speeches · October 8, 2014
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
Opening remarks by James Bullard, President and CEO
39th Annual Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Fall Conference
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Oct. 9-10, 2014
It is my pleasure to welcome you to the St. Louis Fed 2014 Fall Conference. This is the 39th year
for this conference. I want to thank Bill Dupor and Yongseok Shin for putting this very
provocative program together. I am looking forward to the stimulating discussion these papers
are sure to inspire over the next day and a half.
At the St. Louis Fed, we have long tried to provide perspectives on whether the policies
adopted in the past still serve us well today and whether recent developments at the frontier of
research can be fruitfully applied to improve policy. This agenda has become especially
important in the past few years, as the Fed and central banks around the world have struggled
to devise appropriate policy responses to the current macroeconomic situation.
In polite economist society, there has long been a distinction between what is known as
“frontier” research and what is sometimes called “policy” research. In my view, this has been
and continues to be a false dichotomy. There is no such distinction: “Policy” and “frontier”
research are two sides of the same coin. We need to understand both how fundamental
mechanisms in the economy operate as well as how current data can be interpreted in terms of
fundamental theory.
In short, advanced economic theory has to be made more relevant for actual policy, and actual
policy has to understand and embrace the sometimes difficult ideas advanced in the theoretical
world. The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis has long been a leader in supporting research at
the intersection of economic theory and economic policy.
We are fortunate this year to have an outstanding group of speakers whose research expands
our understanding of key contemporary issues in macroeconomics.
This year’s agenda includes papers on a host of macroeconomic topics, including:
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A paper on new ways to measure product market frictions and the role these distortions
play in explaining the so-called “labor wedge;” and
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A paper on using disaggregated data to assess the ability of demand stimulus to increase
inflation.
We will hear about research on labor markets and education, including:
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A paper concerning the Affordable Care Act’s likely effect on household incentives and
work-schedule decisions;
Work on changes in U.S. job-to-job flow patterns following the Great Recession and the
associated implications for unemployment;
A paper on how financial shocks have diminished the ability of labor markets to match
idle labor with vacancies; and
Research on the impact of state-level higher education subsidies on the education and
migration decisions of young people.
We also have a set of papers concerning banking regulation issues, including:
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A paper examining circumstances under which mandatory disclosure requirements on
banks may be beneficial;
Work looking at banking sector regulatory reforms that can promote competition and
lead to greater voluntary transparency; and
Research on whether it is ever beneficial to require banks to hold more than their
otherwise-preferred level of government bonds.
I know that these papers and the ideas they contain will contribute importantly to the
macroeconomic discussion in the coming years as the papers are eventually published and the
results become more widely known in the profession. The St. Louis Fed is proud to provide this
forum for discussion and analysis of the leading issues of the day.
Let me again welcome all of you to the St. Louis Fed 2014 Fall Conference. Thanks very much
for coming, and now let’s get to work!
Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2014, October 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20141009_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20141009_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20141009_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}