speeches · April 30, 2012
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
What’s Different about Economic Development in Indian Country?
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Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Growing Economies in Indian Country: A National Summit
Washington, D.C.
May 1, 2012
∗
I thank Dorothy Bridges, Doug Clement, Sandy Gerber, Michael Grover, Jacqueline King, Dick
Todd, and Susan Woodrow for their contributions to these remarks.
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Good morning, and welcome to Washington, D.C., and the home of the Federal Reserve
System’s Board of Governors. Actually, I am a guest here myself. My own home base is the
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, one of 12 independently managed Federal Reserve Banks
whose districts span the country. I’m delighted to see so many people joining in this
conversation today. I think I speak for all of us here when I thank the staff at the Board of
Governors for graciously hosting this event. I should note that the following views are my own,
and not necessarily those of others in the Federal Reserve.
I just mentioned the Federal Reserve System’s regional structure. This structure, in place for
nearly 100 years now, was established by Congress for a very deliberate reason. Congress
wanted to ensure that the nation’s central bank keeps in touch with economic issues at the
grass-roots level across the United States. The Fed benefits greatly from this regional structure
and the community access it allows.
In our critical monetary policy responsibilities, it helps us understand how economic policies
affect Main Street as well as Wall Street. In our financial supervision and regulation
responsibilities, it gives us a window into the operations and impact of the entire financial
system, from global giants to local banks. In our role as a provider of payments services to the
public and the U.S. Treasury, it allows us to perceive and respond quickly to changes in
technology and demand. Finally, the Federal Reserve’s decentralized structure also helps us
monitor and respond to regional economic issues affecting low- and moderate-income
communities, including Native American reservations, through our Community Development
departments.
The Federal Reserve System made good use of this regional structure last year, when it co-
sponsored six Growing Economies in Indian Country workshops across the country. Community
Development staff at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and the Reserve Banks of
Minneapolis, Boston, Chicago, and San Francisco helped organize these well-attended and
thought-provoking events. Our invaluable partners in this effort included nine federal agencies
and numerous national, local, and tribal organizations and individuals.
Two crucial differences that shape Indian Country development
Today we gather to discuss and respond to the concerns and recommendations that were
voiced at those workshops. We’re honored to have a number of distinguished presenters who
will address issues raised separately or commonly at the six forums. Before we hear from them,
however, I hope you’ll allow me a few minutes to offer some thoughts on economic
development in Indian Country.
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My ideas have clearly been influenced by the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank’s work in this
area. For the past 20 years, our Community Development department has worked from the
ground up with tribal and private sector leaders in Indian Country to strengthen the
institutional foundation for economic growth on reservations. Most notably, they have helped
develop and implement secured transactions laws and related initiatives. The aim of these
efforts: to facilitate the flow of credit and entrepreneurial opportunities on reservations.
Today we will be hearing many additional ideas for institutional and policy reforms that may
enhance economic development in Indian Country. I will try to frame our discussion by asking
what I hope is a clarifying question: How does Indian Country economic development differ
from rural economic development more generally? I realize that a number of reservations and
homelands are in or near urban areas. Nonetheless, I think that the rural location of many of
the larger and poorer reservations justifies a comparison between Indian Country and rural
development. And I should say that by “Indian Country,” I mean the self-governing Native
American and Alaska Native communities and reservations throughout the United States, as
recognized in federal law.
My thinking will be guided by a crucial assumption. In particular, I assume that Indian Country
residents and leaders place a high value on preserving their native cultures and their tribal
sovereignty. This statement may seem obvious to most of you, but I will argue that it clarifies
what is special—and perhaps unique—about Indian Country economic development.
The goal of preserving tribal cultures and sovereignty creates two key differences between rural
economic development in general and Indian Country economic development in particular. One
difference involves the often painful and disruptive process of population loss through out-
migration. Despite such costs, large-scale out-migration from poor rural regions has been a
major force for poverty reduction around the globe. But in Indian Country, it is an especially
unattractive option, because population loss would threaten the viability of the tribe as a
distinct cultural entity. Heightened resistance to out-migration is therefore a special
characteristic of economic development in Indian Country.
The second important difference arises from the distinctive legal arrangements required to
maintain meaningful tribal political sovereignty. The most prominent example is a topic we will
hear more about today—special restrictions on the ownership of land that are necessary to
preserve the reservation land base. Although critical for maintaining tribal sovereignty, Indian
Country’s special restrictions on land ownership raise economic development issues that are
rarely encountered in other rural economies. In Indian Country, therefore, conventional
thinking about rural development needs to be adjusted for two special factors—population
retention and restrictions on land ownership. Many of the issues we are discussing today deal,
directly or indirectly, with how to make the required adjustments to our thinking.
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I hasten to add that I offer my views with a great deal of humility and an open mind. Unlike
almost everyone else in the room, I am not an expert on Indian Country. Nor am I here to tell
you what needs to be done. I speak as an economist and as a Federal Reserve Bank president
with concerns for his district. I hope you will find my comments useful in organizing your own
thinking today and perhaps in the future. By the same token, I look forward to hearing your
views and refining my own thinking through our dialogue. Please note that, to simplify my
discussion, I will hereafter focus my remarks on Native Americans and their reservations. These
are the peoples and geographies I am most familiar with in the Minneapolis Federal Reserve
district. I ask the audience to make appropriate adaptations of my language to apply, where
relevant, to other Indian Country geographies and peoples as well.
The economic gap
Today, as you know, Native Americans on reservations continue to face economic
disadvantages relative to other Americans. For example, the American Community Survey
assesses the employment status of working-age individuals, defined as 16 years and older.
From 2006 through 2010, just over 45 percent of working-age Native Americans on reservations
were employed, compared with almost 60 percent of all working-age Americans. Partly as a
result, the median annual income among Native American households on a typical reservation
was under $35,000 during that period. This compared with $52,000 for all American households
and about $37,000 for all Native American households, on and off reservations. As a further
consequence, about 25 percent of the Native Americans on reservations lived in households
with incomes below the official poverty level during this period, compared with 14 percent of
Americans overall.
These gaps are even larger on more remote reservations, including several in my district.
Consider, for example, North Dakota’s portion of the Standing Rock Reservation, which exactly
coincides with Sioux County, North Dakota. For 2006 through 2010, about 84 percent of Sioux
County’s residents were Native American. On average, over this period, just 37 percent of the
working-age Native Americans in Sioux County were employed. This contributed to a median
household income of only $31,000 and a 47 percent poverty rate for Native Americans in Sioux
County during these years. Again, this is compared with $52,000 for all American households
and a 14 percent poverty rate for all Americans.
Of course, it may not be fair to compare a very rural location, like Sioux County, with national
averages heavily weighted toward major metropolitan areas. However, Sioux County still lags
significantly when compared with rural nonreservation counties, even its immediate neighbor,
Grant County, North Dakota. Grant County is equally rural and remote, but its population is 97
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percent white. Almost 62 percent of its working-age population was employed during the 2006-
2010 period. Higher employment helped households there earn a median income of almost
$37,000, more than 25 percent higher than the Native American households in Sioux County.
Only about 13 percent of Grant County residents lived in poverty during 2006-2010.
By these very basic economic measures, therefore, Sioux County’s Native Americans lagged well
behind other Americans not only nationally, but also just next door in Grant County. To be sure,
not all reservations fit this pattern, especially those with small populations and gaming
operations located near major metropolitan areas. Nonetheless, the economic gaps between
Sioux County and Grant County, North Dakota, are not uncommon among the large
reservations in remote rural areas. Our conversations today will largely focus on how to close
those gaps.
A success that points to one distinctive feature: Retaining population
The economic gaps I’ve just cited may not tell the whole story about Sioux and Grant counties
and the many other rural reservation and nonreservation areas like them. As I mentioned,
population retention is of fundamental importance to Native American tribes. By that measure,
Sioux County has been significantly more successful than Grant County.
Between 2000 and 2010, Sioux County’s population grew by over 2 percent, while Grant
County’s population dropped by almost 16 percent. Other nearby counties with mostly white
rural residents also experienced large population declines. Although there are again exceptions,
similar patterns prevail in and around many of the remote rural reservations in the American
West. It seems to me that the relatively strong retention or growth of the Native American
population on rural reservations is an important success in its own right. It shows that these
reservations are not fading away. Indeed, it indicates that many Native Americans value the
way of life there, despite continuing economic disadvantages.
At the same time, reservations’ success in population retention points to another of the
challenges of Indian Country economic development. Over the past century in the United States
and around the world, one of the most pervasive responses to rural poverty has been out-
migration. Voting with their feet, workers shift from low-paid rural agricultural and resource-
based jobs to higher-paid urban work. As workers leave, the rural labor supply contracts. The
result is higher wages and incomes for the remaining rural workers, compared with what they
would have earned in the absence of rural-urban migration.
As a response to rural poverty, out-migration has been lamented by most rural communities,
but ultimately accepted as nearly inevitable. For tribes, however, the stakes are higher;
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accepting out-migration as the cure for reservation poverty would threaten the very existence
of the tribe as a viable cultural and political entity. Many reservations in remote rural areas thus
face a special challenge. They must raise residents’ incomes without resorting to the levels of
out-migration that have helped raise personal incomes in many other rural counties.
Looking once again at Sioux County on the Standing Rock Reservation, we find 3.8 residents per
square mile in 2010. This compares to 2.4 or even fewer residents per square mile in the
neighboring nonreservation counties of North Dakota. Standing Rock’s tribal leaders probably
see this relatively high population density as a measure of success. And I suspect that,
compared with nearby county commissioners, they are even more determined to raise
residents’ incomes in place rather than accept population decline as a response to poverty.
I think that this difference applies to most reservations. And it is one of the distinctive
challenges we confront as we seek to promote Indian Country economic development. Several
broad topics identified in this conference’s white paper are directly germane to boosting
reservation household incomes without shrinking the reservation workforce and tribal
population. These topics include education, workforce development, and physical
infrastructure.
A failure pointing to another distinctive feature: Preserving land base
A strong population base alone may help preserve distinctive Native American cultures. But
preserving tribal political sovereignty requires a land base. Tribal sovereigns, like sovereigns in
general, rule only over the real estate that is officially under their jurisdiction.
The political sovereignty that is based on tribal land sometimes creates development
opportunities. The tribal gaming industry is probably the most familiar example. However,
special institutions are needed to preserve the reservation land base. And these institutions are
a second factor that differentiates Indian Country and rural economic development.
History suggests that reservations do require special arrangements to preserve their land base.
The 1887-1934 Allotment Period can be viewed as an experiment in what can happen with
weak restrictions on the transfer of tribal land to outside entities. The results were stark, and
damaging to tribal sovereignty. Between 1887 and 1934, the land area clearly under tribal
jurisdiction fell by 65 percent. In addition, the land within official reservation boundaries often
became a hard-to-administer checkerboard. Tribally controlled parcels were frequently
scattered among those not under tribal control.
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To reestablish tribal sovereignty and stem further loss, the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934
made it more difficult to remove tribal lands from the trust system administered by the Bureau
of Indian Affairs. These changes were largely successful in preventing further loss of tribal land.
However, many of the participants in last year’s conferences raised concerns about the trust
system. They pointed out that it also makes it hard to conduct some basic business
transactions, such as using trust land to collateralize business loans or home mortgages.
This gives rise to one of the special challenges of Indian Country economic development. That
challenge? To develop creative methods to safeguard the tribal land base while simultaneously
facilitating the efficient economic use of reservation land. Is an incrementally improved version
of today’s trust land system the best solution? Or do we need a more radical change? If the
latter, what would the new system look like? I don’t have the answers to those questions, but
they seem very important, and I look forward to hearing your thoughts on this matter. We may
also want to expand our dialogue to include new participants with relevant expertise in the
design of financial contracts.
Finding harmony between tribal traditions and economic development
I have discussed population retention and preservation of land-based tribal sovereignty as two
special objectives that make Indian Country economic development different from
conventional rural economic development. I don’t mean to say that these are the only
differences. For example, the difficult historical experience of Native Americans has left a
number of obstacles that will still take time and considerable effort to address. Examples
include lower personal wealth, and in some instances, ill-fitting tribal constitutions written by
outsiders.
Compared with off-reservation localities, reservations also deal with a distinctive array of
federal programs and often more distant relationships to surrounding state governments. In
addition, tribal governments are actively establishing additional business laws and legal
institutions in order to protect tribal interests and cultural values on reservations.
The recent adoption of updated tribal secured transactions laws is a good example of this. My
Community Development staff has worked on this effort for many years with tribal leaders
across the country. Like the institutions that govern reservation land ownership, tribal business
laws need to be artfully crafted to achieve their intended cultural or political objectives. And
the challenge, in part, is to do so while imposing the least possible burden on access to capital,
economic efficiency, and overall economic development.
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In fact, that’s how I see our two-part task today. We must seek policies, laws, and institutions
that enable tribes to pursue the cultural and political objectives they truly value. And we must
design them so that they won’t unduly impede necessary development. Success in this effort is
extremely important. I believe it will contribute significantly to closing the large and regrettable
economic gaps that prevail in Indian Country today.
That’s an ambitious goal for just one day, but I can sense that the people in this room have a lot
of motivation, and plenty of energy: So, let’s get to it.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2012, April 30). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120501_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120501_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120501_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}