speeches · February 27, 2023
Regional President Speech
Austan D. Goolsbee · President
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The Need for a Ground-Level View of the Economy
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Austan D. Goolsbee
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Ivy Tech Community College
Elkhart County Campus
Goshen, IN
February 28, 2023
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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CHICAGO
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
The Need for a Ground-Level View of the Economy
Austan D. Goolsbee
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Introduction
Thank you, Dr. Robinson-Cooper, for that introduction. And thank you to the culinary
students for our fabulous meal and to members of the community for turning out.
Thanks also to the students I got to meet with in the respiratory therapy lab and the
communication, entrepreneurship, and business administration programs. What an
impressive group!
And let me give a special thanks to Chris Murphy for his help in setting up this visit to
Ivy Tech as well as the tour of the operations at Jayco this morning. Chris is on the
board of directors of the Chicago Fed and a mainstay of the community here in
the region.
Now, I know perfectly well that some of you are only here because your instructor told
you to come. I used to hate stuff like that when I was a student, so I will try not to
overstay my welcome. I am going to tell you about who we are and why I came here to
Northeast Indiana for my very first speech as president of the Chicago Fed.
Let me get the required part out up front: These are my own views and not
necessarily those of others on the Federal Open Market Committee or in the Federal
Reserve System.
If you came here wondering about the Fed’s role, you aren’t alone. In recent polling, a
big majority of Americans say they have heard of the Fed, but they don’t know what it
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does.1 But that hasn’t stopped folks from judging how we are doing. A recent Gallup poll
says that only 37 percent think the Fed is doing a good job—just 3 points better than
the IRS.2
Since I’ve become president, lots of folks have told me why: Some people are upset
about inflation outstripping their wages, some about all the disruptions caused by the
pandemic and the supply shortages making it harder for businesses to grow, others
about the risk of unemployment creeping up and the danger that the economy might be
headed for a recession. Even if they don’t know what, exactly, the Fed does, they know
that they want it to fix things that feel broken.
Who we are
So, let’s start with what we do. The Chicago Fed serves the Seventh District. It is your
local branch of the Federal Reserve System. Geographically, our District covers the
heart of the Midwest—all of Iowa and most of Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and
Michigan.3 Some people in Northeast Indiana don’t appreciate being lumped together
with Michigan; imagine how I felt as a Bears fan when they told me the District includes
the Green Bay Packers.
The Fed regulates banks in the District. And we serve, basically, as the bank for banks.
We wire money. We do direct deposits of your paycheck. If one of our banks needs new
bills to restock their ATMs, they get them from us. Our vault has billions of dollars of
cash in it. That doesn’t look as cool as you would think, though. I thought it would be
1 Diamond and Sawyer (2022).
2 Jones (2022).
3 Further details on the Seventh Federal Reserve District are available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/region/region.
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stacks and stacks of money piled up to the ceiling. Actually, the money is bound in small
bundles wrapped in plastic baggies and sitting on pushcarts. It almost looks like a high
school storage room or something. Still, if you look at a dollar bill in your wallet and it
has a letter “G” displayed in the circle, it’s from us—the Seventh District.
We also work on community development and ways to foster economic growth that
benefit everyone and ensure a safe and inclusive financial system. We are responsible
for enforcing consumer protection laws and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) to
make sure financial institutions work fairly in their communities.4 In addition, we work
with local partners to promote economic growth in low- and
moderate-income communities.
But the Fed is most well-known for monetary policy—basically for setting some of the
fundamental interest rates in the economy to meet the specific goals for us that are
specified by law. The Federal Reserve Act requires the Fed to use its monetary policy
tools to promote maximum employment and stable prices.5 This is called our “dual
mandate”—to keep both unemployment and inflation low.
If the economy overheats, higher rates can cool it off. If we are in a recession, lower
rates can heat it up. Generally, there isn’t any tension between what we need to do to
reach our two objectives. However, sometimes they can conflict with each other. Then
the job gets a lot tougher, and we have to think about trade-offs.
4 Details on the Community Reinvestment Act are available online,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/consumerscommunities/cra_about.htm.
5 Congress amended the Federal Reserve Act (FRA) in 1977 to provide greater clarity about the goals of monetary
policy. More details on the Federal Reserve Reform Act of 1977 are available online,
https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/fed-reform-act-of-1977.
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Why I am here
Of course, it’s always hard to figure out what’s happening in the economy from the
avalanche of data coming in. One of the toughest things about monetary policy is
figuring out what to pay attention to. And that is the main reason I am here in
Northeast Indiana.
You see, most of our economic data come out with a delay—the jobs numbers, the
inflation numbers, gross domestic product (GDP)—they all come out a week, a month, a
quarter after they happen. Sometimes these data bounce around a lot or give
contradictory signals. It can be hard to get a clear picture of what is going on. So, it’s
important to supplement these traditional data with observations on the ground from the
real economy. This is especially true when things are as strange and up in the air as
they have been through much of the pandemic times.
The temptation can be to look at what’s easy to find and lean more on that—stock
market, bond market, and other financial data that give instant reactions to news about
the economy and our policy announcements and tell us which way the markets want the
Fed to move. But it is a danger and a mistake for policymakers to rely too heavily on
market reactions.
The thing is, our job is ultimately judged by what happens in the real economy. We need
to know how things are going in places like here in Elkhart County. We come here to
find out the latest information: How is the job market? The unemployment rate around
here has literally been as low as 1.4 percent, but how much has it been rising as the
demand for RVs post-pandemic has cooled off? Are supply chain pressures easing for
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the transmissions plants in Kokomo or for the medical device makers in Warsaw? Are
wages for middle-class workers keeping up with inflation?
We need this kind of information about the real economy. It’s why we do a lot of
outreach. Each month we survey about 120 business and community leaders
throughout the District—many from right around here; we host scores of industrial and
community roundtables and conferences each year.
The best central bankers are ones we call “data dependent.” They decide what to do
based on the conditions they see in the economy. They don’t start with an ideology.
They start from facts. I came here to learn everything I can from you and to hear about
how the economy is doing. This is information we need to watch when we make
decisions about policy.
Monetary policy can’t solve every economic problem. But when the Fed does its job
well, it provides a stable environment that makes it easier for you to succeed and helps
millions of people achieve their goals.
Conclusion
No doubt there will be bumps in the road to come. It’s a strange and unprecedented
moment coming out of the pandemic. Lots of things in the economy got turned on their
heads, and we need to figure out where they will land and what that means for the
future. But we will figure it out. Here in the Midwest, we know how to get the job done no
matter what the conditions. We know there is no bad weather, only bad clothing.
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So thank you for everything you do for this region and this nation, and thank you for
teaching me about what’s going on here in Northeast Indiana.
Dr. Robinson-Cooper, if they sat through that, they really deserve full extra credit.
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References
Diamond, James, and Johnny Sawyer, 2022, "Few Americans understand the Federal
Reserve’s role outside curbing inflation," Ipsos, press release, April 30, available online,
https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/news-polls/Axios-Federal-Reserve-2022.
Jones, Jeffrey M., 2022, "Government agency ratings: CIA, FBI up; Federal Reserve
down," Gallup, October 5, available online,
https://news.gallup.com/poll/402464/government-agency-ratings-cia-fbi-federal-reserve-
down.aspx.
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Cite this document
APA
Austan D. Goolsbee (2023, February 27). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230228_austan_d_goolsbee
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20230228_austan_d_goolsbee,
author = {Austan D. Goolsbee},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2023},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20230228_austan_d_goolsbee},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}