speeches · September 11, 1997
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
12 20 p in , E D T
September 12, 1997
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Building Dedication Ceremonies
at the
Kenan-Flagler Business School
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
September 12, 1997
I welcome the opportunity to join Dean Fulton President Broad, President
Emeritus Spangler, Chancellor Hooker, Hugh McColl, and the many other
distinguished guests on the podium today It isnt every day that we have the
opportunity to dedicate a new building devoted to the research and training that our
young people need for conducting business in a global setting This new facility—the
McColl Bulding—as been equipped with state-of-the-art information technology that
will enhance the ability of the faculty and students of Kenan-Flagler to prepare for an
exciting future in our global economy
The Umversity has made this important commitment at a time when our
busmesses and workers are confronting a dynamic set of forces that will influence our
nation's ability to compete worldwide in the years ahead One of the most central of
these forces is the rapid acceleration of computer and telecommunications
technologies, which can be reasonably expected to appreciably raise our standard of
living in the twenty-first century In the short run, however, the fallout from rapidly
changing technology is an environment in which the stock of plant and equipment
with which most managers and workers mteract is turning over increasingly rapidly,
render ing a perception that human skills are becoming obsolete at a rate perhaps
unprecedented in American history I shall endeavor to place this most unusual
phenomenon in the context of the broader changes in our economy and, hopefully,
explain why the value of education, especially to enhance advanced skills, is so vital
to the future growth of our economy
Wealth has always been created, virtually by definition, when individuals
use their growing knowledge to interact with an expanding capital stock to produce
goods and services of value Assisted by the whole array of market prices,
entrepreneurs seek to identify the types of products and services that individuals will
value, especially the added value placed on products and services that customers find
better tailored to their particular needs, delivered in shorter time frames, or improved
in quality
This striving to unbundle the particular characteristics of goods and services
in order to maximize their value to each individual inevitably results in the shift
toward value created through the exploitation of ideas and concepts, rather than simply
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the utilization of physical resources and manual labor Indeed, over the past century,
by far the smallest part of the growth in America's real gross domestic product reflects
mcreased physical product measured in bulk or weight Most of our gams have been
the result of new insights into how to rearrange physical reality to achieve ever-higher
standards of living We have dramatically reduced the physical bulk of our radios, for
example, by substituting transistors for vacuum tubes Thin fiber optic cable has
replaced huge tonnages of copper wire New architectural, engineering, and materials
technologies have enabled the construction of buildings enclosing the same space, but
with far less physical material, than was required say 50 or 100 years ago Most
recently, mobile phones have been significantly downsized as they have been
improved
The increasing importance of new msights has, of necessity, raised the
value of information creation and transfer in boosting standards of living Thus, it
should be no surprise that advanced computer and telecommunications products have
been accorded particularly high value by consumers and busmess and, hence, why
companies that successfully innovate in this field exhibit particularly high stock market
values
Breakthroughs in all areas of technology are continually adding to the
growing list of almost wholly conceptual elements in our economic output These
developments are affecting how we produce output and are demanding greater
specialized knowledge
The use, for example, of computer-assisted design instruments, machine
tools, and inventory control systems has given our former, more rigid factory assembly
lines greater flexibility Businesses now can more quickly customize their production
to changes in market conditions, design cycles are shorter, quality control has been
improved, and hence costs are lower Offices are now routinely outfitted with high-
speed information-processing technology
The accelerated pace of technological advance has also mteracted with the
rapid rise in financial innovation, with the result that busmess services and financial
transactions now are transmitted almost instantaneously across global networks
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Financial instruments have become increasingly diverse, the products more
customized, and the markets more intensely competitive Our nation's financial
institutions, in turn, are endeavoring to find more effective and efficient ways to
deliver their services
In this environment, America's prospects for economic growth will greatly
depend on our capacity to develop and to apply new technology—a quest that
inevitably will entail some risk-taking One lesson we have clearly learned is that we
never can predict with any precision which particular technology or synergies of
technologies will add significantly to our knowledge and ability to gain from that
knowledge Moreover, America's ability to remain in the forefront of new ideas and
products has become ever more difficult because of the rapid international diffusion of
technology Nonetheless, to date, we have not fallen behind in converting scientific
and technological breakthroughs into viable commercial products
But, to be fully effective in realizing the gains from technological advance
will require a considerable amount of human investment on the part of managers and
workers who have to implement new processes and who must be prepared to adapt,
over their lifetimes, to the ongoing change that innovations bring
Clearly our educational institutions will continue to play an important role
in preparing workers While we all are concerned about the performance of American
elementary and secondary schools compared with those in other developed countries,
there is little question about the quality of our university system, which for decades
has attracted growing numbers of students from abroad However, the notion that
formal degree programs at any level can be crafted to fully support the requirements
of one's lifework is being challenged
A great deal of innovation and development has been occurring in the
business sector where firms are striving to stay on the cutting edge, in an environment
where products and knowledge rapidly become obsolete Education, as a result, is
increasingly becoming an ongoing lifelong activity, businesses are now looking for
employees who are prepared to continue learning, and workers and managers in many
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kinds of pursuits had better look forward to persistent hard work acquiring and
maintaining the skills needed to cope with a dynamically evolving economy
The recognition that more productive workers and learning go hand-in-hand
is becoming ever more visible in both schools and in the workplace Linkages
between business and education should be encouraged at all levels of our education
system Your business school is an excellent example of how our educational
institutions are building bridges to the private business sector that will have payoffs in
how well graduates are prepared to meet the challenges of an increasingly knowledge-
based global economy The growth of high-tech industry here in the Research
Triangle, as well as in Silicon Valley and Boston—all areas rich in educational and
research institutions—is no accident
In the private sector, a number of major corporations have invested in their
own internal training centers—so-called corporate universities Some labor unions have
done the same More broadly, recent surveys by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
indicate that the provision of formal education on the job has risen markedly in recent
years By 1995, 70 percent of workers in establishments with 50 or more employees
had received some formal training during the twelve months preceding the survey
The incidence of training was relatively high across age groups and educational
attainment Most often this training was conducted in-house by company personnel,
but larger firms also relied importantly on educational institutions
At the same time, we must be alert to the need to improve the skills and
earning power of those who appear to be falling behind In the long run, better child-
rearing and better basic education at the elementary and secondary school level are
essential to providing the foundation for a lifetime of learning But in the shorter run,
we must also develop strategies to overcome the education deficiencies of all too
many of our young people, and to renew the skills of workers who have not kept up
with the changing demands of the workplace
The advent of the twenty-first century will certainly not bring an end to the
challenges we are facing in a rapidly changing world Americans will surely adjust to
a frenetic pace of change, as we have in the past, but we must recognize that
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adjustment is not automatic All shifts in the structure of the economy naturally create
frictions and human stress, at least temporarily As those frictions dissipate, however,
I have no doubt that the economy will emerge healthier And, if we are able to boost
our mvestment in people, ideas, and processes as well as machines, the economy can
operate more effectively as it adapts to change This holds the potential to create an
even greater payoff of a broadly based rise in living standards over the longer run
Your new Kenan-Flagler facility will enhance this Umversity's ability to meet the
challenge
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1997, September 11). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19970912_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19970912_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1997},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19970912_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}