Dec 1 (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 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 currently
stack up on their outlooks for Fed policy and how 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
             Patrick     Jerome        Neel       Michelle
             Harker,     Powell, Fed   Kashkari,  Bowman,
             Philadelph  Chair,        Minneapol  Governor,
             ia Fed      permanent     is Fed     permanent
             President,  voter:        President  voter: 
             2023        "Having come  , 2023     "My
             voter: "A   so far so     voter:     baseline
             decrease    quickly, the  "When      economic
             in the      FOMC is       activity   outlook
             policy      moving        continues  continues
             rate is     forward       to run     to expect
             not         carefully,    this hot,  that we
             something   as the risks  that       will need
             that is     of under-     makes me   to
             likely to   and           question   increase
             happen in   over-tighten  if policy  the
             the short   ing are       is as      federal
             term."      becoming      tight as   funds rate
             Nov. 8,     more          we assume  further."
             2023        balanced."    it         Nov. 28,
                         Dec 1, 2023   currently  2023
                                       is." Nov.  
                                       7, 2023    
             Raphael     John          Lorie       
             Bostic,     Williams,     Logan,     
             Atlanta     New York Fed  Dallas     
             Fed         President,    Fed        
             President,  permanent     President  
             2024        voter: "We    , 2023     
             voter: "I   are at, or    voter:     
             don’t       near, the     "We have   
             think       peak level    seen some  
             we’ve seen  of the        retraceme  
             the full    target range  nt in      
             effects of  of the        that       
             restrictiv  federal       10-year    
             e policy."  funds rate."  yield and  
             Nov. 29,    Nov 30, 2023  financial  
             2023                      condition  
                                       s, and so  
                                       I'll be    
                                       watching   
                                       to see     
                                       whether    
                                       that       
                                       continues  
                                       and what   
                                       that       
                                       means for  
                                       the        
                                       implicati  
                                       ons of     
                                       policy,"   
                                       Nov. 7,    
                                       2023       
                         Philip        Loretta     
                         Jefferson,    Mester,    
                         Vice Chair:   Cleveland  
                         "We are in a  Fed        
                         sensitive     President  
                         period of     , 2024     
                         risk          voter:     
                         management,   "Monetary  
                         where we      policy is  
                         have to       in a good  
                         balance the   place for  
                         risk of not   policymak  
                         having        ers to     
                         tightened     assess     
                         enough,       incoming   
                         against the   informati  
                         risk of       on on the  
                         policy being  economy    
                         too           and        
                         restrictive.  financial  
                         ” Oct. 9,     condition  
                         2023          s." Nov.   
                                       29, 2023   
                         Christopher   Thomas      
                         Waller,       Barkin,    
                         Governor,     Richmond   
                         permanent     Fed        
                         voter: "I am  President  
                         increasingly  , 2024     
                         confident     voter:     
                         that policy   "If        
                         is currently  inflation  
                         well          is going   
                         positioned    to flare   
                         to slow the   back up,   
                         economy and   I think    
                         get           you want   
                         inflation     to have    
                         back to 2%."  the        
                         Nov. 28,      option of  
                         2023          doing      
                                       more on    
                                       rates."    
                                       Nov. 29,   
                                       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                     
                         Austan                    
                         Goolsbee,                
                         Chicago Fed              
                         President,               
                         2023 voter:              
                         "It's                    
                         working                  
                         through in               
                         the way                  
                         we've                    
                         anticipated.             
                         " Dec. 1,                
                         2023                     
                         Mary Daly,                
                         San                      
                         Francisco                
                         Fed                      
                         President,               
                         2024 voter:              
                         "I'm                     
                         thinking                 
                         about                    
                         whether we               
                         have enough              
                         tightening               
                         in the                   
                         system and               
                         are                      
                         sufficiently             
                         restrictive              
                         to restore               
                         price                    
                         stability.               
                         Discussions              
                         about                    
                         interest                 
                         rate cuts                
                         are not                  
                         particularly             
                         helpful at               
                         the moment."             
                         Nov. 30,                 
                         2023                     
                         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%, was in July.
    Most policymakers as of September expected one more rate
hike by the end of this year, but recently many have expressed
more confidence that none will be needed. Neither Jeff Schmid,
who has been the Kansas City Fed's president since August and
will be a voter on the FOMC in 2025, nor Adriana Kugler, a
permanent voter who was confirmed to the Fed's Board of
Governors in September, have yet made any substantive policy
remarks. The St. Louis Fed has begun a search to replace its
former president, James Bullard, who took a job in academia; the
new chief will be a voter on the policy-setting committee in
2025. Interim St. Louis Fed chief Kathleen O'Neill Paese appears
to lean hawkish. 
    Below is a Reuters count of policymakers in each category,
heading into recent Fed meetings.
 FOMC Date       Dove   Dovish  Centri  Hawkis  Hawk
                                st      h       
                                                
 Dec '23                     2       9       4  
                 0                              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)