speeches · April 30, 1997
Regional President Speech
Robert T. Parry · President
Federal Reserve Bank
of San Francisco
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The Value of an Educated
Work Force
SPEECH INFO
City College of San Francisco School of Business Annual Awards Dinner San Francisco, CA May 1, 1997
The following text represents the notes on which Mr. Parry based his remarks.
I’m truly delighted to be a part of this evening’s awards presentation. Successful
partnerships between business and education–such as the ones we’re honoring
tonight–are well worth celebrating. I know first-hand–on a number of levels–just
how special institutions like City College of San Francisco are to the businesses
and people in the communities they serve.
At the personal level, both my wife, Brenda, and my son, Bob, took advantage of
the opportunities of a two-year college by graduating from Pierce College in Los
Angeles. Brenda had postponed college to marry me and raise our children, so
the convenience of having a campus right in our neighborhood gave her a
wonderful chance to pursue her interests in a degree, while she balanced the
demands of home and family. For my son, Bob, Pierce was his launching pad into a
Bachelor’s program in the U.C. system and a career in computer systems.
As Chief Executive of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, I’ve long been a
supporter of the Bank’s own partnership with City College. For the last six years,
we’ve worked together to offer Fed employees a program called “Corporate
College.” This program started as an extension of our longstanding commitment to
provide tuition assistance to our employees. By having the faculty come to the
Bank to conduct the courses, the program gives people a very affordable–and
very convenient–way to enrich their business-related skills and knowledge. The
program has grown and changed over the years, as more and more people
participated in it. Now Fed staffers can complete an Associates degree through
the program, and they even can go on to a four-year degree through a similar
arrangement we have with San Francisco State and U.C. Berkeley. So far, we’ve
had almost 450 people in the program. And, I might add, it also won the Economic
Development Network award sponsored by the California State Chancellor’s
office in 1995.
I think the San Francisco Fed is an especially appropriate place for a program like
this because of the variety of responsibilities we have and the great variety of
skills and kinds of knowledge our people need to carry them out.
Let me give you just a few examples. One of our busiest areas is check processing
and collection–we handle almost 8 million checks a day in this District. Another is
managing and maintaining an electronic wire payments system–again, the
numbers seem staggering: our system handles 170 billion dollars a day. We’re also
responsible for handling cash distribution in the nine western states–and our
employees process and store several billion dollars worth of coin and currency.
These banking service functions are, of course, highly automated, and they also
require a range of types of employees–from production workers to managers
who supervise round-the-clock operations.
In addition to services such as these, there are also two other broad areas of
responsibility: bank supervision and regulation, and national monetary policy.
These functions call for a staff with highly specialized training and knowledge.
And in both areas, virtually everyone has at least a B.A., and many have masters
degrees or higher. Indeed, in our Research Department, which is the main support
for monetary policymaking, all of our economists have Ph.D.s and are active in
publishing their research in scholarly journals.
The picture of the Bank I’ve tried to draw is one where ongoing learning is both an
opportunity for advancement and a necessity for keeping the institution abreast
of unfolding developments. In bank services, these developments may involve
learning about or even inventing new technology for such things as high speed
currency counting. Or they may involve learning about new management
techniques to bring out the best in production employees. In Supervision and
Regulation, these developments may involve understanding new strategies for
banks to manage risk in their portfolios. In Research, the constant aim is to push at
the frontiers of our knowledge about the economy.
This brings me to the last point I want to discuss. As an economist and monetary
policymaker, my focus is on the course of the economy’s growth and its impact on
labor markets and on inflation. While there are many disputes when it comes to
monetary policy, there is no dispute about how important an educated workforce
is both to the Bay Area economy and to the national economy.
Let me illustrate this point about an educated workforce by referring to an
analysis of the local economy done last year by the Bay Area Economic Forum. I’m
proud to say that the San Francisco Fed contributed substantially to the report.
The analysis involved a careful comparison with seven other high-growth regions
in the country. One of the strongest findings of the report concerned the role of
knowledge-based industries in this economy. It indicated that these industries–
software development, high-tech manufacturing, multimedia, and biotechnology,
to name just a few–were critical in pulling the local economy out of the long
recession of the early 1990s. And they’re an important component of our strong
performance today.
Let me review that performance very briefly. Rapid economic growth in the Bay
Area since 1995 has pushed employment levels well beyond their previous peak in
1990. And the effect on unemployment has been quite striking, too. The area’s
unemployment rate is about 4 percent, around one percentage point lower than a
year ago. As the local economic recovery broadened in 1996, we saw employment
growth pick up in a number of sectors that are closely linked to a
growingpopulation–sectors such as wholesale and retail trade, finance,
insurance, and real estate, and state and local government.
The Bay Area’s strongest sectors–business services and high tech
manufacturing–continued to post healthy gains in 1996. For example, job growth
in the business services sector is estimated to have jumped 10 percent last year,
following a gain of about 15 percent in 1995. Without a doubt, this excellent
performance reflects additional jobs developing software for the Internet,
multimedia, and other applications. And in high-tech manufacturing, employment
activity has increased as well. Many of these firms have been boosting research
and development spending in order to stay on the cutting edge of rapidly
changing product areas, such as networking equipment. So, clearly, knowledge-
intensive industries have been fundamental to our recovery and growing
economic strength. And, as the report concludes, they also clearly will be engines
of economic growth and prosperity for the region’s future. The rewards for
workers who get the education needed to earn a place in such industries can be
substantial. Over the last decade or so, there’s been a large increase in the wage
premium for workers with higher educational attainment and specific,
knowledge-based skills.
But over this period another development in the marketplace has emerged–both
in the Bay Area and in the nation. And this development makes an even stronger
argument for the tremendous advantage of ongoing education of the workforce.
The development I’m referring to is the high degree of worker displacement we’ve
seen. Part of this displacement is due to restructuring in the private sector, as firms
strive to improve their efficiency.
But, there are also other forces–such as regulatory reforms and increased
competition from businesses outside regulatory barriers–that have produced
large changes, both nationwide and in the Bay Area. For example, among
financial businesses, increased competition and automation have led banks and
other depository institutions to cut back employment, while securities brokers and
other investment offices have continued to add jobs. Deregulation and
competition also are fostering some restructuring in the utilities sector.The
telephone business is changing rapidly, as local carriers and long-distance
companies are beginning to get additional access to each others’ markets. And,
as the electric and gas utilities sector also moves towards increased competition,
these firms have been forced to ask basic questions about what services they
should be providing and what types of workers they need to deliver the services.
This scenario–of fast-moving developments, regulatory reform, and stiff
competition–illustrates how the rules of the game have changed. For the workers
of today and tomorrow, it won’t be enough to look for job security under the
umbrella of a large corporation. Nor will it be enough to look for it in one small
niche of specialized skills. Instead, we’ll have to look for it in ourselves–in
strengthening our own ability to adapt, to anticipate change, to grow, and to
learn. This is where institutions like City College of San Francisco play such an
important role–in building these strengths–and therefore increasing
the human capital–of a broad range of citizens in our community.
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Cite this document
APA
Robert T. Parry (1997, April 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19970501_robert_t_parry
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19970501_robert_t_parry,
author = {Robert T. Parry},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1997},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19970501_robert_t_parry},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}