speeches · December 7, 2000
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For Release on Delivery
1:00 p.m. CST (2:00 p.m. EST)
December 8, 2000
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the Dedication of
the Birmingham Branch Building
Birmingham, Alabama
December 8, 2000
This afternoon, it is my distinct pleasure to be with you at this dedication
ceremony to speak about the gains in productivity and efficiency that technology is
bringing to the Federal Reserve. We are standing in an exemplar of this phenomenon.
This new structure-which succeeds a building dating to 1927-will for the first time use
automated guided vehicles and an automated stacking and retrieval system to process and
store both currency and coin. Until now, we've used such systems only for currency.
Buildings such as this new Birmingham Branch, employing the most modern
technologies, are central to the System's continued fulfillment of the basic purposes and
functions for which it was founded more than eighty years ago. However, we should
note that, as important as such buildings are in our endeavors to maintain a prosperous
economy, a safe and strong financial system, and a reliable and efficient payment system,
people—not machines—remain at the heart of whatever success we have achieved. I am
speaking of the dedicated professional men and women employed at this and other
Federal Reserve offices and of the many public-spirited citizens who give of their time
and expertise as directors and advisers to our Banks and Branches. I am also referring to
the many people outside the System who recognize the importance of safeguarding and
supporting the nation's independent central bank.
Thus, at the outset, I would like to acknowledge the important assistance we have
received from the members of Congress from Alabama. In 1992, they helped win
passage of an amendment to the Federal Reserve Act that enabled us to move forward on
this project. We are grateful to Senator Richard Shelby, who succeeded in moving the
legislation through the Senate, and to former Congressman Ben Erdreich, who sponsored
the bill through the House of Representatives. Without their efforts we would not have
been able to construct this new Branch.
I would like to recognize Congressman Spencer Bachus, chairman of the
subcommittee in the House Banking Committee with jurisdiction over the Federal
Reserve. In fact, the subcommittee he now chairs conducted hearings on the Branch
building legislation. We value the Federal Reserve's close working relationship with
him.
I am pleased to recognize Senator Jeff Sessions and Congressman Earl Hilliard as
well. We appreciate their support for this new structure. I also would like to
acknowledge state and local officials, Federal Reserve directors and officers, and other
invited guests.
A board of nine members serves each of the twelve regional Reserve Banks and a
board of five or seven members serves each of twenty-five Branch offices. All together,
270 men and women—industrialists, union leaders, bankers, educators, farmers, and
shopkeepers, all leaders in their communities—offer their knowledge and advice as
directors. So, in a sense, this building also stands as a symbol of our unique form of
central banking, which draws its strength from the closeness of its ties to local and
regional economies across the nation.
Convenience and efficiency in coin and currency distribution and in check-
processing may be the least of the benefits flowing from this far-flung network of offices,
stretching from Seattle to San Antonio and from Buffalo to Birmingham. Our System's
broad geographic reach also ensures that we who have the privilege of serving as
policymakers—the presidents of the regional Banks and the Board members in
Washington— receive a clear sense of the economic and business life beyond the
Beltway, which encircles the nation's capital. As keen observers of local economies, the
directors here and elsewhere contribute vitally to the formulation of monetary policy by
offering important insights absent, by definition, from even the most careful analysis of
aggregate data. Often they know what is happening in the various regions of the country
well before the hard data are collected by national statistical agencies. Most importantly,
this singular system of broad and diverse representation, nurtured by close contacts at the
regional and local levels, fosters a long-term perspective and a continuity.
So it is, on this special and festive occasion in the life of the Federal Reserve, that
this exceptional new structure, which benefits from the latest in technological innovation,
also reminds us of our fundamental purposes and our roots. It reminds us that the
regional Banks and local Branches, and the people who serve in them, are an integral part
of central banking in this country. It stands as a testament to the continued success of our
unique type of "decentralized" central banking.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2000, December 7). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20001208_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20001208_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2000},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20001208_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}