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For release on delivery
7:30 p.m. EST
March 24, 2011

Changed Circumstances:
The Impact of the Financial Crisis on the Economic Condition of Workers Near Retirement and
of Business Owners

Remarks by
Elizabeth A. Duke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
to the
Virginia Association of Economists

Richmond, Va.

March 24, 2011

It is an honor to be invited to deliver the annual Sandridge lecture to the Virginia
Association of Economists. This series has a long history of important discussions, including the
now-famous global savings glut speech by then-Governor Ben Bernanke in 2005. I confess to
being quite intimidated by this illustrious history, but I hope to heighten interest in my own
contribution by offering you something prized by economists everywhere--fresh data. I am
going to draw on preliminary data from the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances
(SCF) to talk about the impact of the financial crisis on the wealth of consumers and small
business owners.
As the recent financial crisis unfolded, I kept coming back to two questions that seemed
central to understanding the way consumers and small businesses might respond to changes in
their own circumstances during the crisis and, importantly, how their attitudes toward spending
and investing might change going forward.
The first question had to do with the relationship between household wealth and the
saving rate. And as a baby boomer myself, I wondered whether the relationship between wealth
and savings might be especially important as the baby boomers faced a change in wealth just as
most were planning to retire. So I am going to talk first about how changes in wealth impacted
the spending plans and risk tolerance of consumers closest to retirement.
The other question that continually arises is whether the sharp reduction in small business
credit was due to changes in the supply of credit, demand for credit, or creditworthiness of
potential borrowers. While the SCF data do not offer any definitive answers, they do give some
previously unavailable insight into the role of creditworthiness, if we use changes in wealth as
proxies for changes in creditworthiness.

-2I want to apologize in advance. I found that the rich data set offered some occasionally
surprising insights into both of these questions, and I was unable to choose between the two
topics. The result is a somewhat overpacked discussion. Despite that, I warn you: These results
are the tip of a very large iceberg and may spur more questions than answers in your minds.
The Survey of Consumer Finances
As some of you may know, the SCF is the premier source of microlevel information on
the finances of American families. The survey is normally conducted every three years by
selecting a new sample of consumers willing to provide detailed responses to questions about
their personal finances. Because aggregate data consistently indicated that the crisis was having
severe negative effects on households, the Federal Reserve thought a follow-up survey of 2007
survey participants would offer a unique opportunity to understand the impact of the financial
crisis on individual families and the resulting changes in the financial decisions and outlooks of
those families. Although we are only beginning to mine the data, I believe the richer
understanding of individual circumstances provided by the data set will prove invaluable in its
ability to help us understand how consumers are approaching a number of important decisions,
such as spending, saving, and wealth accumulation.
In 2009, we launched a program to conduct follow-up interviews with participants in our
2007 SCF to update their information. As always, consumers’ willingness to share their personal
data in the interest of better public policy is a critical requirement for these surveys, and
participants’ privacy is strictly guarded. We are extremely grateful for the public-spirited people
who dredge through their financial statements, pension accounts, credit card bills, and tax returns
to give us the most accurate information possible. And we are particularly grateful to the nearly
90 percent of the participants in the 2007 survey who did so a second time in 2009.

-3The panel interviews were concluded in early 2010, and Board staff spent most of the rest
of the year preparing this complex set of data for analysis. Earlier today, the Federal Reserve
published a research paper providing an overview of the data, and further results are expected to
follow.1
Changes in Household Wealth
The shocks to household wealth associated with the most recent recession were
extraordinary by any measure. According to the Federal Reserve’s flow of funds accounts,
household net worth peaked in the second quarter of 2007 and then fell approximately 28 percent
during the next two years (figure 1).
The initial shocks to housing and to financial assets wiped out most of the wealth gains
realized since the aftermath of the tech crash in 2001. There has been some recovery in wealth
since the trough, but since early 2010 it has remained fairly flat.
The personal saving rate, which had been trending downward before the recession,
jumped during the crisis as spending retreated (figure 2). Traditional macroeconomic analysis
would attribute at least some of the increase in the saving rate and corresponding drag in the
recovery of consumer spending to diminished household wealth. That direct effect might be
compounded if the wealth decline also affected consumers’ confidence and expectations, which
could affect families’ future decisions. For example, workers on the cusp of retirement might
need to work longer than they had planned and business owners might be unable or unwilling to
leverage their personal assets to fund or expand their businesses. In addition, if attitudes toward

1

Jesse Bricker, Brian Bucks, Arthur Kennickell, Traci Mach, and Kevin Moore (2011), “Surveying the Aftermath of
the Storm: Changes in Family Finances from 2007 to 2009,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2011-17
(Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, March),
www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2011/201117/201117pap.pdf.

-4risk have shifted, households might make different decisions about spending, or about saving,
than they have in the past.
Diversity of Wealth Outcomes in 2009
The overall pattern of wealth decline, however, masks the stark differences in outcomes
for individual families. To put these wealth changes in perspective, it is useful to look at them
relative to a measure of the scale of families’ circumstances and, thus, to a possible link with
spending. Income is one such possible measure, but it can be quite “noisy” because income may
be affected by a variety of transitory factors.
In the SCF, we include a measure of the level of income that families consider their usual
income.2 Taking this measure as a scaling device for wealth changes, we see that 43 percent of
families saw a wealth decline equal to or more than six months of their usual income (figure 3).
Almost a third saw a loss greater than an entire year of their usual income (not shown).
However, more than a fifth of families saw a gain in wealth that was greater than six months of
their usual income.
To put these changes in wealth in perspective, it is useful to consider the level of
household wealth relative to normal income before the crisis. In 2007, more than one-quarter of
families had total wealth equal to or less than six months of their usual income, so a change of
this magnitude would be quite significant for those families (figure 4). In contrast, for nearly
one-third of households, their wealth was more than five times their usual income.
At the level of individual families, changes in wealth appear to have been driven
primarily by changes in asset valuation, not by changes in ownership (that is, by changes in
portfolio composition). Comparisons of patterns of ownership in 2007 and 2009 do show some

2

For all families, median 2007 normal income was $53,000 (mean of $84,000). Taken over all households, the
differences in usual and current income average out to a small amount.

-5differences, but the dominant pattern across families is no change in portfolio holdings.
Moreover, responses to a question we asked about changes in portfolio composition over the
crisis indicate that 54 percent of all families made no change at all in their portfolios over the
period covered by the panel SCF. This is perhaps surprising, given the large change in asset
values that occurred during the crisis.
Preretirement Age Group
In this dataset, the preretirement group includes families whose household head was
between 50 and 61 years old in 2007. This age group traditionally has a particularly strong effect
on the overall economy because the preretirement years are typically characterized by peak
earnings, peak saving, and peak spending. The baby-boom generation, by virtue of its sheer size,
has had an outsized influence on the economy as it has entered every stage in the life cycle, and
its magnification of the preretirement effect is no exception. In addition, in 2007, this group held
more than one-third of all household net worth. Because wealth is a key driver of household
decisions about spending, saving, and investment, we might expect behavioral shifts in response
to wealth changes to have significant effects on the performance of the U.S. economy. We will
look at changes from 2007 to 2009 in the attitudes of this group and how those changes might
vary depending on whether they experienced gains or losses in wealth during the crisis.
I chose the preretirement group to examine because of its significant size and wealth, but
also because this seemed like the group most likely to be affected by changes in wealth and to
feel the need to change behavior as a result of any such changes. The preretirement group must
accumulate assets to sustain itself through retirement, continue working, or rely on their children
or the government for support. Given their vast numbers, the adjustments they make can affect

-6the course of the economy. So it is informative to look at how the finances of this group were
impacted by the crisis and how they have changed their outlook as a result.
As was the case for families overall, experiences varied widely. The share of families in
the 50-to-61 age group that saw a substantial increase in their net worth--more than six months of
their usual income--was nearly the same as for families overall (figure 5). But 49 percent of the
age group saw a decline of more than six months of their usual income, compared with 42
percent of families overall.
Implications for Behavior
It would be reasonable to expect households’ plans and attitudes to vary based on the
individual wealth outcomes they experienced. But in comparing responses from boomer families
that lost wealth to those that gained wealth, we found remarkably similar answers.
In 2009, more than two-thirds of the preretirement group reported that their expected
retirement age was at least a year later than what they reported in 2007. The share of families
expecting to extend their working life was very similar regardless of their change in wealth. This
likely suggests increased uncertainty about the future, no matter what their experience during the
financial crisis, as also suggested by other results in the survey.
In terms of asset management, more than half of the preretirement families reported that
they plan to make no changes at all in the next few years; this result holds across all wealthchange groups. But among those who do expect to make changes, increased savings was the
most commonly reported goal.
Boomer families’ reported willingness to take on financial risk also changed over the
panel period. Regardless of the change in their wealth, these families were more likely to report
being more unwilling to take financial risk in 2009 than in 2007 (figure 6).

-7This sense of increased caution is reinforced by the answers to questions the survey posed
to families about the amount of money they think they need to cope with emergencies and other
unexpected events. The median value of this measure of desired precautionary savings increased
substantially from 2007 to 2009 for the preretirement groups that experienced large changes in
wealth, regardless of whether the change was a gain or a loss, and was virtually unchanged for
others (figure 7). Furthermore, the largest percentage increase was for families that experienced
wealth gains.
The large changes in asset prices over the period may have had an effect on the
willingness of the families in this age group to consume out of gains to assets or to reduce
spending in response to asset losses.3 The survey responses suggest that the large drop in asset
prices over the period may have increased boomer families’ sensitivity to future losses more than
it affected their sensitivity to future gains. In other words, it made them more cautious.
In the boom years leading up to the crisis, many economists believed that increases in
wealth, especially increases in home equity, helped fuel consumer spending. However, fewer
than 30 percent of boomer families reported in 2007 that they would be willing to spend out of
any increase in asset values. In 2009, that willingness declined for boomer families that
experienced losses as well as for boomer families that experienced only small gains.
Somewhat counterintuitively, boomer families that experienced significant gains in their net
worth from 2007 to 2009--gains greater than the equivalent of six months of income--also
remained largely unwilling to spend out of increases in asset values. In fact, they were among
the least willing in 2007 and they remained among the least willing two years later. Thus,

3

The SCF asks whether families agree or disagree (on a five-point scale) with the following statements: “When the
things that I own increase (decrease) in value, I am more (less) likely to spend money.” Note that the “spend less”
version of the question was only asked in 2009.

-8boomer families remained cautious, or grew more cautious, about spending out of their asset
gains--regardless of whether they experienced significant losses during the crisis (figure 8).
However, the response of spending plans to the prospect of asset losses appears to be
stronger than the response to the prospect of asset gains. Every wealth-change group reported
being more than twice as likely to decrease spending if asset values declined than they were to
increase spending if asset values rose (figure 9). All of this evidence may help explain the sharp
drop in consumer spending as household wealth declined and the continued sluggishness of
consumer spending even as asset values have recovered. This asymmetry in responses holds
over all age groups as well.
The varied change in wealth for preretirement families, taken together with the changes
in retirement plans, risk attitudes, and willingness to spend in response to changes in wealth,
imply that some of the effects of recent economic turmoil may result in a longer period of
economic adjustment than has been the case in past recessions, as fundamental attitudes appear
to have shifted.
I think the higher level of caution displayed by all households in the group, regardless of
whether the change in their individual circumstances was positive or negative, is especially
interesting. This indicates that changes in risk appetite result from observations of changes to the
circumstances of others as much as to changes in one’s own circumstances. Responses regarding
attitudes toward modifying spending as asset values rise and fall suggest that the relationship
between the saving rate and household wealth might be even more persistent than in the past.
Such an impact would be further magnified if changes in wealth also impacted borrowing
patterns and credit approval.

-9To look at credit indicators, I decided to focus on business owners in order to examine
the impact of changes in wealth on access to business as well as consumer credit.
Business Owners
The preretirement and business owner groups I have chosen are not mutually exclusive.
Indeed, there is quite a bit of overlap. More than 30 percent of small business owners in 2007
were part of the preretirement group, and they tended to be among the wealthier members of that
group. In fact, the business owner group held nearly half of all household wealth in 2007.
Small businesses employ roughly half of private-sector workers, they fill critical niches
throughout the economy, and they are often seen as sources of innovation. For many, the ability
to leverage personal assets is a critical factor in developing their businesses.
Concern over credit availability for small businesses has appropriately been a recurring
worry throughout the crisis, but information about the intersection between business
performance, personal finances, and credit has been hard to find. While the data are still not
definitive, the panel survey allows us to look at supply, demand, and assessment of
creditworthiness from the borrowers’ point of view.
Although the SCF is focused on families, not businesses, it does collect substantial
information on the closely held businesses families own. The survey clearly shows a high degree
of interdependence of personal and business finances for many families with businesses. For
example, families make loan guarantees for their businesses using personal assets as collateral,
and loans between business owners and their businesses are common in both directions.
According to the most recently available data from the Census Bureau’s Survey of Business
Owners, 6 in 10 small business owners use personal savings or assets to finance or expand their
businesses.

- 10 The spread of gains and losses from 2007 to 2009 was sharper for business owners than
for the population overall (figure 10). Fifty-seven percent of business owners saw substantial
losses in their net worth relative to their usual income, compared with 43 percent of the overall
population; but the percentage of business owners who saw large wealth gains relative to their
income was also larger than for the overall population.
The industry in which the business operated had a significant impact on whether the
business owner gained or lost wealth. Families with businesses primarily engaged in mining or
construction--among small businesses in the survey, this was overwhelmingly constructionrelated businesses--were the most likely to see a substantial decline in net worth (figure 11). In
contrast, families with a wholesale or retail business were more likely to see a substantial gain.
Those involved in utilities, transportation, and services--in the survey, this was predominantly
services--saw the largest gains and the largest losses, but losses exceeded gains for the group.
Only 82 percent of the consumers who reported owning a business in 2007 also reported
owning a business in 2009. And some of those who remained business owners may have scaled
back their operations while awaiting recovery. We do not have the detail necessary to assess the
importance of reduced operations directly, but we have some suggestive evidence. For
businesses that were in operation in both 2007 and 2009, we see decreased median and mean
business incomes for owners who saw their wealth fall and the reverse for owners whose wealth
rose.
Some of the decrease in activity may be driven by a decline in demand for services, but
some may come from credit constraints. For a variety of reasons, we cannot look directly at
changes in credit availability for business owners and their businesses, but we can look at two
indicators for the owners who had a continuing business in 2009.

- 11 Some business owners use proceeds from personal loans for business purposes or use
personal assets to secure business loans. In other cases, the business itself may apply on its own.
If the business is a sole proprietorship, there is no legal distinction between business and
personal borrowing, but business owners still may view their personal and business debt
separately.
The 2009 SCF panel interview asked participants to report separately whether they had
applied for personal and business loans during the two-year period. If they had, it asked whether
they had been turned down for a loan. The survey also asked whether they had wanted to borrow
for personal or business purposes but had been so convinced they would be turned down that
they did not apply.
The data show a substantial level of personal and business applications both for owners
whose wealth rose and for those whose wealth fell over the period of the SCF panel. The level
of personal applications was slightly higher for those whose wealth increased over the period,
and their applications were more likely to have been approved (or they were less likely to have
believed they would have been denied) (figure 12).
The pattern of personal loan denial rates is consistent with changes in individual
circumstances. The denials could also indicate that business difficulties have a significant
influence on the ability of business owners to borrow for personal reasons. Indeed, business
owners have much more difficulty documenting their income than do wage-earners. The
combination of weaker earnings, lower net worth, and renewed focus on income verification
could have made it particularly difficult for business owners who lost wealth to refinance
mortgages or purchase homes.

- 12 Business owners whose wealth rose were also more likely to have applied for business
credit, but the rate of denial and for those who feared denial was nearly the same for business
owners who gained wealth as for those who lost wealth (figure 13). In this case, the pattern of
denial does not match the variations in individual circumstances. Unfortunately, we don’t have
any history for this series so it is impossible to tell how it has changed over time. But the
striking similarity in credit approval rates for business loan requests by business owners who
gained and those who lost wealth would seem to support anecdotal reports at the time--that
business credit was hard to obtain even for good borrowers.
Conclusion
The results I have discussed today are among the first details to emerge from our panel
study of changes in family finances over the financial crisis. The data show significant
heterogeneity in the wealth changes that families experienced during the period of the financial
crisis between 2007 and 2009. Any consequent macroeconomic wealth effect depends on the
distribution of gains and losses and the propensities of the families that experienced those
changes.
Research remains to be done on how all those factors come together, but the data offer at
least a suggestion of what may emerge. Among the preretirement age group, those who gained
and those who lost wealth during the financial crisis generally appear to act as if they had lost
wealth--in that there are signs of delayed retirement and greater desire to save and to avoid risk.
In addition, there appears to be an asymmetric reaction to wealth shocks that could be a factor in
the slow recovery of spending.
Business owners had much wider changes in wealth than those reported for the general
population and the changes were related to the conditions of the industries in which the

- 13 businesses operated. Business owners who had increases in wealth were more likely to apply for
personal and business credit. Although business owners who experienced decreases in wealth
were more likely to have been denied or to fear denial of personal credit, actual denial rates for
business credit were about the same regardless of wealth outcomes. Moreover, the difference in
credit approval rates between personal and business applications suggests that differences other
than the financial circumstances of the applicant were at work in business credit markets.
It is still too early to determine how consumer spending patterns will ultimately be altered
as a result of changes in circumstances wrought by the financial crisis. But as events unfold, the
SCF data will be an invaluable resource as we try to understand these new patterns.

Sandridge Lecture
Virginia Association of Economists
March 24,
24 2011

Elizabeth Duke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

The Impact of the Financial Crisis on the Economic Condition
of Workers Near Retirement and on Business Owners

Changed Circumstances:



10

20

30
30

40

50

60

70

80

Elizabeth Duke

Dollarss,trillions(2
2009)

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Shadedarearepresentstherangeofthe
2007and2009surveys discussed
(2007Q3to2009Q3)

Figure 1. Household sector net worth

2

7

70

3
2

30
30

20



Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

4

40

0

1

5

50

10

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60

Shadedarearepresentstherangeofthe
2007and2009surveys discussed
(2007Q3to2009Q3)

Personalsavingrate

8

80

Elizabeth Duke

Dollarss,trillions(2
2009)

Figure 2. Household sector net worth and personal saving as
a percentt off di
disposable
bl personall income
i

3

Percent

0

10

20

30

40

50

Lost>6months

43

+/ 1month

9

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Lost1to6
months

15

Gain1to6
months

11

Gain>6months

21

Figure 3. Distribution of families by change in wealth
relative
l ti to
t usuall income,
i
2007-2009
2007 2009

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

4

0

10

20

30

40

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

<.5

27

1to3

3to5

14

Board of Governors of the
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Ratioof2007wealthto2007income

.5to1

9

21

Figure 4. Distribution of families by ratio of
2007 nett worth
th tto usuall iincome

>5

30

5

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Lost>6months

49

7

9

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Lost1to6
+/ 1month
Gain1to6
months
months
Changerelativetousualincome

13

Gain>6months

22

Familieswithaheadaged50to61

Allfamilies

Figure 5. Distribution of families by change in wealth
relative
l ti to
t usuall income,
i
2007-2009
2007 2009

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

6

0

10

20

30

40

50

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35

Lost>6months

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2009

2007

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

+/ 6months
Changerelativetousualincome

45

54

Families with a head aged 50 to 61

Gain>6months

34

39

Figure 6. Share of families unwilling to take financial risk,
by change in wealth change relative to usual income

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Elizabeth Duke

Thousandof2009d
dollars

Lost>6months

7

10

5

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Change relative to usual income
Changerelativetousualincome

+/ 6months

5

2009

2007

Families with a head aged 50 to 61

10

Gain>6months

5

Figure 7. Median precautionary savings,
by change in wealth relative to usual income

8

0

5

10

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25

30

35

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

25

Lost>6months

28

21

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Change relative to usual income
Changerelativetousualincome

+/ 6months

29

Families with a head aged 50 to 61

19

Gain>6months

18

2009

2007

Figure 8. Percent of families willing to spend
more if wealth increases,, by
y change
g in wealth
relative to usual income

9

Elizabeth Duke

0

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70

Lost>6months

25

65
62

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Change relative to usual income
Changerelativetousualincome

+/ 6months

21

Spendless

Spendmore

Families with a head aged 50 to 61

Gain>6months

19

58

Figure 9. Percent of families willing to spend more (less) if
wealth increases (decreases),
by change in
i wealth relative
i to usual income,
i
2009

Percent

10

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Lost>6months

57

3

5

Board of Governors of the
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Lost1to6
+/ 1month
Gain1to6
months
months
Changerelativetousualincome

10

11

Gain>6months

25

Familieswithabusinessin2007

Allfamilies

Business ownership in 2007

Figure 10. Distribution of families by change in wealth
relative to usual income 2007
2007-2009
2009

Elizabeth Duke

Percent

0

5

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25

30

35

40

45

13
6

6
Wholesale&
RetailTrade

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Board of Governors of the
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2007primaryindustry

Agriculture,
Mining& Manufacturing
Forestry Construction

10

13

20

Gain>6months

Loss>6months

36

12

Finance,
Utilities,
Insurance,Real Transportation&
Estate
Estate
Services

13 13

39

Figure 11. Change in family net worth 2007-2009,
byy industry
y of p
primary
y business and
by wealth change relative to usual income

Elizabeth Duke

Percentof2007busine
essowners

Elizabeth Duke

0

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Applied

53

8

Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System

Credit experience
Creditexperience

Denied

14

Gain>6months

Loss>6months

2

13

Didnotapply,feareddenial

8

Figure 12. Personal credit application experiences, families
with businesses in 2007 and 2009,,
by change in net worth relative to usual income

Percent

Elizabeth Duke

0

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Applied

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Credit experience
Creditexperience

Denied

8

Gain > 6 months
Gain>6months

Loss>6months

5

14

Didnotapply,feareddenial

6

Figure 13. Business credit application experiences, families
with businesses in 2007 and 2009,,
by change in net worth relative to usual income

Percent