speeches · August 5, 2019
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
Welcome Remarks
Neuroeconomics and Financial Decision Making:
Foundations and Applications in New Domains Symposium
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Consumer Finance Institute
Philadelphia, PA
August 6, 2019
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).
Welcome Remarks
Neuroeconomics and Financial Decision Making:
Foundations and Applications in New Domains Symposium
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Consumer Finance Institute
August 6, 2019
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good morning and welcome. I’m a big fan of bridging conversations across disciplines, so I want
to applaud Larry and the team at the Consumer Finance Institute for pulling together such an
eclectic — and esteemed — group of experts, including my old friend and former colleague,
Colin Camerer.
Economics may be the dismal science, but it’s far from an exact one. And despite the myriad
tools and equations at our disposal, there’s one remarkably unpredictable variable that forever
complicates the results: human behavior. Neuroeconomics is relatively new territory, but it’s
important to seek out new insights — in fact, we could use a little more of it. Given humanity’s
inherently capricious nature, the more expertise and angles of analysis, the better. The richness
of context it adds is more important now than ever, as the U.S. economy ventures into new
territory: As AI and machine learning fundamentally alter the unfolding employment landscape;
as a new economic normal takes hold, even as a record-long expansion continues; and as many
of our traditional models and modes of assessment have begun to lose their predictive and
evaluative prowess.
I have a background in engineering, so it’s in my DNA to take a step back every once in a while
and reassess structures: Do we have all the information we need? Are we still using the right
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models? Is there new analysis or insight that could make them more effective? And, crucially,
do we know what we don’t know?
I’m not saying we should throw out the old tools. But I do think we should contextualize them
in the light of new information. And I do think it’s important to solicit information from outside
traditional bounds.
The economy is not a fixed structure; it’s an ecosystem — a living, breathing organism informed
by the people and entities that comprise it. As a policymaker, my judgment is influenced by the
behaviors and patterns I see as much as by economic orthodoxy. And at a time when far more
of the variables appear to be uncertain — or unruly — new insights are especially valuable to
the discipline and study of economics.
So I’m very pleased that we could host this discussion today, and with that, let me turn the
floor over to Bob Hunt.
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Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2019, August 5). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190806_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20190806_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2019},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20190806_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}