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Opening Remarks: 2013 Homer Jones Memorial Lecture
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April 3, 2013
President Bullard delivered opening remarks at the 24th
annual Homer Jones Memorial Lecture held at the St. Louis
Fed's Gateway Conference Center. He introduced this
year's speaker, R. Glenn Hubbard, who is currently dean of
Columbia Business School and is also the Russell L.
Carson Professor of Finance and Economics.
Remarks: pdf | text (below) | Event videos
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Full text of remarks:
Opening remarks by President James Bullard
The 2013 Homer Jones Memorial Lecture
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
April 3, 2013

Welcome to the 24th annual Homer Jones Memorial
Lecture. Each year we host this event to honor the
outstanding contributions of Homer Jones, a former senior
vice president and Research director of the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

The Bank began the lecture series after Homer Jones'
death in 1986. The lecture series enjoys the long-lasting
support and co-sponsorship of many people and
organizations, including the St. Louis Gateway Chapter of
the National Association for Business Economics, Saint
Louis University, Southern Illinois University at

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"Rationally, let it be said in a
whisper, experience is certainly
worth more than theory."
Amerigo Vespucci

Edwardsville, the University of Missouri at St. Louis and
Washington University in St. Louis.

Homer Jones is sometimes described as "Milton
Friedman's teacher" because Jones taught Friedman when
Friedman was an undergraduate at Rutgers University in
the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Then, as now, it was a tumultuous time for
macroeconomists.

Jones had come to Rutgers after studying at the University
of Chicago, where he was a student of legendary Chicago
professor Frank Knight. Also on the Rutgers faculty at the
time: a young Arthur Burns, future Fed chairman.

According to Friedman, Jones was one of the primary
in uences in Friedman's choice to study economics, as
opposed to mathematics or statistics. In Friedman's 1976
reminiscence, he says Jones opened his eyes "to the
broader reaches of economics and to the beauties and
intricacies of economic theory."1 The rest, as they say, is
history—the two remained friends and colleagues for years
afterward.

In 1958, Homer Jones joined the staff here at the St. Louis
Fed. He is remembered for many contributions at the Bank,
but his role in the Bank's development in monetary
research and statistics stands out. The Bank's research
function became a national and international leader in the
then-rapidly advancing "monetarist" approach to monetary
policy. The famous Andersen/Jordan paper published
during this era became one of the most widely cited papers
in all of macroeconomics.2 And Homer Jones insisted on
freely available data to encourage research on critical
economic policy issues.

Today, the St. Louis Fed is internationally known as an
institution that is unparalleled in data dissemination. The
Bank's Federal Reserve Economic Data, or FRED, has its
genesis in Homer Jones' innovative idea to publish
monetary data in a form that did not yet exist at the time.
Today, through FRED, we make more than 61,000 data
series available and accessible to individuals and
organizations worldwide.

The St. Louis Fed's unwavering commitment to rigorous,
independent economic research is the key legacy of Homer
Jones that we honor today. Those of us in the Federal
Reserve System who believe that the ability to question
and re-examine conventional wisdom leads to better policy

outcomes owe a great debt to Homer Jones. The Fed's
ability to absorb and be open to multiple viewpoints helps
prevent groupthink and leads to superior monetary policy
and, ultimately, to better macroeconomic performance.

It is only tting for us to use the Homer Jones Memorial
Lecture to spotlight others who have made a signi cant
impact in the world of academic research, central banking
and global nance. It is a pleasure for me to introduce this
year's distinguished speaker, R. Glenn Hubbard.

Professor Hubbard was named dean of the Columbia
University Business School in 2004. A Columbia faculty
member since 1988, he is also the Russell L. Carson
Professor of Finance and Economics.

Professor Hubbard is a liated with research programs in
monetary economics, public economics, corporate nance
and industrial organization at the National Bureau of
Economic Research. Additionally, he is a visiting scholar at
the American Enterprise Institute and a member of the
International Advisory Board of the MBA Program of BenGurion University.

Professor Hubbard's research spans tax policy, monetary
economics, corporate nance and international nance. In
addition to writing more than 100 scholarly articles in
economics and nance, Professor Hubbard is the author of
two leading textbooks on money and nancial markets and
the principles of economics. He is also the co-author of
The Aid Trap: Hard Truths About Ending Poverty, and
Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Five Steps to a Better Health
Care System.

In government, Professor Hubbard served as deputy
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department for Tax
Policy (from 1991 to 1993), and he was chairman of the
U.S. Council of Economic Advisers under President George
W. Bush. While serving as CEA chairman, he also chaired
the Economic Policy Committee of the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development.

In the corporate sector, Professor Hubbard is currently a
director of ADP, BlackRock Closed-End Funds, KKR
Financial Corporation and MetLife. He is a life member of
the Council on Foreign Relations, a co-chairman of the
Committee on Capital Markets Regulation and the Study
Group on Corporate Boards, and a past chairman of the
Economic Club of New York.

Please join me in welcoming R. Glenn Hubbard.

James Bullard, President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Endnotes
1

See Milton Friedman, 1976, "Homer Jones: A Personal
Reminiscence," Journal of Monetary Economics 2: 433-436.
[back to text]
2

See Leonall C. Andersen and Jerry L. Jordan, 1968,

"Monetary and Fiscal Actions: A Test of Their Relative
Importance in Economic Stabilization," Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis Review, November: 11-24. [back to text]

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