speeches · October 18, 2020
Regional President Speech
Raphael Bostic · President
The Benefits of a Diverse and Inclusive Recovery
Raphael Bostic
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Annual Meeting of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
October 19, 2020
• Atlanta Fed president Raphael Bostic is speaking to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association about how the economic recovery benefits some parts of the economy much less
than others.
• Bostic said he and his macro team have turned to a mathematical symbol, the less-than sign, to
describe the present conditions as characterizing a “less-than recovery.”
• Bostic pointed out that while parts of the economy and the population are prospering, moving
on an incline, a considerable portion is moving in the opposite direction, as represented by the
descending leg of the less-than sign.
• He said that these circumstances are laying bare—and exacerbating—disparities that have long
plagued our economy, along ethnic, racial, gender, geographic, and occupational lines. The Fed
must participate in a deeper, more creative reckoning with a history of racial injustice that
continues to weaken the economy for all of us.
• Turning to monetary policy, Bostic said the Fed’s new approach should help minorities, women,
and lower-income earners be more fully connected to the labor market.
• He is comfortable with the Fed’s current policy stance but wants to be clear that once we are
past the current crisis, he will heartily support the removal of the Fed’s emergency vehicles.
• Bostic said that he and his colleagues will work to make sure the Federal Reserve is a place that
people look to for thoughtful solutions to issues around racial equity and historic disparities.
Thank you, Ken, for the kind introduction and thanks for inviting me to visit with you.
It’s a pleasure to address the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. I think it is
wise that you have chosen to focus your annual meeting on the myriad unknowns associated
with this public health crisis, which has spawned a deep and unprecedented economic crisis. In
my remarks today I will talk a bit about what I am seeing in the economy, and I hope this can
demystify some unknowns, or at least help us to consider them in more productive ways.
Before I delve into the substance of my talk, please keep in mind that these thoughts are strictly
my own. They do not necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues on the Federal Open
Market Committee or at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
Over the past few months, you’ve heard economists and analysts use a multitude of letters: V,
U, L, W, and so on. Well today, I’m not going to do that. Instead, being economists, my macro
team and I turned to a mathematical symbol—the less-than sign, and I’ve come to describe the
present conditions as characterizing a “less-than recovery.”
In my remarks this afternoon, I’ll explain what I mean by this and explore some of the
implications of an economic recovery that benefits some parts of the economy much less than
other parts. In short, these circumstances are laying bare—and exacerbating—disparities that
have long plagued our economy, along ethnic, racial, gender, geographic, and occupational
lines.
I will also discuss what the Federal Reserve and particularly the Atlanta Fed can do and are
doing to confront these disparities, before closing with thoughts on how the finance and
economics field might grapple with these challenges in a more meaningful way.
While the aggregate numbers can be interpreted as promising, I believe they mask the fact that
the recovery is progressing in a pattern that, when graphed, looks to me like a less-than sign.
<
Less-than recovery
Index: Feb = 100 Real Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE)
120
100
80
60
40
Strong PCE spending categories
20
Weak PCE spending categories
0
FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG
Note: StrongPCE categories include motor vehicles and parts, furnishings, recreational goods, other durable goods,
food & beverages (off-premises), and other nondurable goods. Weak PCE categories include transportation services, recreation services,
accommodations, and personal care services.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and Atlanta Fed staff calculations
2
Let me explain. There are parts of the economy and the population that are prospering, moving
on an incline. Most college-educated people and professionals who can work remotely along
with sectors like home improvement chains, grocery stores, online retailers, and others are
doing well.
Some commentators have even gone so far as to proclaim the COVID recession effectively over
for many of those who didn’t lose their jobs or could easily shift to working from home.
2
Unfortunately, that’s not the whole story. A considerable portion of the economy and
population is moving in the opposite direction, as represented by the descending leg of the
less-than sign.
This group includes industries that depend on people crowding together, such as restaurants,
hotels, recreation, household care services, transportation, tourist attractions, many small
retailers, and the people who work in those sectors.
These industries saw economic activity decline as much as 80 percent in the first two months
following the pandemic. Through August, their business output remained 50 percent below pre-
COVID levels. Employees in those industries are primarily lower-wage workers and
disproportionately people of color, younger people, and women. In other words, the
people who are often least equipped to weather a prolonged bout of unemployment are
bearing the brunt of this health crisis and economic downturn.
In this context, it is useful to look at what has happened to jobs with similar skill requirements.
For this, I will use a classification scheme for low-, middle-, and high-skill jobs made popular by
MIT economist David Autor and his coauthors.
Uneven features of the recovery
% change since February
Employment by Occupation, September 2020
0.0%
-2.0%
-5.0%
-6.3%
-4.0%
-10.6%
-6.0%
-8.0%
Workers in Low Skill Jobs
-10.0%
Workers in Middle Skill Jobs
-12.0% Workers in High Skill Jobs
Source: Current Population Survey and Atlanta Fed staff calculations
3
Workers in low-skill occupations, many of which are in service-oriented industries such as food
preparation, cleaning, and hospitality, accounted for 17 percent of total employment in
February. But they suffered double that percentage (33 percent) of the share of jobs lost
between February and April.
3
This is notably different from the typical recession triggered by an economic shock. The typical
downturn has generally affected sectors such as construction and manufacturing, which employ
mostly middle-skill workers. For example, in the Great Recession, nearly all of the job loss was
concentrated among middle-skill workers, while employment for low-skill jobs (in service-
oriented industries) actually kept growing.
Equally troubling, many of the jobs lost in the sectors that comprise the declining portion of the
less-than sign may not come back. Segments like business travel and food service might not
recover for years. This assumes, of course, that they will at some point return to their pre-
COVID state. But this is not assured. Take restaurants. Some contacts in the food service
industry are expecting a permanent contraction of up to 20 percent of restaurant capacity.
Moreover, the restaurants that do survive could more intensively deploy labor-eliminating
technology, such as electronic tablets customers can use to place orders, and take other
measures to minimize close human contact.
As another example, a hospital director told me they are seeing nearly a third of patients via
telemedicine, compared to just 3 percent before the pandemic.
Those kind of developments could have profound labor market implications for the numbers of
jobs and the types of skills employers will require. For instance, the hospital may require fewer
orderlies but more nurses trained in using telemedicine technologies. Further implications?
Consider that the hospital hosting fewer in-person visits might scrap plans for a new parking
deck. That’s a number of potential construction jobs that would not be realized.
Overall, only half the roughly 22 million jobs lost in the first couple months of the pandemic
have reappeared.
Less-than recovery
Change in the unemployment rate from April to September
Declined 10.3 percentage
points for those unemployed
<
less than 15 weeks
Increased 3.4 percentage
points for those unemployed
more than 15 weeks
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and Atlanta Fed staff calculations
4
4
Already, the data are warning of these kinds of structural shifts in the labor market that, absent
the pandemic, may have taken several years or a decade to unfold. Job losses listed by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics as permanent, according to its household survey, rose from 2.3
million in May to 3.8 million in September, on a seasonally adjusted basis. This increase in long-
term unemployed individuals has happened in about six months. It took over two years for a
comparable shift to occur following the Great Recession. The pandemic has been a big
accelerant.
More sobering still is that, if we assume that jobs continue to be added at the pace seen in the
September labor report, it will take an additional 16 months to return to February employment
levels. And that does not account for the additional employment growth needed to keep pace
with population growth. The upshot: if September is our new jobs baseline, we will not return
to pre-COVID total employment levels until December 2021.
Widespread permanent job loss could become a material risk to the recovery. The data on this
are clear: permanently laid off workers find it far more difficult to rejoin the labor force. This
would make recovery more difficult to sustain.
We saw that dynamic in play not long ago. It took years for masses of displaced workers to
learn new skills necessary to find work in entirely new fields after the Great Recession.
That said, the prolonged economic expansion eventually created job opportunities for
marginalized groups and generally strengthened families, businesses, and communities.
Unfortunately, many of the people who were last to benefit from the gradual recovery from the
Great Recession were the first to suffer at the onset of the COVID recession.
What the Fed can do
As policymakers, our goal should be to ensure that their suffering does not become permanent
lest the recovery take far longer. Indeed, an unnecessarily slow labor market rebound could just
drive historic wedges deeper, continuing to exacerbate the geographic, racial, gender, and
income disparities in our economy.
By traditional lights, it might appear the Fed is ill-placed to address long-standing economic
inequities like income and wealth gaps. After all, these disparities are similar to gaps in access
to quality health care, housing, education, and job training. In this context, I’m of a mind with
my Boston Fed counterpart, Eric Rosengren, who recently pointed out that we must think about
these inequities holistically.
Admittedly, the Fed cannot make grants and put money directly into the pockets of those
families and small businesses that need it most. We are not directly involved in health care and
education. Fiscal policymakers clearly have a significant role to play in ensuring that the
economic disruptions don’t become deeply rooted, that the wedge does not continue to widen
these disparities.
5
Still, the Fed has an important role to play. We must be central to this conversation. And
increasingly, I think we are.
Let me mention a few ways our bank is attacking these problems. First, we’re going micro,
because conditions vary greatly across places and populations.
At the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, we, along with our Federal Reserve System
colleagues, stepped up efforts to survey localities about how they were doing amid the
slowdown—the intensity of the problems and how long leaders in the government, business
and nonprofit sectors anticipated full recovery would take.
Those findings paint a picture of low-income, minority, and rural communities suffering
disproportionately and anticipating longer recoveries. In April, just about half of the people we
surveyed said the economic downturn would be over in September. That consensus has
steadily extended into 2021 and, for many contacts, into 2022.
We are using those findings to inform a more muscular outreach program. We are going micro
in our outreach by advising local government officials on ways they might help businesses in
their communities. In this vein, we've been talking about how you maintain business activities
in the time of COVID.
We're trying to help the philanthropic sector understand the stresses on their constituencies,
and suggest ways they can make a meaningful difference in the communities they serve.
Our bank also is researching and working to dismantle barriers to career advancement for low-
wage workers. One effort we’re making is helping workers better understand benefits cliffs.
These happen when someone acquires new skills and earns, say, an extra dollar an hour, but
because public benefits are automatically reduced as wages rise, this person actually loses the
equivalent of $3 or $4 an hour in supports and ends up worse off, for years in many cases, by
trying to better their circumstances.
Taking research from the lab to the real world
We are taking our benefits cliffs work from the laboratory to the real world, where it can
improve the lived experience of real people. Our researchers and outreach folks have
established more than a dozen partnerships across the country to build practical tools for state
agencies and other groups to help these workers address what amount to exceedingly high
marginal tax rates for some of the lowest paid workers. We are working with the state and
other nonprofit organizations in Alabama, Louisiana, Florida, and Georgia in our district, as well
as in Connecticut and Oklahoma, among other places.
At the Atlanta Fed, we have also established a research and outreach team focused on
workforce development. The aim is to equip workers with the skills they need for not only the
jobs of today, but also the jobs of tomorrow. As I noted, the pandemic crisis is accelerating a
tectonic shift in the labor market, and, simply put, too many workers are not ready. In
response, we recently worked with the Markle Foundation and others to stand up the Rework
6
America Alliance, which is aggressively moving forward with partners across the nation to
reorient the existing job training infrastructure so it can help more workers be prepared for
these changes.
Across the Fed System, we are also using our convening power to confront the immediate
effects of the COVID downturn and the ongoing effects of historic economic disparities.
We have joined the Boston and Minneapolis Feds to present a seven-part webinar series on
racism and the economy. If you didn’t catch the first installment this month, I recommend that
you look it up, and I encourage you to watch for upcoming segments on topics including
education, housing, and wealth and financial services. You will hear views expressed that you
are not accustomed to hearing in a forum affiliated with the Federal Reserve, I assure you.
Ultimately, that’s the point. We need to participate in a deeper, more creative reckoning with a
history of racial injustice that continues to weaken the economy for all of us.
Now let me turn to what you probably expected to hear from me—monetary policy. Our
monetary policy stance today is a far cry from where we were just eight months ago, when we
were enjoying the fruits of a historic expansion, with inflation approaching our 2 percent target
and record low levels of unemployment spurred by many people less attached to the labor
force finding jobs. The pandemic changed all of that, triggering bold and decisive action on the
part of the Federal Open Market Committee to provide support to the economy and ensure
that financial markets continued their smooth functioning.
We quickly reduced the fed funds rate to effectively zero and, with unprecedented swiftness,
stood up a series of facilities designed to provide support for targeted financial markets that
were showing signs of extreme distress.
These proactive actions, I am pleased to say, were quite effective. Spreads in many financial
markets backed off their extreme levels soon after the facilities were deployed. In some cases,
like the corporate bond market, the easing occurred without a significant draw on the facilities,
indicating that simply the presence of a backstop vehicle was enough to reduce fears.
I would like to say a few words about a number of these facilities. Some, like the Municipal Loan
Facility and the Main Street Lending Program, represent totally new ventures for the Fed and
have required a great deal of learning on the fly. As we gain a deeper understanding of the
needs and nuanced circumstances of the targeted sectors, we will continue to reshape these
facilities to maximize their effectiveness.
On balance, I am comfortable with our current policy stance. As I have detailed today, though
the U.S. economy continues to show clear signs of recovery, there remain significant portions
where the recovery has been weak or nonexistent. That reality tells me that it will be some time
before we tighten our interest rate stance or pull back strongly from our actions supporting
financial functioning.
7
That said, I want to be clear that once we are past the current crisis, I will heartily support the
removal of these emergency vehicles. There should be no expectation that these will persist in
a new steady state.
Though there has been considerable focus on emergency measures through much of 2020, the
Committee was also able to complete its multiyear review of its longer-term policy framework.
Most of you likely are well aware of our August announcement of a fundamental shift in the
Fed’s monetary policy framework.
There are two parts to this that I would call out as particularly noteworthy. First, the new
framework makes explicit my long-held view that levels of inflation above the 2 percent target
can persist for a time without being a cause for concern. What concerns me more are trends
relative to the 2 percent target. If we are somewhat above 2 percent, but the level is stable, I
will likely not be concerned. By contrast, if we are somewhat above 2 percent and the distance
between actual inflation and our target is increasing steadily, that would be a reason for
concern and merit a policy response. I think this is a commonsense approach to managing our
inflation target.
The second important aspect has been summarized in the press as a “lower, longer” approach.
Boiled down to its essentials, this codifies that the FOMC will no longer seek to preemptively
blunt runaway inflation by tightening monetary policy when unemployment reaches certain low
levels. The disparities we’re discussing today played a large part in this strategic shift.
We are committing to let the economy grow a little more robustly than we might have
otherwise because we have learned over the past decade that even historically low
unemployment is less likely to spark troublesome inflation. Importantly, then, the new
framework calls for policy to support “broad-based and inclusive” job gains. And it states that
policy decisions will be based on estimates of "shortfalls of employment from its maximum
level"—not "deviations."
This is no small matter.
A significant cost of tightening monetary policy prematurely during an economic expansion is
that it can block job opportunities from reaching all communities. Our new approach should
help minorities, women, and lower-income earners to be more fully connected to the labor
market. That will give those traditionally marginalized groups a better opportunity to secure
jobs and economic resilience, which for too many of our citizens has been severely tested by
the COVID economic downturn.
Of course, the Fed carefully weighed numerous factors in crafting the new long-run policy
strategy. We have been criticized at times for not listening enough, particularly to Main Street.
Therefore, we conducted events across the country to seek public input as we refined our
policy approach. One clear message we heard before the pandemic from community, labor,
workforce development, and business leaders across the country was that the strong job
market was particularly beneficial to low- and moderate-income communities.
8
We are going to keep listening because we have far to go to dismantle entrenched disparities
that act as a yoke on the nation’s economy. One more snapshot of current conditions makes
this abundantly clear.
Across the jobs spectrum, minorities, particularly African Americans, are bearing an outsize
burden of employment losses. A much larger share of Blacks and Hispanics (22 and 23 percent,
respectively) than whites (13 percent) worked in low-skill occupations before the pandemic.
So not only are those individuals and families absorbing the sharpest blows from job losses, but
they have also experienced a much slower employment recovery than whites in similar low-skill
occupations. What’s more, this disparate impact is not confined to low-skill occupations. There
is also a notable difference in employment outcomes for Blacks in high-skill occupations in
industries less damaged by the pandemic.
Making a commitment to an inclusive society
In sum, the speed and the magnitude of this punishing economic crisis is falling
disproportionally on those least equipped to handle it. And for many of these individuals and
families, government support has evaporated. That could leave millions of our fellow citizens in
dire straits. We are seeing some unfortunate evidence that this may be happening already.
Evictions in the metropolitan Atlanta area began to rise significantly soon after moratoriums on
them expired in July.
As a nation, we cannot afford to continue leaving talent, productivity, and creativity on the
table. So we as a society, and I’ll aim this call to the economic and financial fields in particular,
must make a commitment to an inclusive economy.
9
The fields of economics and finance must acknowledge that the influence of race is
multidimensional and lasting. If we are to build a more equitable economy and financial system,
the people who build it need to know and appreciate the history of our system. Too many
people, in finance and among the general public, are unaware of the role financial institutions,
policies, and structures have played in calcifying inequities in our economy.
Indeed, much financial research has ignored race and other demographic differences in the
population. Partly as a result, this is an area ripe for research, product innovation, and policy
proposals to help eliminate barriers, reduce frictions, and create structures and institutions that
support the success of all Americans.
Only by investigating differences in behaviors and the practical effects of policy can we
recalibrate our approaches or devise wholly new strategies to help everyone engage and thrive
in the economy. For instance, in a new paper, one of our research economists, Kris Gerardi, and
two coauthors suggest that Black and Hispanic Americans basically overpay for mortgages
compared to non-Hispanic white borrowers. This appears to happen mainly because Black and
Hispanic mortgage holders do not refinance as often as non-Hispanic whites do when mortgage
interest rates decline. Thus, they end up continuing to pay higher rates than they would
otherwise. Precisely why those mortgage holders refinance less often is unclear. It may well not
be exclusively rooted in raw discrimination, to the extent that this plays a role at all.
The point, though, is that this type of work highlights differences in behavior that are salient for
pricing securities and providing financial advice. Just as important, the work offers ideas about
structural changes to mortgages that might mitigate the disparities, which could help millions of
our fellow citizens pay less for mortgage loans, and therefore have more disposable income.
Clearly, the challenges here are considerable. Still, I’m optimistic. Why? For one, we are having
these conversations. I don’t think that would have happened even six months ago. By itself, the
willingness to discuss these matters shows me there is an appetite for change and, maybe more
important, a willingness to work to make change.
My colleagues and I are going to work to make sure the Federal Reserve is a place that people
look to for thoughtful solutions to issues around racial equity and historic disparities. I hope you
see the value of this virtuous pursuit and join in the effort.
If we succeed, we can create a more perfect union that in fact, and not just in words, allows for
unburdened life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all citizens.
10
Cite this document
APA
Raphael Bostic (2020, October 18). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20201019_raphael_bostic
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20201019_raphael_bostic,
author = {Raphael Bostic},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20201019_raphael_bostic},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}