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For release on delivery
2:30 p.m. EDT
October 7, 2004

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Conference on
Reflections on Monetary Policy 25 Years after October 1979
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri
October 7, 2004

A defining moment may shape the direction of an institution for decades to come.
In the modern history of the Federal Reserve, the action it took on October 6, 1979,
stands out as such a milestone and arguably as a turning point in our nation's economic
history. The policy change initiated under the leadership of Chairman Paul Volcker on
that Saturday morning in Washington rescued our nation's economy from a dangerous
path of ever-escalating inflation and instability. As I noted in congressional testimony
before the Joint Economic Committee on November 5 of that year:
We are here ... to evaluate the moves of Chairman Volcker and his
colleagues last month, implying that some alternate policies were feasible
at that time. However, given the state of the world financial markets, had
the Fed not opted to initiate a sharp interest rate increase in this country,
the market would have done it for us.1
In a democratic society such as ours, the central bank is entrusted by the
Congress, and ultimately by the citizenry, with the tremendous responsibility of guarding
the purchasing power of money. It is now generally recognized that price stability is a
prerequisite for the efficient allocation of resources in our economy and, indeed, for
fulfilling our ultimate mandate to promote maximum sustainable employment over time.
But the importance of price stability has sometimes been insufficiently appreciated in our
central bank's history, and, as Allan Meltzer will soon point out, such episodes have had
unfortunate consequences.
Far from being a bulwark of stability in the 1970s, the Federal Reserve conducted
policies that, in the judgment of many analysts, inadvertently contributed to an

1

Alan Greenspan (1980), "Statement," in Domestic and International Implications of the Federal
Reserve's New Policy Actions, Hearing before the Subcommittee on International Economics of the Joint
Economic Committee, November 5, 1979, 96 Cong. 1 Sess. (Washington: Government Printing Office), p.
5.

environment of macroeconomic instability. We should strive to retain in the collective
memory of our institution the ensuing lessons of that period. It may be the most fruitful
and proper way to commemorate the events of October a quarter-century ago.
Tracing the roots of the 1970s inflation brings us to an earlier era. The Keynesian
revolution of the 1930s and its subsequent empirical application led many economists to
accept the view that through regulation, state intervention, and the macroeconomic
management of aggregate demand, government policies, including those of our nation's
central bank, could improve on earlier efforts to achieve and maintain "full employment."
By the 1960s, policymakers seemed to concentrate their short-run objectives on
maintaining a "high pressure" economy in the belief that such a recipe could virtually
thwart economic contractions at little or no risk to long-run stability and growth. If this
high-pressure management inadvertently carried the economy beyond its productive
potential, some cost in terms of inflation could be expected, but such costs appeared
tolerable in light of the employment gains that came with them. Furthermore,
policymakers hoped that additional tools at their disposal—so-called incomes policies
enforced by "jawboning," guideposts, and price and wage controls—were ready to combat
and control any resulting upcreep in inflation with minimal macroeconomic cost.
By the turn of the 1970s, the ugly reality of stagflation forced an overhaul of this policy
framework. The corrosive influence of inflation on our nation's productive potential was
beginning to take hold. Policymakers slowly came to recognize the adverse long-term
consequences of compromising the purchasing power of our currency for economic well
being. Indeed, by the late 1970s, a consensus gradually emerged that inflation destroyed
jobs rather than facilitating their creation. Unfortunately, a legacy of failed attempts

during the decade to restore stability with gradualist plans and with various incarnations
of incomes policies took its toll on business and household attitudes toward inflation and
toward the prospects of our nation. By the end of the decade, an inflationary psychology
had become well entrenched and complicated efforts to restore a sense of stability in the
national psyche.
Little leeway for policy was left before the Federal Reserve took decisive action
on October 6, 1979. In retrospect, the policy put in place on that day was the obvious and
necessary solution to the nation's troubles. As events unfolded, however, the Federal
Reserve did not escape criticism, and for a time it was not entirely obvious that the
System could maintain the necessary public support to see its disinflationary efforts come
to fruition. Though widely anticipated even before the actions of October, the recession
and retrenchment in employment that followed those actions resulted in pressures on the
Federal Reserve to reverse course. The fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of the Great
Depression—the crash of 1929—was observed later during that same month, October
1979. I recall that this anniversary not only rekindled the question of whether such an
event could recur but also inflamed sensitivities regarding the effects on unemployment
that might stem from the new anti-inflationary action. Judging from the fate of earlier
attempts during the 1970s to tame inflation in the face of a weakening economy, when
short-run considerations appeared to trump policies oriented toward longer horizons, such
fears of rising unemployment could have also derailed the reforms of October. In the
event, they did not. We owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to Chairman Volcker and to
the Federal Open Market Committee for their leadership and steadfastness on that
important occasion and for restoring the public's faith in our nation's currency.

By the time that I arrived at the Federal Reserve, in 1987, the task of the Federal
Open Market Committee had become easier precisely because of the perseverance and
success of our predecessors in the turbulent years following October 1979. Maintaining
an environment of stability is simpler than restoring the public's faith in the soundness of
our currency. The task is easier still as we remind ourselves of the stark difference
between the long-term prospects of our economy now, in our current environment of
stability, and then, a quarter-century ago, before the reforms of that October.
In closing, I applaud President Poole and his colleagues for organizing this event
to reflect upon that critical episode in our nation's economic history. An appreciation of
our history is, after all, an invaluable guide to sound policies for a better future.