speeches · February 4, 2002
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
9:30 a.m. EST
February 5, 2002
Statement of
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
United States Senate
February 5, 2002
I am pleased to be here this morning to discuss the importance of improving
financial literacy and learning for consumers.
Given the importance of accurate and timely information in the financial services
industry, it is not surprising that this sector has benefited enormously from the innovative
application of new technologies that have facilitated the development of a wide range of
new financial providers and products. For consumers of household and business credit,
computer and telecommunications technologies have lowered the cost and broadened the
scope of financial services. As a consequence, we have seen a proliferation of
specialized lenders and new financial products that are tailored to meet very specific
market needs. At the same time, the development of credit-scoring tools and the
securitization of loan pools holds the potential for opening doors to national credit
markets for both consumers and businesses. In addition to technological advancement,
deregulation has created important structural changes in the financial services industry
and contributed significantly to creating a marketplace that is increasingly competitive
and highly innovative as a result of the entry or expansion of new players.
Throughout our banking history, we have seen significant adjustments made to
existing policies to enable markets to respond to the demand for services. These
structural changes have heightened competition, resulting in market efficiencies that
continue to help drive down costs and foster the emergence of increasingly diverse and
highly specialized organizations. Through these entities, which range from banks and
brokerage firms that offer their services exclusively through electronically based delivery
mechanisms to locally based public-private partnerships that provide counseling and
financing arrangements to facilitate access to mortgage credit for low- and moderate-
income families, consumers have increased access to a variety of credit and savings
instruments. Corporations, for example, often allow employees to self-direct their
investments in pension and other benefit plans, whereas employers dictated such
decisions twenty years ago, and the advent of on-line brokerage firms has enabled
individual investors to directly conduct stock transactions.
For an increasingly complex financial system to function effectively, widespread
dissemination of timely financial and other relevant information among educated market
participants is essential if they are to make the type of informed judgments that promote
their own well-being and foster the most efficient allocation of capital.
However beneficial, constant change, of course, can be unsettling, and one
challenge we face is overcoming such anxieties. But just as the rapid adoption of new
information technologies has expanded the scope and utility of our financial products, so
has it increased our means for addressing some of the challenges these changes pose. For
example, just as universities provide remote learning options to allow students to pursue
continuing education via the Internet, consumers can utilize software to create
customized budgets to develop long-term savings strategies for retirement or their
children's college education. In both scenarios, technological advances represent the
opportunity for achieving efficiencies and exercising preferences, but only when the end
users possess the knowledge of how to access pertinent information and how to capitalize
on those choices.
As in the workplace, fostering education that will enable individuals to overcome
their reluctance or inability to take full advantage of technological advances and product
innovation in the financial sector can be a means of increasing economic opportunity. As
market forces continue to expand the range of providers of financial services, consumers
will have more choice and flexibility in how they manage their financial matters. They
will also need to accumulate the appropriate knowledge about how to use new
technologies and how to make financial decisions in an informed manner.
Indeed, surveys repeatedly demonstrate a strong link between education and the
use of new financial technologies. For example, data from the Federal Reserve's Survey
of Consumer Finances (SCF) suggest that a higher level of education significantly
increases the chances that a household will use an electronic banking product. In
particular, in 1998, the typical user of an electronic source of information for savings or
borrowing decisions had a college degree—a level of education currently achieved by
only about one-third of U.S. households.
These most recent data from the SCF exhibit a mixed picture of the financial
status of households, providing evidence that we need to reach out to those who have not
been able to participate fully. For example, while the median real net worth for all
families increased 17-1/2 percent between 1995 and 1998, this trend did not hold where
the head of the household had a high-school level of education or less, family earnings
were less than $25,000 annually, or the ethnicity of the respondent was non-white or
Hispanic. That families with low-to-moderate incomes and minorities did not appear to
fully benefit from the highly favorable economic developments of the mid-1990s is, of
course, troubling, and the data from the 2001 survey that will be available later this year
will warrant a detailed look. Through 1998 we found that families with incomes below
$25,000 did increase their direct or indirect holdings of stock, and more reported that they
had a transactions account. However, they were less likely to hold nonfinancial assets—
particularly homes, which constitute the bulk of the value of assets for those below the
top quintile according to income. At the same time, one encouraging finding from the
survey is that the homeownership rate among minorities rose from 44 percent to 47
percent between 1995 and 1998, and according to the Census surveys, the rate edged
above 48 percent as of the fourth quarter of 2001. This trend may be a sign of improved
access to credit for minorities.
Other findings of the SCF through 1998 include the rise in families' median level
of debt burden, financial stress (defined as debt payments that represent more than 40
percent of income), and incidence of late debt repayment. The findings showed increases
in each of these categories across all income and age groups, with the highest levels of
financial stress among households headed by people 65 and older and earning less than
$25,000 annually. The recent evident rise in subprime loan delinquencies is of some
concern in this regard.
In considering means to improve the financial status of families, education can
play a critical role by equipping consumers with the knowledge required to make wise
decisions when choosing among the myriad of financial products and providers. This is
especially the case for populations that have traditionally been underserved by our
financial system. In particular, financial literacy education may help to prevent
vulnerable consumers from becoming entangled in financially devastating credit
arrangements. In the quest to stem the occurrence of abusive, and at times illegal,
lending practices, regulators, consumer advocates, and policymakers all agree that
consumer education is essential to combating predatory lending. An informed borrower
is simply less vulnerable to fraud and abuse. Financial literacy can empower consumers
to be better shoppers, allowing them to obtain goods and services at lower cost. This
effectively increases their household budgets, providing more opportunity to consume
and save or invest. In addition, comprehensive education can help provide individuals
with the financial knowledge necessary to create household budgets, initiate savings
plans, manage debt, and make strategic investment decisions for their retirement or their
children's education. Having these basic financial planning skills can help families to
meet their near-term obligations and to maximize their longer-term financial well-being.
While data to measure the efficacy of financial education are not plentiful, the
limited research is encouraging. For example, a recent study by Freddie Mac, one of the
nation's largest purchasers of home mortgages, finds that homebuyers who obtain
structured homeownership education have reduced rates of loan delinquency. Similarly,
an evaluation conducted by the National Endowment for Financial Education on its high-
school-based programs found that participation in financial-planning programs improved
students' knowledge, behavior, and confidence with respect to personal finance, with
nearly half of participants beginning to save more as a result of the program. Another
Freddie Mac study of the relationship between financial behavior and financial outcomes
revealed that comprehension of the general principles of sound financial behavior, such
as budgeting and saving, is actually more beneficial in producing successful financial
results over time than specific and detailed information on financial transactions.
These findings underscore the importance of beginning the learning process as
early as possible. Indeed, in many respects, improving basic financial education at the
elementary and secondary school level is essential to providing a foundation for financial
literacy that can help prevent younger people from making poor financial decisions that
can take years to overcome. In particular, it has been my experience that competency in
mathematics—both in numerical manipulation and in understanding its conceptual
foundations-enhances a person's ability to handle the more ambiguous and qualitative
relationships that dominate our day-to-day financial decisionmaking. For example,
through an understanding of compounding interest, one can appreciate the cumulative
benefit of routine saving. Similarly, learning how to conduct research in a library or on
the Internet helps one find information to evaluate decisions. Focusing on improving
fundamental mathematic and problem-solving skills can develop knowledgeable
consumers who can take full advantage of the sophisticated financial services offered in
an ever-changing marketplace.
As I noted earlier, we have seen the marketplace respond to an increased demand
for conceptual job skills by increasing the range of educational options available to
individuals. We are also beginning to see similar efforts to provide consumers with
information and training that will improve their knowledge about financial matters
throughout their lives. For example, the U.S. military, in response to surveys that
revealed that nearly one-third of enlisted service members reported moderate-to-severe
difficulty in paying bills, has mandated that all incoming enlisted personnel receive
financial education.
Some school systems have introduced financial-management classes as part of
their high-school curricula and many employers are taking up the challenge as well. At
the Federal Reserve Board, for example, interest in financial education prompted an
employee committee to host a seminar on financial-planning strategies, and our
Consumer and Community Affairs staff recently hosted several well-attended educational
programs for Federal Reserve employees, providing information on qualifying for a
mortgage and managing debt. In fact, in conjunction with National Consumers' Week,
today an additional employee seminar on budgeting is underway
Despite the existence and proliferation of numerous training programs offered by
a wide variety of public, private, and nonprofit organizations, evaluation of the efficacy
of such programs has just recently begun. A study commissioned and published by the
Fannie Mae Foundation recommended that financial education programs equip
consumers of all ages and across all socioeconomic groups with the ability to know when
they need information, where they can find it, and how to apply it.
The Federal Reserve also has a keen interest in measuring the effectiveness of
financial literacy programs. For example, we hosted a forum highlighting best practices
in credit education focusing on effective tools and techniques and identifying
programmatic challenges and issues. More recently, we have included studies that
evaluate the impact of such training initiatives in our call for papers for the Community
Affairs Research Conference scheduled for the spring of 2003. Additionally, our
Community Affairs and Public Information Offices have embarked on a national
initiative to highlight the importance of financial literacy and heighten the visibility of
economic education programs. Quantitative study of the quality and long-term success of
education and training will be of particular interest to the Federal Reserve System, as we
develop and distribute a wide variety of financial and economic literacy products.
Both individually and through long-standing partnerships with a variety of local,
regional, and national organizations, each of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks and the
Board provide extensive information on these topics to a wide range of audiences,
including school-age children, low- and moderate-income families, and minority and
immigrant populations. The scope of these activities ranges from the sponsorship of
competitions on economic principles for high-school students and workshops on
homeownership and wealth-building strategies to the development of computer-based
tools for understanding mortgage borrowing and creating household budgets and savings
plans. The economic educators of the Federal Reserve System launched an interactive
web site offering students, educators, and the general public an introduction to the
workings of the Fed and the nation's banking system. The goal is to offer consumers a
clearer picture of, for example, how the Federal Reserve's decisions influence the
economy and consequently affect their monetary choices.
In closing, let me simply reiterate that the pace of technological change and
competitive pressures can only increase. These changes are affecting both financial and
nonfinancial institutions around the world. We cannot know the precise directions in
which technological change will take us, but as in recent years, the role of banks and
other providers of financial services will surely be significantly affected by the same
basic forces that guide the real economy. Building bridges between community
organizations, our educational institutions, and private business will be an essential
aspect of our efforts to increase familiarity with new technological and financial tools
that are fundamental to improving individual economic well-being. And the success of
such efforts will have a significant bearing on how well prepared we are to meet the
challenges of an increasingly knowledge-based economy.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2002, February 4). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20020205_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20020205_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2002},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20020205_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}