speeches · November 4, 2015
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
Welcoming Remarks
Energy Interdependence in the Western Hemisphere Conference
Hosted by the Global Interdependence Center
Philadelphia, PA
November 5, 2015
Patrick T. Harker
President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Welcoming Remarks
Energy Interdependence in the Western Hemisphere Conference
Hosted by the Global Interdependence Center
Boehne Auditorium
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Building
November 5, 2015
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good morning and welcome to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Fed
staff and colleagues throughout the Federal Reserve System have had a long relationship with
the Global Interdependence Center, or the GIC. For nearly 40 years, Fed policymakers have
participated in GIC meetings around the world, sharing interests in many of the economic
topics that drive the world’s economy.
We are glad to have the GIC as good neighbors and as colleagues whose good work serves so
many around the world.
We are delighted to provide the venue today for the GIC’s conference on Energy
Interdependence in the Western Hemisphere. I am particularly pleased to see a combination of
engineering and economic perspectives, given my background prior to joining the Philadelphia
Fed in July.
My Ph.D. is in civil and urban engineering, with masters’ degrees in engineering and economics,
so as you can imagine, today’s agenda piqued my interest on a number of fronts. Many of the
topics you will be discussing today are at the intersection of energy and the economy, and I
would have likely found them on my syllabus for courses in either academic discipline.
This topic of energy also is important to me because I am a native son of this region, and I have
watched as energy has become so important to economic growth here in the Third District. I
have served on the operating committee of Select Greater Philadelphia, the marketing arm of
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our Chamber of Commerce, and I know that companies that want to locate here spend time
thinking about the energy issues you will be discussing today.
In January 2015, the Philadelphia Fed asked manufacturers what effect lower energy prices had
on their businesses. Nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of the firms reported positive effects, while
16 percent reported negative effects. A majority of manufacturers reported that falling energy
prices were lowering the costs of production and increasing sales margins.
I believe the Third District has a role to play in the interdependent world of energy in our
Western Hemisphere. Energy has influenced the regional economy in recent years, especially
with the Marcellus Shale natural gas fields in Pennsylvania. According to a 2014 Bureau of Labor
Statistics report, Pennsylvania grew from being the tenth largest state for employment in oil
and natural gas in 2007 to being the sixth largest state in 2012. It also has had the second-
largest employment increase over that same period, second only to Texas.1
Yet, we should not oversell its promise. The Philadelphia Fed’s regional economic team notes
that in our tristate economy, mining has experienced a 6.7 percent annualized job growth rate
from December 2007 through December 2014, mostly attributable to the Marcellus Shale
boom. But the sector still only represents 0.4 percent — less than one-half of 1 percent — of
total employment.
And through meetings and studies within our local areas, the Philadelphia Fed’s Community
Development Studies & Education Department has highlighted the challenges that Marcellus
Shale has had on local economies, including housing shortages during the boom years.2
1 Bureau of Labor Statistics, Monthly Labor Review, February 2014. “The Marcellus Shale gas boom in Pennsylvania:
employment and wage trends” available at http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2014/article/the-marcellus-shale-gas-
boom-in-pennsylvania.htm.
2 Kelsey, Timothy W., and Thomas B. Murphy, “Economic Implications of Natural Gas Drilling in the Marcellus Shale
Region,” article in Cascade: No. 77, Spring/Summer 2011, available at
https://www.philadelphiafed.org/community-development/publications/cascade/77/01_economic-implications-
of-gas-drilling-in-marcellus-shale.
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The robust natural gas drilling that carried this region through the worst of the Great Recession
has likely plateaued in the past few years. Yet, with the energy currently in the ground, we
know it will be a factor for decades to come as we continue to tap known sources and build the
infrastructure to bring natural gas to market and eventually find new ways to use this energy to
drive our economy.
While at the University of Delaware and before that as dean of the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania, I sought opportunities to ensure that these institutions innovated
with their communities. At the University of Delaware, we launched several initiatives,
including the development of a Science, Technology and Advanced Research (STAR) Campus
that has become a center of innovation, focused on research in areas such as health science,
cybersecurity, and alternative energy. We also built an Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering
Laboratory on campus. The 194,000-square-foot laboratory building, which was the first newly
constructed laboratory in nearly 20 years on the campus, brings together students and faculty
from various disciplines to teach, learn, and conduct research in a collaborative environment
about real-world problems, including alternative energy. The building is also home to the
University of Delaware Energy Institute, the Delaware Environmental Institute, and the
Catalysis Center for Energy Innovation.
While not every institution can build a laboratory, I believe that organizations such as the GIC
and the Philadelphia Fed can play important roles by convening the right expertise to discuss
these issues, to be the laboratory of ideas, if you will.
Today’s program is just such an opportunity. You will have an exciting mix of speakers, including
the Honorable Carlos I. Giralt-Cabrales, Consul of Mexico in Philadelphia, who will speak this
afternoon.
This morning, you are scheduled to hear from, among others, Philip Rinaldi, CEO of Philadelphia
Energy Solutions and chair of the Greater Philadelphia Energy Action Team; Dean Joseph
Hughes from the Drexel Institute for Energy and the Environment; and Mine Yücel, senior vice
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president and director of research for the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, who has written
extensively about energy and the economy.
This is not the first, or the last, energy cycle for the region. Just remember Titusville, PA, where
the first oil well was drilled in 1896, or even earlier, the anthracite mines that fueled the
railroads, or even more recently, the refineries that operated in my lifetime along the Delaware
River here in Philadelphia. The task for every era is to ensure that we all work together to drive
innovation by bringing together the right blend of science, technology, business, and
community leaders to foster growth and economic development to use the resources wisely.
With that, I will turn the podium over to our colleagues at the GIC and hope you enjoy the
discussion that will follow. Thank you.
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Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2015, November 4). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20151105_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20151105_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2015},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20151105_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}