speeches · March 7, 1978
Speech
G. William Miller · Chair
G. William Miller
Remarks at Swearing-in Ceremony
White House
March 8, 1978
President Carter, I want to thank you for receiving
my family, friends and associates at the White House for the
occasion of my assuming office as Chairman of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System. I am grateful for your
hsopitality, and I know that all the other guests here are too.
The Federal Reserve is a unique American institution.
America is a diverse land, with diverse people, who from the
foundation of the Republic have sought to blend appropriate national
responsibilities with local and regional participation. This
led to the concept of an independent central bank comprised of
a central Board of Governors with 12 regional Federal Reserve
Banks.
The Federal Reserve System has met the test of time.
For 65 years it has responded to the needs of dynamic America.
It has evolved to meet the challenge of change. And the changes
have been dramatic, as our nation experienced technological,
social and economic developments of unprecedented scale.
The country has benefited from outstanding leadership
of the Federal Reserve over this period. Since the present organiza
tional structure was established in the 1930's, there have been
four Chairmen of the Board of Governors. Each has faced enormous
challenges. Each responded with strength and courage.
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Two of those Chairmen are with us today. William
McChesney Martin presided over the Fed for the longest term of
any Chairman, and his record stands as a beacon of excellence.
Arthur Burns is a legend in his own time. Every American
knows how he has stood in the front in the great fight against
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inflation. Everyone recognizes his remarkable intellect and
talent. He is respected and admired throughout the world.
With such giant predecessors, I fully recognize that
I must measure up to a demanding standard. I shall do my best
to meet the test.
The task ahead is difficult. It will take time to
resolve the many problems we face. It will take support from
both the public and private sectors. It will take willingness
by individuals, enterprises and associations to accept the
self-discipline of moderation.
Mr. President, I can pledge to you and to the Congress
and to the American people that the Federal Reserve System, in
carrying out its mission as the monetary authority for the
United States, will continue to be responsive and responsible.
Fortunately the Federal Reserve is able to draw upon many valuable
assets.
The people who make up the Federal Reserve family are
a great resource. The Governors, the Presidents of the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks and all employees of the System are competent and
dedicated men and women committed to professional service.
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The Federal Reserve is and will be a adaptive institution,
evolving to meet the new and expanding requirements of a changing
nation and world. It will seek to be creative in all its under
takings.
The American system itself has demonstrated inherent
strengths. During the past 10 years a series of substantial and
adverse events have impacted the U.S. and world economies. The
effects continue and present us with many policy dilemmas.
Yet, the system has shown remarkable resilence, with the capacity
to adjust and self-correct over time.
Governmental organizations have also shown vitality.
National leadership has responded to reestablish confidence in
business institutions.
And, most important, the American people themselves
are a boundless resource. Americans are by nature optimistic,
and that optimism is well justified from accomplishments of
the past. More recently, there has been considerable self-
examination. From that process, I believe there is emerging a
growing sense of self-confidence. With faith in ourselves, the
cumulative effect of what each of us does will assure that we
overcome all tj>e difficulties which now look so formidable.
For my part, I shall apply whatever energies and talents
I possess to play my. part--to make the best contribution I can
to achieving our goals of a growing economy with price stability.
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Cite this document
APA
G. William Miller (1978, March 7). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19780308_miller
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19780308_miller,
author = {G. William Miller},
title = {Speech},
year = {1978},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19780308_miller},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}