speeches · November 5, 1996
Regional President Speech
William J. McDonough · President
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK ServingtheSecondDistrictandtheNation
Remarks by
William J. McDonough, President
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
before the
New Jersey Council on Economic Education
Short Hills, New Jersey
November 6, 1996
I am delighted to be here this evening to address such a distinguished and dedicated gathering of community leaders, educators and students.
Dr. Ronald Applbaum, President of Kean College of New Jersey and chairman of this dinner, represents a most important audience -- today's
students. Each of us share a concern that each student receives the education and tools needed to be a productive, contributing member of
society. Our host, the New Jersey Council on Economic Education, targets one narrow but vital aspect of education -- raising the economic
literacy of the students and their teachers in the Garden State. We all know the importance of computer literacy, but economic literacy is of
equal or even greater importance because it provides a fundamental framework for evaluating critical questions that our children will face as
teenagers and adults. The bedrock of our democracy is prudent decision-making by an informed citizenry -- and many of those decisions
require an economic evaluation. Under the leadership of the New Jersey Council on Economic Education, students are introduced to the
importance of the free enterprise system and the elements that make it work. New Jerseyites are indeed fortunate to have the Council's
programs to supplement the day-to-day academic curriculum and introduce basic economic concepts. I commend the Council for its important
work, and the leadership and members represented here tonight for their contribution.
New Jersey has grown well beyond the stereotypical bedroom community to New York City. Today the "local" economy is truly the greater
metropolitan area -- stretching from Northern New Jersey to lower Connecticut to Montauk Point, Long Island. The many strengths of the
metropolitan area as a financial and business center, and as a desirable place to live and work, are of great importance to me and my institution,
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. As you know, the New York Fed plays a special role within the Federal Reserve System in the
implementation of monetary and exchange rate policies largely by dint of its unique location in the financial capital of the United States, if not
the world. In addition, the New York Fed has a critical, though less well known, responsibility for maintaining the nation's payment systems
that relies heavily on many components of New York City's infrastructure. The New York Fed employs some 3,500 people at our headquarters
in Manhattan and our operations center in East Rutherford, New Jersey and thus has a large stake in the economic and social well-being of the
metropolitan area. In that context, my Bank takes very seriously its responsibility to be an active, contributing corporate citizen.
Today, I would like to begin my remarks with some comments about the performance of the national and regional economies. Next, I will
discuss with you a major challenge that must be addressed head on by the business community of the greater metropolitan area, in partnership
with state and local governments. It is a challenge that this community has begun to meet but more must be done and we need to act sooner
rather than later.
Let me start with a few words about the economic picture for the country as a whole. The national economic expansion, already one of the
longest of the post-World War II era, is entering its sixth year and shows few, if any, signs of coming to an imminent conclusion. In fact, I am
quite encouraged in many ways by the recent performance of most of the key indicators of current and future cyclical conditions. One of the
most positive features of the ongoing expansion is the continued good news about inflation. Consumer price inflation, while up slightly during
the first three quarters of this year, gives no indication that it will accelerate persistently over the months ahead. In fact, during the third quarter
of this year, inflation slowed to just 2.3 percent. But, if the rate of inflation continues to be contained in the coming months, one could say that
"the beat goes on." As you may recall, the CPI increased by about 3 percent or less in each of the last five years, a record unequaled since the
1960s.
I think it's fair to say that at least some credit for the nation's favorable inflation performance belongs to the forward-looking policies set by the
Federal Open Market Committee. The FOMC's policy of monetary restraint, which began in February 1994, brought about a much needed
slowing of aggregate demand, which had started to run well ahead of the economy's productive capacity. That move was not without its critics,
coming as it did well before most analysts and economists had forecast an uptick in the rate of inflation. The Fed's pre-emptive strike against
the threat of inflation was necessary, however, because monetary policy works with long and uncertain lags. Although most of the effects of
monetary policy on output take place within one to two years, its effects on inflation take even longer -- on the order of three years. Thus it was
clear to us in 1994, and it's just as clear today, that the failure to contain inflation at its earliest, incipient stages only makes it costlier and more
time-consuming to bring it under control later.
Although actions by the FOMC play a major role in containing inflation and weakening inflationary expectations, monetary policy, in and of
itself, cannot serve as the wellspring of real long-term economic growth. It does not lead directly to the incorporation of new businesses, the
renovation of more malls or the expansion of computer service organizations. Real growth over time results from increases in the quality,
productivity and supply of both labor and capital, and from innovations in the way these factors of production are used. What monetary policy
can do is raise or lower the rate of money supply and credit growth, and help to move interest rates to levels consistent with the goal of
economic growth with price stability. In the process, the Fed's actions and pronouncements can influence the expectations and confidence of
consumers and businesses and, thereby, what they do in the various economic and financial market places. Only by the Fed muting both
inflation and inflationary expectations can households, businesses and governments make the decisions and take the steps that create jobs,
profits and the steady rise in output from which everyone in our society benefits. Thus, monetary policy can best help to foster economic
growth by ensuring the continuation of a stable price environment.
Over the last five years, economic growth has come more grudgingly to our region, the states of New Jersey and New York, than it has to the
nation as a whole. The 1990-1991 recession was unevenly diffused in its effects and hit our region earlier, and hung around longer, than was the
case in most of the rest of the country. Although the region has regained some of the employment lost in the previous cycle, the recovery here
has not been nearly as vigorous as the national recovery and subsequent expansion. In New Jersey, a succession of large-scale restructurings in
the chemical, pharmaceutical, and communication sectors, several mergers in the financial sector, and the bursting of the bubble in real estate
values all have contributed to the region's plodding advance. The resulting loss of thousands of jobs has been a major impediment to a vigorous
overall recovery in employment.
Nevertheless, New Jersey certainly has been the regional leader. Since the recession's trough, New Jersey has recouped about two-thirds of its
job loss. The net additions to employment are all the more remarkable because they have developed despite some significant job losses at
several large companies. Job growth has been particularly good in management, computer and financial services, and restaurants -- sufficient to
more than offset the losses at AT&T, and at other utilities and manufacturers. New Jersey's financial sector continues to flourish because
business costs remain favorable compared with those in New York City, attracting some who have found it cost-effective to relocate here.
Service employment is growing rapidly, reflecting the demand for all types of business, amusement, and recreational services. Employment in
wholesale trade and at malls and fast-food outlets is rising. Even construction employment is picking up, due mainly to the work on the
facilities at Newark airport and the rise in new home construction. The growth in jobs and income has been felt in the resale housing market,
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where prices have firmed and are now rising moderately in many areas in the state.
New Jersey's economy is likely to continue its gradual recovery through next year. Despite the potential for some moderation in U.S. economic
growth in 1997, economists at the New York Fed believe that the State's job growth will accelerate modestly to 1.1 percent in 1997 from 0.9
percent in 1996. Stated differently, we expect close to 40,000 new jobs will be added next year in New Jersey. The acceleration in job growth is
largely the result of continued strength in the region's key private sectors and a slackening of the recent rapid pace of decline in manufacturing
and utilities. Business and consumer services are expected to be the driving forces for the private sector. The restructurings will continue, but at
a slower pace and with less of a drag on overall job growth.
It is true that there are many challenges ahead for New Jersey's cities and counties: the shifting of budget responsibilities from the federal
government to states and the rapid pace of technological change are just two. But such changes are not one-sided problems. Technological
advancements may reduce manufacturing employment in New Jersey, but they also make it possible to attract financial services, such as back
office operations to Hudson County and trading operations to Princeton. In addition, technological change sets a framework for the
development of new industries and new occupations that may well lead the State's economy forward in the years ahead.
Let me add that job growth is only one measure of economic well-being. Personal income also is growing at a reasonable clip in New Jersey --
about on par with that of the nation. And, because per capita income in New Jersey remains among the highest for all states -- second only to
Connecticut -- New Jersey is indeed a very wealthy state. The region is rich in corporate headquarters, households at the top of the income
ladder, and not coincidentally, households with above-average levels of education.
One risk too frequently given only glancing attention by members of the business community is the threat to the social fabric caused by
disparities in the distribution of this wealth and income. Over the last twenty years or so, growth and prosperity have not been shared widely
enough, and the less educated and poorer segments of society have lost ground. One cannot be sanguine about this widening gap. Over the long
term, I am convinced, strong economic growth can be sustained only if the benefits of the economic pie -- more and better jobs, higher
incomes, improved housing and a higher standard of living -- are shared by all parts of society, rich and poor, skilled and less skilled. This is
true everywhere in the world, but no place more so than in our own region.
What could many of us in this room do to help narrow the disparity in income and wealth without sacrificing the well-being of the institutions
we represent? Admittedly, this is an enormous and complicated challenge.
I believe that the business community and civic leaders can most directly promote economic well-being by taking active, participatory roles in
the education and training of our region's youths and workers. It would be easy to stand before you and preach the gospel of education, and tell
you what you already know -- that such a pursuit is important and right. Who could ever disagree? Instead, my message today is that our
focused attention on education and training is needed urgently and indispensable now. The business community must take an active role in the
development of this region's human capital or risk facing a serious, and permanent, mismatch between the skills we need to run our businesses
and those possessed by the pool of available workers. Our school systems are doing what they can and should have our total support, but they
can no longer do enough by themselves.
While the need to match the skills of workers to the list of available jobs may sound like an evergreen issue, it has new dimensions in the 1990s
that, in my opinion, expand our current challenge to unprecedented proportions. The same forces that continue to reshape the region's economy
-- industrial restructuring, global competition, and rapid, persistent technological change -- are the ones that have put enormous strains on much
of our work force and the educational establishments. Students nowadays require an array of skills far beyond the three R's that shaped most of
us here today. Telecommunications, computers, the information superhighway, and even television have made obsolete the standard curricula
that guided education for decades, and they have changed the mix of knowledge, skills, and experiences students and workers must develop in
order to function well today.
In addition, the service-based economy, which, like its manufacturing counterpart has grown very capital intensive, also requires keyboard,
reasoning, customer service, and communication skills more complex and advanced than those of previous generations. These challenges arose
with great suddenness, at a time when school budgets have been stretched as never before. The failure of the business community to help
schools now will mean that our businesses won't be able to hire the kinds of workers they need to benefit fully from the business opportunities
opening up to us. It also will mean that income and wealth disparities among groups will widen still further and the social fabric of the region
and, indeed, the nation will become badly frayed.
Every one of our organizations -- business, academics, government or social services -- can and must do more to bolster the readiness for work
of all who are entering, and others who have been in, the region's labor force. The investment will be meaningful, and it doesn't have to be very
expensive. Whether we run large enterprises with thousands of employees, or small establishments with but a few, we have to use our doors as
entrances to the world of work rather than barriers. Educators tell us that individuals learn best by doing, by participating actively in tasks, and
by experiencing those tasks in new environments. We can do something about that.
Many of us can do something about it by increasing the number and variety of internships we offer, and by expanding the work-study and
school-to-career programs we offer so that learning comes from doing, and not just by sitting in classrooms. At the New York Fed, we have
committed substantial effort to the development and implementation of a wide range of participatory instructional programs geared mainly
toward easing students' transition from school to career and toward developing a better understanding of business, economics and finance. In
addition, we have a strong commitment to the training of educators throughout the Second Federal Reserve District in a variety of subject areas
in which we have expertise. In the last two years, the Bank has hosted meetings and seminars for teachers of economics, finance, law, social
studies, political science, consumer economics, government, and education; we also hosted or arranged conferences for administrators,
department chairpersons, principals and assistant principals, while working to help shape the secondary schools' social studies curriculum. For
the educators, the collaboration has provided needed additional resources, ideas, and training; for the Bank, the time and resources devoted to
these efforts help us to fulfill our community responsibility while raising the readiness for work of thousands of students in the region from
whom we, and perhaps you, will draw to meet future human resource needs.
Let me give you an idea of some of the more successful of my Bank's programs. We have an Econ Explorers Club that teaches elementary and
middle school students how to gather, chart and analyze data. Another program brings high school teachers to the Bank for four days in order to
gain a better understanding of how policy is made and implemented. Throughout their stay, they do as I might in the days prior to an FOMC
meeting -- they get the same kinds of briefings, read the same kinds of reports, meet with the same staff members as I do.
One of our most recent and exciting ventures is a competition among high school students that has earned national recognition, though it's only
in its second year. One team of five students from each participating school has 20 minutes to present an analysis of current economic
conditions, a forecast, and a monetary policy prescription before a panel of judges consisting of senior-level New York Fed staff; the judges
then have 10 minutes to pepper the teams with questions, and believe me, the judges pull no punches. This year, 40 high schools from the
metropolitan area took part with four schools from the Buffalo area. Let me add that the winning team came from Matawan, New Jersey and
they delivered a rigorous multimedia analysis with sophisticated presentation skills that would make any professional group proud.
In addition to these innovative programs, we also engage in a host of more traditional activities with the schools in our district. These include
Join-a-School partnership, summer internships, a mentoring program and several career days. We also provide intellectual support to
Classroom, Inc., a non-profit organization that has created outstanding computer-based simulations of enterprises in various industries.
All of these collaborations have the benefit of improving the preparation of teachers and the performance of students. They also involve staff of
the Federal Reserve at all levels, encouraging volunteerism and civic pride, while providing concrete opportunities to participate actively in the
achievement of a major objective of our institution. While the specifics of the New York Fed's programs focus on what we do, there is no doubt
that everyone in this room has the potential to engage in similar projects in your areas of specialization. It's good business to do so, and it
responds to a major civic imperative.
For most of the public, the reputation of the Federal Reserve will continue to be measured mainly by our success in promoting economic
growth with price stability, rather than by our interactions with educators and students. Over the months and years ahead, I will continue to
advocate a monetary policy that promotes price stability, without which long-term economic growth will not be possible. Such a policy stance
would be favorable, not just for the nation but for our region as well. Our region, with its many interest rate-sensitive industries, has prospered
when decision-makers in the public and private sectors have confidence that the Federal Reserve was committed to a rigorous set of policies
that promoted price stability, in a growth-oriented environment. Price stability also promotes innovation and confidence, both of which lead to
jobs, and it paves the way for the entrepreneurship that gives hope for the future to the people who live here.
The New York Fed also must respond to the social needs of our community. In that context, my Bank will continue to work both independently
and with community leaders to help make the Second Federal Reserve District a better place to live and work. We firmly believe that our
efforts to improve educational opportunities contribute to that mission, though we remain very aware of the challenges that lie ahead to narrow
the gap in income and wealth among groups.
I encourage you to join with me and many others in committing our organizations and ourselves more fully to the task of meeting this challenge
head on.
Thank you very much.
Cite this document
APA
William J. McDonough (1996, November 5). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19961106_william_j_mcdonough
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19961106_william_j_mcdonough,
author = {William J. McDonough},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1996},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19961106_william_j_mcdonough},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}