View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

For release on delivery
10 a.m , E S.T.
January 29, 1992

Statement by

Alan Greenspan

Chairman

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

before the

Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
of the
United States Senate

January 29, 1992

Mr. Chairman members of the committee, I want to
thank you for scheduling this hearing to consider my
nomination to a second term as Chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board and to a full 14-year term as a member of that
Board.

I am especially grateful to President Bush for the

confidence he had in me to make these nominations.
I have testified before you frequently on the state
of the economy and the conduct of monetary policy, including
as recently as two weeks ago.

I also have given you my

views and those of the Federal Reserve Board on a wide range
of specific regulatory and supervisory matters pertaining to
banks over the last several years.

I would expect to be

addressing your questions on these issues again here today.
In my brief opening statement, however, on the occasion of
these hearings on my confirmation, I thought it might be
appropriate to step back a little from the application of
policy in specific circumstances and discuss some general
principles that I believe should guide decisions on the
monetary policy and banking structure of this country.
I see the fundamental task of monetary policy as
fostering the financial conditions most conducive to the
American economy performing at its fullest potential.

As I

have often noted before, there is every reason to believe
that the main contribution the central bank can make to the

-2-

achievement of this national economic objective over long
periods is to promote reasonable price stability.

Removing

uncertainty about future price levels and eliminating the
costs and distortions inevitably involved in coping with
inflation will encourage productive investment and saving to
raise living standards.

Monetary policy is uniquely quali-

fied to address this issue:

Inflation is ultimately deter-

mined by the provision of liquidity to the economy by the
central bank; and, except through its effect on inflation,
monetary policy has little long-term influence on the growth
of capital and the labor force or the increase in productivity, which together determine long-run economic growth.
But a central bank must also recognize that the
"long run" is made up of a series of "short runs".

Our

policies do affect output and employment in the short- and
intermediate-terms, and we must be mindful of these effects.
The monetary authority can, and should, lean against prevailing trends not only when inflation threatens, but also
when the forces of disinflation seem to be gathering excessive momentum.

That is, in fact, what has concerned us in

recent months, and we have been taking actions designed to
assist in returning the economy to a solid growth path.
However, the Federal Reserve, or any other central
bank, must also be conscious of the limits of its capabili-

-3-

ties.

We can try to provide a backdrop for stable, sus-

tainable growth, but we can not iron out every fluctuation,
and attempts to do so could be counterproductive.

What we

have learned about monetary policy since the beginnings of
the Federal Reserve System is that the longer-term effect of
a policy action may be quite different from its initial
impact; what we don't know with precision is the size and
timing of these effects, especially in the short run.

Un-

certainty about the near-term twists and turns of the economy along with the awareness of the potential differences
between long- and short-term effects suggest both flexibility in the conduct of monetary policy and close attention
to the longer-term context in conducting day-to-day operations.
Monetary policy actions are transmitted to the
economy through the financial system, and the influence of
weakness in that system on how the economy responds has been
all too evident in recent years.

A structurally sound and

vigorous financial system not only facilitates monetary
policy implementation, but is itself no less important to
support an economy operating at its highest potential.

Such

a system must effectively and efficiently gather savings and
distribute them to where they will be of most value to
society in promoting productive investment and supporting
consumption.

Banks and other depositories have a key role

-4-

to play in this system.

They are the channels through which

payments pass, they are the chief repositories of households' liquid savings, and they extend credit to many who
have limited, if any, access to alternative sources of
financing.

Our nation's banking system must be strong—not

only in the sense of safe and sound, but also in the sense
of being efficient and innovative in delivering vital
services to the economy.

That strength undoubtedly has

eroded in recent years, in part through errors of judgment
by depositories and their regulators, but also through the
combined effects of a stiffer competitive environment and
continued legal restraints on the ability of depositories to
respond and adapt.
Against that background I, and the Board of Governors, have brought three interrelated principles to bear on
our approach to banking structure and regulation.
the importance of a strong capital position.

First is

Capital brings

market discipline to bear on institutions that otherwise
might be tempted to take excessive risk by their access to
the federal safety net.

And, it insulates the taxpayers

holding up that safety net from the losses associated with
unwise risk taking, should that occur nonetheless.

Second

is the need for more certain and prompt supervisory actions
when capital and other key indicators of the financial

-5-

health of an institution decline.

This not only will pro-

tect the taxpayers, but it also gives depositories planning
their financial structures more certainty about governmental
reactions, and induces them to take early action to
strengthen those structures.
Congress and the regulators have gone a long way in
acting on these first two principles.
gress on the third is more limited.

Unfortunately, pro-

That principle embraces

the necessity for greater competitive scope for well-capitalized banking organizations—across boundaries of geography and product line.

Both sets of boundaries have been

made increasingly arbitrary and artificial by innovation and
internationalization of financial services.

An ability to

deliver desirable services to the public is a prerequisite
for generating the profits necessary to build capital and
for keeping an innovative banking system capable of meeting
the changing needs for credit and deposit services of a
dynamic economy.
The last four years have seen no paucity of challenges at the Federal Reserve.

As much as we sometimes

might wish otherwise, I suspect the years ahead will be no
less challenging.

While much remains to be done, important

strides have been made--in private markets and in government
policies to restore the normal vigor of the American economy
and our banking system.

To that end, I believe the Banking

-6-

Committees' oversight and our continuing consultations have
been a most helpful and constructive factor.

Should the

Senate choose to confirm me for a second term as Chairman of
the Federal Reserve Board, I would look forward to working
with this Committee to assure the sound financial system and
vital economy the American people rightfully expect.