speeches · August 7, 2007
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Comments on Release of the Nations Report Card Economics 2006 | Fed... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/commen...
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I am pleased to join you this morning for release of the first Banking in the Ninth
Nation's Report Card on economics for at least three reasons.
First, I clearly think that economic knowledge, and hence Connect
economics education, are very important. Although I am speaking MinneapolisFed on Twitter
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seems clear to me that economic policy-making becomes easier
and more effective the better the general public understands
economics, and I will return to this theme shortly.
Second, like many economists, I think that incentives, and thus
accountability, matter. For that reason, I welcome the decision of
the National Assessment Governing Board to extend their
program of educational assessment to include economics.
Assessment programs can be costly, for the assessors and the
assessed alike. By drawing on its broad experience in educational
assessment, the National Assessment can minimize these costs,
so that they are outweighed by the benefits of enhanced
incentives and accountability.
Finally, and especially, I am pleased to see that our nation's
economics report card is perhaps a bit better than I would have
guessed. As a member and former chair of the board of directors
of the National Council on Economic Education, I certainly see
plenty of room for improvement, and I think this assessment can
help guide our efforts toward more effective education in
economics. As a result, I hope to see even better results, and
smaller disparities among students of different backgrounds, in
the next economics report card in 2012.
But as an economic policy maker, I am encouraged that even now
a large majority of American high school seniors have at least a
basic understanding of economic principles and that over 40
percent have reached the Proficient achievement level set by the
Governing Board. That's a good base to build on and a credit to
the teachers, parents, and others who guide our nation's youth
and need our support to achieve even better results.
I'd like to draw on my experience as a Federal Reserve Bank
president to expand a bit on how the public's understanding of
economic principles contributes to good policy-making. As I have
discussed at greater length elsewhere (Top of the Ninth, The
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Region, June 2006), enduring economic progress and prosperity
depend on public institutions' ability to commit to policies that are
optimal over the long haul, across the temporary ups and downs
of the business cycle. In a democracy, such policy commitments
can only be sustained with broad public support, and public
support for good policies depends, in turn, on voters' competence
in basic economic reasoning.
Tangible evidence of the connection between good policies and
public understanding can be found in our experience with
monetary policy during and after the 1970s. Over a decade before
today's high school seniors were born, the U.S. economy
experienced a period of sustained high inflation. From 1973 to
1981, consumer prices rose by about 9 percent per year, on
average. These high inflation rates distorted economic decisions,
hindered growth, pushed interest rates to record levels, and
weakened our financial system. Adding to the problem was the
widespread view that high inflation was here to stay, a "fact of life"
to be accepted and adjusted to. Today we know that this view was
too pessimistic.
Under Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve made a commitment to
get inflation down and keep it down. Chairman Volcker kept that
commitment, and it has been unambiguously extended by his
successors, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke.
Although the Federal Reserve's firm commitment to a policy of
long-term low inflation was essential in this process, support from
the public was critical as well. This was especially so during
Chairman Volcker's tenure, when the shift to a consistent
anti-inflationary policy entailed painful adjustments for many
consumers and businesses. Chairman Volcker's public statements
helped guide the public to a consensus that inflation hurts
economic growth and thereby, over time, most citizens.
Inflation has now been reasonably well contained for roughly two
decades or so, and the consensus in favor of price stability has
been sustained. One reason, I think, is that under Chairman
Greenspan, the Federal Reserve took a series of steps to
communicate more clearly with the public, including financial
market participants, about its objectives and its policies. Chairman
Bernanke has embraced and extended that effort. As a result, the
public continues to understand the long-term benefits of low
inflation and thus to support the Federal Reserve's pursuit of this
objective as one important element of our dual mandate. I think
this is an excellent example of the value of economic knowledge.
The public was educated about inflation at a high price, amidst the
economic dislocations of the 1970s and early 1980s. I prefer that
economic education be pursued more benignly, in the classroom
and the press, and more proactively, before rather than after it is
needed. So I regret to note that today we are again witnessing
some painful and belated learning, by policy-makers and
consumers alike, in our consumer financial markets.
As you are probably well aware, consumers today have access to
a wide array of borrowing and savings options. In itself, variety is
good, because it expands choice and opportunity. However,
variety also fosters complexity, which challenges both consumers
in their decision-making and financial regulators in their writing
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and enforcement of rules.
This is not the time to go into the details of how the Federal
Reserve and the other financial regulators are responding, but I
would like to use some simple economics to make a connection
between financial regulation and economic education. In short, I
view consumer regulation and consumer education as substitutes.
If consumers are more educated and able to make good decisions
on their own, regulations can be narrower and more focused on
clearly abusive practices such as deceit and fraud.
This is valuable, because as the scope of regulation widens, so
does the cost. I'm not just referring to enforcement costs, which
are high enough. More significant, in my view, are the extra
compliance burdens that broad regulations impose on legitimate
transactions and the opportunities forgone when legitimate
potential transactions are prevented outright.
Don't get me wrong. In some cases it is necessary and
appropriate that we bear these costs in order to prevent even
greater abuses elsewhere. However, regulation involves a tradeoff
between preventing harm to some and allowing innovation, gains
from trade, and free choice for others. At any given time, we write
regulations as best we can to balance that trade off. Over time,
however, we hope that better economic education will soften the
trade off and allow us to rely more on the informed decision-
making of consumers and less on formal restrictions.
In closing, I hope my remarks help to highlight the importance of
economic education and of The Nations Report Card on
Economics. I and many other Federal Reserve staff are actively
involved in supporting economic education. We know that clear
communication about public policy and an economically
well-educated public are crucial in sustaining good monetary and
regulatory policies and, in turn, a prosperous economy.
Accordingly, we value the economics report card as a solid
benchmark for measuring progress toward the complementary
goals of better education, better policy, and economic growth.
Thank you.
For more information go to: Economics Report Card.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2007, August 7). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070808_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070808_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2007},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070808_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}