speeches · May 21, 2004
Regional President Speech
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. · President
For Release on Delivery
4:00 p.m., EDT
May 22, 2004
Remarks
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
at the
Commencement
School of Business
Virginia Commonwealth University
Siegel Center
Richmond, Virginia
May 22, 2004
Dean Sesnowitz; distinguished members of the faculty; proud parents and other family
members; guests; and, of course most importantly, members of the Virginia Commonwealth
University School of Business Class of 2004: thank you for your welcome and the privilege of
sharing a few reflections with you this afternoon on this very special occasion. As accomplished
students of business, you know that when a firm determines that a particular approach to some
aspect of its business works in practice, it's a good idea to stick with the approach. The same is
true in life more broadly. Sometime ago, the newspaper columnist Ann Landers asked her older
readers who had enjoyed long and happy marriages to write in and share some of the secrets of
their successful relationships. One reader from a small town in North Carolina wrote in and told
Ms. Landers that the secret of his 63-year marriage was an agreement with his wife to go out for
dinner and dancing twice a week, every week. She went on Tuesday; he went on Thursday.
There is a similar key to success in making commencement speeches: keep them short,
and I will follow that rule here today. To use a concept from mathematics that is often applied in
economics, brevity may not be a sufficient condition for a successful commencement speech,
but it is definitely a necessary condition.
But while I may keep my remarks brief, I am nonetheless enormously impressed by what
all of the members of this class have achieved in earning a degree from this School. I am
impressed because I know from direct experience how good the School of Business at Virginia
Commonwealth University is. I know and have worked with many members of your faculty for
years. Perhaps even more importantly, your alumni are employed and play key roles at all
levels of our Bank's diverse operations, and I can tell you without any exaggeration that they
shine. Beyond this, the Bank has collaborated with the School in a variety of endeavors over
the years. One such activity, highlighted in one of your recent newsletters, is the Bank's
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participation in your internship program. We are very proud to have had at least this limited role
in helping the School achieve its mission.
I'm also comforted to know that men and women with the high caliber business training
and practical experience that you have had are entering the business world at this juncture.
Calvin Coolidge famously said — or at least is said to have said — that the business of America
is business. Sometimes that remark is recalled in a perjorative way as exaggerating the
importance of business. But, in the aggregate, the daily business of business is simply
allocating resources in our economy effectively to meet the needs and aspirations of American
households and businesses, and, in a dynamic context, growing these resources.
Consequently, if business isn't healthy, the economy won't be healthy. And when the economy
isn't healthy, the strength of our society is likely to be stressed.
I think most people would agree that American business was, in fact, less than healthy in
2002 when the egregious behavior of some corporate leaders, and the financial and accounting
professionals who supported them, produced the most widely publicized corporate governance
scandals in recent memory. It appears that those involved constituted a small minority of the
talented, industrious, and highly principled people who lead most American businesses. But the
scandals seriously weakened the public's confidence in the integrity of businesses and business
people generally. Fortunately, the disease was far from terminal, and the scandals are
gradually fading from the public's consciousness — due in no small measure to the high
standards of the vast majority of American business leaders I just noted. These high standards,
in turn, reflect the emphasis on business ethics at this School and other business schools.
Still, our recent experience has given us a taste — and probably a useful one — of what
could happen to American business generally if unethical behavior ever became truly
widespread and persistent. Therefore, I challenge you to hold yourselves to the highest
standards in your careers and in your lives, and to demand the same of your associates. This is
the right thing to do; it is also the profitable thing to do. A successful business accumulates and
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uses a variety of assets in conducting its business: its work force, its plant and equipment, its
financial assets, and so forth. Trust and creditability may not be measured precisely by a line
item on a firm's balance sheet, but their value is embedded over time in the firm's market
valuation. I have no doubt you will meet this challenge.
As I participate with you in this happy celebration, I am reminded of the college
commencements of my two sons. My older son graduated in 1992, the year of the first of the
two recent “jobless” recoveries. My younger son finished in 1997 in the midst of one of the
tightest labor markets in many years when the private business leaders on our Bank’s board of
directors complained constantly about the difficulty of finding even entry-level workers. This
class will be entering a market somewhere between these two extremes.
It was only a few weeks ago that I and many other economists and policymakers were
very concerned about the sluggish growth in jobs, despite the pronounced acceleration in GDP
growth and in other measures of economic activity in the second half of last year and early this
year. As you may know, the most recent developments in the job market are very encouraging.
Jobs overall grew at a solid pace in March and April, and most economists now expect more of
the same in the months ahead. So while your job search may be a little more challenging than
the one your predecessors in the late 1990s experienced, I think your prospects are good.
Indeed, I suspect many of you already have positions and are looking forward to moving on.
More broadly, I am firmly optimistic about your longer-term prospects for successful and
satisfying careers. I once heard an optimist defined as the passenger on the Titanic who
thought the ship was stopping in the middle of the ocean in the middle of the night to take on a
fresh load of ice. Many people — maybe most people — are skeptical of optimism currently,
including optimism about the longer-term future, in view of the continuing threat of terrorism, the
challenges we face in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East, sharply rising fuel prices, and the
other domestic and global risks we are reminded of daily.
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But I am optimistic, and I believe my optimism is readily defensible. You will be entering
an economy that is currently enjoying accelerated productivity growth. Moreover, this high
growth may well be sustained in the years ahead as businesses and workers adopt the
numerous, broad-based recent advances in information technology and other technologies.
Higher productivity growth may seem to be an abstract concept of interest mainly to economists,
but it means more and better jobs and a substantially higher standard of living for you and your
families over the course of your careers. And despite the recent run-up in fuel prices and some
other commodity prices, I am confident the Federal Reserve can and will sustain the low
inflation environment that we have spent much of the last two decades establishing — and the
firm foundation low inflation provides for strong economic growth.
Someone once asked Willie Nelson what par was on a golf course he’d just purchased
in Austin. He replied that par was anything he wanted it to be. For instance, he said, the hole
they were currently playing was a par 47, and he’d birdied it the day before. In at least a
somewhat similar way, I believe that the favorable economic fundamentals I just described,
together with the knowledge you’ve acquired here at Virginia Commonwealth University, will
empower you to make your careers whatever you want them to be. Naturally I hope you will set
standards that are more like Willie’s standards when he sings than when he plays golf.
You have all been required to complete many assignments over your years here, and I
expect that you would like to get away from them for a while. I have one more assignment for
you, however, that you really must complete if my optimism about your future prospects is to be
validated. Your assignment is to confront the major economic and social policy issues our
nation faces and deal with them more effectively than my generation has. Business school
graduates, which you will all be momentarily, are particularly well positioned to do this. You are
trained to analyze complex problems, array options for solving them, and then decide among
the options.
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The list of these issues is long. It includes the federal budget deficit, which is
manageable at its current level, but which, in the absence of policy adjustments, is likely to grow
substantially as the baby boomers begin to retire only a few years from now. You may be weary
of listening to people like Chairman Greenspan and me complain about the deficit, but if it
continues to rise, the increasing federal government demand for resources that drives it will
reduce overall investment in the economy, reduce the economy’s longer-term growth, and
diminish the improvement in living standards you and your families would otherwise enjoy over
the course of your careers.
An issue I hope you will give particular attention to is the growing disparity of income and
wealth across American households that is already straining our social fabric, and which will
strain it further if this trend continues. It is certainly true that the raw data on income distribution
may exaggerate the problem, since many people move up from lower income categories to
higher categories over their lifetimes. But many people do not, and if the disparities widen
significantly further, the risks are obvious.
The most effective way to resolve this problem seems obvious enough to me: much
better educational opportunities for all Americans, but especially young people in low income
neighborhoods. Making progress in this arena is a huge challenge, but I will tell you how you
can help. Join the Federal Reserve and other organizations that are working across the country
to increase basic economic and financial literacy among disadvantaged young people. Help
teach them the importance of saving and investing and the longer-term rewards of doing so.
Even more important, teach them how to find a job and then keep it and advance in it so they
will have a growing income from which to save and invest. Teach them how to use credit
wisely. Teach them how to develop their own longer-term financial strategies to build wealth
over time, and introduce them to the basic tools — like balance sheets, income statements, and
cash flow analysis — that will empower them to plan and track their progress. Helping build
financial literacy would be a great way for you to give back to the communities where you will be
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working. The return on your investment will be substantial, even if it doesn’t come in the form of
a big check.
These are my assignments for you, and I hope you will accept them. Winston Churchill
once said, “Sometimes it is not enough to do your best; you have to do what’s required.” I think
that sentiment applies here. Resolving the issues I’ve identified should be a high national
priority. I am confident you can and will accept the challenge.
It is a privilege and a pleasure to extend my congratulations to each and every member
of the class of 2004, and to wish you success and satisfaction in your careers. You’ve truly
earned it. Good luck and Godspeed!
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Cite this document
APA
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. (2004, May 21). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20040522_j_alfred_broaddus_jr
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20040522_j_alfred_broaddus_jr,
author = {J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2004},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20040522_j_alfred_broaddus_jr},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}