speeches · September 7, 2017
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
Welcoming Remarks
New Perspectives on Consumer Behavior in Credit & Payments Conference
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, PA
September 8, 2017
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System
or the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
Welcoming Remarks
New Perspectives on Consumer Behavior in Credit & Payments Conference
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, PA
September 8, 2017
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Hello and welcome; it’s great to have everyone here.
I’m going to keep my remarks to a minimum today, but I do want to take some time to express what I
think is truly one of the most important areas of modern economic research. Which, being just one of the
many opinions I’m going to share in the next 10 minutes, is a good place to stop to deliver the standard
Fed disclaimer that the views I express today are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect those of
anyone else in the Federal Reserve System, including my colleagues on the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
In 2001, one of my predecessors stood on this very stage at the first Consumer Transactions and Credit
conference, making the case for the newly launched Payment Cards Center (PCC). Today, I’ll be making
the case for that center’s evolution. In some ways, there may as well be a century and a half, rather than a
decade and a half, separating our two discussions. In others, some messages from that conference still
resonate today.
Reading Anthony Santomero’s remarks with the benefit of 16 years’ perspective is a lesson in the power
of research and, given the prescience of his case, something of an exercise in humility.
His view back then was that individuals’ use of consumer credit and payments had been relatively
neglected in the research community. That was starting to change with the emergence of ever more
complex financial vehicles, particularly relating to the mortgage market. But, by and large, he said we
were still a long way from a sophisticated model of household decisions on spending, saving, borrowing,
and allocation of assets. He said that “In short, the detailed payoff patterns associated with the debt
instruments issued by the agent were entirely too mundane for the theorists’ consideration.”
What a difference a few years would make and how much we all wish those instruments had actually
been mundane.
Today, the place of consumer credit and payments, and its attendant research, is markedly different than it
was in 2001. But the foundation of the Philadelphia Fed’s continued focus remains the same: The Third
District is home to the credit card industry, and we have years of research and expertise dedicated to the
study of all things consumer.
1
So today, I’m incredibly pleased to say that we’re building on that legacy and the work of the Payment
Cards Center by launching the Consumer Finance Institute (CFI).
This is an evolution rather than a rebranding or a new initiative. The Payment Cards Center will
contribute to the CFI, along with researchers in our Supervision, Regulation, and Credit; Community
Development Studies & Education; and Research departments. Our goal is to make the Consumer
Finance Institute a primary source within the Federal Reserve System for consumer finance data and
research.
I hold the relatively straightforward belief that we should play to our strengths, and this expansion is an
expression not only of the importance of consumer finance but the skill and expertise of our staff.
We’ve built on the great work of Bob Hunt, Julia Cheney, and the team in the PCC and created a new
consumer finance section in our Economic Research group, led by Satyajit Chatterjee. Chatty will be
joined by Wenli Li, and I’d like to take a moment to welcome Igor Livshits and Andrew Hertzberg. Just a
plug for our fantastic research team, and a thanks for their work. I’d advise everyone to look out for
Andrew’s upcoming article in The Journal of Finance. It’s a great example of how the close study of
household behavior — in this case, understanding that households are actually made up of interdependent
individuals — gives us valuable, and surprising, insights into consumption behavior. That’s important on
a number of levels but particularly from my perspective as a monetary policymaker.
Which leads me to something I find so surprising about Anthony Santomero’s words not too many years
ago. The absence of a fully developed field of robust research on consumer credit fundamentally indicates
that we didn’t acknowledge that it touches every aspect of the economy. Consumer issues are intertwined
and interwoven, inextricable from virtually every economic issue. From entitlement programs to business
formation to health care, as Nathan Blascak is going to present later today, there’s nothing in the
economy consumer credit doesn’t touch.
Perhaps it’s simply more stark in the wake of the financial crisis and its aftermath, but it seems to me
there’s no way to look at the economy without factoring in the work and research you all are doing.
So I’m going to let you get on with that discussion, now that I’ve shamelessly plugged all the great work
of the staff here at the Philadelphia Fed. I want to thank the conference organizers, who reviewed 140
submissions this year, and Mike Dotsey, our director of Research, for his role in overseeing the CFI and
realigning some of his research team to work in such an important area.
With that, thanks for coming and enjoy the rest of your day.
2
Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2017, September 7). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170908_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20170908_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2017},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20170908_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}