speeches · December 8, 2004
Regional President Speech
Timothy F. Geithner · President
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK ServingtheSecondDistrictandtheNation
SPEECH
National Academy Foundation's 2004 Dinner
December 8, 2004
Timothy F. Geithner, President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Gene, for that generous introduction.
It is a pleasure to be here tonight to celebrate the National Academy Foundation and all of your contributions to this important
mission. I am very pleased to accept this award on behalf of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
I want to compliment Sandy Weill on his commitment to education and the achievements of the NAF. And I want to recognize
three important people from the New York Fed who are responsible for the Fed Challenge:
Steve Malin, Lloyd Bromberg and Bob Diamant.
Among these and other contributions to public service, Sandy serves as a member of the board of directors of the New York Fed. I
want to tell you his reaction to a presentation early this year on our work in financial education. Sandy listened carefully to the
description of the full array of New York Fed programs. Then, in his typically tentative and understated way, with the same soft
approach he brought to building one of the most formidable financial institutions in the world, asked why the Bank didn’t limit its
role in education to simply supporting the National Academy Foundation. His belief, with justifiable pride in the Foundation, was
that there was no more important contribution the Fed could make and no more competent institution engaged in this effort than
the Foundation.
Fortunately for the New York Fed, we have a long and productive collaboration with the Foundation. We provide support on
curriculum design and professional development. We are working together to help create a new high school in the city with a
finance theme. The NAF has adopted the Fed Challenge for its Academies throughout the country. And we benefit in turn by using
the Academy’s work as a model for the economic and financial programs we support and initiate.
If you care about the economic future of America, you have to care about educational reform and the mission of the NAF. This
mission has always been important, but it is particularly important today. Confidence in America depends importantly on success
in the education mission.
Improving educational achievement will play a critical role in generating the innovations necessary to drive future productivity
growth. And yet, U.S. students remain math challenged, and we are awarding a diminishing share of the world’s PHDs in science
and engineering.
Improving the quality of education is vital to improving the capacity of our citizens to manage the challenges that come from
global competition, rapid technological change, and the greater share of the risk they now bear for saving for retirement. The
average American with a college degree earns twice as much as his neighbor without a college education, which is about twice
the premium that existed 40 years ago.
Improving access to educational opportunity for all our citizens, regardless of race or the economic fortune of their parents, is
critical to the credibility of the American ideal of equality of economic opportunity. As Larry Summers has noted, In our country
today, a student whose parents are among the richest quartile of Americans is six times more likely than one from the poorest
quartile to graduate with a B.A. within five years of leaving high school.
And improving the capacity of our present and future tax payers to make informed judgments about economic policy is important
to improving the quality of policy decisions by our elected officials, national and locally. This is vital in an era where we face
tremendous challenges in bringing our commitments and resources closer to balance.
Improving educational achievement, access to educational opportunity, and the level of public sophistication on economic issues
are critical challenges with high returns to progress. This is why we will continue to invest in educational programs and why we are
pleased to work closely with organizations as effective as the NAF in this noble cause.
I take some comfort in the fact that, when NAF students think of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, they know we have an
important role in monetary policy and financial stability. They know we sit on a large amount of the gold and dollar reserves of the
world. But what they think is really cool is the Fed Challenge, and how they can win a place in the national competition. My wife
said to me this morning that the Fed Challenge sounds considerably more fun and exciting than the real thing.
I applaud all of you who contribute to this effort. And I thank the NAF for its tribute to the New York Fed.
Cite this document
APA
Timothy F. Geithner (2004, December 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20041209_timothy_f_geithner
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20041209_timothy_f_geithner,
author = {Timothy F. Geithner},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2004},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20041209_timothy_f_geithner},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}