speeches · June 6, 1979
Speech
G. William Miller · Chair
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Remarks of
G. \·Ji 1 l i am Mi 11 e r
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Before the
National Alliance of Business
\fa s h i n g ton , D. C.
June 7, 1979
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This is a rather historic occasion for me to be addressing
this group. has completed its first decade of service. It can
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look back on those 10 years with a great sense of accomplishment. Many
milestones have been reached, and the opportunities for commemorating
your athievenents are tremendous. But there is little time, it seems
to me, for the National Alliance of Business to pause to savor its
success. And there is no time to rest on your laurels.
was not organized just to conduct a battle; it was organized
~IAB
to carry out a complete war -- a war that would defeat idleness, defeat
poverty, defeat despair; a war that would achieve victory for oppo~tunity,
for human dignity, for the value of the individual. The changes since
UAB came into being are many. The very structure in which we work, the
issues we face, have changed dramatically. And the challenge for NAB is
going to be to adapt and to build on its past accomplishments and progress
and make an even greater contribution in the decade ahead.
The reason it is increasingly critical that you do so is because
the life and death issues that face our society are far more critical.
Today we are suffering from various serious threats to our well-being in
the form of pervasive and deep-rooted inflation. That inflation has grown
up over some 12 or 14 years. In the process, it has become deeply embedded
in our system. It will require a dedicated strategy, implemented over a
number of years, if we are to avoid the destruction of values and incomes
and investment that also destroys the chance for accomplishing your pur
poses and accomplishing the overall goals of our nation.
Inflation is so deadly a disease that, if it is not· checked, it
can undermine not only the economic but the political and social values
of our entire society. So it is critical that we move with understanding,
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vtith will, and with a detennination to deal with this problem of
inflation.
In the year and a quarter since I have been in Washington,
it is rather remarkable how this has come to be the number one issue
and a number of fund amen ta 1 po 1 i c i es have been harrrnered into
h0\·1
shape to form the strategy, the arsenal of weapons, representing the
capacity to deal with and to conquer this dread disease.
The first policy that was put into place was redirection of
fiscal policy toward more discipline, toward greater reduction of the
role of Federal expenditures in our economy, toward a shift of re
sources to the private sector where the spending and the investment
decisions of millions of Americans and businesses will be more effect
tive than the same expenditures by the Federal government.
Second; an incomes policy was introduced in an effort to
moderate wages and prices as a means of buying time until more funda
mental policies can come into play. This, unfortunately, has often
been characterized as though it were the anti-inflation program,
while it is perhaps one of the least important parts -- but a critical
part -- of that strategy. The incomes policy represented by the
voluntary wage and price standards has, in my opinion, made a con
tribution, because it has resulted in less of an increase in prices
and wages than would have taken place had the program not been in
effect. I think that there has been far too little credit given to
the corporations which have, without any worry of sanctions, been
willing to comply with this program in the self-interest of
t~eir
own companies and in the interest of this nation. Too little credit
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has been given to the labor unions; over 90 percent of the contracts
signed since last October clearly have been in compliance.
A third policy has been the dollar policy. All last year
you were reading headlines about the decline and the weakening of the
dollar. It was not just a matter of pride; the decline of the dollar
was a real threat to our nation in tenns of inflation. The decline of
the dollar from September, 1977 through October 1978 added one per
cent to inflation last year because of the higher prices for essential
imports. Because those prices work through our system slowly, as
contracts run out and new commitments are made, we will have to suffer
an additional one percent of inflation this year as a result of the
weak dollar over a 12-month period. Two percent of added inflation
means that consumers in America will pay $30 billion more over two
years than would have been the case had we not had the decline of the
dollar.
In the strategy to fight inflation, it was no wonder then
that the government marshalled considerable resources. In cooperation
with other governments, the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the White
House, a massive program was put into place last November 1 that has
been effective in stabilizing and strengthening the dollar and return
ing to us the opportunity to cushion some of the effects of world events.
A fourth policy has to do with energy. This country developed
on abundant and inexpensive energy. Not long ago, we were a vast sparsely
populated continent with seemingly boundless sources of cheap energy. We
used those sources to build the highest standard of living the greatest
fo~
number of people that any nation has ever achieved. In doing so, we used
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energy instead of labor or muscle -- which we were short of -- and
instead of capital. Now we are coming to the end of the period when
oil flows through straws, if you will. We are going to go through an
important transition, a critical transition in terms of our strategy
to deal with inflation.
Some important steps to shape a new energy policy have already
been taken. Many of them you know. The policy involves new laws, in
cluding the natural gas bill enacted last fall which by creating a
national market, has had some effect on improving supplies and equal
izing the availability of this energy source. We now also see the
President taking the courageous step of decontrolling domestic crude,
returning to market forces which is an essential part of the process of
conserving and allocating resources as we make this transition. The
transition we'll need to make in our transportation stock, in our
housing stock, in our industrial stock, will take a number of years.
We can view energy as a divisive issue or we can use .it to unite our
nation behind a modernization program that will once again return
America to a position of dominance in the world in terms of technology
and productive capacity. It is the latter view that must prevail in
the strategy to fight inflation.
A fifth important policy weapon that has been put in place
is monetary policy. In putting all of these policy weapons that make
up the strategy into place, we have had the very good fortune to have
a common understanding and, therefore, a confluence of policies working
in the same direction. During this period, monetary policy been
h~s
directed toward restraint in order to curtail the growth of money and
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credit and thus dampen demand so as to avoid the excesses which would
drive us into a new round of inflation. Second, this policy has been
appli ed steadily and consistently, so that families and businesses
could adjust their plans with a knowledge of the course of policy,
without surprise or shock. Third, monetary policy has been imple
mented so as to avoid any undue burden falling on any sector of the
economy. It is for this reason that we authorized the money market
certificates and allowed the housing industry to compete for credit re
sources with other industries, thereby avoiding the disintermediation
and depression in housing which has been characteristic of past cycles.
Fourth, monetary policy has been applied to try to bank the fires of
inflation and slow down the economy without carrying our nation into
a serious recession, which would carry with it tremendous human suffer
ing and very little long-range impact in terms of correcting policy.
We now need to address ourselves to a sixth policy weapon,
and that is a policy to incentivize investment, to favor investment
over consumption as we recover from the slowdown in 1978. In that
way, we can lead ourselves out of this period of consolidation and
pause with an effort on productivity, with an effort on investments to
improve our technology, to reduce our unit costs, to reduce our energy
per unit costs, and we can return America to the leading nation in terms
of its capacity to produce at stable and low costs.
Now this strategy fits into your program because it is within
this framework of economic policy that you must make your contribution
toward dealing with the issue structural unemployment. have
~f T~ere
been great changes over the decade that NAB has been in business. As
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you know, the nature of the problem has shifted. In many ways it has
become more pervasive, more deeply embedded as has inflation. We
know now a great deal more about it. We know more about where the
problem exists, what kind of people need help in making the transition
from under-utilization to full contribution to our society. We know
that we must move from generalized policies to more targeted and
specific policies if we are to achieve the kinds of gains that we
need.
I would like to suggest to you some policy considerations
and policy options that I think are critical to understanding your
mission and how it relates and contributes to the total mission of
this nation.
First, it seems to me that we must reject the idea that
macro-economic policies can do the job that you are trying to do. If
we try to stimulate this economy in order to create jobs for all those
who need employment, we will strain our resources and unleash a round
of inflation that would destroy all values, in all jobs. We must re
ject that as a solution.
We should also, in my opinion, reject the idea that we can
cure inflation by placing the burden on a massive number of unemployed
Americans; that to me is unacceptable. do not think that we can ask
those who are disadvantaged in America to bear the burden in making
the adjustment. I reject the idea that we can use macro-economic
policies to stimulate or to depress the economy in order to solve this
problem. also reject the theory that there are limits in what we
can do to provide employment for Americans. It is often said that
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there are only so many hours and so many jobs in the economy and it
is just a question of shuffling one person or another into those jobs
and into those hours. I reject this. There is plenty of work to do
i n Amer i ca . ha t we need to do i s to l i nk tho s e who are a nx i o us to
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work with the work that is there, and reject the idea that there is
no room in the inn for all those who want to participate.
We must, instead, accept the philosophy of economic moder
ation to dampen the amplitudes of boom and bust that have been so
destructive of our economic progress. We must accept the idea that
every American can play a role in this moderately controlled progress
in f u t_ur e yea rs. Th ere a re no bounds to the work that America has to
do. We must, therefore, accept the proposition that the National
Alliance of Business has a critical role to play in bringing the people
who want and need to participate into a full partnership in this society
at the same time that we maintain a sound economic course to wipe out
inflation over the next five, six or seven years.
So, in the decade ahead, as you struggle with this problem of
linking up those who should be participating with the jobs that are
waiting, you need to ·do so in harmony with all the other policies I've
outlined that are designed to create the climate in which we can march
fonvard to accomplish our primary goals of full employment, price
stability, and a sound dollar.
has been most impressive to me over my years of experience
\~hat
is the great merit of our private enterprise system, how superior it is
in addressing our issues of economic progress and well-being.·:. But it is
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important to link that powerful system to effective partnership with
the government. That partnership between business and government is
the critical link. That is the essence of a potential great power.
Partnerships are difficult. All of us who are partners in
anything go through periods when we have some degree of uncertainty
about our own roles and our own missions and our own objectives.
There are times v1hen we are uncertain about what we are trying to
accomplish. think this is one partnership that has lived through
the good times and the bad times and has survived and is stronger
than ever today. I think it is our great good fortune that there is
a complete confluence of interest now between the governmental object-
ives and the private sector objectives. All of us desire the same
thing: government has come to realize the limits of government power
and is relying more on the private sector; the private sector has
realized that in the complex society in which we live, in this time
of great transitions, partnership with government if we
is~essential
are to address the issues objectively. and unemotionally and come up
with the answers to the benefit of the greatest number of people.
What has been accomplished by NAB over the past decade may
seem quite minor compared to the .contribution that NAB can and will
make in the coming decade. The job you are undertaking is one that is
business-like, pragmatic; it has goals, it has objectives, and each
day it faces the problem, deals with it, and solves it. But I hope
that you vlill not forget, as you approach this problem in a business
like way, that there is probably no program alive in America today
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more humanistic than the National Alliance of Business. In going
about your business of creating job opportunities for all Americans,
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you are contributing to the well-being and to the spiritual advancement
of everyone in this nation. Therefore, your mission is one with a
great sense of purpose, meeting a great national need. You deserve
the support and encouragement of all Americans, and I certainly will do
my best to help you in your years ahead.
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Cite this document
APA
G. William Miller (1979, June 6). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19790607_miller
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19790607_miller,
author = {G. William Miller},
title = {Speech},
year = {1979},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19790607_miller},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}