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For release on delivery
1 10 p m M S.T
(3 10 p m
March 7, 1997

E S T

Remarks byAlan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governora of the Federal Reserve System
at a
Conference on Privacy in the Information Age
Salt Lake City, Utah
March 7, 1997

It is a pleasure to be with you this afternoon as you
discuss some of the most fundamental issues raised by our new
information and communications technologies
The topic Senator Bennett has asked us all to address is
privacy in the information age

The central dilemma in these

discussions almost always involves fundamental choices about how
to strike prudent balances among the needs of individuals for
privacy in their financial and commercial transactions, as well
as their personal communications, the needs of commerce to bring
us new products and new means to communicate, and the needs of
the authorities to provide for the effective administration of
government and to ensure the public safety
choices

These are not easy

I think we all need to have a healthy respect for all

sides of the debate

Even further, we need to be aware that the

balances we strike in one era may need to be reexamined as
technology and circumstances change
The dictionary defines privacy as the state of being free
from unsanctioned intrusion

This concept, to which Americans

feel a very deep-seated attachment, is reflected in the Fourth
Amendment to the Constitution, which assures "The right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures

"

For the

government to intrude on one's privacy is in a very fundamental
sense a deprivation of freedom

It is one of those deeply sensed

issues that transcends people's constitutional or legal views and
delves into the realm of one's sense of person

-2This is why the perceived threat to privacy from burgeoning
technological advance, coupled with an increasing sense of
inefficacy in the face of sophisticated new technologies, has
created such a stir

The fears of invasion of privacy, as a

consequence of inexorable forces seemingly out of the control of
the average American, has risen to a major public policy issue
A half century ago a number of writers expressed concern at
a perceived ever widening intrusion of government into the lives
of individuals

They feared the ultimate collectivization of our

society where individualism would be significantly diminished or
expunged, and the emergence of "Big Brother" would come to define
and dominate our lives

1984, the year, as well as the book made

famous by George Orwell in 1949, have come and gone

The

outreach of government, if anything, has receded, especially with
respect to the issues of personal libertyL and its concomitant,
personal privacy
I suspect that the fear of "Big Technology" when it arrives
will travel the less threatening route of "Big Brother" before
it

In preparation for addressing that issue, I believe it would
be useful to examine some of the interesting dimensions of the
concept of privacy and its application to how human society
arranges itself

Indeed, when it comes to the issue of privacy,

humans are distinctly ambivalent
institution of wanting to be alone

Greta Garbo made an
Yet, at the same time, human

-3beings have always sought and presumably needed the presence of
others in organizing their societies, even before we economists
came on the scene to inform them about the benefits of the
division of labor
But the various paradigms by which we have chosen to
organize ourselves were closely tied to how we viewed the
relative value of individualism and its precondition, the
implicit need for privacy.

In recent generations, the major

competing forms of government, of course, have been (1) a system
based on individual rights with the role of the state largely
directed at protecting those rights (the United States being the
most prominent example of that form of government) and (2) the
now defunct Soviet Union, and its eastern European satellites,
which were the model of communist collectivization

In the

latter, the individual was theoretically subject to the will of
the collective but, in reality, subjugated by an elite autocratic
hierarchy
In the Soviet system, rights inhered in the collective,
which immediately dismisses by definition any right to privacy
State mtrusiveness in the form of the KGB or the Stasi
eviscerated any wall of personal separation that citizens may
have sought
But, in the end, that form of government did not, probably
could not, succeed

The human need for personal expression,

property, and privacy, doubtless were significant in undermining

-4those collectivist states

Indeed, since the end of World

War II, we have had as close as one can come to a controlled
experiment in the comparative effectiveness of alternate forms of
government organization

I refer to the extraordinary divergence

in post-war recovery patterns observed between West and East
Germany

Both were rooted in the same historic culture and

institutions, differing virtually only in the form of political
and economic organization, which were adopted by those societies
at war's end

Almost a half-century later, when the Berlin Wall

was torn down, the results of this remarkable experiment vividly
and unqualifiedly attested to the superiority of the West German
free market system based on individual rights, a system where
people lived with minimum fear of the state's intrusion into
their daily lives

In East Germany, in contrast, to assure that

society was appropriately collectivized, it was necessary to
probe into the private lives of all individuals and suppress
individual freedoms

Human beings had to be molded by force to

achieve the East German leaders' distorted view of societal
organization

Privacy was scarcely the goal or purpose of the

East German state

Indeed, intrusiveness into the lives of all

of the citizens was perceived to be an essential ingredient in
its organization
The political and economic results of the post-war
competition between East and West generally have been
unequivocal.

The free market capitalism of West Germany has been

-5judged superior in all relevant respects, with very few
dissenting from that conclusion

The human need for privacy

surely was a major factor in that outcome
To be sure, our newer information technologies can scarcely
be perceived as the type of threat to privacy as that of the
Soviet state.

Nonetheless, the same pressing need for privacy,

which helped upend the Soviet Union, can be expected to address
and overcome concerns that our newer technologies will intrude on
our cherished need for privacy

Communism fell because its

practice eliminated personal incentives to work and to acquire
property, except in a very limited sense

The existence of such

incentives requires the broad freedoms we enjoy to pursue our
myriad personal goals

It was the deprivation of these

incentives and the suppressing of competition among individuals,
the hallmark of a growing economy, which brought Communism down
Since privacy is such an evident value in our society, where
technology threatens that value, entrepreneurs can be counted on
to seek means to defend it

The major resources they have

devoted to encryption in the development of

new communication

systems attest to the economic value they place on privacy in
communications

Moreover the pressures to enact legal

prohibitions on the dissemination of personal records will also
create incentives to produce technologies that protect them
Indeed, the most effective means to counter technology's erosion
of privacy is technology itself

-6The marketplace is burgeoning with new devices to this end
These devices, of course, include the many advances for
encrypting and filtering information

We may even see the

deployment of technologies that permit individuals to make
choices calibrating their degree of privacy in conducting
individual transactions.
With some irony, even some of the ability of the government
to pursue protection of individual rights is being impaired by
effective encryption

This leads to the important question of

how to balance the legitimate expectations of individuals for
privacy with the needs of government for information to
effectively administer the laws and provide for the public
safety

The most delicate care is needed in this regard to

prevent unnecessary intrusion when specific government decisions
are implemented and to avoid the risk of a gradual, long-term
erosion of privacy
Beyond these issues are immediate questions about privacy in
the delivery of professional, commercial, and financial services
over open computer networks as well as personal communications
through devices such as e-mail

For example, there are typically

strong assumptions about privacy surrounding medical, legal, and
financial communications and records

These assumptions are

designed to safeguard the autonomy of the individual and to
facilitate a society where special expertise can be developed and
called upon, when necessary, to promote the individual's welfare

-7It would be a strange outcome, indeed, if traditional notions of
privacy applied only at the physical office of the doctor,
lawyer, or banker, but not when modern computer technologies were
employed to make professional services available at lower cost
and with greater convenience
It may be that some services and communications channels
will be used regardless of what privacy guarantees are provided
Providing medical advice by computer network to rural areas with
no resident doctors may be one example

More common services,

however, such as certain cellular telephone technologies and the
use of e-mail over the Internet, are subject to less privacy than
some other modes of communication, although extensive efforts are
currently being directed to address that

The growing use of

credit cards without security measures to pay for goods and
services over open networks is another example
Clearly, as these examples demonstrate, privacy concerns may
be outweighed, if only for the moment, by other factors such as
cost and convenience

However, given choices in the marketplace

that include price, quality and differing degrees of privacy, I
have little doubt that privacy would be valued and sought after
In the financial sphere, the payment systems of the United
States present a paradox

Our systems, and banking arrangements,

for handling high-value dollar payments are all electronic and
have been for many years

Banking records, including those for

loans and deposits, have been computerized since the 1960s

-8Securities markets also now rely on highly automated records and
systems, born out of necessity following the paperwork crisis of
the 1970s
Thus, it might seem strange that in transactions initiated
by consumers, paper--currency and checks--remains the payment
system of choice

Debit and ATM cards, along with automated

clearing house payments, account for a very small percentage of
transactions

Even the use of popular credit cards has only

recently begun to challenge paper's dominance

While there are

many other factors involved in this anomaly, the value of privacy
of transaction has clearly been a significant determinant
Paper currency is, of course, the ultimate protector of
anonymity, for making ordinary payments at the retail level

It

is, thus, a measure of how valued is privacy in our system that
inroads into the use of_currency have been slow, and halting, in
the face of technologies one would assume would have quickly
buried the presumed inefficiency of paper transactions
To be sure, checks leave a paper trail which can compromise
privacy, but it is a less efficient and accessible trail than
when available newer technologies are used

Clearly, then, the

value of privacy of transactions that currency--and to a somewhat
lesser extent, checks--provide is a measure of the economic cost
individuals are willing to expend when far superior efficiencies
are at hand

-9Nonetheless, the marketplace is currently investing large
sums to develop new means to automate payments as well as other
retail banking and financial transactions

Projects for creating

stored value cards and Internet-based payment systems, for
example, are being discussed around the world

Again, as in the

1970s, articles are being written and conferences are being held
to pronounce the end of paper

They may again prove premature

It is clear, however, that security and privacy will be very
important if confidence is to be established in these new
systems

Indeed, in many, privacy of communication is a

necessary requirement

Many projects are evolving daily to meet

the business requirements of potential operators and the
potential service needs of businesses and consumers
There is a significant need for flexibility in allowing
these technologies to adapt and grow in response to pressures in
the marketplace

There is also a need to avoid building formal

or burdensome regulatory systems on the shifting sands of project
proposals

If we wish to foster innovation, we must be careful

not to impose rules that inhibit it

I am especially concerned

that we not attempt to impede unduly our newest innovation,
electronic money, or more generally, our increasingly broad
electronic payments system

To develop new forms of payment, the

private sector will need the flexibility to experiment, without
broad interference by the government

-10Our most intriguing challenge is whether new technologies
can provide improved financial services and, at the same time,
provide greater privacy and related benefits

Flexibility by

industry, consumers, and government may help make such overall
advances possible
Finally, I want to emphasize that the information age is not
something to be feared, but may well be a vast opportunity
Personal computers, an array of software, and new communications
channels have placed powerful and creative technologies directly
into the hands of individuals

The current enthusiasm of society

for science and technology, particularly among young people,
holds great promise for the future

If history is any guide, it

is from this enthusiasm that the future will be born