speeches · June 16, 2024
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
June 17, 2024
The Best Answers
Start with the
Right Questions
Global Interdependence Center 42nd Annual
Monetary and Trade Conference
Philadelphia
The views expressed
Patrick T. Harker today are my own and not
necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or
President and Chief Executive Officer
the Federal Open Market
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Committee (FOMC).
The Best Answers Start with the Right Questions
Global Interdependence Center 42nd Annual Monetary and Trade Conference
Philadelphia
June 17, 2024
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good afternoon. It is a pleasure to once again join the Global Interdependence Center.
It is also my pleasure to welcome Central Bank of Ireland Governor Gabriel Makhlouf to the
Philadelphia Fed.
And in doing so, I must acknowledge the figure who stands central in the histories of the central
banks in both of our respective countries — the economist Henry Parker Willis. Parker Willis
was one of the main architects of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, and subsequently served as
both the first secretary of the Federal Reserve Board as well as the Federal Reserve System’s
director of research from 1918 to 1922. And, in 1926, as the then four-year-old Irish Free State
grappled with the question of how to set up its own independent currency system, it enlisted
Henry Parker Willis to lead this effort. His experiences and expertise directly influenced the Irish
Currency Act of 1927.
Over the past century, Ireland and the United States have enjoyed a strong, friendly, and
beneficial relationship. And our history surely predates Irish independence to the ancestors of
today’s millions of proud Irish Americans. As an individual, I’m proud of this history, but as a
central banker, I take pride in knowing that this history extends to our financial underpinnings,
as well!
Now, before I get to the topics at hand, and to our moderated discussion, allow me to do away
with a bit of official business by noting that the views I express today are my own and do not
necessarily reflect those of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve System or on the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC). And with that disclosure now out of the way, let’s get into this
afternoon’s program and I’ll begin with my overview of current economic conditions.
Economic Outlook
Allow me to open with four brief statements. First, high inflation remains not only a leading
concern of many Americans, but certainly also one of mine and my colleagues’.
Second, the overall underpinnings of the American economy have proven nothing less than
resilient, time and time again, despite the high rates leaning against aggregate demand for more
than a year now.
Third, monetary policy overall remains positioned in restrictive territory to bring inflation back to
its 2 percent target, while minimizing broader economic risks.
And fourth, we are still surrounded by an air soaked with uncertainty. There are a host of risks
and known unknowns, but what I would like to emphasize is that the data haven’t, so far,
resolved those. Indeed, data have been what I would describe as “choppy.” Not that this is
unheard of. As the economy becomes more balanced, the chances of a miss on the upside or
downside are more evenly distributed.
But the point stands, the data have not quite dissipated this uncertainty as I would have hoped
they would. Well, then, maybe I should add a fifth — more data is essential.
With regard to inflation, as we all saw, the promising disinflation in the second half of 2023
unceremoniously halted through the first quarter of 2024. I had expected bumps in the road, but
the Q1 2024 “bump” threatened to become a hill to climb. Yet, while the lack of progress toward
the inflation target was concerning, inflation did not re-ignite.
And while I remain very attentive to inflation risks, the latest inflation data have been quite
promising that progress on disinflation has resumed. But “promising” falls short of the
confidence I want to have, before cutting rates, that inflation is on a sustainable path back to
target.
Inflation has a range of impacts throughout the economy, but its greatest impact is on low- and
moderate-income families — those who have already been pinching their pennies over the past
two years and aren’t sure how much more they can pinch. The situation has been made much
worse as inflation hit hard the basic necessities: shelter, food, transportation.
Fortunately, we have seen quite a bit of improvement in many categories. Food prices have
been essentially flat for several months now. Gas prices came down sharply in 2023. Vehicles,
new and used, are cheaper now than a year ago. Unfortunately, the long-term stubbornness of
shelter inflation, especially, remains a concern along with the continually high rate of inflation in
the services sector, notably auto insurance and repairs — echoes of the past runups in vehicle
prices, most likely.
Last week’s CPI inflation release for May was very welcome, and the kind of price data I want to
see more of. But I would add the caveat that our inflation target is the PCE price index, not the
CPI, the May reading of which is not due for another 11 days. If the higher inflation in the first
quarter was a bump in the road, I want to make sure that the lower inflation we are seeing so far
in the second quarter is not a pothole.
I remain focused on seeing inflation return to a clear path toward our target rate of 2 percent
annually.
Overall, there is much in the American economy that allows me to remain optimistic.
Unemployment remains low, job creation appears robust, and labor market participation is within
range of its historic levels. So, the labor market remains healthy, while supply and demand are
coming into better balance, as shown by the average number of job openings to job seekers, as
well as other measures of labor market tightness, like quits and job-to-job transitions, both of
which are gently normalizing. Gross domestic product, while leveling off in the first quarter from
the close of 2023, continues to grow. We have seen some moderation in consumer spending as
of late, and I am keeping a close eye on household finances.
2
All said, as recent Fed survey data show, overall measurements of economic well-being among
American households remained essentially unchanged from 2022. The percentage of
respondents saying they were “doing at least okay financially” in 2023 was roughly where it was
the prior year, for example. And economic resilience as measured by respondents’ ability to
afford an emergency $400 expense similarly remained unchanged.1
Yet inflation continued to eat away at the sense of true economic well-being. More respondents
said their expenses increased than said their incomes increased. And, I should add, these
results are in line with what I hear as I speak with residents and contacts across the Third
District. This is a strong convergence of soft data.
So, to me the key is wrestling inflation back down to target. And, in this, progress has been
uneven. Inflation is way down from where it was a year ago, but with the high inflation readings
between January and March factored in, progress in recent months has been modest.
I believe that the current policy interest rate, which has been held steady for nearly 11 months,
will continue to serve us well for a bit longer, holding us in restrictive territory to bring inflation
back to target and mitigate upside risks.
Over the ensuing months, I will continue to closely monitor the data — both hard and soft — on
inflation, labor markets, and economic activity. And I will be asking whether it is, or is not, the
right time to decrease the policy interest rate.
When that time will be, exactly, I don’t yet know. I have a forecast for inflation, employment, and
economic activity: slowing but above trend growth, a modest rise in the unemployment rate, and
a long glide back to target for inflation.
And if all of it happens to be as forecasted, I think one rate cut would be appropriate by year’s
end — as well as a medal for myself for best economic forecaster ever. Because any forecast
remains just that: a forecast. It is not a lock-down commitment.
My commitment is to remain data dependent because this is how we get through the uncertainty
and make sure inflation returns to target, sustainably.
Indeed, I see two cuts, or none, for this year as quite possible if the data break one way or
another. So, again, we will remain data dependent.
This is a time when the independence of the Federal Reserve System — and beyond to that of
other central banks — will be of utmost importance. This is a fraught time in our nation and
world, which makes it all the more vital that we, as central bankers, remain not nonpartisan but
apolitical. We at the Fed operate under our dual mandate to ensure price stability and maximum
employment for the American people. That is our mandate, given by the U.S. Congress, and it is
our goal.
To achieve this, we must make decisions by looking at all the data, not just a narrow set, and by
asking and answering the right questions.
Deepening the Economics Talent Pipeline
1 Federal Reserve Board of Governors, “Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2023,” May 21,
2024, https://www.federalreserve.gov/consumerscommunities/shed.htm.
3
And that statement brings me to my final thoughts to share with you. How do we ensure we’re
asking the right questions to begin with? I can say with great pride that the research team here
at the Philadelphia Fed is filled with some of the brightest economic minds available. And I know
that goes the same for the team in Washington and at our sister banks across the Federal
Reserve System.
Whenever I speak to students studying economics, I’m quick to note that the Federal Reserve
System is the largest employer of economists in the nation. I want these future economists to
consider us as a potential career choice. I’m not just a central banker; I’m a recruiter!
Recently, I’ve been pleased to see that the makeup of these student audiences has become
somewhat more diverse over time, but it still is not nearly representative enough. To me, this
next generation of economists isn’t just important because they are the ones who will sit at the
desks of those who have gone on to retirement or other aspects of the field. What’s more
important are the perspectives they will bring into these future positions. And we need voices
that are not going to be afraid to challenge us into looking at old numbers with new eyes.
To foster this, the Philadelphia Fed has partnered with the National Association for Business
Economics, or NABE, in an effort to bring more historically underrepresented individuals into the
field of economics. But to be sure, we are not the only ones who have recognized the vital need
for diversity not just in economic thinking, but in economic thinkers.
The simple reality is that the underrepresentation of women and minority economics students at
the college and university level ultimately leads to an underrepresentation at the professional
level.
Nearly a decade ago, in 2016, Amanda Bayer and Cecilia Elena Rouse’s article in the Journal of
Economic Perspectives noted that the lack of diversity within the field of economics “hampers
the discipline, constraining the range of issues addressed and limiting our collective ability to
understand familiar issues from new and innovative perspectives.”2
That concern was underscored by research released by the Fed in 2017.3 That research
measured student diversity in economics programs through the attainment of bachelor’s
degrees at hundreds of colleges and universities across the United States. It was a project that
captured the annual makeup of classes from 2011 through 2015 — a yearly average of nearly
35,000 economics majors. Overwhelmingly, the data showed that the presence of women and
underrepresented minorities lagged well behind that of white males.
Now, certainly, there are many reasons why students may not choose to study economics.
Perhaps the discipline’s moniker as the “dismal science” may hamper recruitment. But as we
here know, economics is far more than just “guns and butter,” being able to define “opportunity
cost” and “mutual exclusivity,” or understanding, let alone grasping, the minutiae of monetary
policy.
2 Bayer, Amanda, and Cecilia Elena Rouse, “Diversity in the Economics Profession: A New Attack on an
Old Problem,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 30, No. 4, Fall 2016,
https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/jep.30.4.221.
3 Federal Reserve Bank of New York, “Who Is Being Trained in Economics? The Race, Ethnicity, and
Gender of Economics Majors at U.S. Colleges and Universities,” https://www.newyorkfed.org/data-and-
statistics/data-visualization/diversity-in-economics#interactive/overview.
4
So much of our world, and nearly every decision made by individuals and governments, whether
they recognize it or not, is an economic decision at its heart — everything from the goods they
purchase, to the jobs they take, to whether or not to go to school to study economics.
And homogeneity in the economic discipline prevents us from being able to more fully
investigate those decisions to more fully understand choices and trade-offs, and to move
economics forward in a more meaningful way that captures the nuances of rapidly changing
economies and societies.
Even just one year ago, Stefania Paredes Fuentes and Tim Burnett in a London School of
Economics blog post wrote: “Diversity among economists is crucial for policymaking as it
enables the inclusion of a wide range of perspectives and experiences, leading to more
informed and effective decision-making.”4
This goes far beyond an ability to understand hard data. We can take all the classes we want
and become proficient in collecting hard data and making calculations that seek to understand
decisions and influence policy. But hard data can only take a researcher so far. Equally
important is the soft data — and there is no soft data that can be more important than a lived
experience.
Or, as Anna Stansbury in the Harvard Business Review succinctly asked in 2022: “without many
economists from less socioeconomically advantaged backgrounds, what kinds of perspectives,
questions, and answers are we missing?”5
For us here at the Philadelphia Fed, we know that increasing the diversity of those studying and
practicing economics isn’t just good for ensuring that our workplace is more reflective of the
world outside our walls, but it is crucial to ensuring that the work we produce is more reflective,
and therefore better, as well. It is vital, as well, to the reputation of that work.
Conclusion
In the words of that most preeminent of Philadelphians, Benjamin Franklin, “Glass, China, and
Reputation, are easily cracked, and never well mended.”
So, my hope is for everyone here today to likewise commit to ensuring that the reputation of the
economics discipline does not crack. I ask you to commit to ensuring economics remains
relevant in the lives of those we aim to support through our work. I encourage you, if you have
not already done so, to find local partners, whether it be directly with an institution of higher
education or a business organization, to seek out and foster the economists of tomorrow.
Those economists, after all, are the ones who will eventually be sitting and standing where we
are today. And we are going to want them to look back at this convening and build upon our
work and progress not because we have all the answers, but because we recognize that we
don’t and that many questions are yet to be asked.
4 Paredes Fuentes, Stefania, and Tim Burnett, “Lack of Diversity in Economics Holds Back Its Relevance
and Value to Society,” London School of Economics, May 12, 2023,
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2023/05/12/lack-of-diversity-in-economics-holds-back-its-
relevance-and-value-to-society/.
5 Stansbury, Anna, “Economics Needs More Socioeconomic Diversity,” Harvard Business Review, June
10, 2022, https://hbr.org/2022/06/economics-needs-more-socioeconomic-diversity.
5
With that, I will conclude my prepared remarks. I thank you, again, for being part of this
conference. And I look forward to our conversation.
6
Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2024, June 16). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20240617_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20240617_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2024},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20240617_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}