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For release on delivery
7:30 p.m. EDT
April 9, 2014

Longer-Term Challenges for the American Economy

Remarks by
Daniel K. Tarullo
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
“Stabilizing Financial Systems for Growth and Full Employment”
23rd Annual Hyman P. Minsky Conference
on the State of the U.S. and World Economies
Organized by the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College
with support from the Ford Foundation
Washington, D.C.

April 9, 2014

In the more than five years that I have been a member of the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, it has been hard not to concentrate on near-term economic
prospects. The severe decline in the economy precipitated by the financial crisis and the
magnitude of job and production loss in the Great Recession that followed have made a
focus on recovery both understandable and imperative. But as I have prepared for
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings every six to seven weeks by
examining incoming data and the analyses of our own staff and of outside economists, I
have been struck by the evidence of longer-term challenges to the American economy
that poke through shorter-term discussions.
There is considerable ongoing debate about whether the financial crisis and
recession amplified changes already afoot in the economy, accelerated them, or simply
revealed them more clearly. Whatever one’s view on that question, the confluence of
some apparently secular trends raises important questions about our nation’s future
growth potential and our ability to provide opportunity for all of our people. Indeed,
these changes reflect serious challenges not only to the functioning of the American
economy over the coming decades, but also to some of the ideals that undergird the
nation’s democratic heritage. This evening I will address in some detail four particularly
important developments:
1. Productivity growth has slowed. As a result, the overall economic pie is
expanding more slowly than before.
2. Some indicators further suggest that workers have been claiming a smaller
share of the overall economic pie during the past decade.
3. Inequality has continued to increase, meaning that a larger portion of overall
economic resources is commanded by a smaller segment of the population.

-24. Economic mobility across generations is not particularly high in the United
States, and it has not been increasing over time.
After detailing these trends, I will turn briefly to both the role and the limits of monetary
policy in countering them. 1
Structural Challenges for the American Economy
Lagging productivity growth
Over the long term, the pace at which our standards of living increase depends on
the growth of labor productivity--that is, the increase in the amount of economic value
that a worker can generate during each hour on the job. Unfortunately, the data on
productivity growth in recent years have been disappointing. Although output per hour in
the nonfarm business sector rose about 2-3/4 percent per year from the end of World
War II through 1971, productivity has risen just 1-1/2 percent per year since then,
excluding a brief burst of rapid growth that occurred roughly between 1996 and 2004.
Just as it took economists a long time to identify the sources of the surge in
productivity that began nearly two decades ago, they are only now beginning to grapple
with the more recent slowdown. Some have argued that the burst of productivity growth
that began in the mid-1990s was the anomaly, and that the more pedestrian pace of
growth over the past decade represents a return to the norm. 2 In this view, the long
period of rapid productivity growth that ended in the 1970s grew out of the technological

1

Stephanie Aaronson of the Board’s staff contributed substantially to these remarks.
See, for example, Tyler Cowen (2011), The Great Stagnation: How America Ate All the Low-Hanging
Fruit of Modern History, Got Sick, and Will (Eventually) Feel Better (New York: Dutton); Robert J.
Gordon (2010), “Revisiting U.S. Productivity Growth over the Past Century with a View of the Future,”
NBER Working Paper Series 15834 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, March);
and Robert J. Gordon (2012), “Is U.S. Economic Growth Over? Faltering Innovation Confronts the Six
Headwinds,” NBER Working Paper Series 18315 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic
Research, August).
2

-3innovations of the first and second Industrial Revolutions. But now, despite continued
technological advances, a return to that pace of performance is thought unlikely. In
particular, these authors argue that the information technology revolution of the past
several decades--including the diffusion of computers, the development of the Internet,
and improvements in telecommunications--is unlikely to generate the productivity gains
prompted by earlier innovations such as electrification and mass production.
This somewhat pessimistic perspective is far from being conventional wisdom.
While productivity has increased less rapidly in recent years than during the first threefourths of the 20th century, per capita income (a statistic available over a longer time
span) is still rising more quickly than it was even during the second Industrial
Revolution. Indeed, some have argued that the problem with new technology is not with
productivity growth but with our ability to capture the productivity in our statistics.
Moreover, many economists and technophiles remain optimistic that we have yet to fully
realize the potential of the information revolution, and that technological change will
continue to bring inventions and productivity enhancements that we cannot imagine
today. 3 This view holds that there is no reason productivity could not continue to rise in
line with its long-term historical average. 4

3

See, for example, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee (2011), Race Against the Machine: How the
Digital Revolution Is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming
Employment and the Economy (Lexington, Mass.: Digital Frontier Press); Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee (2014), The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant
Technologies (New York: W.W. Norton & Company); and Martin Neil Baily, James Manyika, and
Shalabh Gupta (2013), “U.S. Productivity Growth: An Optimistic Perspective,” International Productivity
Monitor, no. 25 (Spring), pp. 3-12. See also Ben Bernanke (2013), “Economic Prospects for the Long
Run,” speech delivered at Bard College at Simon’s Rock, Great Barrington, Mass., May 18,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20130518a.htm.
4
See, for example, David M. Byrne, Stephen D. Oliner, and Daniel E. Sichel (2013), “Is the Information
Technology Revolution Over?” International Productivity Monitor, no. 25 (Spring), pp. 20-36.

-4It must be noted that, even among the productivity optimists, there are differences
over how the expected progress will affect job creation and income distribution. In
particular, some in this camp believe that we are likely to see a continuation of the pattern
by which recent productivity growth seems to have mostly benefited relatively skilled
workers. It may also have favored returns to capital investment, as opposed to labor, in
greater proportion than past productivity gains.
While there is some reason for optimism about the prospects for technological
progress, there are grounds for concern over the decline in the dynamism of the U.S.
labor market, an attribute that has contributed to productivity growth in the past and has
traditionally distinguished the United States from many other advanced economies.
Historically, the U.S. labor market has been characterized by substantial geographic
mobility. Our high rates of geographic mobility are one facet of the overall dynamism of
our labor market, which is also manifest in the continual churning of jobs through hirings
and separations, as well as firm expansions and contractions--a process that the
economist Joseph Schumpeter called “creative destruction.” 5 To give a sense of the
magnitude of this process, while net job gains and losses are typically measured in the
hundreds of thousands each calendar quarter, gross job creation and destruction
commonly run at a pace of roughly 7 million jobs each quarter. Creative destruction has
been shown to improve productivity as jobs that have low productivity are replaced with
jobs that yield greater productivity. 6
5

Joseph A. Schumpeter (1942), Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy (New York: Harper & Brothers).
See, for example, Lucia Foster, John Haltiwanger, and C. J. Krizan (2001), “Aggregate Productivity
Growth: Lessons from Microeconomic Evidence,” in Edward Dean, Michael Harper, and Charles Hulten,
eds., New Developments in Productivity Analysis (Chicago: University of Chicago Press); and Lucia
Foster, John Haltiwanger, and C. J. Krizan (2006), “Market Selection, Reallocation, and Restructuring in
the U.S. Retail Trade Sector in the 1990s,” Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 88 (November),
pp. 748-58.
6

-5However, a variety of data indicate that this feature of labor market dynamism has
diminished. Since the 1980s, internal migration in the United States over both long and
short distances has declined. To give an example, the rate of cross-state migration was
less than half as large in 2011 as its average over the period from 1948 to 1971. 7 And,
while we still see the level of employment rising and falling over the business cycle, the
gross flows of people between jobs and of jobs across firms that underlie the observed
aggregate changes have fallen over the past 15 years.
At this point, we do not have a full understanding of the factors contributing to the
decline in labor market dynamism. As a number of economists who have studied the
issue have pointed out, some of the explanations may be benign or even positive. 8 For
instance, the aging of the population accounts for some of the decline in migration and
job churning, as older individuals are less likely to move and change jobs; such
demographic factors probably do not represent an adverse reduction in dynamism.
Moreover, some of the decline in turnover could be the result of individuals and firms
finding productive job matches more quickly than before. For many employers and
workers, the Internet has reduced the cost of posting job openings and the cost of
searching for jobs. This more efficient process could result in better matches between
firms and workers and thus fewer separations. Similarly, a reduction in firm uncertainty
about the costs and benefits of investing could reduce firm-level churning in jobs. In

7

For more information on the rate of cross-state migration, see Raven Molloy, Christopher L. Smith, and
Abigail Wozniak (2013), “Declining Migration within the U.S.: The Role of the Labor Market,” Finance
and Economics Discussion Series 2013-27 (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, September), www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2013/201327/201327abs.html.
8
For additional details on the decline in labor market dynamism, see Henry R. Hyatt and James R. Spletzer
(2013), “The Recent Decline in Employment Dynamics,” Center for Economic Studies Working Paper
Series 13-03 (Washington: U.S. Census Bureau, March), www2.census.gov/ces/wp/2013/CES-WP-1303.pdf.

-6both cases, workers and firms are able to achieve a good outcome with less turnover and
presumably no loss of productivity.
While it seems possible that improved information could be a force behind the
reduction in geographic mobility and labor turnover, there are less benign possibilities as
well. For instance, an increase in the costs to firms of hiring and firing individuals or an
increase in the costs to individuals of changing jobs could lead to fewer productivityenhancing job changes. Alternatively, the reduction in churning could itself be a function
of slower productivity growth, as slower productivity growth implies lower benefits to
forming new matches.
One recent trend that is particularly disturbing is stagnation in the formation of
new firms. Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) show that the number of
establishments in operation for less than one year rose between the mid-1990s, when the
data start, and the early 2000s. But, smoothing through the ups and downs of the
business cycle, new firm formation has been roughly flat since then. Moreover, the
number of individuals working at such firms stands almost 2 million below its peak in
1999. Given the role of innovation by entrepreneurs and the well-documented
importance of successful young firms in creating jobs, these trends are disheartening.
The lagging share of national income accruing to workers
A second adverse development in recent years has been the apparent reduction in
the share of overall national income that accrues to workers. Here I will be brief and
suggestive because the scholarship is far from settled. But the basic trends in the data are
troubling. Labor’s share of total income generated in the nonfarm business sector has
been on a downtrend since the 1980s and has fallen sharply since the turn of the

-7millennium. It stood at 56 percent at the end of 2013, the lowest level since the BLS
began collecting data on the measure in 1948.
To be sure, various conceptual and measurement challenges make it difficult to
compute labor’s share of income with any degree of precision. However, taken at face
value, these data have significant implications for the distribution of income in our
society, given how skewed the holdings of capital are. Economists have focused less
attention on the factors underlying the apparent decline in labor’s share of income than
they have on the rise in income inequality in general, but among the candidates are
technological change, which has allowed for the substitution of capital for labor in the
handling of routine tasks, an increase in firm bargaining power, and perhaps a decline in
competition in product markets.
The increase in inequality
Of the trends I have identified, the one that has received the largest amount of
press attention recently is the rise in income inequality. While income inequality has
been increasing since the 1970s, over the past two decades the process has been
characterized by what some have called polarization, with those at the top of the
distribution accumulating a significantly larger share of income, those at the bottom of
the distribution experiencing modest relative gains, and those in the middle of the income
distribution falling further behind in relative terms.
Gauging by one fairly comprehensive measure of income used by the
Congressional Budget Office, the share of income garnered by those in the top 1 percent
of the distribution more than doubled between 1979 and 2007 to about 17 percent, while

-8the share accruing to those in the 1st through 80th percentiles fell 9 percentage points. 9
And while it is true that those at the upper end of the income distribution were
disproportionately affected during the financial crisis, with the result that inequality
actually fell a bit in the wake of the recession, high earners also appear to be benefiting
disproportionately from the recovery. Thus, the crisis does not seem really to have
changed the trajectory of inequality.
As interesting as these statistics on inequality are, they obscure a key part of the
story--one that has been an important part of our identity as Americans: whether a family
has the ability, through hard work, to attain a better standard of living. And on that point,
we find that households in the middle and lower parts of the earnings distribution have
experienced, at best, only modest improvements in inflation-adjusted income. 10 Between
1979 and 2007, households in the middle quintile of the income distribution--a functional
definition of the middle class--saw their real labor income (adjusted for household size)
rise only about 3 percent. Meanwhile, households in the bottom one-fifth of the
distribution did a bit better, experiencing about a 24 percent rise, although this figure
reflects an improvement of just 1 percent per year, and that from a very low base. In
contrast, income rose more than 70 percent among households in the top one-fifth of the
earnings distribution.
The polarization of the labor income distribution has been mirrored in the types of
jobs we are creating. Since the 1990s, job gains have been concentrated at the upper and
9

This measure of income accounts for total compensation, including health benefits, and capital income,
government transfers, and taxes while also adjusting for household size. See Congressional Budget Office
(2011), Trends in the Distribution of Household Income between 1979 and 2007 (Washington: CBO,
October), www.cbo.gov/publication/42729.
10
This measure of income covers total compensation, including benefits, and adjusts for household size.
See Congressional Budget Office, Trends in the Distribution of Household Income, in note 9.

-9lower ends of the earnings distribution. There have been healthy gains in employment in
highly paid occupations, such as computer and information systems managers, and a rise
in low-paid jobs, such as home health-care workers, but growth has been much slower in
occupations with earnings in the middle of the distribution, such as machinists. This
trend accelerated during the Great Recession and the ensuing recovery. For example,
food services, retail, and employment services, all low-wage industries, accounted for
nearly 45 percent of net employment growth from the start of the recovery through early
2012, while employment in a number of industries that offer good jobs for mid-wage
workers--including construction, manufacturing, and finance, insurance, and real estate-did not grow in those years or grew too slowly to make up for their job losses during the
recession. 11
There is no single explanation for the rise in inequality and the decline in the
share of jobs that provide a middle-class standard of living. Economists generally agree
that technological change and globalization have played a role. 12 Both of these forces
have reduced the demand for workers whose jobs had involved routine work that can
easily be mechanized or offshored while, at the same time, increasing the productivity of
higher-skilled workers. However, it is less clear whether technology and globalization
are sufficient explanations for the increased share of income going to those at the very
top of the income distribution. It may be that by increasing the effective size of the
markets for their skills, technological change and globalization can also explain some of
11

For more information on this trend, see National Employment Law Project (2012), “The Low-Wage
Recovery and Growing Inequality,” data brief (New York: NELP, August), www.nelp.org/page//Job_Creation/LowWageRecovery2012.pdf?nocdn=1.
12
The literature on the reasons for the rise in inequality is extensive, but one recent work that tries to
address the issue is David H. Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon H. Hanson (2013), “Untangling Trade and
Technology: Evidence from Local Labor Markets,” NBER Working Paper Series 18938 (Cambridge,
Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, April).

- 10 the large increase in earnings of top athletes, musicians, and even chief executive
officers. In the popular press, the phenomenon of the very few reaping enormous
windfalls has become known as the winner-take-all economy. However, other
researchers have noted that a large share of the top earners is found in industries such as
finance and law, suggesting that deregulation, corporate governance, and tax policy may
have also played a role in the trend toward rising inequality.
Economic mobility has not increased to mitigate higher inequality
Despite the fact that rising inequality has compounded the stakes associated with
one’s position in the income distribution, mobility up and down the economic ladder
from one generation to the next in the United States has been stagnant. Work by Raj
Chetty and his coauthors using income tax data has shown that a child who was born in
the early 1990s had about the same chance of moving up in the income distribution as a
child born in the 1970s. 13 Combining these results with previous research suggests that
mobility has not increased in the postwar era. And, despite the long-held view of the
United States as the land of opportunity, we actually fall short of other advanced
economies in terms of intergenerational mobility. In the United Kingdom, for example,
about 30 percent of sons with low-income parents end up being low-income themselves,
while in the United States the comparable figure is over 40 percent. 14

13

For a discussion of mobility in income distribution, see Raj Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Patrick Kline,
Emmanuel Saez, and Nicholas Turner (2014), “Is the United States Still a Land of Opportunity? Recent
Trends in Intergenerational Mobility,” NBER Working Paper Series 19844 (Cambridge, Mass.: National
Bureau of Economic Research, January).
14
For more information on intergenerational mobility, see Markus Jäntti, Bernt Bratsberg, Knut Røed,
Oddbjørn Raaum, Robin Naylor, Eva Österbacka, Anders Björklund, and Tor Eriksson (2006), “American
Exceptionalism in a New Light: A Comparison of Intergenerational Earnings Mobility in the Nordic
Countries, the United Kingdom, and the United States,” IZA Discussion Paper Series 1938 (Bonn,
Germany: Institute for the Study of Labor, January), http://ftp.iza.org/dp1938.pdf.

- 11 The Role of Monetary Policy
As must be apparent, the challenges I have discussed are not susceptible to easy
or rapid solution. It is equally apparent that monetary policy cannot be the only, or even
the principal, tool in addressing these challenges. But that is not to say it is irrelevant.
There is not as sharp a demarcation between cyclical and structural problems as is
sometimes suggested. Monetary policies directed toward achieving the statutory dual
mandate of maximum employment and price stability can help reduce underemployment
associated with low aggregate demand. And, to the degree that monetary policy can
prevent cyclical phenomena such as high unemployment and low investment from
becoming entrenched, it might be able to improve somewhat the potential growth rate of
the economy over the medium term. 15
More generally, reducing labor market slack can help lay the foundation for a
more sustained, self-reinforcing cycle of stronger aggregate demand, increased
production, renewed investment, and productivity gains. Similarly, a stronger labor
market can provide a modest countervailing factor to income inequality trends by leading
to higher wages at the bottom rungs of the wage scale.
The very accommodative monetary policy of the past five years has contributed
significantly to the extended, moderate recoveries of gross domestic product (GDP) and
employment. To this point, however, there has not been a corresponding upturn in
wages. To be sure, there have been notable wage increases in specific areas of the
country enjoying economic growth much higher than the national average. And, as is
15

For details on the potential growth rate of the economy, see Dave Reifschneider, William Wascher, and
David Wilcox (2013), “Aggregate Supply in the United States: Recent Developments and Implications for
the Conduct of Monetary Policy,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2013-77 (Washington: Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, November),
www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2013/201377/201377abs.html.

- 12 nearly always the case, labor shortages in discrete skilled job categories may be placing
some upward pressures on wages for those jobs (though, judging by such aggregate data
as we have, not by as much as one might have thought based on the widespread anecdotal
reports of skilled labor shortages).
But one sees only the earliest signs of a much-needed, broader wage recovery.
Compensation increases have been running at the historically low level of just over
2 percent annual rates since the onset of the Great Recession, with concomitantly lower
real wage gains. The reasons for the lag in wage gains in the context of continuing
moderate growth are not totally clear. Nominal wage rigidity on the downside may have
played a role to the extent that employers were reluctant to cut nominal wages even in the
period from late 2008 to early 2009, when they were eliminating jobs in staggering
numbers. The secular labor market factors mentioned earlier are also likely relevant.
There is, of course, also a debate around the question of how much of current
unemployment--particularly long-term unemployment--is structural and thus how much
slack still exists in labor markets. Last week Chair Yellen explained why substantial
slack very likely remains. I would add to her explanation only the observation that, in the
face of some uncertainty as to how best to measure slack, we are well advised to proceed
pragmatically. We should remain attentive to evidence that labor markets have actually
tightened to the point that there is demonstrable inflationary pressure that would place at
risk maintenance of the FOMC’s stated inflation target (which, of course, we are
currently not meeting on the downside). But we should not rush to act preemptively in
anticipation of such pressures based on arguments about the potential increase in
structural unemployment in recent years.

- 13 In this regard, the issue of how much structural damage has been suffered by the
labor market is of less immediate concern today in shaping monetary policy than it might
have been had we experienced a period of rapid growth during the recovery. Remember
that, just a few years ago, many forecasters--in and out of the Federal Reserve--were
projecting growth rates at an annualized rate of 4 percent or greater for at least a year.
That expectation raised the question of whether a reasonably rapid tightening in monetary
policy might at some point be needed. But now, in part because we did not have such a
spike in the early stages of recovery and instead have had modest growth in place for
several years, it seems less likely that we will experience a growth spurt in the next
couple of years that would engender concerns about rapid wage pressures and changes in
inflation expectations.
The Importance of a National Investment Agenda
In short, by promoting maximum employment in a stable inflation environment
around the FOMC target rate, monetary policy can help set the stage for a vibrant and
dynamic economy. But there are limits to what monetary policy can do in counteracting
the longer-term trends I have discussed. In economic research and in policy debates, we
need more focus on these issues and more attention to concrete proposals to address
them. I would suggest that one element, though by no means the only one, in such a
program is a well-formulated government investment agenda.
A pro-investment policy agenda by the government could help address some of
our nation’s long-term challenges by promoting investment in human capital, particularly
for those who have seen their share of the economic pie shrink, and by encouraging

- 14 research and development and other capital investments that increase the productive
capacity of the nation.
There is already a well-known list of investments that have been shown to be
successful. For instance, early childhood education can increase the educational
attainment of children from low-income families as well as improve other outcomes. 16 In
addition, recent innovations in job training programs, which more tightly link the training
to the needs of employers in sectors of the economy with a demand for workers, have
been shown to increase both the employment and wages of participants. 17
Investment in basic research by the federal government is another area in which
greater investments could yield significant returns and in which a public policy role is
warranted because of externalities. Econometric studies suggest that the rates of return to
this type of investment can be very high. 18 And a range of policy commentators agree
that there is a continuing role for government investment in infrastructure, including
various forms of transportation, as a way to enhance productivity. Not too long ago, the
American Society of Civil Engineers gave the United States a rating of D+ on its roads

16

For more information on the effect of early childhood education, see James J. Heckman, Seong Hyeok
Moon, Rodrigo Pinto, Peter A. Savelyev, and Adam Yavitz (2010), “The Rate of Return to the HighScope
Perry Preschool Program,” Journal of Public Economics, vol. 94 (February), pp. 114-28; James Heckman,
Rob Grunewald, and Arthur Reynolds (2006), “The Dollars and Cents of Investing Early: Cost-Benefit
Analysis in Early Care and Education,” Zero to Three, vol. 26 (July), pp. 10-17; and Elizabeth U. Cascio
and Diane Schanzenbach (forthcoming), “The Impacts of Expanding Access to High-Quality Preschool
Education,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity.
17
For a discussion of such rates of return, see, for example, Sheila Maguire, Joshua Freely, Carol Clymer,
Maureen Conway, and Deena Schwartz (2010), Tuning in to Local Labor Markets: Findings from the
Sectoral Employment Impact Study (Philadelphia: Public/Private Ventures).
18
See Zvi Griliches (1992), “The Search for R&D Spillovers,” Scandinavian Journal of Economics, vol. 94
(Supplement), pp. S29-S47; and Charles I. Jones (2002), “Sources of U.S. Economic Growth in a World of
Ideas,” American Economic Review, vol. 92 (March), pp. 220-39.

- 15 and bridges. Improving that system, both by doing necessary maintenance to maintain
safety and functionality and by reducing congestion could yield substantial benefits. 19
This agenda might sound ambitious. In fact, spending in these areas is currently
not a very large proportion of federal outlays. For example, the entire federal budget for
nondefense research programs--including expenditures on health research, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the National Science Foundation--is only 2
percent of federal spending (or less than 0.4 percent of GDP), well below the share in the
1960s, when we last made a significant effort to advance our capacities in math and
science during the era of space exploration. Moreover, spending in these areas has been
the target of much of the budget restraint in recent years. Even in the area of physical
infrastructure, we have fallen behind past efforts. After a surge associated with fiscal
stimulus during the recent recession, public spending on infrastructure has tumbled,
resulting in the slowest growth (1 percent) in the state and local capital stock since
WWII.
I certainly am not intending here to join the broader debate on fiscal policy, either
short or longer term. But I do note that fiscal policymakers could promote the longerterm prospects of the nation by increased spending in areas that are likely to yield
increases in living standards. The amount of increased investment spending that could
reasonably be absorbed would be quite modest in comparison with the very large
amounts associated with major fiscal issues such as health-care expenses. And even a

19

For more details on the U.S. infrastructure, see American Society of Civil Engineers (2013), 2013 Report
Card for America’s Infrastructure (Reston, Va.: ASCE),
www.infrastructurereportcard.org/a/documents/2013-Report-Card.pdf; and Her Majesty’s Treasury (2006),
The Eddington Transport Study--The Case for Action: Sir Rod Eddington’s Advice to Government
(London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office).

- 16 strong investment agenda would not be a complete response to the economic challenges I
have discussed. But, like monetary policy, it could play a useful role.
Conclusion
The longer-term challenges to the American economy that I have identified this
evening are real. But I certainly do not regard a continuation of these trends as
inevitable. On the contrary, the American economy is still possessed of great advantages
and potential that, while always and necessarily evolving, have served us well over the
years. 20 My principal aims this evening have been, first, to echo those who have been
drawing attention to these challenges in recent years and, second, to encourage more
discussion and debate of the specific policies that can best help us meet these challenges.
As should be apparent in my remarks on monetary policy and an investment agenda, I
believe that there are policies already developed and available to us that can contribute to
this effort. My hope is that such policies will be pursued and that others, perhaps yet to
be developed, will follow.

20

These advantages--such as the country’s substantial natural resources, a stable but adaptive legal
framework for economic activity, a dynamic labor market, and a fostering of entrepreneurship--have
contributed to productivity growth that is estimated to have averaged about 2-1/4 percent over the past
140 years. See David M. Bryne, Stephen D. Oliner, and Daniel E. Sichel (2013), “Is the Information
Technology Revolution Over?” International Productivity Monitor, No. 25 (Spring), pp. 20-36.