speeches · March 15, 1984
Regional President Speech
Robert P. Forrestal · President
The Role of a Regional Reserve Bank
remarks of
Robert P. Forrestal
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
to the
Policy Advisory Board
of the
Joint Center for Urban Studies
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University
Sea Island, Georgia
March 16, 1984
You have honored me with your invitation to address so distinguished a group as the
Policy Advisory Board of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of those two justly revered
educational institutions, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University.
To repay you for that honor — and for the pleasure of a visit to this charming corner
of the Sixth Federal Reserve District — I shall attempt to sketch out for you a verbal
picture of the role of a regional Reserve Bank within the Federal Reserve System. In
particular, I shall discuss the regional banks’ role in shaping monetary policy, as I
believe that role should be more widely understood.
Before we immerse ourselves in monetary policy, however, perhaps I should briefly
mention those areas in which the regional Reserve Banks play more visible roles. From
the perspective of the nation's depository institutions, these are, in fact, the Fed's
most prominent roles; they require a great deal more in the way of human resources
and physical facilities than does monetary policy. I refer, of course, to our roles as
a supervisor and regulator of financial institutions and as a provider of a wide range
of financial services for these financial institutions and the United States Treasury.
The Fed is part of a tripartite federal banking regulatory apparatus. It shares
its supervisory role with the Comptroller of the Currency and with the Federal Deposit
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Insurance Corporation. Other supervisors on the scene are the Federal Home Loan
Bank, which supervises the savings and loan associations; the National Credit Union
Administration, which supervises the credit unions; and the supervisory agencies of the
50 states. The Fed's responsibilities include all state-chartered banks that are members
of the Federal Reserve System, all bank holding companies, domestic institutions engaging
in any form of international banking or investment, and foreign institutions with banking
offices in the United States. That may change within the reasonably near future; you
have probably heard a good deal about the recommendations of the task force recently
headed by Vice President George Bush. Those recommendations are now in the hands
of Congress, and it is too early to predict just what the outcome will be. The
recommendations, however, envision a somewhat different but perhaps even larger
supervisory role for the Fed in the future. Whatever form the final restructuring may
take, the Federal Reserve seems likely to continue to play an important part in assuring
the nation that its banks are sound and well managed in compliance with applicable
regulations. I personally believe that it is most appropriate for the nation's central
bank to play a major role as a regulator of financial institutions.
Closely related to our supervisory role is our role as a "lender of last resort."
This, of course, is a function of what has become known as "the discount window."
Through the discount window, the Federal Reserve extends short-term credit to enable
depository institutions to adjust to temporary reserve deficiencies or to adjust to the
seasonal problems that may arise in areas with economies dependent on agriculture or
tourism. As the lender of last resort, the Fed occasionally provides longer-term credit
to allow a bank time to correct a more serious problem. If the problem cannot be
corrected, credit may be extended to allow the supervisory agencies time to arrange
an orderly liquidation or sale of the ailing institution.
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The Fed's discount rate, of course, determines the cost of the loan to the
borrowing institution, but it is also generally considered to have an important secondary
function. Changes in the discount rate have come to be generally interpreted as signals
of the Fed’s intentions with regard to monetary policy. For this reason, changes in
that rate usually set the financial press and even the general media abuzz.
As a provider of services to financial institutions, the regional Reserve Banks
offer a varied menu of the basic services those institutions must have in order to serve
their customers. We provide currency and coin, collect checks and items such as bond
coupons, and provide securities services. We also handle electronic fund transfers for
them, and we function as the automated clearinghouse for the electronic transactions
that are slowly displacing the conventional paper check. In addition, they use their
accounts at the Fed to settle with each other for their interbank transactions. To
give you an idea of the volume of some of those operations, just within the Sixth
Federal Reserve District — the area served by the Atlanta Fed — incoming cash deposits
in 1983 exceeded $2 billion. The checks we processed totaled well over $1 trillion,
and wire transfers of funds aggregated some $6 trillion.
For the United States Treasury, the Fed functions as both bank and financial
agent. As the Treasury’s bank, we receive tax revenues and other federal income,
crediting it to the Treasury's account. When Uncle Sam pays the nation’s bills, the
checks are charged against that account. As fiscal or financial agent, we help the
Treasury borrow whatever funds may be needed to finance the government's operations
— and it surely must be the world’s biggest business. The government borrows by
selling securities, of course; we are the agents who solicit tenders for those securities,
receive the bids, then issue, service, and finally redeem the securities. The facilities
we have developed for this purpose also enable us to provide our securities services to
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depository institutions, since those institutions are important buyers and sellers of
government securities. When they sell government securities to a distant bank, for
example, the securities can be transferred to the buyer through the Fed's wire transfer
service; wire transfers of securities through the Atlanta Fed in 1983 totaled well over
$700 billion. And depositories may elect to have us serve as custodians of their
securities portfolios; we will automatically collect the interest as it becomes due and
will redeem the securities at maturity, crediting the proceeds to the owner's account.
At the end of 1983, we were holding some $60 billion worth of securities for our
customers.
Those operations are vitally important to the smooth functioning of our financial
system, and they provide some fascinating sights for those who tour our operations. But
I am sure you would agree that the Fed's most important role falls under the heading
of monetary policy. Monetary policy affects the buying power of those billions and
trillions of dollars we have been talking about. Monetary policy indirectly affects the
economic climate within which all business people make their plans and execute their
strategies. Of particular concern to you, I should think, is monetary policy's effect on
the resources available for urban development. And every one of the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks and their branches in the major cities of our nation plays an important
part in shaping monetary policy. That is the role I want to discuss with you at some
length today.
Within the Federal Reserve System, the body that is responsible for shaping
monetary policy is known as the Federal Open Market Committee — the FOMC, for
short. The FOMC consists of all 7 members of the Reserve System's Board of Governors
plus 5 of the 12 Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The governors are appointed by the
President of the United States, with the advice and consent of the Senate^ so-tho-
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admiiirsliHllve. branoh-of—the government has-H voice in Shaping monetary -poitgy. It
should-he noted however, that the oHmipfcfrntr......»|...u^u..imi-Hg-.irrf-».il.iin|ll tim
jidminioli ationj^o far, the Reagan administration has had the opportunity to fill only 2
of the 7 slots on the Board of Governors. At present, the only Reagan appointee
serving as a governor is Preston Martin, vice chairman of the Board of Governors,
although there are rumors that the President has decided on a successor to Governor
Nancy Teeters and will make the announcement any day, now. Although Mr. Volcker
was redesignated as chairman by President Reagan, it was President Carter who initially
appointed him. Fjvc of the- current governors woro appointed by earlier PrcGidente?—
■and mnst nf thnm hy a i mention this because it is often alleged that the
FOMC bows to administration pressure during election years to do a bit of window
dressing that will improve an incumbent President’s chances for reelection. Presidents
may, in fact, be tempted to exert that pressure, and not all Presidents may successfully
resist that temptation. However, the present system makes it highly unlikely that an
incumbent President, during his first four years, could stack the Board of Governors
with hand-picked governors who would do his bidding. Federal Reserve governors serve
staggered, 14-year terms, so only two vacancies will normally occur during a presidential
term. I think we may all be thankful that the governors are insulated from short-run
political pressures. Even the election year of 1980, when the Board of Governors
consisted largely of Carter appointees, may serve as a testimonial to the System's
integrity; we need no reminder that the deterioration of the economy contributed
importantly to President Carter's defeat. I recall no convincing evidence of window
dressing then, and I see none now.
The fact that 5 Federal Reserve Bank presidents serve on the FOMC also
contributes to its insulation from short-run political pressures. Fed presidents are
vaTvXv ^w *p\*rntS A* 3/ 4
chosen by their Reserve Bank's Board of Directors.. Those directors are regional leaders
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who represent a variety of business interests as well as a broad range of economic and
social interests. Neither they nor the Fed presidents could logically be said to be
particularly vulnerable to election-year pressures. I shall have more to say later about
the Fed directors’ place in the System’s scheme of things, because I believe they make
a much more important contribution to the shaping of monetary policy than is generally
realized.
The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is a permanent member
of the FOMC. The other 4 voting memberships rotate among the presidents of the
other 11 Feds. For example, the Atlanta Fed shares a voting membership with the
Dallas and St. Louis Feds. The Atlanta Fed last had the vote during the 12-month
period ending in March 1983, and the Atlanta Fed’s president will again become a
voting member about this time next year.
However, Federal Reserve Bank presidents do not lose their voices when they
lose their votes. Voting or not, they attend every meeting of the FOMC and contribute
to the information and deliberation that regularly shape and reshape monetary policy
to keep it responsive to the changing economic situation.
It is obvious that this process must be based on a substantial volume of current
and accurate information about what is taking place in virtually every sector of the
economy in every part of the nation. It is probably much less obvious that a great deal
of this information flows into the FOMC through the 12 regional Reserve Banks and
their presidents.
At the Atlanta Fed, we have two major sources of information relevant to
monetary policy. One is our economic research program, the other is our directors.
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These sources complement each other quite effectively. The economic research program
is relatively formal, scientific, objective, and commendably deliberate. One of its
approaches relies on sifting and interpreting large volumes of statistical and factual
data to develop a neatly quantified picture of the economy. On the other hand, our
program for collecting information through our directors is less formal and somewhat
more subjective. It usually provides anecdotal evidence, but it takes advantage of the
tremendous experience and judgment of our directors and it is current. It is today's
view of a particular sector as seen through eyes trained by years of experience to
notice such things as incipient trends that have not had time to show up on anyone’s
charts. I will return to our directors later, but first I want to fill out the sketchy picture
I have given you of our research program.
At the Atlanta Fed, our economic research program places heavy emphasis on
regional economic analysis. Our largest research team, in fact, is labeled the Regional
Team. As its name suggests, it studies all aspects of the Southeast's economy. Our
district includes all of Alabama, Florida, and Georgia, and parts of Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Tennessee; however, our interest extends into neighboring areas, since economic
activity is blind to boundary lines. Our Regional Team is constantly screening data
on agriculture, commerce, manufacturing, construction, transportation, imports, exports,
government, public utilities, employment and unemployment, average hours worked,
demographics, and anything else that may improve our understanding of what is taking
place and why. They do not rely on statistics alone, but regularly contact informed
sources throughout the region to glean additional facts and insights.
Our research program’s emphasis on regional studies pervades other teams, as
well. For example, the team that focuses on financial institutions keeps a particularly
close eye on developments affecting the banks, savings and loan associations, credit
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unions, and international banking organizations of the Southeast. Another team closely
follows the nation's rapidly evolving payments system, a system that increasingly uses
electronic payments made through automated clearinghouses and interfacing computers
linked by thousands of miles of wires; while this team’s attention is on a particular
subject rather than on a region, many significant payments system developments are
occurring in the Southeast, particularly in Florida.
One team has a nonregional perspective because its assignment is to track the
national and international economies. We call it the National Team. The members of
this team coordinate the preparation of briefing materials for me prior to each FOMC
meeting. They are our monetary policy specialists.
Unique within our research program is what we call our Database Team. This
team has two main concerns; the first is broadening our pool of data and the second
is accelerating the analysis of that data. With respect to that second goal, the team’s
efforts have produced results that have drawn national attention. They have done some
pioneering work in the use of microcomputers to cut the statistical lag that has always
hampered attempts to monitor economic activity.
Senior economists with doctoral degrees need no longer wait while research
assistants run time-consuming regression analyses; the economist has in his own office
a computer that makes short work of the problem. Meanwhile, the research assistants
can be doing more important and rewarding work on their own computers. Our experience
has been that our staff finds this a stimulating experience. It removes much of the
drudgery and delay from the task of statistical analysis, and it frees the mind to
grapple with the concepts rather than to struggle with the mechanics.
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Our Publications and Information Team, which is responsible for sharing the
results of our economic research with the outside world, is aided by a sophisticated
word processing system. Their main publication is our monthly Economic Review. One
of their specialties is making complex material both interesting and intelligible to
business people and bankers. Articles prepared by other teams are copied into the
Publications Team's word processing system to expedite editing. When the article is
ready for publication, it is transmitted directly into a computer-controlled
phototypesetter. This produces camera-ready proofs without having to type the text
into another keyboard. That phototypesetter paid for itself in less than a year in
reduced typesetting costs alone, and it has also saved us a great deal of time.
I have brought with me a supply of the most recent issue of our Economic
Review to give you an idea of the nature of our research and our effort to share it
with the public.
Now let me return to the role of our directors. There are 9 directors of the
parent organization in Atlanta, and 7 on the board of each of our branches in Birmingham,
Jacksonville, Miami, Nashville, and New Orleans. That makes a total of 44 directors
who live and work throughout the Sixth Federal Reserve District. They represent
banking, commerce, industry, the legal profession, public service, labor, the academic
world, journalism, and — over time — virtually every calling that exists in our complex
society. Each one of them has risen to a position of preeminence in his or her field as
a result of demonstrated ability. Most are also civic leaders deeply involved in the
charitable, cultural, and developmental programs of their communities. They are, in
short, the sort of people whose opinions, insights, judgments, and even intuitive hunches
can provide an extremely valuable supplement to the formal research carried out by
our economists.
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Our board meets only once a month, but our directors are available for consultation
whenever needed. We remain in touch with many of our past directors, too. Furthermore,
through an ongoing program of business leaders’ meetings, we constantly develop new
contacts with still others of proven judgment and experience.
Before each meeting of the FOMC, I am thoroughly briefed by our economists.
In addition, I carry with me a great deal of information imparted by this remarkable
group of counselors, our directors. The other Fed presidents are similarly prepared by
their economists and directors. The result is a monetary policy-shaping organization
that, in effect, can see into virtually every sector of the economy and every region of
the nation through eyes that are trained to see more than the average person might
see — and to interpret it more perceptively as well. I cannot conceive of any centralized
bureaucracy that could match the wealth of informed judgment that this structure
brings to bear on monetary policy.
A moment ago, I briefly mentioned our regular meetings with business leaders.
Some of these meetings are built around speakers eminently worth hearing — speakers
of the caliber of Paul Volcker, Preston Martin, Sir Oliver Wright, the Ambassador of
Great Britain, and Congressman Newt Gingrich, as well as many of equal stature from
the private sector. This program, therefore, not only reinforces our ties with the
business leaders who come to hear these speakers, it also broadens their exposure to
the world of ideas and facilitates the dialogue that generates the new ideas on which
we all depend. We have also initiated another series of somewhat similar meetings
that will be held at various sites around the Sixth District and are designed to foster
discussion of current economic issues with leading citizens of the area. '
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Another way we contribute to that dialogue is through our program of conferences
on current issues in economics and banking. Perhaps the best example was our conference
on supply-side economics, which we held early in the Reagan administration, when the
entire nation was struggling to understand the concept. At that conference, speakers
such as Milton Friedman and Lawrence Klein, both Nobel laureates, attracted hundreds
of participants, as well as journalists representing most of the nation’s major business
publications. Next month, we will hold our sixth conference of this type, this time
exploring the question of how businesses may compete beyond the 1980s. It will offer
perspectives from high-performance companies that are already thinking years ahead
of most.
In addition, we are involved citizens of the communities within which we operate.
For example, I am currently serving as chairman of a group of local bankers who are
providing guidance and funding for an innovative program within the Atlanta public
school system. This program offers specific job training for high school students
interested in careers In the financial services. It is proving to be particularly helpful
to disadvantaged students, and we have good reason to hope it will substantially improve
the quality of their lives.
With that, I think I have sketched out the role of at least one regional Reserve
Bank in reasonable detail. Having heard me out, I hope you would now agree that the
Federal Reserve System’s insulation from short-term political pressures must be
preserved, and that the role currently being played by the Reserve Banks contributes
importantly to that insulation. I believe it also adds tremendously to the quality of
the information upon which decisions on monetary policy must be based.
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Cite this document
APA
Robert P. Forrestal (1984, March 15). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19840316_robert_p_forrestal
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19840316_robert_p_forrestal,
author = {Robert P. Forrestal},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1984},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19840316_robert_p_forrestal},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}