speeches · April 13, 2025
Regional President Speech
Patrick T. Harker · President
APRIL 14, 2025
“Fed 101”: A
Broad Look at the
Federal Reserve
and Its Role
Villanova School of Business Speaker Series
Villanova, PA
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).
“Fed 101”: A Broad Look at the Federal Reserve and Its Role
Villanova School of Business
Villanova, PA
April 14, 2025
Patrick T. Harker
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Good afternoon. It is an honor and a pleasure to be here.
Thank you, Adam, for that wonderful introduction.
And thank you, as well, to Dr. Mary Kelly for the invitation to speak this evening.
This is the second year in a row that I’ve been asked to come out to Villanova and
speak and I cannot say how much I appreciated the return invite. As president and CEO
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, I get to speak before and meet with a
tremendous variety of people. And I'm lucky that includes getting back to my roots in
academia — as president of the University of Delaware, and before that as dean and
professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania — and interacting
with students.
So, because of this, I want to make sure I leave plenty of time for us to interact. So, I’ll
get on with my prepared remarks and then we can have a conversation.
Right at the top, I must do away with a little piece of official business, and that is the
standard disclaimer that I must make before every public appearance: The views I
express this evening are my own and do not necessarily represent those of anyone else
in the Federal Reserve System or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC).
By the end of this evening, I hope I will have provided some insight into how I view my
work with the Federal Reserve and, in particular, the Philadelphia Fed.
Perhaps most important, I hope I may say something that might inspire you to consider
the Federal Reserve System as a place in which you can envision yourself for your
career. For those of you who are studying economics, specifically, the Federal Reserve
is arguably the largest employer of economists in the United States.
Even for those of you who are not on track to become economists, there may be a
future for you at the Fed, as well. And I say this from experience. Full disclosure, I didn’t
major in economics. I majored in engineering, specifically civil engineering. Further,
engineering is what I hold my doctorate in! I am what you could call an “accidental
economist.” Some years ago, I was working on an engineering problem related to
railroads and I realized that to truly appreciate the impacts of the project, I needed to
understand the economics of the project, as well. So, back to school I went!
In the end, it all makes sense, because both engineering and economics are disciplines
in which the end goal is to understand how systems work so that we can improve them
and make them more efficient and effective.
But I am getting way ahead of myself.
Allow me to provide, briefly, what I like to call “Fed 101.” Because I know, through my
experience, that the Federal Reserve is seen by some to be a bit of a mystery.
Since its creation in 1913 — in response to a series of financial panics which rattled the
national economy as well as destroyed the savings of many Americans — the main role
of the Federal Reserve, as the nation’s central bank, has been to utilize the tools of
monetary policy available to us to help the economy stay on an even, forward course.
But to fully understand what the Fed is, one first needs to understand what the Fed is
not. The Fed is not “the economy.” If you want to see the real economy, look at those
sitting next to you and then look in the mirror. It is each of you, as consumers, as
potential employees, or as potential business owners and employers, who are the
economy.
It is your decisions that ultimately have the greatest impact on our collective economic
direction. The monetary policy work of the Fed can influence those decisions in an effort
to guide long-term economic growth or respond to emergent trends — think of how we
raised the policy interest rate to try to slow overheated demand to alleviate inflation —
but we cannot and do not control the decisions you make. While we can project what we
think the economy may do in the coming weeks, months, or years, we have to act
based on what it actually does.
We are also independent within the government. The Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System is appointed by the president of the United States with the advice and
consent of the Senate. But the 12 Federal Reserve District Banks are independently
chartered institutions. Certainly, the Board of Governors retains some purview over our
work and operations, but by and large, I and my 11 colleagues at the District Bank level
report not to Washington but to our own boards of directors and, by extension, our home
communities.
The Fed was set up to be a decentralized central bank. And, because of this, the
Federal Reserve is able to operate in a space that I can only call radically nonpartisan.
Surely, we operate within the fiscal and economic conditions fostered, or constraints
imposed, by the decisions of elected policymakers. But we do not step explicitly into the
partisan arena. This is a vital design feature as it allows for the Fed’s decisions to be
made by looking across all the available data and responding to those scenarios alone.
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The North Star for all of our work is the Fed’s dual mandate. This is the charge handed
to us by Congress to focus our work on two key goals: ensuring stable prices and
achieving maximum employment. The research we undertake informs far-reaching
economic and monetary policy decisions as we fulfill this charge. This is where all those
economists I mentioned a moment ago are of great importance.
Stable prices, as it sounds, are just that — it’s inflation. At the Fed, as with many other
central banks around the world, we set a goal that annual inflation should be targeted at
2 percent annually, as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, or
PCE. That’s our preferred measure over the more well-known Consumer Price Index,
the CPI, because we believe it better captures the ways consumers act in the economy.
Not that we don’t look at that CPI — trust me, we do.
Maximum employment, strictly speaking, is the highest level of employment that the
economy can sustain to maintain inflation at our 2 percent annual target. However, I
prefer to take a more nuanced view. To me, achieving maximum employment does not
mean simply getting to a condition where every employer can find a worker.
As I have said to multiple audiences before, while job growth is important, I believe we
must be promoting a climate in which workers can find jobs that are truly rewarding. In
other words, I prefer that we don’t see a trade-off between job quality and job quantity.
Looking around this room, I am concerned with creating economic conditions where
each and every one of you will be able to find a job. But, more important to me, I want it
to be a job where you are able to take full advantage of your education and skills, and
where you can truly feel productive. I do not think you would consider anything less as
having achieved your own “maximum employment” — and neither would I.
Now, take that personal consideration and transpose it to the full economy. That’s my
definition of maximum employment.
So, now I hear some of you thinking, “OK, Pat, that’s great and all, but how do you get
to the decisions you make?” That’s a really good question. And the truth is I don’t come
to these decisions by myself. I truly rely upon the work of the entire staff of the
Philadelphia Fed.
For you economics majors, yes, this is where you come in, and in a big way. The raw
economic data and its analysis forms the basis of many decisions. But to say that we’re
only, in essence, an economic think tank looking at and charting numbers could not be
further from the truth.
Those numbers — inflation reports, employment reports, and more — are “hard data.”
These data points are critical for us to build the long-term trend models crucial to setting
policy. Yes, they are vital data points. But hard data has also its limits. For starters, each
of these reports tells me what has already happened. They are a snapshot into a prior
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time. They tell what has already happened and may not necessarily tell what is
happening.
So, equally important to me is “soft data” — the real-time and on-the-ground information
gleaned through survey research, the daily operations of the Philly Fed, and individual
conversations I and many others have with contacts across Pennsylvania, Delaware,
and New Jersey. Those interactions tell us how the economy is impacting families and
businesses where it matters most, in the communities we serve and around kitchen
tables.
Moreover, soft data allows me to speak more directly when I’m joining my FOMC
colleagues at our regular meetings in Washington. We all have access to the same
numbers. The reports I can bring in from the field help add vital color to the black-and-
white on the printed page.
And this is where those who may not necessarily end up with an economics degree
come in.
Our supervisory and regulatory function works directly with community banks across the
District to ensure trust in the financial institutions where millions of customers hold their
savings. Their reports back to us really provide a good look into community financial
conditions which can be a harbinger for conditions elsewhere.
Our Cash Services team works every day to, quite literally, connect people with their
money. Now, I recognize I’m speaking to the Smartphone Generation, and you each
probably have one app or another on your phone to send and receive money. But if you
have stopped at an ATM recently, that cash you withdrew, at some point, spent time in a
Federal Reserve Bank. Those bank orders and the demand for cash give us a broad
look inside whether, how much, and how often consumers are spending their money.
But let’s dig a little deeper beyond just the financial side. We house a busy and
impactful Community Development & Regional Outreach team which works directly with
local officials, community bankers and business leaders, and nonprofit organizations,
among others, to create plans, informed by Fed research, to enhance the economic
lives of countless residents. This allows us an opportunity to have meaningful kitchen-
table discussions.
We have economic educators whose role is to inform students and consumers not just
about the Fed but about the critical role they, as individual consumers, play in our
economy. For example, consumers may make better decisions about using credit, for
example, if they fully understand how credit works.
Our communications team makes our work more visible and more easily
understandable for the public. I know that many of us in the field tend to have our own
lingo — don’t get me started about all the acronyms! — and it is crucial that all
Americans can understand what we at the Fed do.
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We also have IT teams focused on emerging tech issues, including AI and machine
learning and even quantum computing. The financial technology revolution is changing
the very way people view and interact with money — think of those payment apps I just
mentioned. Moreover, there are numerous issues related to financial security — both in
enhancement and in the threats from hackers — we must understand.
And on and on. So, suffice it to say that if you think that I’m just sitting in my office in
Philadelphia waiting for official data reports to come across my desk you’d be mistaken.
In fact, if I’m not in my office talking or meeting with people to gain the soft data I need,
I’m most likely traveling around the Third District meeting people where they are. And if
I’m not the one doing it, there’s a good chance someone else from the Philly Fed is.
This willingness to be open to many voices is something that has not only shaped my
decisions at the Philadelphia Fed but, in fact, helped shape my career. Remember, I’m
not a trained economist, but a trained engineer! But almost every day I encounter an
instance where the fields of engineering and economics intersect.
Before I step out from behind this lectern and to hear from you, I want to leave one last
piece of advice — just in case my advice to come work for the Federal Reserve wasn’t
enough.
I am soon going to reach the age and service limit to serve as president of the Philly
Fed. On June 30, I’ll be retiring. So, tonight not only marks one of the last times I’ll be
speaking before an audience, but you are also the last audience of students I will have
the privilege to stand among. So, allow me to impart one of the lessons that has helped
guide my career and which, I hope, will help you in yours.
It is our nature to want to seek stability and certainty. And surely, that’s part of my job at
the Fed, to help secure a stable and certain course for the economy. But the economy,
like life, doesn’t always react in the ways we think it will or should, and so sometimes
we’re challenged to rethink some of the assumptions we previously thought were
maxims.
Leaning into those situations with an open and calm mind — following what you see and
not necessarily want you want to see — is how we tackle these challenges. It’s how we
focus on the now and doing what’s best for the given moment. It is how we can seek to
improve both the world around us and ourselves.
So, once again, I thank you for being here and for allowing me to be a Wildcat for the
night. I hope I have achieved my initial aim — to not just open the Fed a little bit but
hopefully to open up your minds to the numerous career paths the Fed may offer you.
I also wish you — and your professors — all the best as you work toward the end of the
semester and the academic year. Let’s have a discussion.
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Cite this document
APA
Patrick T. Harker (2025, April 13). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20250414_patrick_t_harker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20250414_patrick_t_harker,
author = {Patrick T. Harker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2025},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20250414_patrick_t_harker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}