speeches · April 13, 2011
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
Economic Development in Indian Country
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Hometown Helena
Helena, Montana
April 14, 2011
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Introduction
Good morning. I am pleased to be here and have a chance to talk with you. My ability to
engage in this kind of dialogue reflects the characteristically American design of the Federal
Reserve System. Unlike most central banks, the Fed was designed to be a regional organization,
so that residents of cities and rural areas from across the country can hear from central bank
officials in person and directly add their voices to the monetary policy process. I and my senior
management colleagues regularly hear from our boards of directors and advisory councils at
both the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank and our Helena branch, and I really appreciate the
opportunities I have to get out to Helena and other Ninth District cities and communities.
Often, at events like this, I provide comments on the economic outlook or monetary
policy and then interact with the audience, to get their insights into the issues facing
households, businesses, and local governments. I find those opportunities incredibly valuable,
both to communicate what the Fed is doing and to hear how our policies, and economic forces
generally, are affecting people like you.
Today, however, I want to forgo my usual monetary policy themes and talk about
another way in which the Federal Reserve interacts with citizens at the local level to promote
economic prosperity. I have in mind our Community Development program, which collaborates
with partners across the Ninth District to enhance the foundations of an open and accessible
market economy. More specifically, I want to talk about some important work our Community
Development staff are engaged in, much of it here in Montana, to assist tribal leaders who are
strengthening the institutions of business law that prevail on Indian reservations. First,
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however, I must note that the views I present are mine and not those of the Federal Reserve
System or the Federal Open Market Committee.
Community Development
The Fed’s Community Development function is not the most prominent of our policy
tools, but it provides a useful complement to our better-known tools, such as monetary policy
and banking supervision. For example, one of our staff in Helena, Sue Woodrow, helped found
the Montana Financial Education Coalition as part of her Community Development work to
ensure that low- and moderate-income Montanans would know how to access credit markets
prudently and effectively. But that same effort provides a broader benefit to the Fed, because
monetary policy is also more effective if consumers and business owners understand concepts
like inflation and compound interest. For another example, Sue and her colleagues gathered
intelligence last year on the factors that were impeding the flow of credit from banks to small
businesses, one of the sectors targeted by our Community Development program. But the
results of that exercise were also shared with management in Minneapolis and ultimately with
Chairman Bernanke at a national forum in Washington.
Our Community Development program has roots in the Community Reinvestment Act of
1977, which requires federal regulators to assess that financial institutions are meeting, safely
and soundly, the credit needs of their entire community or market, including credit needs in
low- or moderate-income neighborhoods. Out of that basic regulatory responsibility, the
Federal Reserve gave the Community Development program the mission of supporting the
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Fed’s economic growth objectives by working beyond our walls and independently from our
bank examiners to promote fair and impartial access to credit and financial services.
In pursuing this mission, the Minneapolis Community Development team often works
with external partners to shore up the foundations of a well-functioning market economy,
including initiatives on financial education like the one I mentioned. This year, they also will
work to strengthen organizations that provide training and credit to small businesses, to assist
foreclosure and housing counselors, and to support organizations that foster rural development
and post-foreclosure neighborhood recovery. In a very local but important way, these efforts
supplement the Fed’s other policy tools for promoting economic growth.
Work in Indian Country
As you might imagine, the range of issues our Community Development staff might try
to address is vast. I should note, by the way, that we do not operate as a foundation and thus
do not provide cash contributions or donations to any organization. Our community
development work is primarily conducted through staff work on outreach, technical assistance,
and analysis. To thoroughly cover the entire community development field would take
significantly more staff than we have. So we have identified some high-priority areas where we
think we can make a difference by focusing our efforts. One of our highest Community
Development priorities is the one I want to focus on this morning—supporting tribes as they
strengthen the legal foundations of their Indian Country economies. By the way, I am using the
term Indian Country as a consistent term to describe the many self-governing Native American
communities throughout the United States.
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A New Voyage of Discovery
I find these efforts to strengthen legal foundations of Indian Country economies to be
very interesting and full of potential, but thinking about them here also reminds me of their
historical roots. A bit over 200 years ago, Lewis and Clark and their Corps of Discovery passed
near here on a federally sponsored voyage that launched a powerful transformation of
Montana and the American West. That transformation led to tremendous economic
development, but, as we know, also relegated most of the region’s tribal societies to
reservations. For decades thereafter, the tribes’ affairs were largely administered by federal
officials who permitted them very little local autonomy. Partly as a result, economic
development lagged on most reservations, leaving them as pockets of sharp rural poverty.
Federal policy began to shift in the 1930s, with passage of the Indian Reorganization Act,
which led to the drafting of numerous tribal government constitutions. But federal policy
wavered for another 40 years, including a significant shift away from tribal recognition and
sovereign rights in the 1950s. By the 1970s, however, civil rights activism and a shift toward
market-oriented economic policies created a consensus in support of greater tribal self-
government. A combination of executive orders and the Indian Self-Determination and
Educational Assistance Act of 1975 finally put federal support for tribal sovereignty on firmer
footing. Despite some unsettled issues, a new realm of meaningful tribal sovereignty within the
United States was opened up.
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This realm remains fairly new and is still incompletely mapped out. I am tempted to say
that tribes are now on a new voyage of discovery in search of the most suitable institutions to
govern their own affairs, including in the important area of business law and regulation. From
an outsider’s perspective, at least, the impetus for this search is simple. In the United States,
the bulk of our practical, everyday business law is state, not federal, law. But tribes are
sovereign, to varying but significant degrees, with respect to state law. That is, state laws and
state legal procedures and institutions often do not apply, or do not clearly apply, to business
disputes on reservations. Unless appropriate tribal laws and institutions are in place, the result
can be a vacuum, a real or perceived lack of business law and related institutions on
reservations. Not surprisingly, this has a chilling effect on business and economic development.
Fortunately, since the 1930s and especially since the 1970s, a number of tribes have
pioneered the development of laws and institutions that support growth while respecting tribal
traditions. In the Southwest, for example, the Navajo have developed both an extensive body of
written law and a strong system of courts to coherently administer a blend of written and
Navajo traditional law. Later, I will also discuss work here in Montana. Nonetheless, the voyage
has only begun, and much remains to be learned and done.
Our Work
The Minneapolis Fed’s Community Development program is proud to assist in this
journey. For many years, we have helped Ninth District tribes explore how to make good use of
their renewed sovereign powers, with a special focus on helping tribes develop the legal and
institutional foundations of a strong private business sector. This fits neatly into our general
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strategy of shoring up the foundations of a sound and inclusive market-oriented economy; in
fact, I regard it as perhaps the best example of that strategy.
Some of our work in this area goes back many years, but the thrust of our current
efforts took shape early in the previous decade here in Montana. Through the initiative of Sue
Woodrow, who is our Helena Branch Community Development staff person and an attorney
with experience on Indian reservations, we began to take an active role in national efforts to
draft model tribal business laws.
What is a model law? It’s essentially a recommended starting point that a legislative
body can use in drafting and passing real laws. For example, states often base their business
laws on the model laws developed by a voluntary organization called the Uniform Law
Commission.
About 10 years ago, the commission took a new direction by undertaking to draft a
model secured transactions law for tribal governments. Secured transactions laws are basic to
modern business finance. These laws allow a business owner to pledge movable property, like a
truck or machine the business owns, as collateral for a loan. State governments have provided
for this bread-and-butter business activity by adopting versions of the commission’s Uniform
Commercial Code (UCC) for states and, in particular, its Article 9 on secured transactions.
As I’ve noted, however, state law does not automatically extend to transactions on
reservations. So unless tribes take similar steps to adopt secured transactions laws, creditors
may hold back from making collateralized loans to reservation-based businesses. There are
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ways to try to work around this problem, and some tribes had adopted varying types of secured
transactions laws to fill the gap. Overall, however, big gaps remained, and the existing tribal
laws in this area were often incomplete, confusingly divergent, or out of date.
The Uniform Law Commission chose to address this problem head on. Under its
leadership, a team of business law experts and tribal leaders gathered to devise a model
secured transactions law that would both support collateralized lending on reservations and
respect key aspects of tribal sovereignty. The team also understood that an effective model
tribal act would need to be free-standing, unlike the UCC’s Article 9, which frequently refers to
other UCC articles. We were very pleased to make Sue Woodrow available to serve on this
team of experts.
In 2005, after four years of work, the group put forward a new model Tribal Secured
Transactions Act, or model STA, for tribal governments to consider. Just as states decide
whether to adopt the Uniform Law Commission’s model acts, tribes are free to make use of the
model STA as they wish. However, to help tribes make an informed decision, our Community
Development program prominently includes the provision of information about the model STA,
which we pursue through our publications, a new Indian Country page on our website, and
presentations and meetings all around Indian Country.
Since 2005, a growing number of tribes have reached the conclusion that the model STA
can help them. Again, the way was paved here in Montana. Crow tribal leaders were involved in
advising the Uniform Law Commission on the model act and were also quick to undertake the
process of adapting the model act to meet their specific needs. The tribe passed its customized
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version of the model STA in April 2006. Since then, other tribes in the Ninth District and beyond
have adopted versions of the model STA, including the Oglala Sioux in South Dakota, the Mille
Lacs and Leech Lake Ojibwe in Minnesota, the Ponca in Nebraska, and the Osage
in Oklahoma, while others are actively considering it.
Community Development’s support has not ended with adoption of the tribal STAs, and
for good reason. The act is important, but achieving its full potential requires a system for filing
liens, judges who are trained to understand and enforce it, and lenders who understand and
trust it. To assist tribes in putting these elements in place, our Community Development staff
have organized training materials and events on the STAs for tribal judges, lenders, attorneys,
and other interested parties. They have also helped tribes negotiate with state governments to
use existing state lien filing systems. We were thus very pleased when the compact that was
negotiated here, for the Crow tribe to use the state of Montana’s lien filing system, was
nationally recognized with a ceremonial signing at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on February
6, 2008.
Recently, our work in Indian Country has broadened in three new directions that
complement our earlier work. First, to assist Indian business owners to articulate and overcome
barriers to tribal economic development, the Minneapolis Community Development staff have
helped organize Indian business alliances, or IBAs, in Montana, South Dakota, Minnesota, and
Wisconsin. These statewide coalitions of tribes, financial institutions, nonprofit organizations,
corporations, colleges and universities, and government agencies work to encourage and
support Native small business owners and entrepreneurs. Although each alliance is unique,
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they all have committed to working on four building blocks of sustainable business
development in Indian Country: governance, infrastructure, finance, and business training and
support resources. The Montana IBA is quite active, and we expect to work with them to host a
conference in Montana on tribal economic development issues and opportunities later this
year. Similar events with our other IBAs are also in the works this year.
Second, we have again made Sue Woodrow available to the Uniform Law Commission,
this time to assist in drafting a model tribal probate code. This project is in its early stages but
further exemplifies our support for tribes’ efforts to modernize their legal institutions in
support of economic development.
Finally, I have challenged my Community Development staff to evaluate the impact of
their efforts to assist tribes in the development of tribal business laws and institutions. Part of
their response will be to compare key aspects of the business environment on a number of
reservations, in order to assess which factors seem to be associated with better economic
outcomes. This is a new and challenging research effort, but I hope we will be able to report
some results by next year.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I have noted that Indian tribes have embarked on a voyage of discovery of
their renewed sovereign powers and capacity for local governance. Our Community
Development program has strongly supported this journey for many years and will continue to
do so. As you can see by visiting our website, our Indian Country work fits into a broader
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strategy that touches Montana and the rest of the Ninth District in many ways. Nonetheless, I
regard our work with tribes who are modernizing the legal and institutional foundations of their
reservation economies, much of it done right here in Montana, as the leading example of how
our Community Development program rounds out the Federal Reserve’s approach to economic
policy and economic development.
Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2011, April 13). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110414_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110414_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110414_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}