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For release on delivery
Expected about 8 45 E D T
October 7, 1996

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Annual Public Service Awards Dinner
of the
Public Securities Association
New York, N Y
October 7, 1996

I thank the members of the Public Securities .Association for bestowing upon
me this award for distinguished public service I am particularly honored by the
company that I keep as a winner of this award, as previous recipients have included
Senators Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Christopher Dodd, and Kay Bailey Hutchison
and my predecessor as Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Paul Volcker
I trust that everyone in this audience would agree that the U S government
securities market works as well as any on earth and generates widespread
macroeconomic benefits

In one sense, that is regrettable The market has become

so efficient in part because of the economies of scale associated with the large
volume of Treasury debt issued over the years While the massive federal debt has
allowed traders to refine their skills, it has also implied that much of the small pool
of national saving has gone toward funding the government Moreover, the interest
burden of this debt has kept tax rates higher than we might have wanted
In another sense, though, the efficiency of the government securities market
stands as testimony to decisions by policy makers in the formative days of our
nation that convinced the world that the United States honored its commitments
and valued the rule of law Every time I visit Secretary Robert Rubin, I am
reminded of the power of the first Secretary of the Treasury's decisions that laid the
foundations for this nation's financial credibility Engraved at the base of the statue
of Alexander Hamilton outside the Treasury building are the words of Daniel
Webster "He touched the dead corpse of the public credit, and it sprung upon its
feet"
Everyone knows the short version of the events that prompted that praise

2
Hamilton convinced the new Congress to honor the debts of the Continental
Congress Under his prodding, the federal government also assumed responsibility
for the debts of the individual states incurred in fighting the War of Independence
But there are five details of the debate at that time that we all would be well served
to remember
First, Hamilton insisted on full payment of the debt Many at that time
counseled discrimination among those obligations-perhaps by favoring vendors and
veterans over bond holders or perhaps by paying original holders of debt more than
those who purchased securities in the secondary market Hamilton recognized that
an obligation was an obligation, no matter how it was incurred or who held it
Repayment had both a moral and practical dimension The debt, in Hamilton's
words, was the "price of liberty" because it financed the successful completion of the
War of Independence Those who extended aid at a time of peril, or supported the
debt subsequently, deserved to be repaid But repayment would also send an
important message to investors, particularly those abroad, that the United States
could be trusted in the future

Hamilton recognized, and we should never forget,

that investors have many choices on world markets Even the whiff of the
possibility that the United States would not honor its debt would push up the cost
of borrowing for years to come Following Hamilton's lead, the Treasury has never
defaulted on any debt security, notwithstanding the abrogation of the gold clauses in
1933
Second, Hamilton was practical in his understanding that economic policy

3
making cannot be divorced from the broader discourse on public priorities

The

debate on the assumption of state debts generated arguments so heated as to make
our weekend television talk shows appear as civil as tea parties Reflecting on those
days in his later years, Thomas Jefferson--by no means an admirer of the first
Secretary of the Treasury-was led to write that "this measure produced the most
bitter and angry contest ever known in Congress, before or since the Union of the
States " But those bitter enemies, Hamilton and Jefferson, compromised with an
old-fashioned horse trade Jefferson threw his support for the assumption of the
state debts in return for Hamilton's advocacy of placing the nation's capital on the
banks of the Potomac
Political realities have not changed in that regard in the succeeding two
centuries It is inevitable that consideration of the budget be included as part of a
wider debate on public policies However, Alexander Hamilton drew a line that no
one should cross The government of the United States must never default on its
debt
Third, Hamilton's plan to honor the old debt provided a sinking fund to help
repay new debt as it came due The first Secretary saw that Treasury debt was a
burden to future generations And it was his responsibility to provide the means to
lighten that load

In those simpler times, before we became too sophisticated for our

own good, deficit financing was a necessity prompted solely by peril, not as a tool of
active demand management or as an excuse to put off hard decisions In one sense,
though, Hamilton's job of planning for the retirement of the debt he was issuing was

4
easier than the problems confronting today's policy makers In 1789, government
obligations could be measured by the amount of debt outstanding Today, debt
comes in many forms, including promises to pay that have become embodied in
unfunded entitlement programs
Fourth, Hamilton's refunding scheme provided for the issuance of securities of
long maturity that would be repaid in specie Thus, his Treasury locked in longerterm funding and did not have to test continually the market's willingness to finance
the new government

At the same time, investors were given some assurance that

holding government securities would preserve their purchasing power Those same
incentives have led our present-day Treasury to issue securities across a wide range
of maturities and, I am pleased to note, to begin soon to offer debt indexed to
consumer prices
Fifth, and this should come as no surprise from one of the authors of the
Federalist Papers, Hamilton explained his policies in well written, logically constructed
arguments that remain pleasures to read, even two hundred years later
Hamilton's lessons speak across the generations, both to policy makers in
mature democracies and those coping, as he did, with financing newly independent
states If we are to protect his creation, the U S Treasury market, we must
remember two facts he could not afford to forget

For one, buyers of Treasury

securities do so through their own volition Investors have alternatives, and more so
now than ever before

For another, the issuer of those securities, the U S Treasury,

must finance an amount, on net, that is determined by the political judgments of

5
the congressional and executive branches of government

If the government makes

purchasing its debt harder--by imposing onerous reporting or bookkeeping
requirements--or riskier-by following capricious macroeconomic policies-buyers will
pull back and the cost of servicing the debt will rise We at the Federal Reserve will
do our part to contribute to financial stability, which is to preserve the purchasing
power of money over time
To be sure, the dollar sums that preoccupied Alexander Hamilton were small
The national debt totaled $75 million, or $18 per capita But the issues at stake
were large I can only hope that, by following his precedent, today's policy makers
show some of the same wisdom in dealing with the public debt

5
the congressional and executive branches of government

If the government makes

purchasing its debt harder--by imposing onerous reporting or bookkeeping
requirements--or riskier--by following capricious macroeconomic policies-buyers will
pull back and the cost of servicing the debt will rise We at the Federal Reserve will
do our part to contribute to financial stability, which is to preserve the purchasing
power of money over time
To be sure, the dollar sums that preoccupied Alexander Hamilton were small
The national debt totaled $75 million, or $18 per capita

But the issues at stake

were large I can only hope that, by following his precedent, today's policy makers
show some of the same wisdom in dealing with the public debt