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For release on delivery
1:15 p.m. EDT
April 8, 2005

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
to the
Federal Reserve System Community Affairs Research Conference
Washington, D.C.
April 8, 2005

It is a pleasure to be here today as you conclude your discussions about our
dynamic consumer finance market. Our nation's vibrant financial services industry is
remarkable in many respects, with myriad providers offering consumers a broad range of
transaction and credit options. The industry is central to the functioning of our robust
consumer sector. Therefore, it is essential that policymakers, regulators, bankers,
researchers, and consumer groups remain fully engaged in monitoring developments in the
consumer finance market and continually seek to better understand the strengths and
weaknesses of the financial services industry, including how well it serves lower-income
and underserved consumers.

Evolution of the Consumer Finance Market
A brief look back at the evolution of the consumer finance market reveals that the
financial services industry has long been competitive, innovative, and resilient. Especially
in the past decade, technological advances have resulted in increased efficiency and scale
within the financial services industry. Innovation has brought about a multitude of new
products, such as subprime loans and niche credit programs for immigrants. Such
developments are representative of the market responses that have driven the financial
services industry throughout the history of our country.
From colonial times through the early twentieth century, most people had quite
limited access to credit, and even when credit was available, it was quite expensive. Only
the affluent, such as prominent merchants or landowners, were able to obtain personal

loans from commercial banks. Working-class people purchased goods with cash or
through barter, since banks did not make consumer loans to the general public.
However, more-intense industrialization and urbanization during the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries dramatically changed the market for small consumer loans.
Urban wage earners used credit to help them purchase the vast array of durable goods
being produced by the new industrial economy, such as automobiles, washing machines,
and refrigerators. Naturally, this growth in demand fostered increased competition for
consumer credit, and, most important, the development of new intermediaries to supply it.
Early in the twentieth century, many new organizations that focused exclusively on the
needs of consumers entered the field, and the structure of consumer finance began to
change dramatically.
Semi-philanthropic groups, called remedial loan societies, were formed to combat
the high-rate cash lenders. "Morris Plan" banks, which made loans based on savings plans
by borrowers, and the first credit unions, accessible exclusively to consumers with a
common place of employment, soon followed. By the 1930s, a wide array of lenders
served consumers, including credit unions, small local savings banks, and a nationwide
network of state-licensed consumer finance companies. Savings and loans were created, in
large part, because commercial banks and other local lenders would not make home
mortgage loans. Hundreds of sales finance companies were formed to help manufacturers
and retailers provide credit to their customers. Although commercial banks continued to
finance merchants, manufacturers, and farmers, they were forced to turn more to consumer
lending during the Depression, when their primary business sharply contracted.

As these structural changes continued, market demand and growing competition
among this wider variety of lenders spawned further innovation. As early as 1900, some
hotels began offering credit cards to their regular customers. By 1914, gasoline companies
and large retail department stores were also issuing credit cards to their most-valued
patrons. These first cards were simply a convenient way for good customers to run a tab
with a particular retail business concern, since balances had to be paid in full each month.
Later versions, introduced by retail giants Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward, allowed
customers to pay their bills in installments, with interest charged on unpaid outstanding
balances. This shift to revolving credit, and another innovation—allowing one card to be
used at multiple businesses—later generated increasing competition in the card industry. In
the 1950s, commercial banks entered into the credit card business.
Home mortgage loans, as we know them today, are a fairly recent product born of
the failures of the mortgage finance system during the Great Depression. Clearly, radical
change was needed. One of the most significant responses to this need was creation of the
Federal Housing Administration, which instituted a new type of mortgage loan—the longterm, fixed-rate, self-amortizing mortgage—which became the model that transformed
conventional home mortgage lending. A whole industry—thriftinst uions—

grew

up

around this one product.
The development of a broad-based secondary market for mortgage loans also
greatly expanded consumer access to credit. By reducing the risk of making long-term,
fixed-rate loans and ensuring liquidity for mortgage lenders, the secondary market helped
stimulate widespread competition in the mortgage business. The mortgage-backed security
helped create a national and even an international market for mortgages, and market

4

support for a wider variety of home mortgage loan products became commonplace. This
led to securitization of a variety of other consumer loan products, such as auto and credit
card loans.

The Current Banking Structure
Today's fiercely competitive market for consumer credit evolved into its present
form slowly but persistently. Along the way, critical structural changes occurred,
including entry of, and expansion through, new players.
Deregulation of U.S. banking markets has contributed to an approximately 50
percent decline in the number of banking and thrift organizations since the mid-1980s,
when industry consolidation began. From 1995 to 2004, the ten largest U.S. banking and
thrift organizations, ranked by the total assets of their depository subsidiaries, have
increased their share of domestic banking and thrift assets from 29 percent to 48 percent.
However, according to most studies, this ongoing consolidation of the U.S. banking
system has not reduced overall competitiveness for consumer financial services. When
consolidation occurs, it is not uncommon for the merger to result in de novo entry to take
advantage of any inefficiencies or transition difficulties of the newly consolidated
enterprise. Over the past five years, for example, for every five bank mergers that have
been approved, two de novo bank charters have been granted. Even in the face of
consolidation, competition is fought on the battlefield of the local market, where most
households obtain the majority of their banking services. And. it is noteworthy that our
measures of local market competition have remained quite stable over the past fifteen
years.

Deregulation and consolidation have also cultivated the expansion of the financial
services marketplace, as evidenced by the proliferation of many nonbank entities that
provide the credit and transaction services that were once mainly the province of
depository institutions.

The Impact of Technology on Financial Services Markets
As has every segment of our economy, the financial services sector has been
dramatically transformed by technology. Technological advancements have significantly
altered the delivery and processing of nearly every consumer financial transaction, from
the most basic to the most complex. For example, information processing technology has
enabled creditors to achieve significant efficiencies in collecting and assimilating the data
necessary to evaluate risk and make corresponding decisions about credit pricing.
With these advances in technology, lenders have taken advantage of credit-scoring
models and other techniques for efficiently extending credit to a broader spectrum of
consumers. The widespread adoption of these models has reduced the costs of evaluating
the creditworthiness of borrowers, and in competitive markets cost reductions tend to be
passed through to borrowers. Where once more-marginal applicants would simply have
been denied credit, lenders are now able to quite efficiently judge the risk posed by
individual applicants and to price that risk appropriately. These improvements have led to
rapid growth in subprime mortgage lending; indeed, today subprime mortgages account for
roughly 10 percent of the number of all mortgages outstanding, up from just 1 or 2 percent
in the early 1990s.

For some consumers, however, this reliance on technology has been disconcerting.
Credit-scoring models arc complex algorithms designed to predict risk. Consumer
advocates have raised concerns about the transparency and completeness of the
information fit to the algorithm, as well as the rigidity of the types of data used to render
credit decisions. Consumer advocates contend that the lack of flexibility in the models can
result in the exclusion of some consumers, such as those with little or no credit history, or
misrepresentation of the risk that they pose.
To address these concerns, some firms have worked to customize credit-scoring
systems to include new data and to revalue the weight of the variables employed. Also,
new organizations have emerged, developing new systems for collecting alternative data,
such as rent payments and other recurring payments that will enable creditors to evaluate
creditworthiness of consumers who lack experience with credit.
Improved access to credit for consumers, and especially these more-recent
developments, has had significant benefits. Unquestionably, innovation and deregulation
have vastly expanded credit availability to virtually all income classes. Access to credit
has enabled families to purchase homes, deal with emergencies, and obtain goods and
services. Home ownership is at a record high, and the number of home mortgage loans to
low- and moderate-income and minority families has risen rapidly over the past five years.
Credit cards and installment loans are also available to the vast majority of households.
The more credit availability expands, however, the more important financial
education becomes. In this increasingly competitive and complex financial services
market, it is essential that consumers acquire the knowledge that will enable them to
evaluate products and services from competing providers and determine which best meet

7

their long- and short-term needs. Like all learning, financial education is a process that
should begin at an early age and continue throughout life. This cumulative process builds
the skills necessary for making critical financial decisions that affect one's ability to attain
the assets, such as education, property, and savings, that improve economic well-being.

Conclusion
As we reflect on the evolution of consumer credit in the United States, we must
conclude that innovation and structural change in the financial services industry have been
critical in providing expanded access to credit for the vast majority of consumers,
including those of limited means. Without these forces, it would have been impossible for
lower-income consumers to have the degree of access to credit markets that they now have.
This fact underscores the importance of our roles as policymakers, researchers,
bankers, and consumer advocates in fostering constructive innovation that is both
responsive to market demand and beneficial to consumers.