speeches · December 6, 2007
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Remarks at the Early Childhood Research Collaborative Conference | Fe... https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/remarks-...
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NB: The italics in this talk are from the original speeches. Banking in the Ninth
Let me begin by welcoming you, once again, to the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and also by telling you what a Connect
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pleasure it is to sponsor this conference with the University of
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Minnesota. I've had the privilege of leading this institution for a RSS Feeds
number of years now, and it has been a rewarding experience to
observe and participate in the fruitful relationship that exists
between the Bank and the University.
Working together, the University's economics department and the
Bank's research department—and you would be forgiven if you
think those are one and the same—have produced research that
has sparked revolutions in economic theory and monetary
policymaking, and has even helped spawn a Nobel Prize or two
along the way. In addition, this academic partnership—which is
further realized by the Bank's cooperation with the University's
Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, its Journalism and Law
schools, and other departments—has generated educational
programs and influenced public policy initiatives, often in
surprising ways. In that regard, perhaps none is more surprising
than forming an Early Childhood Research Collaborative and
holding research conferences on the subject of early childhood
development.
I use the word "surprising" because when you think of the Federal
Reserve and its research and policy responsibilities, the first topic
that comes to mind is likely not early childhood development.
Frankly, it is unlikely to be even the second or third topic that
comes to mind. But that's changing. Increasingly, state and local
governments are looking to their Federal Reserve banks for
support on this emerging issue—and not just the Minneapolis
Fed. Why is this happening? Let me begin to answer that question
by citing some recent speeches by my colleagues in the Fed:
Sandy Pianalto said that when she became president of the
Cleveland Fed, she asked her research department to put a
sharper focus on the issues that are shaping her district.
Education was at the top of the list. "We all should care about this
issue," Sandy said, "and I am convinced that it begins with early
childhood education."
Janet Yellen, president of the San Francisco Fed, has noted that
"skill acquisition is a cumulative process that works most
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effectively when a solid foundation has been provided in early
childhood. As such, programs to support early childhood
development, such as preschool programs for disadvantaged
children, not only appear to have substantial payoffs early but also
are likely to continue paying off throughout the life cycle."
Finally, a few words from Jeff Lacker at Richmond: "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."
So as you can see, other Federal Reserve banks have also been
out front on this seemingly un-Fed-like topic. But let me step back
and put these statements in a broader context that will further
explain why the Federal Reserve has taken an active interest in
early childhood development.
As all of you know, this country's central banking system includes
12 district banks and a Board of Governors in Washington, D.C.
While the role and purpose of those 12 district banks could be the
subject of a separate speech, one clear function of those banks is
to understand what makes their regional economies tick. This
recalls Sandy Pianalto's charge to her research department: Tell
me what issues matter most to our district's economy.
This charge is one shared by all Federal Reserve banks, and it is
a responsibility that has attained a sharper focus in recent
decades as Congress has passed a series of laws, beginning with
the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, to ensure equal access
to financial services and equal opportunity for all citizens. More
than just supervising banks to ensure that they are upholding the
letter of the law, Federal Reserve banks are working with their
local communities on issues ranging from housing to credit
availability to education.
But it's not just our district economies and our legal mandates that
have motivated us to take a hard look at education: This topic
circles back to core economic research, the very kind that the
Bank and University have contributed to over the years. One such
field of investigation is that which compares the economies of
various countries and tries to answer one of the most vexing
questions in economics: Why are some nations rich and others
poor?
Bob Lucas has made important contributions to this line of
research, especially on the issue of human capital. In a 2003
Annual Report essay for the Minneapolis Fed, Lucas made a key
point that has relevance for the work done by many of you in this
room: "It is a unique feature of human capital that it yields returns
that cannot be captured entirely by its ‘owner.' … These pervasive
external effects introduce a kind of feedback into human capital
theory: Something that increases the return on human capital will
stimulate greater accumulation, in turn stimulating higher returns,
stimulating still greater accumulation and so on." The key words
there are "and so on." To all of you familiar with the benefit/cost
ratio attributed to certain early childhood development programs,
the "and so on" of these programs adds up to some serious
positive external effects.
On the question of the comparative wealth of nations, Lucas
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famously said that once you start thinking about that question, it's
hard to think of anything else. I would suggest that the same is
true at a more micro level for the United States: When you start
thinking about why some states and cities are richer than others,
it's hard to think of anything else. It's a motivating question that,
when you come right down to it, frames much of the economic
and policy debate in this country. And if the answer to this
question involves human capital, then the next question follows:
Why are some states and cities better educated, or better at
education, than others? These are the types of questions that
perplex policymakers and economists, and also Federal Reserve
banks, and that's why we keep asking them.
And, of course, there are no easy answers, which is why all of you
made the questionable decision to travel to Minnesota in
December. You would think that with all of that intellectual
firepower that I referred to at the beginning of this speech, we
would have picked a more temperate month for you to pay a visit.
Or maybe this just reveals how serious we are about this topic,
and how seriously all of you take this issue.
Before I close, I want to briefly describe the current efforts under
way here at the Minneapolis Fed on this issue. As many of you
know, Art Rolnick and Rob Grunewald, following on the work of
some of you in this room, have been making the economic case
for early childhood programs for at-risk children for a number of
years. Over this time, they have been challenged by skeptics to
bring their ideas to scale. It's one thing to cite focused studies with
relatively small numbers of families and tout the high returns,
these skeptics say, but it's quite another to actually implement
those ideas in a broad way.
Art and Rob accepted that challenge and drafted a proposal that,
in effect, puts the market to work to stimulate demand and create
a supply of quality child care programs. I won't go into the details
here, but I will add that Art and Rob's plan—as adopted by the
Minnesota Early Learning Fund, a unique nonprofit funded mostly
by corporate donations—will get its first real test in St. Paul
beginning in January, when 1,200 at-risk families will receive
scholarships for high-quality child care. Additionally, other Twin
Cities school districts, as well as those in rural Minnesota and
other parts of the country, have begun programs that incorporate
Art and Rob's market-based approach. Will the skeptics be proved
wrong? Time will tell, but as an economist, I can say that I'm
hopeful. Finally, I would like to end with a fitting quote from Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke, who gave a talk earlier this year on this
very subject:
"Although education and the acquisition of skills is a lifelong
process, starting early in life is crucial. Recent research—some
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in
collaboration with the University of Minnesota—has documented
the high returns that early childhood programs can pay in terms of
subsequent educational attainment and in lower rates of social
problems, such as teenage pregnancy and welfare dependency.
The most successful early childhood programs appear to be those
that cultivate both cognitive and noncognitive skills and that
engage families in stimulating learning at home."
There's that partnership again. And in that quote, Bernanke also
makes reference to the academic work underpinning this
conference, for he cites research by Jim Heckman, who of course
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is in attendance. And speaking of Jim, I would be remiss not to
acknowledge the huge debt that the profession owes him for
almost single-handedly establishing the economic bona fides of
this issue. His research was the foundation for the work produced
at this Bank and by the University and has influenced every
serious economic and policy research project on this issue, which
means he has also had a vicarious hand in many of the policy
reforms taking place across the country—however nervous that
makes him feel.
Thank you very much.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2007, December 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20071207_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20071207_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2007},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20071207_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}