speeches · April 18, 2001
Regional President Speech
Robert D. McTeer Jr. · President
Speeches by Bob McTeer
Remarks at the U.S. Savings Bond Campaign Kickoff Luncheon for Department of the Treasury
Dallas, Texas
April 19, 2001
I plan to talk to you about saving as a former economist and current policymaker. And, as a minor saver. And, as a
regular purchaser—through payroll deduction—of savings bonds.
If I weren't a regular purchaser of savings bonds, I would have declined your kind invitation to speak today. I would
have felt phony.
Here is a picture of my motivation: Candace and Ryan. They call me "Big Daddy." I get a bond every other week at
payday in the name of one of my sons—Candace and Ryan's dad. He's "Little Daddy." The idea is for my son to use
the special education benefits associated with savings bonds for Candace and Ryan's college.
The Dallas Fed recently published this booklet called Building Wealth: A Beginner's Guide to Securing Your Financial
Future. It's for beginners. It talks about saving and investing and budgeting.
For me, a family budget is like dieting by eating sensibly and counting calories. It's a good idea if you can do it. It's the
best way. But I could never do it. I'm not disciplined enough. I have to have a gimmick. Protein in the morning. Carbs
at night.
That doesn't do the trick, however, so I have to add an hour of exercise a day. I pay that price for my lack of
discipline. I used to think lack of discipline was a character flaw. But modern science has let me off the hook. It's not
my fault. It's genetic. And I seem to have come from the shallow end of the gene pool, as the Austin Lounge Lizards
say.
Saving and financial management to me is a lot like dieting. I could never do it regularly if I couldn't do it
automatically. I could never stick to a budget.
So, my approach—my weak-gene approach—is to sign up for payroll deduction for savings bonds, 401(k), etc., and
try to forget about it. Out of sight, out of mind. And let the power of compound interest work its magic.
Savings bonds are probably the most convenient way to save through payroll deduction. All employers provide it. If
I'm wrong about that, shame on them.
As U.S. government bonds, savings bonds are safe. They have no credit risk. Since they don't trade on the market,
they have no market risk either. They will always be worth what you paid for them and more.
They are perfect for grandparents. You can give and get credit for a $100 bond, but you don't have to pay $100 for it.
Such a deal.
I still remember my first bonds as a kiddo. They were $25 bonds that cost $18.75. I think one service club gave me a
$25 bond as a college scholarship.
Not all that long ago, all these advantages of convenience and safety had to be balanced against the disadvantages
of low yield. A few years ago, I felt like I was making a sacrifice when I bought savings bonds—since the stock market
was on such a roll. But the past year of stock market correction has reminded us once again that high returns go with
high risk.
As they say, if something is too good to be true, it probably is. Easy come, easy go.
Savings bonds are plain vanilla. But remember, vanilla still outsells the other 31 flavors. Over the past year, plain
vanilla—riskless—savings bonds have outperformed the Nasdaq, the Dow and the S&P 500. So has cash in the
mattress, for that matter, but savings bonds have a higher yield than cash and don't put as big a lump in your
mattress.
The stock market boom of the past few years—especially since 1995—has had a huge negative impact on consumer
saving. Feeling flush with paper profits, consumers reduced their saving out of current income to zero and below.
This is not a good thing.
Under current fragile economic circumstances, it would not be good for the economy if consumers were to get the
saving religion too abruptly, but over time, it is imperative that a significant positive personal saving rate be restored.
Let me bore you a bit longer and play economist. The reason saving is important to the individual or the family is
obvious and doesn't need repeating. But the reason saving is important for the nation's economy may be less
obvious.
The bottom line is that without saving you can't have the investment that makes the economy grow. The more saving
you have—in a healthy economy—the more investment you can have and the faster we will grow and the faster and
higher our standard of living will rise.
Imagine a closed economy without government—but don't get your hopes up. In such an economy, we produce so
much a year and consume so much. What is not consumed is saved—and made available for investment. In such an
economy, saving and investment would be equal, ex post.
When you introduce government, the government—as well as the private sector—is a potential saver or dis-saver. If
the government runs a budget surplus, it's a net saver. If it runs a deficit, it is a net dis-saver. In such an economy,
investment is limited to the net saving of the government and the private sector together.
Now introduce international trade and investment into the picture. Exports are a net addition to spending, like
investment and government spending. Imports are a net subtraction from spending, like saving and taxes. So, in this
open mixed economy, investment is limited by the net saving of the private sector, plus the government sector, plus
the international trade sector.
Now, one last complication. Private-sector saving in my example is made up not only of personal saving but of
business saving—depreciation and retained earnings. Now, for years the U.S. economy featured positive private
saving (both personal and business) and negative government saving, as represented by the large, chronic budget
deficits. Net saving from these sources was not sufficient to finance our domestic investment. The difference was
made up by an inflow of capital from abroad—the mirror image of our international trade deficit. In other words, we've
had to supplement domestic saving with foreign saving to finance our domestic investment.
Of course, this has increased our net debtor position internationally and has given foreigners more and more claims
on future U.S. goods and assets. This is not necessarily bad, but at some point it may become unsustainable.
Then it will be bad.
The big change in the last couple of years has been that private personal saving has declined to zero while business
saving continued reasonably strong. This represents a net reduction in domestic, private-sector saving. Fortunately,
this reduction has been offset in part by a swing in the federal budget from deficit to surplus. This means the federal
government has swung from being a negative saver to a positive saver.
But still, the combination of U.S. private and government saving together has remained inadequate to finance U.S.
investment. So the difference continues to be made up by foreign saving in the form of a capital inflow. Again—let me
repeat—there is nothing wrong with that as long as it is sustainable. But it could become unsustainable rather
abruptly, with dire consequences.
Wile E. Coyote might look down.
That's what happened to the Nasdaq, you know. Wile E. Coyote overran the cliff and kept running. When he finally
looked down, he saw all foam and no beer, so he fell. Actually, there was a good bit of beer there, but it did have too
big a head on it.
I apologize for this little lecture on national saving. If you slept through it, the bottom line is this: over time we need
more domestic saving in this economy. We need it in a macroeconomic sense so we can finance our investment
domestically without overreliance on foreign capital. And we need it from a microeconomic, or family, viewpoint
because most of us are simply not saving enough to finance our retirement and old age—not to mention college for
the kiddos.
This point should be obvious to everyone, but apparently it isn't. Maybe everyone is counting on winning the lottery.
Maybe everyone will.
But if not, they need to be taking charge of their financial lives—slowly and carefully. A savings bond campaign is a
good vehicle to spread the gospel of saving. And savings bonds are the easiest way—and for many the best way—to
start.
Good luck in your campaign. You are doing the Lord's work.
Cite this document
APA
Robert D. McTeer Jr. (2001, April 18). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010419_robert_d_mcteer_jr
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20010419_robert_d_mcteer_jr,
author = {Robert D. McTeer Jr.},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2001},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010419_robert_d_mcteer_jr},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}