speeches · October 8, 1973
Regional President Speech
David P. Eastburn · President
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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of PHILADELPHIA
TRANSMITTAL SLIP
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TO All Officers'
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At the Board of Directors meeting
in Washington last week, Dave Eastburn
made an oral presentation on "The State of
the Federal Reserve System" before presen
ting the State-of-The-Bank Report. I
thought that you might be interested in
his thoughts, and a copy of the presenta
tion is attached.
Dave.plans to distribute the State
of-The-Bank Report later this week.
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Before discussing the state of the Bank, let me take a moment to
describe the state of the Federal Reserve System, as I see it. To do this
it is important to have some conception of the state of the world confronting
the System. I detect at least three dominant charac.teristics of society
which shape the task of the System today:
1. A demanding society. The public may not be exact~
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sure what it wants, but it is impatient to get it ~
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and is intolerant of institutions which fail to
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2. An innovating society. Under the pressure of com-m 0 -""CC ll:
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petition to satisfy those wants, institutions are ... .c -
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rapidly changing ways of doing business.
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3. A compacting society, which is another way of say-CD
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ing that the world is growing smaller.
A demanding society impacts on the Fed in several ways. It imposes
on monetary policy an impossible task of simultaneously achieving full employ-
ment and a stable dollar. This is nothing new, but the precision expected is
new. Even minor recessions are now intolerable. Even a price performance
better than that of any other major nation is inexcusable. In addition to
these economic demands, the public requires high performance in the solution
of social problems. It is impatient, for example, with an anti-inflation
policy that impinges heavily on housing.
The Fed is used to being cast in an inherently unpopular role (as
Chairman Martin used to say, like the chaperone who removes the punch bowl
just when the party is getting good). But, in addition, the public now is
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looking to the Fed for fine tuning of which the Fed is incapable. Experience
in recent years has been disillusioning as to our ability to move intelli
gently and promptly enough to smooth out every wrinkle in the economy. One
course is to try to educate the public to which is possible. We should do
all we can to accomplish this, but I'm skeptical as to the likely success.
The best course is to sharpen our minds and our tools in an effort to produce,
as nearly as we can,what is expected of us.
A demanding society makes the relationship between Congress and the
Fed more critical. As the public's watchdog, Congress is more aware of its
responsibilities in overseeing System, not only with respect to monetary
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policy but also operations. Mr. Patman's current drive to have the Fed
audited by the GAO for example, seems to have more support than did his
earlier efforts. Our own self-examination into procedures and costs reflects
an awareness of stricter accountability to the public.
I suspect that a demanding society tends to put the Fed under more
political pressure. I mean this not in the sense of involvement in narrow
party politics, but in the sense of identification with, or against, the
policies of a given administration. Chairman Burns' outspokeq comments on
economic policies beyond the monetary sphere certainly have not reflected a
narrow view of the Fed's role. It may be that a posture of political isolation
is no longer possible for the Fed.
An innovating society also puts pressure on the System. An obvious
example is in techniques of making money payments. We are now in the throes-
and only the beginning throes--of changes to meet future payments needs. The
System will have to move fast if it is to keep up, let alone lead. And it will
have to be more searching than it has been in the question of its role vis-a-vis
private enterprise.
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In the process of innovating, financial institutions have made
monetary policy more difficult. Techniques of liability management, for
example, have raised questions as to whether the Fed has lost complete con
trol of credit extended by large banks.
Innovation is proceeding in ways that can radically alter the
prevailing institutional structure. Clear distinctions among various kinds
of institutions are disappearing, a development that obviously raises
difficult questions for supervision. We are just beginning to come to
grips with some of the supervisory problems presented, for example, by bank
holding companies. When savings. and loans take on characteristics of commer
cial banks, when commercial banks take on some of the characteristics, say,
of investment companies, and so on, the Fed will face additional problems
involving standards of supervision. The question of the Fed's role vis-a
vis other supervisory authorities must surely become increasingly critical.
Finally, a compacting society places new demands on coordination
within the System. The concept of the System as a federation of autonomous
units has been eroded over the years, and rightly so. Funds are too fluid,
transportation and communications too rapid, the performance expected of the
System too demanding to permit the individual units to go completely indepen
dent ways. Yet the complexity of our tasks is so great--and becoming still
greater-- that it would be disastrous to try to run the System from one
central place. The challenge the System is only barely beginning to face
is how to accomplish the necessary degree of coordination in planning what
to do and the necessary degree of decentralization in doing it. The Board of Directors
of the Reserve Banks can play a critical role in finding a, solution.
DPE-10/9/73
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Cite this document
APA
David P. Eastburn (1973, October 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19731009_david_p_eastburn
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19731009_david_p_eastburn,
author = {David P. Eastburn},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1973},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19731009_david_p_eastburn},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}