speeches · July 12, 2011
Regional President Speech
Eric Rosengren · President
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Remarks at a Forum on Opportunities and
Challenges Facing New England’s
Smaller Industrial Cities
Eric S. Rosengren
President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Clark University
Worcester, Massachusetts
July 13, 2011
It is a pleasure to be with you today in Worcester as we discuss the opportunities and
challenges facing New England’s smaller industrial cities.1 At the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston,
we are very pleased to be collaborating with our co-sponsors in organizing this forum –
the Mosakowski Institute for Public Enterprise, MassINC, and the Rappaport Institute for Greater
Boston.
I would like to briefly frame the economic context that prevails as we gather today. I think the
economic backdrop only underscores the importance of a practical and constructive forum like this
one, and the need for collaboration and leadership – which are themes of particular focus at this event.
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I should note, of course, that the views I express today are my own, and not necessarily those
of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors or the Federal Open Market
Committee (the FOMC).
The deep recession and slow recovery have had a significant impact on New England’s cities.
At the same time, we should note that our experience of late in New England has been less severe
than that of the nation. The unemployment rate for New England in May, the latest month we have a
regional number for, was 7.9 percent – high, but well below the 9.1 percent rate for the nation as a
whole in May (a number that climbed to 9.2 percent in June). Many of our cities, particularly in the
northern half of New England, have unemployment rates well below the national average. Also,
many cities in New England did not experience the extremes of boom and bust in residential real
estate that plagued some cities elsewhere in the country.
As the economy continues its slow recovery, there are significant opportunities but also
daunting challenges facing our cities. But before discussing those opportunities and challenges, I
would like to briefly describe the national economic outlook.
The National Economic Outlook
As we consider the national outlook, I would note that some have referred to the first half of
this year as a “slow patch” in the recovery. I am not sure that phrase is quite right, however – the
notion of a slow patch suggests strong growth that has been temporarily interrupted by some sort of
headwind or shock, like natural disasters or extreme weather that crimps economic activity. I would
instead describe the past two years as a consistently weak recovery, interrupted by a period of
stronger growth. Let me add that a weak recovery like we have seen is, unfortunately, typical of
recoveries after a financial crisis.2
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Figure 1 shows growth in what we call real final sales, which represents the goods and
services produced in the economy, not including inventories. If one assumes that the economy needs
to grow faster than 2.5 percent – an estimate of what economists call its potential – to yield much
improvement in the unemployment rate, you see that we have had only one strong quarter in this
recovery (the fourth quarter of 2010).
Also, Figure 2 shows that consumers have been particularly tentative during the recovery.
The only quarter in which we saw consumption growth in excess of 2.5 percent during this recovery
was that same fourth quarter of 2010.
In short, the only quarter of strong economic growth so far in this recovery has been the one
containing the holiday season at the end of last year. With housing activity and government spending
likely to continue to be unusually weak for a recovery, we need to see consumer and business
confidence improve so that consumption and investment can offset the weaker growth in other
components of gross domestic product (GDP).
The first half of this year saw the economic recovery impacted by the tragic destruction in
Japan, which disrupted manufacturing supply chains, as well as weather issues ranging from severe
winter conditions to damaging floods. The result is that growth in the first half of this year is likely to
be roughly 2 percent.
As the effects of these problems fade, we do expect a rebound in purchases of consumer
durables to yield stronger growth in the third quarter. I expect economic growth over the second half
of this year to average somewhere in the range of 3.0 to 3.5 percent. While this represents an
improvement from the first half, it is still quite slow given the amount of slack in the economy, and
slower than I had expected at the beginning of this year.
While we are seeing some positive economic signs such as equipment and software spending,
and growth in exports, the employment report issued last Friday was dismal. The national
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unemployment rate rose slightly (a tenth of a percent) to 9.2 percent in June. And net job growth was
very weak over the last two months – job growth averaged only 21,500 over the two-month period of
May and June.3 The employment-to-population ratio fell to 58.2 percent, matching the 28 year low
that we have hit a few times in this recovery.4
Not surprisingly, with so much painful slack in the labor market we are not seeing any
significant wage pressure – average hourly earnings fell slightly this month and have increased only
1.9 percent over the past year – which is consistent with a continued low inflation rate in the medium
term. As Figures 3 highlights, wages are not likely to place much upward pressure on inflation since
compensation is growing only slowly, given weak job markets. In addition, Figure 4 shows that
many commodity prices have stabilized or retreated from their recent highs. These factors give
monetary policy the leeway to remain accommodative, so as to provide the monetary conditions for
improved economic growth.
In addition, there are significant downside risks associated with an outlook that includes only
very slow improvement in the economy. The headlines from Europe continue to remind us of this.
With fiscal austerity slowing down economies both here and abroad, it will in my view be important
to maintain sufficiently accommodative U.S. monetary policy so that national labor market conditions
can improve.
Opportunities and Challenges for New England’s Mid-Sized Cities
So the national outlook is for a continued slow recovery, which of course factors into the
opportunities and challenges for New England’s mid-sized cities we have come together to discuss
today.
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Also, with widespread pressure for fiscal austerity not only impacting Federal budgets but also
budgets at the state and local level, I think we should acknowledge the acute challenges that cities
face in prioritizing expenditures to ensure that program cuts do not impair the ability of their
communities to prosper over the long term.
As we think about their opportunities and challenges, I think it is useful to highlight some of
the trends in New England’s mid-sized cities relative to New England as a whole, and the nation. For
example, Figure 5 highlights the differences in the populations of our mid-sized cities and the rest of
the region and the country with respect to age, at roughly decade intervals. The most recent data
suggest that New England as a whole now has a greater portion of people over 65 and a smaller
portion of people under 15, and age 15 to 24, than the U.S. However, the residents of the region’s
small and mid-sized cities are on average younger than the rest of New England – with a smaller share
of people over 65 and a larger share of people 15 to 24 than both the region and the nation. As for the
portion of people under 15, these cities exceed the region and are basically on par with the nation.
In exploring these trends and characteristics, I would like to offer a few possibilities – in the
interest of generating discussion today.
First, it may be that younger workers “just starting out” are especially receptive to training for
jobs in a growing sector. So this younger profile of our mid-sized cities, and the fact that they are
often the site of medical facilities serving the surrounding communities, together highlight a potential
opportunity. Many of the mid-sized cities may be able to build on their medical-services base. While
medical employers require highly skilled doctors and nurses, they also hire a variety of other
employees in positions that often require only an associate’s or bachelor’s degree. Indeed, our
analysis suggests that the number of jobs in the healthcare industry as a percent of total jobs is much
higher for these mid-sized New England cities than it is for the region as a whole, or for the nation.5
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Worcester is a particularly good example of this, being home to hospitals, the University of
Massachusetts medical school, and medical research firms. Other cities in the region have major
medical facilities with spillover benefits to the broader community, including Providence (with
Brown medical school and partner hospitals), New Haven (with Yale school of medicine and Yale-
New Haven Hospital), greater Hartford (with the University of Connecticut Health Center in the
Hartford suburb of Farmington), and Springfield (with Baystate Medical Center).
Turning to educational characteristics in these cities, Figure 6 shows the percent of the
population with a bachelor’s degree or higher, and with some college education or an associate’s
degree – again at roughly decade intervals. New England has a much higher percentage of college
graduates than the nation as a whole, but a smaller percentage of people with some college education
or an associate’s degree. In contrast, the mid-sized cities have a smaller percentage than New
England or the U.S of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher, or some college education or an
associate’s degree. The trend is up in these cities, however, over time.
This is particularly significant when we note that the unemployment experience over the past
decade has been quite different when segmented by educational attainment, as shown in Figure 7.
This is particularly true over the past several years, when the unemployment rates by educational
attainment have widened significantly from where they were 10 years ago.
All this may suggest that community colleges can and should play a larger role in many of our
mid-sized cities. Community colleges in New England have played less of a role in workforce
development than in some parts of the country, where there is a very close connection between
employers (and potential employers) and the curricula developed and offered at community colleges.
As we think about future developments in our mid-sized cities, it is important that leaders at
community colleges and local business leaders work together in the ongoing development of
specialized curricula that will meet the evolving needs of local employers.
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Figure 8 shows that mid-sized cities in New England are increasingly diverse. Mid-sized
New England cities have a much higher proportion of individuals who were born outside of the U.S.
than the rest of New England or the country, and this has intensified over recent decades. These cities
also have a much higher percentage of individuals who are not proficient English speakers. This
highlights a potential impediment to getting higher education or some jobs.
The availability of English classes remains extremely important, and increasingly so. The
same is true for providing greater access to government programs for those with limited English. For
example, a working paper by the Bank’s Ana Patricia Muñoz shows that small business
entrepreneurship programs often do not target Latino populations.6 State and Federal programs
designed to help fund or provide technical assistance to small businesses may need to increasingly
tailor some of their programs to fit the needs of local populations.
However, despite these challenges I believe that the diversity in our mid-sized cities can also
be a decided advantage. Let me show another chart, Figure 9, which instead of foreign born and
limited English speakers simply indicates the portion of the population that is Hispanic, and the
portion that is African American. You see again that while New England as a whole may be less
diverse than the rest of the nation, our mid-sized cities are more diverse -- and increasingly so over
the decades. Finding ways for businesses to reach diverse populations is likely to become
increasingly important as the country as a whole becomes more diverse, and as technology allows
even small companies to reach markets in other countries. A product or service developed by or for a
diverse population in Worcester or Hartford or another mid-sized city may be a first step toward
accessing diverse markets in the U.S., or even globally.
Moreover, developing successful entrepreneurs within a diverse population could of course be
a source of local economic development. The Muñoz paper finds Latino businesses starting up in
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many of New England’s mid-sized cities, and this can be a source of future job growth if some of
these businesses can grow.
Finally and importantly, I would observe that while New England has fared better than the rest
of the country during the recession and the early stages of the recovery, the same is not true for our
mid-sized cities, as shown in Figure 10. Unemployment rates are much higher in the mid-sized cities
than they are in New England or the country as a whole, in contrast to 10 years ago when the
unemployment rates in the region’s mid-sized cities were below the national average.
Concluding Observations
In summary and conclusion, our mid-sized cities are on average younger, proportionally less
advanced in education, and more diverse than the rest of New England. This provides both
opportunities and challenges, as I have noted.
As many of these cities are regional centers, further developing their activities as medical and
educational centers will be important, particularly given their younger population compared to New
England as a whole.
A theme for this conference is the need to build collaborative leadership. Leaders in
government will need to work collaboratively with leaders in education, the sciences, and businesses
more generally, and find ways to take advantage of some of the differences we see in our mid-sized
cities.
I think we all know this, and the challenge is in finding the best ways to do so, to everyone’s
benefit. It is our hope that this forum will be one avenue for supporting and advancing that
collaboration.
Thank you.
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NOTES:
1 We define mid-sized cities in New England as those with a population ranging from 75,000 to 250,000, excluding
“suburb cities” within 20 miles of Boston – specifically, Bridgeport, CT; Danbury, CT; Hartford, CT; New Haven, CT;
Norwalk, CT; Stamford, CT; Waterbury, CT; Brockton, MA; Fall River, MA; Lawrence, MA; Lowell, MA; Lynn, MA;
New Bedford, MA; Springfield, MA; Worcester, MA; Manchester, NH; Nashua, NH; Cranston, RI; Providence, RI; and
Warwick, RI.
2 As I have discussed in other forums, the following dynamic forms one explanation for why recessions that are
accompanied by problems at financial intermediaries tend to be deeper recessions, followed by slower recoveries. Banks
experiencing large losses are often reluctant to raise additional capital – either because it could signal financial problems
or be perceived as an attempt to avoid diluting existing shareholders. Instead, firms that choose not to raise additional
capital often satisfy capital-to-assets requirements by shrinking their assets, and more importantly for the real economy,
reducing their willingness to lend (loans are assets on a bank’s balance sheet). If this behavior is widespread, it can
significantly reduce credit intermediation. Earlier in my career I studied this dynamic with my colleague Joe Peek, and
our research found such behavior during the credit crunch period in the United States during the 1990 recession and during
the Japanese banking crisis.
See the following from Peek and Rosengren: “The Capital Crunch: Neither a Borrower nor a Lender Be," Journal of
Money, Credit and Banking, vol. 27, no. 3 (August 1995): 625-638. “Bank Regulation and the Credit Crunch,” in the
Journal of Banking & Finance, Volume 19, Issues 3-4, June 1995, pages 679-692. "The International Transmission of
Financial Shocks: The Case of Japan" in the American Economic Review vol. 87, no. 4 (September 1997), pages 495-505.
"Collateral Damage: Effects of the Japanese Bank Crisis on Real Activity in the United States" in the American Economic
Review, vol. 90, no. 1 (March 2000), pages 30-45. "Unnatural Selection: Perverse Incentives and the Misallocation of
Credit in Japan" in the American Economic Review, vol. 95(4), September 2005, pages 1144-1166.
3 About 18,000 jobs were added in June and the May figure was revised to 25,000. The percent change over the two
months is 0.03%. Employment rose by an average of 215,000 jobs per month from February through April but now has
averaged 21,500 jobs over the past two months.
4 The employment-to-population ratio hit 58.2 percent in Dec. 2009, Nov. 2010, and June 2011. It was 58.1 percent in
July of 1983.
5 Using data from the Economic Census, the figure for health care employment in mid-sized cities is almost 30 percent
– twice as large a proportion as for the U.S. or New England – but it should be noted that the figures are calculated as a
percent of total jobs that are available in the Economic Census, which excludes several job-heavy sectors (like elementary
and secondary schools, colleges and universities, public administration and employees in most government owned
establishments like public utilities). Using different data sources that include many of these sectors suggests health care is
over 22 percent of jobs in mid-sized Massachusetts cities, just under 15 percent in New England, and around 12 percent in
the U.S. Either approach suggests that health care is a very important sector for jobs, in absolute terms and compared to
the U.S. and rest of New England.
6 Ana Patricia Muñoz, "Small Businesses in Springfield, Massachusetts: A Look at Latino Entrepreneurship", a Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston Community Development Discussion paper with Lynn Browne, Sol Carbonell, Prabal
Chakrabarti, DeAnna Green, Yolanda K. Kodrzycki, Anna Steiger, Richard Walker, and Bo Zhao (2011). Available on the
Bank’s public website at the following link: http://www.bostonfed.org/commdev/pcadp/index.htm
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Collaboration and Leadership in
Smaller Industrial Cities
Eric S. Rosengren
President & CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Clark University
Worcester, Massachusetts
July 13, 2011
EMBARGOED UNTIL WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 2011 9:10 A.M. EASTERN TIME OR UPON DELIVERY www.bostonfed.org
Figure 1
Growth in Real Final Sales
2009:Q3 - 2011:Q1
Percent Change at Annual Rate
8
7
6
5
4
Potential Growth in Real GDP
3
2
1
0
2009:Q3 2009:Q4 2010:Q1 2010:Q2 2010:Q3 2010:Q4 2011:Q1
Source: BEA / Haver Analytics 2
Figure 2
Growth in Real Consumption
2009:Q3 - 2011:Q1
Percent Change at Annual Rate
5
4
Potential Growth in Real GDP
3
2
1
0
2009:Q3 2009:Q4 2010:Q1 2010:Q2 2010:Q3 2010:Q4 2011:Q1
Source: BEA / Haver Analytics 3
Figure 3
Employment Cost Indexes for Civilian Workers
1983:Q1 - 2011:Q1
Percent Change from Year Earlier
7 1
6
1
Total
5
Compensation
1
4
3
0
2
Wages &
0
1 Salaries
0 0
1983:Q1 1986:Q1 1989:Q1 1992:Q1 1995:Q1 1998:Q1 2001:Q1 2004:Q1 2007:Q1 2010:Q1
Recession
Source: BLS, NBER / Haver Analytics 4
Figure 4
Commodity Prices
January 3, 2011 -July 11, 2011
West Texas Intermediate CrudeOil Corn Wheat
Dollars per Barrel Dollars per Bushel Dollars per Bushel
120 8.0 15.0
115
7.5 14.0
110
105
7.0 13.0
100
6.5 12.0
95
90
6.0 11.0
85
80 5.5 10.0
3-Jan-11 28-Mar-11 20-Jun-11 3-Jan-11 28-Mar-11 20-Jun-11 3-Jan-11 28-Mar-11 20-Jun-11
Source: WSJ / Haver Analytics 5
Figure 5
Selected Age Groups as a Share of Total Population
Percent
25
United States
20 New England
New England Mid-sized City Average
15
10
5
0
1990 2000 2005-2009 1990 2000 2005-2009 1990 2000 2005-2009
% Under 15 % 15 to 24 % Over 65
Source: Census Bureau (1990 and 2000), American Community Survey (2005-2009, 5-Year Estimates) 6
Figure 6
Educational Attainment of
Population 25 Years and Older
Percent
40
United States New England New England Mid-sized City Average
30
20
10
0
1990 2000 2005-2009 1990 2000 2005-2009
% Bachelor's Degree or Higher % Some College or Associate's Degree
Source: Census Bureau (1990 and 2000), American Community Survey (2005-2009, 5-Year Estimates) 7
Figure 7
United States Unemployment Rate
by Educational Attainment
Percent
12
High School Graduates, No College
10 Some College or Associate's Degree
Bachelor's Degree or Higher
8
6
4
2
0
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note: Figures are for December of each year from 2000-2010 and for May 2011 and for population 25 years and over
Source: Census Bureau and BLS, Current Population Survey 8
Figure 8
Foreign Born and Limited English
Shares of Total Population
Percent
25
United States New England New England Mid-sized City Average
20
15
10
5
0
1990 2000 2005-2009 1990 2000 2005-2009
% Foreign Born % Who Don't Speak English "Very Well"
Source: Census Bureau (1990 and 2000), American Community Survey (2005-2009, 5-Year Estimates) 9
Figure 9
Hispanic and African American
Shares of Total Population
Percent
25
United States
20 New England
New England Mid-sized City Average
15
10
5
0
1990 2000 2005-2009 1990 2000 2005-2009
% Hispanic % African American
Note: A small number of persons self-identified as both African American and Hispanic are included in both shares
Source: Census Bureau (1990 and 2000), American Community Survey (2005-2009, 5-Year Estimates) 10
Figure 10
Unemployment Rate for the United States,
New England, and New England Mid-sized Cities
Percent
12
United States
10 New England
New England Mid-sized City Average
8
6
4
2
0
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Note: Figures are for December of each year from 2000-2010 and for May 2011
Source: Census Bureau and BLS, Current Population Survey / Haver Analytics 11
Cite this document
APA
Eric Rosengren (2011, July 12). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110713_eric_rosengren
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110713_eric_rosengren,
author = {Eric Rosengren},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110713_eric_rosengren},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}