speeches · July 26, 2007
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Early Childhood Development and Economic Growth
Governor’s Summit on Early Childhood Development
Richmond, Virginia
July 27, 2007
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Early childhood development may seem like an odd topic for a Federal Reserve Bank
president.1 The public policy responsibility for which the Fed is best known is the
nation’s monetary policy – a macroeconomic subject that would seem to stand in sharp
contrast to the more microeconomic focus of Governor Kaine’s summit today. But as a
regional Reserve Bank in a federated central banking system like the Fed, we spend a
good deal of time trying to understand the economies that make up our District, which, as
you may know, includes Maryland, D.C., Virginia, West Virginia and the Carolinas. We
supplement formal data on the national economy with information we gather from
numerous sources – both formal and informal – about economic conditions in our region.
This process gives us an opportunity to observe and learn about the economic trends and
challenges facing the people of our District. It also allows us to observe the range of
public policies and private initiatives undertaken across the District aimed at promoting
local and regional economic growth.
Our interest in growth derives directly from our mandate, which includes both
maximizing employment and ensuring price stability. Although it is now widely known
that the best contribution monetary policy can make to growth is to keep inflation low
and stable,2 understanding the wellsprings of growth is essential to our work. More
broadly, to an economist, comparative economic growth makes an irresistible topic. The
magnitude of the differences in economic well-being across cities, states and nations –
differences that stem directly from decades of historical differences in growth rates – can
be staggering. Indeed, one prominent economist has written that once one starts to think
about these differences, “it is hard to think about anything else.”3
Policymakers at the national, state and local levels generally look for ways to enhance
economic growth in their jurisdictions. In keeping with our status as a nonpartisan
institution, Federal Reserve officials tend to avoid commenting on controversial policy
proposals, especially when such policies benefit some but disadvantage others. On such
issues, I prefer to restrict myself to pointing out what economists know about a policy’s
costs and benefits that may have been overlooked in the public debate. On many issues,
the economics of the question are not decisive, though economics does tend to spotlight
the often-overlooked costs associated with many otherwise seemingly attractive ideas.
On some questions, however, economic research sends a fairly clear message. I believe
that early childhood development is such an issue. I will elaborate in my remarks here
this morning on why I believe this to be the case, but simply stated, my position is that if
government is going to invest in education at all, it should invest in enhancing early
childhood development. For me, this is an economic growth issue. The continual
enhancement of skills over time is essential to sustained growth in economic well-being,
and research indicates that early childhood development is critical to the life-long
development of skills. I need to mention at the outset, however, that although my views
on early childhood development owe much to what I have learned from my colleagues in
the Federal Reserve System, my remarks represent my own personal views.
I come to this conclusion from an understanding of the economics of growth. A moment
ago, I mentioned the disparities in economic well-being across regions. At any point in
time, some nations, states and cities are wealthier, per capita, than others, and over time,
some grow faster than others. Efforts by economists to account for these differences in
growth point pretty convincingly in one direction – human capital, that is, the skills,
abilities and knowledge people possess.
Now it probably sounds like simple common sense to say that a person’s economic well-
being is related to the economic value of their skills. And while skills are difficult to
measure precisely, the measures we do have – on levels of education and work
experience, for instance – show that people with these characteristics tend to have
significantly higher incomes. I’ll have more to say later on about the relationship between
skills and income at the level of the individual worker or household. But first, I want to
talk about the role of human capital in the broader phenomenon of economic growth,
particularly at the level of regions within the United States.
Data on the growth of income per person across the United States and across cities and
metropolitan areas reveals that at least one important measure of skills is consistently
correlated with future growth. That measure is education, and a typical finding is that the
share of the population of a U.S. city or state that had a college degree in 1990 is
positively associated with growth in family income between 1990 and 2000.4 In other
words, the more highly educated the population, the greater the subsequent growth in
economic well-being. Furthermore, population growth in U.S. cities and metropolitan
areas is correlated with education levels, suggesting that places with highly skilled
populations create opportunities that attract newcomers. Similar results have been found
in research that covers different time periods and different geographical designations (for
example, cross-country analyses).
The link between an area’s level of educational attainment at a point in time and its
subsequent growth suggests that the relationship could be causal – that having a greater
skills base enables an area to grow faster. Causality is sometimes hard to establish, and a
great deal of research has been aimed at this question. While such research often is not as
conclusive as one would hope, I think it is fair for us to take as a lesson from the
scientific literature that human capital is an important determinant of a region’s economic
growth.
Note that it is not obvious that the average level of human capital in a region should be
related to future economic growth. One would expect higher average skill levels to be
associated with higher current income, but one might expect regions to grow thereafter at
2
the same rate, independent of their starting point.5 What is striking about the empirical
evidence is that higher current skill levels predict faster future growth, all else equal. One
possible interpretation of this fact is that skills, in addition to boosting current income,
enhance an area’s ability to further build its skill base – “human capital begets more
human capital,” you might say. Economists have identified two distinct ways this might
come about. One is the straightforward notion that certain general skills make people
better at learning new skills. Another involves what economists call “externalities” or
“increasing returns,” meaning that a skilled worker is more productive in a marketplace
or work environment with other skilled workers. The basic idea is simple, though: there is
a bonus when you invest in human capital – you get greater productivity in producing
goods and in producing more human capital.
The idea that human capital promotes growth is, perhaps, not too surprising. After all,
and as I mentioned earlier, it’s quite natural to think of differences in skills as explaining
a substantial part of the differences in income between individual people – why shouldn’t
this logic extend to communities, cities, states, and so on? At the level of individual
workers, in fact, there is abundant evidence that the importance of skill to one’s economic
well-being has grown over the last several decades. This is seen in a growing gap
between the average wages earned by high school graduates and those with college or
advanced degrees.
The growth in this pay differential, or “skill premium,” is a major factor behind the
increase in income inequality that has received so much attention of late. The apparent
reasons for this widening dispersion are germane here. Wages paid to workers at any
particular skill level generally reflect how productive those workers are – how much
economic value their work creates. If the wages of higher-skilled workers have grown
more rapidly than the wages of the less-skilled, then it must be the case that the work
environment has changed in a way that has made the productivity of higher-skilled
workers rise more rapidly.
One change that has had a tremendous effect on the way people work in recent decades is
the application of information technology. And this change appears to have had differing
effects on the productivities and wages of workers at different skill levels. It’s become
commonplace to talk about jobs that have been replaced by automation. These tend to be
relatively low-skilled jobs – involving tasks that you can program a machine to perform,
for example. On the other hand, jobs that require judgment and adaptability to changing
conditions do not lend themselves as easily to automation. In fact, the application of
information technology is likely to enhance the effectiveness of people in such jobs by
relieving them of routine aspects of their jobs.
So technological change has enhanced the productivity of high-skilled workers relative to
low-skilled workers – economists call this “skill-biased technological change.” It can be
thought of as a shift in demand from low- to high-skilled workers. The resulting increase
in the wage premium associated with higher levels of workplace skills provides an
incentive for workers to acquire more education and skills. And college enrollments have
been trending up, which would tend to increase the relative supply of skilled workers and
3
dampen the increase in the skill premium. The fact that the skill premium has continued
to rise essentially means that the (relative) supply of higher skilled workers has not kept
pace with demand.
It is worth noting that the skills that have become most valuable over time seem to be the
general types of skills that come with higher levels of education – as opposed to the very
specific skills that one can gain through experience in a particular job or occupation. This
is an important distinction. It means that moreso than ever before, the path to economic
success lies in education rather than in on-the-job work experience. And if these sorts of
general skills are the key to success, it follows that a lack of skills presents a formidable
barrier to success – for an individual, a community, a state or a nation.
Building a skilled workforce requires investments at several levels, and one important
public policy question involves getting the right mix of public and private responsibilities
for those investments. After all, the evidence that education pays off in the form of higher
lifetime wages means that people should have a strong private incentive to invest in their
own skills.
But there are good reasons why relying on individuals to finance their own investments in
human capital might not be sufficient. One is that, as I alluded to earlier, an individual’s
education benefits society at large, beyond the individual’s increased earning power.
Economists call this type of broader benefit an “externality,” and the traditional case for
public funding of education at various levels rests in part on such effects.
Up to now, I’ve been talking about the role of human capital and investment in skills in
the process of economic growth. Let me summarize the general points. Skills are a key
determinant of individual economic well-being and broader economic growth. Recent
trends in technology have amplified the importance of skills, especially the general skills
that come from education through the post-secondary level. And there are good reasons
for people’s own financing of human capital investments to be supplemented by public
support.
What does this have to do with early childhood? I mentioned earlier that acquiring skills
improves one’s ability to subsequently acquire further skills. Could this logic extend back
to the earliest investments in human capital – those that occur between birth and age 5? I
believe the evidence indicates that the answer is “yes.”
Specifically, there is substantial evidence that differences in early childhood treatment
have long-lasting effects in school performance as well as in a variety of other indicators
of social success.6 Some of these findings come from studies of experimental or pilot
programs in which children receiving different early educational experiences were
tracked over a long time. Two of the most famous of these studies are Michigan’s Perry
Preschool Project and North Carolina’s Abecedarian Program. The Perry Preschool
Project began with a sample of children from low-income families in the 1960s and has
followed their experiences well into adulthood. The study featured random assignment –
half of the sample population was placed in a high-quality preschool program and half
4
was not. Random assignment greatly enhances our confidence in the validity of the
findings, because it minimizes the extent to which different outcomes may be due to
extraneous differences in sample groups. The Abecedarian Program, begun in the 1970s,
also featured random assignment and the assessment of outcomes over a long period –
through age 21.
In both of these studies, program participants were found to show greater success along a
number of dimensions. They generally completed more years of schooling, showed better
scores on standardized tests, and were less likely to need special education services. In
addition, participants had lower rates of involvement in crime and out-of-wedlock births,
and higher rates of employment and home ownership – this last indicator being specific
to the Perry Preschool Project, which followed participants to age 40. In very broad
terms, then, the average participant had a demonstrably better life than the typical
member of the control group. Such striking results appear to give convincing evidence
that well-targeted, high-quality early childhood services can yield benefits well in excess
of their costs.
In addition to these and other relatively small studies, a number of somewhat larger
studies suggest that the benefits from quality early childhood education can be realized
on a larger scale and that the results of studies like Abecedarian and Perry were not
merely due to the specific communities in which they were conducted. For example, a
study in Chicago examined the educational and social experiences of nearly a thousand
Chicago youths from poor households across the city, some of whom had and some of
whom had not participated in the Chicago Child Parent Centers Program when they were
very young. As with the other studies, those having received the early childhood
treatment showed better educational attainment and lower incidence of delinquency and
other social problems.
The association in these studies between enhanced early childhood environments and
improved life outcomes appears to be consistent with the emerging understanding of the
dependence of a child’s early brain development on their exposure to intellectual
stimulation, but that topic is a good deal beyond my area of expertise.
It is worth noting that there are aspects of early childhood development programs that
deserve further research. The most convincing results come from small programs targeted
at particular at-risk populations. One would expect the benefits of such programs to be
greatest for these populations. Returns might be less dramatic for more universal
programs, since presumably they would include more children who are likely to succeed
without a program. Details of program implementation deserve further scrutiny as well.
In particular, the skills and training of the staff seem to be important to a program’s
success, which suggests paying close attention to the design of appropriate qualifications
and standards for early childhood education professionals. All this implies that broader
investments in early childhood education should allow for experimentation with
alternative programmatic models, and should be accompanied by continuing research that
tracks the experiences of participating children over time.
5
Economists like to think about investment in terms of rate of return, and there is reason to
think that the rate of return on early childhood investment could be particularly high. In
fact, Art Rolnick and Rob Grunewald of the Minneapolis Fed have used the results of the
Perry Preschool Project to estimate that the average annual inflation-adjusted rate of
return on investments in early childhood education, targeted to at-risk populations, is in
the neighborhood of 16 percent.7 This compares very favorably with real rates of return
implied by financial markets of around 3 percent, for instance, on long term Treasury
securities. Like any investment in human capital, some of the return accrues directly to
the individual in the form of increased life-time earning ability. But a substantial share of
the return – perhaps as much as three-quarters of the total – is a broader, social benefit,
coming from such sources as reduced costs of remediation and other special services in
primary and secondary school, as well as from the reduced incidence of the array of
social problems often associated with low educational achievement.
There are many explanations for the apparent high economic returns to early childhood
education, but let me briefly highlight one. A key difference between early childhood
investments and investments at primary and secondary education levels is the potential
for compounding that I mentioned earlier. That is, enhancing early childhood
development appears to improve a child’s ability to learn at later stages. This means that
the return on early education comes not just from the direct effects, say on the
development of cognitive ability, but also from the fact that these early investments
increase the productivity of later educational investments. This is a point the Nobel prize-
winning economist James Heckman has emphasized in his writing on early childhood
education.8
This compounding effect means that disparities in early childhood development have the
potential to exacerbate inequality within our society. People with limited means are more
likely to have difficulty providing their children with a high-quality early childhood
environment, leaving those children less able to benefit from later investments in human
capital. This possibility creates, I believe, a legitimate public interest in helping people of
modest means find and afford quality early childhood education. It holds the promise of
expanding the development of human capital more broadly across our society and in so
doing, widening our potential for skill-based economic growth.
So I tend to think of the benefits of early childhood education as providing children in
less-advantaged families and less-developed communities with better preparation for
acquiring the education and skills that expand economic opportunity. For decades,
substantial efforts have been made to improve economic outcomes for disadvantaged
populations by enhancing access to formal educational institutions. The widening of the
skill premium in recent decades demonstrates that those efforts have had only limited
success, and widespread evidence indicates that variations in per-pupil spending have
only limited effects. Parental inputs into a child’s education, on the other hand, explain a
substantial portion of the variation in educational preparedness and outcomes.9 The
promise of early childhood education is that it can begin to address disparities in
educational outcomes, and thus economic outcomes, at a more fundamental level.
6
Having said all that, I should note that the problems facing disadvantaged communities –
problems that limit the realization of human capital potential – are multifaceted, and no
one policy initiative offers a panacea. This is not the place to survey the broader array of
challenges in such communities. I do believe, however, that the new attention to early
childhood development presents a unique opportunity in the area of public policy aimed
at economic development. By broadening the development of human capital, early
childhood education can add to our capacity for growth while also creating opportunities
for the benefits of that growth to be shared more broadly.
1 I have benefited from the help of John Weinberg in preparing this speech, though I remain solely
responsible for the contents.
2 Jeffrey M. Lacker and John A. Weinberg, "Inflation and Unemployment: a Layperson's Guide to the
Phillips Curve," Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond 2006 Annual Report.
3 Robert E. Lucas, Jr., Lectures on Economic Growth, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, p. 21.
4 Glaeser and Saiz (2004), “Rise of the Skilled City,” Brookings – Wharton Papers on Urban Affairs.
Bauer, Schweitzer and Shane (2006), “State Growth Empirics,” Federal Reserve bank of Cleveland
Working Paper Series. This work is also discussed in the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s 2005
Annual Report.
5 Or indeed, one might expect low human capital areas to grow faster and “catch up” with areas that start
with higher human capital.
6 Burr and Grunewald (2006) “Lessons Learned: A Review of Early Childhood Development Studies.”
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis,
http://www.minneapolisfed.org/research/studies/earlychild/lessonslearned.pdf.
7 Grunewald and Rolnick (2003), “Early Childhood Development: Economic Development with a High
Public Return.” Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Fedgazette.
8 Cunha and Heckman (2006), “Investing in our Young People.” University of Chicago manuscript,
http://jenni.uchicago.edu/human-inequality/
9 Heckman and Masterov (2007), “The Productivity Argument for Investing in Young Children.”
University of Chicago manuscript, http://jenni.uchicago.edu/human-inequality/
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Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2007, July 26). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070727_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070727_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2007},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070727_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}