monetary
policy leanings of policymakers, with a dove more focused on
risks to the labor market and a hawk more focused on the threat
of inflation.
    The topsy-turvy economic environment of the coronavirus
pandemic sidelined those differences, turning U.S. Federal
Reserve officials at first universally dovish as they sought to
provide massive accommodation for a cratering economy, and then,
when inflation surged, into hawks who uniformly backed
aggressive interest rate hikes.
    Now, as Fed policymakers note an improvement on inflation
and some cooling in the labor market, the risks are seen as more
balanced and the choices more nuanced.
    All 12 regional Fed presidents discuss and debate monetary
policy at Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings that are
held eight times a year, but only five cast votes at any given
meeting, including the New York Fed president and four others
who vote for one year at a time on a rotating schedule.
    The following chart offers a look at how officials view the
outlook for Fed policy and how best to balance their goals of
stable prices and full employment. The designations are based on
comments and published remarks; for more on the thinking that
shaped these hawk-dove designations, click on the photos in this
graphic.
    Reuters over time has shifted policymaker designations based
on fresh comments and developing circumstances - for an
accounting of how our counts have changed, please scroll to the
bottom of this story.
     
 Dove        Dovish      Centrist      Hawkish    Hawk
             Raphael     Jerome        Loretta    Michelle
             Bostic,     Powell, Fed   Mester,    Bowman,
             Atlanta     Chair,        Cleveland  Governor,
             Fed         permanent     Fed        permanent
             President,  voter: "Decl  President  voter:
             2024        aring         , 2024     "While the
             voter: "If  victory       voter:     current
             we          would be      "March is  stance of
             continue    premature     probably   monetary
             to see a    ... But of    too early  policy
             further     course the    in my      appears to
             accumulati  question is   estimatio  be
             on of       when will it  n for a    sufficient
             downside    become        rate       ly
             surprises   appropriate   decline."  restrictiv
             in the      to begin      Jan. 11,   e ... I
             data it's   dialing       2024       remain
             possible    back?" Dec.              willing to
             for me to   13, 2023                 raise the
             get                                  federal
             comfortabl                           funds rate
             e to                                 further at
             advocate                             a future
             normalizat                           meeting."
             ion sooner                           Jan. 8,
             than the                             2024
             third                                
             quarter.                             
             But the                              
             evidence                             
             would need                           
             to be                                
             convincing                           
             ." Jan.                              
             18, 2024                             
             Patrick     John          Thomas      
             Harker,     Williams,     Barkin,    
             Philadelph  New York Fed  Richmond   
             ia Fed      President,    Fed        
             President,  permanent     President  
             2026        voter: "It    , 2024     
             voter:      will only be  voter: "G  
             "It's       appropriate   etting     
             important   to dial back  inflation  
             that we     the degree    under      
             start to    of policy     control    
             move rates  restraint     is         
             down ...    when we are   criticall  
             we don't    confident     y          
             have to do  that          important  
             it too      inflation is  ." Jan.    
             fast,       moving        5, 2024    
             we're not   toward 2% on             
             going to    a sustained              
             do it       basis." Jan.             
             right       10, 2024                 
             away, it's                           
             going to                             
             take some                            
             time."                               
             Dec. 20,                             
             2023                                 
                         Philip        Lorie       
                         Jefferson,    Logan,     
                         Vice Chair:   Dallas     
                         "We are in a  Fed        
                         sensitive     President  
                         period of     , 2026     
                         risk          voter:     
                         management,   "We        
                         where we      shouldn’t  
                         have to       take the   
                         balance the   possibili  
                         risk of not   ty of      
                         having        another    
                         tightened     rate       
                         enough,       increase   
                         against the   off the    
                         risk of       table      
                         policy being  just       
                         too           yet."      
                         restrictive.  Jan. 6,    
                         " Oct. 9,     2024       
                         2023                     
                         Christopher   Neel        
                         Waller,       Kashkari,  
                         Governor,     Minneapol  
                         permanent     is Fed     
                         voter: "The   President  
                         key thing is  , 2026     
                         the economy   voter:     
                         is doing      "When      
                         well. It is   activity   
                         giving us     continues  
                         the           to run     
                         flexibility   this hot,  
                         to move       that       
                         carefully     makes me   
                         and           question   
                         methodically  if policy  
                         ." Jan. 16,   is as      
                         2024          tight as   
                                       we assume  
                                       it         
                                       currently  
                                       is." Nov.  
                                       7, 2023    
                         Michael                   
                         Barr, Vice               
                         Chair of                 
                         Supervision,             
                         permanent                
                         voter: The               
                         Fed is "at               
                         or near the              
                         peak" of                 
                         interest                 
                         rates." Nov.             
                         17, 2023                 
                         Lisa Cook,                
                         Governor,                
                         permanent                
                         voter: "I                
                         see risks as             
                         two-sided,               
                         requiring us             
                         to balance               
                         the risk of              
                         not                      
                         tightening               
                         enough                   
                         against the              
                         risk of                  
                         tightening               
                         too much."               
                         Nov. 16,                 
                         2023                     
                         Mary Daly,                
                         San                      
                         Francisco                
                         Fed                      
                         President,               
                         2024                     
                         voter: "It               
                         takes                    
                         patience. It             
                         takes                    
                         gradualism."             
                         Jan. 19,                 
                         2024                     
                         Austan                    
                         Goolsbee,                
                         Chicago Fed              
                         President,               
                         2025                     
                         voter: "If               
                         we continue              
                         to make                  
                         surprising               
                         progress,                
                         faster than              
                         was                      
                         forecast, on             
                         inflation,               
                         then we have             
                         to take that             
                         into account             
                         in                       
                         determining              
                         the level of             
                         restrictiven             
                         ess ... but              
                         we don’t                 
                         want to                  
                         commit                   
                         ourselves                
                         before the               
                         job is                   
                         done." Jan.              
                         19, 2024                 
                         Susan                     
                         Collins,                 
                         Boston Fed               
                         President,               
                         2025 voter:              
                         The Fed                  
                         should be                
                         "patient and             
                         resolute,                
                         and I                    
                         wouldn't                 
                         take                     
                         additional               
                         firming off              
                         the table."              
                         Nov. 17,                 
                         2023                     
     
    Note: Fed policymakers began raising interest rates in March
2022 to bring down high inflation. Their most recent policy rate
hike, to a range of 5.25%-5.50%, occurred last July. Projections
released on Dec. 13 showed no policymakers believe rates should
go any higher this year, and a majority see them dropping by at
least 75 basis points. Three policymakers – Fed Board Governor
Adriana Kugler, Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid, and
Alberto Musalem, who starts as the St. Louis Fed's president on
April 2 –  have not made any substantive policy remarks and are
not included in the dove-hawk matrix. 
    Below is a Reuters count of policymakers in each category,
heading into recent Fed meetings.
 FOMC Date            Dove  Dovish    Centrist  Hawkish   Hawk
 Jan '24              0     2         9         4         1
 Dec '23              0     2         9         4         1
 Oct/Nov '23          0     2         7         5         2
 Sept '23             0     4         3         6         3
 June '23             0     3         3         8         3
 March '23            0     2         3         10        2
 Dec '22              0     4         1         12        2
     

 (Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Paul Simao)