speeches · May 18, 2002
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Reflections on Business, Government and Reputation | Federal Reserve ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/reflectio...
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Almost immediately after accepting Dean Benveniste's invitation Banking in the Ninth
to speak at this commencement, I began to have second thoughts
and to wonder whether my acceptance was such a hot idea. After Connect
all, what could someone like me, who has spent most of his MinneapolisFed on Twitter
career at the Federal Reserve in public policy, offer that would be Minneapolis Fed on Facebook
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meaningful and valuable, that would “resonate” with business
school graduates looking forward to careers in the private,
for-profit sector? From one perspective, answers to the question I
just posed are not easy to come by, because the two worlds
—for-profit business and public policy—are distinct, with different
objectives, responsibilities, accountabilities. And while I don't view
myself as a bureaucrat, I can understand if bankers or prospective
bankers out there see it differently. When our bank examiners
show up at your institution, it is probably not comforting to hear
“we're from the Fed and we're here to help.”
But the two worlds—government policy and the private sector
—intersect, and one of the legitimate and significant roles for
government is to establish the rules of the game and make sure
they are followed. Where they are not, the consequences can be
severe, and fortunes, but more importantly reputations, can be
lost. The government may be an effective, after-the-fact
policeman, but we all would do well to remember the importance
of reputation in considering our business practices and decisions.
Let me continue these remarks with some perspectives on the
role of government in our market economy. It may not be widely
recognized, except by those of us who study macroeconomic
data, but the U.S. economy has turned in a truly remarkable
performance over the past 20 years, both absolutely and relative
to the other major industrial economies around the world.
Economic growth here has far surpassed that of Western Europe,
Japan, the United Kingdom and Canada. Our standard of living is
well above those of these other nations. Our unemployment rate
is generally well below theirs. I don't point this out to sound at all
self-congratulatory, but rather out of a sense of deep appreciation
of what is possible in the United States. America still is, by almost
every metric, a land of great opportunity.
But why has the United States outperformed these other
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Reflections on Business, Government and Reputation | Federal Reserve ... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/reflectio...
significant economies for the past 20 years? It is tempting to
answer this question by pointing to the amazing advances in
technology over the period, but that, by itself, can't be the answer
because the technology is available worldwide. Another appealing
answer is the quality of American higher education, which is
clearly the envy of the world and also something I am particularly
pleased to acknowledge here. But higher education has been
outstanding in the United States for a long time. No, there must be
something unique about the American system which has emerged
relatively recently and produced these results. Along these lines, I
would suggest that a growing commitment in the United States to
competitive, market-determined outcomes is part of the
explanation for this performance.
Put another way, over the past 20 years or so, government has
come to play a somewhat diminished role in the U.S. economy
than it had formerly. There are numerous, relevant illustrations of
this. For example, there has been a growing commitment to free
international trade, and, on balance, trade restrictions have been
reduced meaningfully in the United States. Moreover, a wide
variety of domestic industries have been deregulated during the
past 20-plus years and permitted to compete far more freely for
customer business. And there has been a largely hands-off
attitude toward merger and acquisition activity; not that all deals
have worked well, but the government did not often prejudge their
success or failure.
This experience might suggest that when it comes to government,
“less is more”; less regulation, fewer obstacles to trade,
diminished concerns about mergers strengthened productivity and
U.S. economic performance. But I don't think we should stretch
this point too far. The government has important responsibilities in
a capitalist, market economy.
We often think of the appropriate role of government in terms of
provision of so-called public goods like national defense, the
interstate highway system, some aspects of health care and
support for education and research, and so forth. These functions
are important to be sure, but equally important is provision or
regulation of what I call the “soft-infrastructure” in the economy:
adherence to the rule of law, honoring of property rights, assuring
equal access to credit, transparency of accounting standards. We
generally can take the quality of this soft infrastructure for granted
in the United States, which is a tremendous luxury and
advantage. We assume that the rules of the game are in place
and will be adhered to. In much of the rest of the world, and
especially in many developing economies, this infrastructure is
only partially in place at best.
Recently, of course, we have had several glaring examples of
accounting, and more fundamentally, business ethics gone awry.
The rules of the game have been violated. And it has been
amazing to observe how quickly a firm can collapse once its
reputation is called into question, as in the case of Enron. As
Enron's business and accounting practices became suspect, it
lost the ability to obtain funding in the financial markets and from
banks and other traditional financial intermediaries and was
forced to bankruptcy.
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Make no mistake; if Enron-type problems are or become
commonplace, they pose a serious threat. Confidence in financial
reporting could be undermined, and this would adversely affect
asset values, especially in all likelihood equity values.
Fortunately, an Enron-type problem should be largely
self-correcting. Incentives are such that if I were a senior
executive at a publicly owned corporation today, I would act
quickly and aggressively to disclose as much information about
my business as possible, without giving away competitive secrets
or violating any laws, of course. The intent would be to get out in
front on the disclosure issue so as to maintain and to bolster
confidence. The last thing I would want is to have information,
even if innocuous, dragged out in some sort of adversarial
proceeding. Meaningful, voluntary increased disclosure strikes me
as a very good idea at this point.
While Enron may recover and operate at a scaled-down level
post-bankruptcy, its senior officers are unlikely to ever recover
their reputations. This is a sobering observation, because at the
end of the day none of us has much without our good name. And
if you think about it, a solid reputation is absolutely essential in
business, where so many transactions are concluded with a
handshake at the end of a meeting or an “OK” over the telephone
or the click of a mouse.
In the Federal Reserve, we pay a lot of attention to what we call
“reputational risk.” We mean by this term risk to the Federal
Reserve as an institution from the failure to fulfill our
responsibilities well and to manage our resources responsibly, or
the embarrassment we might cause the organization by the failure
to conduct ourselves ethically. Our obsession with reputation risk
is one factor which makes us a conservative organization; but so
much of what we do in the Fed depends on our credibility, both as
an institution and as individuals, and we cannot afford to
compromise it.
Recent leaders of the Federal Reserve, namely Paul Volcker and
Alan Greenspan, are I think widely and deservedly perceived as
men of unquestioned integrity and ethical standards. Having
served and worked with both, I sincerely commend them to you as
models. They are very different personalities to be sure, but both
are dedicated to public service. Both are uncompromising when it
comes to intellectual and ethical commitment and both have gone
beyond the call of duty in the interest of public policy. There is an
old saying to the effect that “the harder you work the luckier you
get” and I think there is something to it.
As you proceed in business, in whatever career, eventually you
will have some tough decisions to make. Most, if not all, are likely
to have an ethical component, and many will affect your
reputation. I have found that difficult decisions really are not so
daunting and complex once I can articulate the decision and the
reasons for it clearly and convincingly, and in a few words or at
most in a few sentences. If I can't pass this self-imposed test, then
I need to think further, and perhaps consult further, before
deciding.
And let me offer one other piece of advice as I conclude these
remarks. Most of you have a 30- or 40-year business career
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ahead. This means that for at least five days a week, 200 plus
days a year, for say 30 years, you will get up in the morning and
go to your job. Given the required time and effort, make sure you
do something you genuinely enjoy and find of value. I realize that
“real world” responsibilities may interfere with this admonition for a
time, because income has to be earned and bills have to be paid.
But if you are going to do it virtually every day, make sure you like
it. Look forward to going to work, not just because it makes life far
more pleasant, although it does, but also because you will find
that with enthusiasm and commitment, you will do a better job and
will, almost automatically, be rewarded.
In closing, let me extend sincere congratulations to all the
graduates and their family and friends here today. In many ways,
graduation is just a beginning, but it is also a significant
accomplishment. So I hope you will celebrate the occasion,
because you deserve to.
Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2002, May 18). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020519_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20020519_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20020519_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}