speeches · May 10, 1954
Regional President Speech
Karl R. Bopp · President
Discussion on
OBJECTIVES OF MONETARY POLICY
by
KARL R. BOPP
before the
FOURTH MEETING OF TECHNICIANS
OF CENTRAL BANKS OF THE AMERICAN CONTINENT
^ew York City, May 11, 1954
-a- * * * * *
Appreciate opportunity to discuss objectives of policy. All
papers and discussants agree it should be to promote stable economic
progress. But this tern is too vague to be a useful guide to operations.
I find four meanings attached to it in the papers. It seems to me we are
a bit too sanguine and optimistic in our belief that there is no conflict
between them.
Expand Contract
Gold standard Reserves large, Reserves declining Deflationary
(stable exchange rising
rate)
Productive credit $ volume of Monetary volume S elf-inflammatory
(real bills business up of business down
doctrine)
Stable prices When prices down Prices up —
Full employment When unemployment Over full employment Inflationary
Fixed rate of When savings are When savings are S elf-inflammatory
interest inadequate excessive
|low, stable)
I
Conflict in last fifteen months.
Lost$Lj billion of gold - Contract?
Prices stable at wholesale and retail - No change.
Unemployment up 1.8 to 3.7 million - Expand?
Role of major countries, especially United States of America.
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I study history to gain perspective. We are tempted to believe
our problems are entirely new problems - they aren't.
We are apt to forget that the pressing problem of today is
(a) the opposite of the pressing problem of yesterday BUT
that it is essentially
(b) the same problem as that of day before yesterday.
Alternatives of prosperity and depression! Surely we can gain
something - a little bit at least - by taking a longer view.
I am one of that rate breed of college graduates who never took
a single formal course in the History Department! Why not? But I have
a great respect for experience - more than many professional students of
history.
So I am an amateur - in history - and for that matter - in
central banking too. Responsible vs. observer - technician!
I am much more conscious of my ignorance than of my knowledge -
yet I have convictions.
Before I am finished you may say I am a reactionary. Well,
maybe I am - at present. But 20 years ago I was considered a revolutionary -
true of many. But 20 - 10 - 30 years from now I will again be considered
a revolutionary.
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A Bit of History
Before the First World War the great fear was of inflation
A. Fear based on experience Bank rate up 1 per cent; down § per cent
(periodic debasements of the currency)
1. John Law early in 18th Century
2. Assignats late in 18th Century
3. The "Continentals" of American colonies
Napoleonic inflation in England and France
B. A belief based on "natural law"
Depressions are God’s way of punishing men for failure to
observe natural law - which meant convertibility
C. Economic progress came as a surprise
- continuing fear that it wasn’t real
- and could not be maintained
Pride in actual progress - not dissatisfaction that it
was not more rapid
- A PATIENCE THAT WE HAVE LOST*
D. Diverse developments (later forgotten) after the Franco-Prussian War in
1. France and in Germany (or the U.S.A.)
Low - stable rates High - variable rates
and stagnation and exhuberant prosperity
2. Why?
a. In part, natural resources
b. More important, character
(1) France admitted defeat - fear
even victory in First World War led to Maginot Line
(2) Germany
even defeat in First World War did not destroy
FAITH THE JOB COULD BE DONE
AND IT INVOLVED SACRIFICE
3. Suggested limits to monetary policy
Not merely that infant grows faster at faster rate*.
He outstrips his father and continues to grow.
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u
- -
II. The 1920's in the U.S.A.
We forgot these limits
We talked of a new era - monetait, policy the panacea
III. The Great Depression
Vast, unused human and material resources
Fiscal policy, starting as a supplement, eventually supplants
monetary policy altogether
Instead of natural law -
Man is the master of his fate - money is merely a servant -
true - but you remember Paul Dukas the Sorcerer1 s Apprentice?
IV. The Second World War and its aftermath
A. Inflation - in varying degrees - but with a vengeance I
Direct controls and their distortions which
submerged the appearance
You can't make money your servant by decree
but only by treating it as a servant'.
If you do not behave as a master, your servant may
blackmail - or prosecute you!
The curious recurrence of the contrast between
France and Western Germany!
V. Beneath the monetary facade there is a real economic problem
How to use LIMITED resources to satisfy UNLIMITED wants and desires
In the main, central banks will contribute most if they concentrate on
MAXIMIZING OUTPUT OF REAL RESOURCES- including voluntary leisure!
and leave to others the problem of distribution
As one takes this view,
Maximizing current standards of living
and
Maximizing the rate of economic development
are brought in their true focus as
0OMPETITIVE or ALTERNATIVE ^
of resources 55555
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If we insist on trying to accomplish both via monetary policy, we
shall end up with inflation - which falls far short of achieving
the "best" combination - however defined.
Fallacy of productive credit idea - motors for refrigerators
Stable prices have been at wholesale
cost
Full employment increased from 1.8 to 3.7 million
Gold standard we lost $lj billion in last 16 months
VI. A final reason for studying our forefathers
A. Without such study, we tend to react against everything
we did before because we now consider the over-all effect bad
B. A study of history reveals that our forebears were not all
bad or all of ill will
- IF IT DID, - are we prepared to face our historians?
- or do we believe we exclusively commune with the BURNING BUSH?
BUT don't take my word - take your own! There is high authority
which says I am stupidl
We cannot in any event DELIVER the millenium overnight.
Let us not promise itI
We may lose our bodies - TEMPORARILY but we shall retain our SOULS -
and regain our bodies - in DUE COURSE
But how much is too much?
Remember FRANCE -
and GERMANY
But be RIGHT!
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Cite this document
APA
Karl R. Bopp (1954, May 10). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19540511_karl_r_bopp
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19540511_karl_r_bopp,
author = {Karl R. Bopp},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1954},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19540511_karl_r_bopp},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}