speeches · March 22, 1990
Regional President Speech
Robert P. Forrestal · President
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS
By Robert P. Forrestal, President
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
To the.,Conference on Demographics
March 23, 1990
Good morning! It is a privilege for me to welcome you or^ behalf of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Atlanta to this conference on demographics and the workforce. I am
particularly pleased to host a meeting of this nature here at our Miami Branch. We are
quite proud of the design of this facility and the efficiency with which it operates. Many
of you have visited the Miami Branch on various occasions in the past, but for those who
have not, let me describe briefly how this branch fits into the overall picture of Federal
Reserve activities and the economy of South Florida.
Most of the employees here are involved in processing about $1.5 billion worth of
checks every day. Others transmit and receive another $6.5 billion in electronic
payments daily. Our coin and currency section puts cash into circulation at the request
of depository institutions and receives it back when those institutions have more than
they want to keep on hand. Sophisticated, high-speed machinery counts and inspects
returned currency for fitness. In addition, this branch is unique in our District in having
staff from our Supervision and Regulation Department on site, in part because of the
concentration of international banking activity in Dade County.
The intensity of operations I just mentioned testifies to the demographic changes
that have occurred in South Florida over the course of this century. Our branch in
Jacksonville was sufficient to handle the payments system needs of depository
institutions in the entire state from the earliest days of the the Federal Reserve
System. But as the influx of migrants—not only from other parts of the United States
but from Latin America as well—continued through the 1950s and 1960s, the pressures of
additional work created the need for a second Florida facility. Thus, the Miami office
began operating in 1971 and became a full branch in 1975. As such, it is the most recent
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
addition to the Federal Reserve System.
However, the Atlanta Fed has an interest in demographic trends that reaches
beyond Florida and the other states in our District. Aside from our work with the
payments system and bank supervision, it is our responsibility to contribute to the
formation of monetary policy for the nation as a whole. In this capacity, we monitor the
current state of the U.S. as well as the southeastern economy and project changes in
conditions that might affect economic growth in the years ahead. At present, few
discussions of the nation’s economy occur without some reference to the demographic
shifts that have emerged in the post-World War II period. From the job market to the
nation’s savings rate to health care costs and inflation, nearly every major economic
issue is tied in some way to phenomena like the ’’baby boom,” the "baby bust,” and the
"graying of America.” Thus I am looking forward to today’s conference, which will
explore developments of this nature and, I believe, leave us all with deeper insights into
them.
Once again, welcome to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s Miami Branch and I
hope we can make your time with us comfortable as well as beneficial both for your
organization and for the South Florida community in general.
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
Robert P. Forrestal (1990, March 22). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19900323_robert_p_forrestal
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19900323_robert_p_forrestal,
author = {Robert P. Forrestal},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1990},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19900323_robert_p_forrestal},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}