speeches · August 8, 2007
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Comments to the 2007 Business Leaders Luncheon | Federal Reserve Ba... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/commen...
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Good afternoon. As President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Independent Reviews
Minneapolis, I regularly hear from the directors of our branch in Banking in the Ninth
Helena, who keep me informed of economic developments in
Montana. All the same, I appreciate the opportunity to see for Connect
myself and meet face-to-face with business and community MinneapolisFed on Twitter
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leaders at events like this. Through these meetings, the regional
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structure of the Federal Reserve System, with its 12 independent
district banks and their regional branches, contributes to a healthy
two-way flow of information between Federal Reserve officials
and the American people, and in a few minutes I?ll come back to
why that?s valuable. But, first, let me talk about the status of
economic education in the United States. Although this may seem
to be a completely different topic, I?ll explain why I see
connections that are important to all of us.
Yesterday I had the privilege of making some remarks in
Washington, D.C., as part of the official release of Nation?s
Report Card on Economics. This Report Card is part of a series of
similar assessments of elementary and secondary educational
achievement that the U.S. Department of Education has
conducted for many years in subjects like reading, mathematics,
science, and more. However, they had never assessed
economics education. That changed in 2006, when over 11,000
twelfth-grade students from 590 public and private schools
nationwide were tested on their knowledge of how markets and
national and international economies work.
I was happy to take part on the panel marking the release of the
Report Card on economics education, for at least three reasons.
First, I clearly think that economic knowledge, and hence
economics education, are important. Although I am speaking only
for myself and not for the Federal Reserve, I will argue that
policymaking becomes easier and more effective the better the
general public understands economics. Second, like many
economists, I think that incentives, and thus accountability, matter.
For that reason, I welcomed the Department of Education?s
decision to extend its program of educational assessment to
include economics.
Finally, and especially, I was pleased that the results of the
assessment were better than I had expected. Seventy-nine
percent of the students demonstrated at least a basic knowledge
of high school economics, and 42 percent performed at a
proficient level, including 3 percent who demonstrated advanced
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knowledge. The assessment also showed that most 12th graders
get at least some economics education in high school. Sixteen
percent said they?d had an advanced economics course, such as
Advanced Placement (AP) economics, and an additional 49
percent had taken general economics. About a quarter of the
students had taken a business course, a personal finance course,
or a course, such as government, that included a unit in
economics. Only 13 percent said they?d had no formal instruction
in economics.
Of course, I still see ample room for improvement, and I hope to
see even better marks in the next economics report card in 2012.
I also hope that the disparities revealed in this Report Card in the
achievement levels of students from different backgrounds will
shrink and, before long, disappear. Nonetheless, as an economic
policymaker, I was encouraged that even now a large majority of
American high school seniors have at least a basic understanding
of economic principles and that many have achieved a degree of
proficiency in economic reasoning. That?s a good base to build
on and a credit to the teachers, parents, and others who guide our
nation?s youth.
Several of those leaders in economics education are in the room
today. I?d particularly like to recognize one of them, our Helena
Branch Manager, Sam Gane. You may know that Sam will be
retiring soon, after a long and distinguished career with the
Federal Reserve in Cleveland, Minneapolis, and Helena. What
you may not know is that since 1999 Sam has been a member of
the board of directors of the Montana Council on Economic
Education and served as the board?s president from 2002 to
2004. At the Branch, he maintained a tradition of partnering with
the Council to sponsor the Montana High School Economics
Challenge, a statewide economics knowledge competition that
completed its 12th year last February. Under Sam?s leadership,
the Helena Branch and the Council also co-sponsored last year?s
first ever Montana Economic Education Summit, and they are
working together on next month?s second annual Summit in
Helena as well. Sam, in addition to noting your many other
contributions, I want to express a special ?thank you? for your
leadership in economic education.
Sam?s upcoming retirement prompts me to make a few
comments about our plans for the Helena Branch. First of all, the
Branch will remain in good hands. We recently announced that
Sam?s successor as Branch Manager will be Paul Drake, the
current AVP at the Branch. Paul has a proven record of
leadership, having worked closely with Sam for many years and
having played a leading role in the difficult but necessary
downsizing and restructuring of the Branch over the past two
years.
This restructuring is part of an overall Federal Reserve System
plan to bring our check processing business not only into the 21st
century but also into the black. As one who has been very close to
this effort, I can assure you that Helena was not singled out. Due
to the rapid decline in the volume of paper checks since 1995, the
Federal Reserve has reduced its check processing sites from 45
in 2003 to 19 by the end of this year, and we expect to be down to
about 4 sites by 2010. As part of our ongoing national
restructuring, we recently announced that check processing at the
Federal Reserve Bank in Minneapolis, a large volume site, will be
phased out as well, in the fourth quarter of 2009.
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Although leaner than before, the Helena Branch will retain key
functions in areas such as banking supervision, cash processing,
and community outreach and economic education. In addition, the
Branch will have a full slate of directors who will continue to play
important roles in providing information on economic and banking
conditions in Montana and helping us reach the people of the
State. In other words, we are committed to maintaining the
Branch?s role in the two-way flow of information that I mentioned
earlier.
In this regard, I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge
and genuinely thank two Helena Branch directors who will be
leaving the Board at the end of the year, namely Joy Ott and Larry
Simkins. Thank you for your service, and for the quality of the
information you brought to the ?table.? One of the strengths of
policymaking in the Federal Reserve is the first-hand, timely
economic intelligence provided by directors like Joy and Larry.
Their information and anecdotes mean that we are not wholly
captive of statistics published with a lag that necessarily provide a
somewhat dated picture of business activity.
On that note, let me try to bring some of the strands of my
remarks together by reviewing how the public?s understanding of
economic principles contributes to good policymaking. As I have
discussed at greater length in other contexts, 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. From 1973 to 1981,
the U.S. economy experienced a period of sustained high
inflation; consumer prices rose by about 9 percent per year, on
average, over that period. 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 just as critical. 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 firm 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 in an effort
to communicate more clearly with the public, including financial
market participants, about its objectives and its policies. Chairman
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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 element of our dual mandate. I think this is an
excellent example of the value of economic knowledge.
The Fed?s commitment to a low-inflation policy, and its increased
emphasis on clearly communicating both that commitment and
the decisions taken to implement it, are part of a world-wide trend.
As explained in an essay by V.V. Chari and Patrick Kehoe in the
Minneapolis Fed's 2006 annual report, central banks around the
world seem to have learned some of the key lessons of modern
macroeconomic theory. This theory stresses that policymakers
must always consider how their current policy choices will affect
expectations of future policies. In a sense, this is an old
lesson—that policymakers can?t say one thing and do another,
and that actions speak louder that words. But modern
macroeconomic theory has clarified how these adages specifically
apply to monetary policy.
There is insufficient time this afternoon to review the arguments
provided in the Annual Report in detail, and I do not want to try
your patience excessively. By the way of summary, let me just say
that, in effect, modern macroeconomic theory stresses the
importance of a high degree of communication and mutual
understanding between the central bank and the public. The
central bank needs to convincingly convey to the public the
substance and logic of a credible long-term commitment to low
inflation. Credibility and transparency also require it to explain its
other objectives, such as the maximum employment objective that
is the second part of the dual mandate of the Federal Reserve.
From this perspective, the importance of economic education is
clear. The public?s understanding of basic economic concepts
and principles is vital to sustaining sound long-term policies in a
democracy. Although citizens can come to a basic level of
economic knowledge through many channels, high-quality
elementary and secondary instruction in at least basic economic
concepts is probably the most efficient and effective method for
achieving widespread understanding.
The importance of clear communication about monetary policy
also helps us understand some of the advantages of the Federal
Reserve System?s regional structure of district banks and
branches. On the one side, having directors, advisory councils,
meetings like this, and other contacts in our districts (and outside
of Washington D.C.) improves both the Federal Reserve?s
understanding of economic conditions and the public?s views of
our policies and of our credibility. On the other side, a regional
presence helps us communicate the substance and rationale of
our policy decisions effectively.
So far, I have focused on monetary policy and the benefits of an
economically educated citizenry, but the benefits extend to other
aspects of Federal Reserve responsibilities. Today we are
witnessing some painful and belated learning, by policymakers
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 opportunities and choice. However, variety
also fosters complexity, which challenges both consumers in their
decision making and financial regulators in their writing and
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enforcement of rules.
This is not the occasion to go into the details of how the Fed 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
regulation aimed at protecting consumers 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 our
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 consumers? informed
decision making and less on broad, formal restrictions. I see the
Economics Report Card that I discussed earlier as setting a good
benchmark for measuring progress toward that goal.
I hope my remarks and the examples I have discussed highlight
the importance of economic education to good policymaking. I,
Sam Gane, 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. Thank
you.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2007, August 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20070809_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20070809_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_20070809_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}