View original document

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

Search Site
Home > James Bullard, President and CEO > James Bullard - Speeches, Presentations and Commentary >

Welcoming Remarks: 2016 Homer Jones Memorial Lecture,
Featuring Lawrence Summers
From the President
Key Policy Papers
Speeches, Presentations
and Commentary
Research Papers
Media Interviews

April 6, 2016
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard delivered welcoming
remarks at the 27th Homer Jones Memorial Lecture. He
introduced this year's speaker, Lawrence Summers—one of
the country's most in uential economists and
policymakers—who discussed "Secular Stagnation and
Monetary Policy." The annual event honors the St. Louis
Fed's former Research director, Homer Jones, who played a
major role in helping the Bank become a leader in
monetary research and statistics.
Remarks (pdf) | Event Videos
Full text of remarks:
Welcoming Remarks by James Bullard, President and CEO
The 2016 Homer Jones Memorial Lecture
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
April 6, 2016

James Bullard
President and Chief
Executive O cer
Bio
Curriculum Vitae
Staff Contacts

Welcome to the Homer Jones Memorial Lecture.

IDEAS/RePEc Pro le

The opening of the major league baseball season is an
opportunity for fans to view with wide wonder the
possibilities of future glory. Yet, the splendor of opening
day notwithstanding, we all know in our hearts that for
some teams, a pessimistic outlook will likely provide a
better match to actual results. The hard reality of errorprone elders, poor hitting and down-the-middle pitching
can add up to a lot of losses before the All-Star break,
leading fans of some teams to sigh and say, “Wait until
next year.”

Photos

In many ways, “Wait until next year” has been a motto for
the U.S. economy since the nancial crisis of 2007-09.
Professional forecasters, monetary and scal
policymakers, as well as Wall Street analysts and traders,
have been predicting each year since then a return to
halcyon days in the U.S., only to be disappointed by the
time the All-Star break rolls around. Although labor markets

Videos
Subscribe:
Email alerts
RSS
"Rationally, let it be said in a
whisper, experience is certainly
worth more than theory."
Amerigo Vespucci

have shown dramatic improvement, U.S. real economic
growth has remained stubbornly low. Many economists
have lowered their assessment of the longer-term real GDP
growth rate in the U.S. to 2 percent or less, as opposed to
the 3 percent or more that might once have been expected
for the world’s largest economy.
What is it that has caused this relative losing streak? Is it
something that can be xed with a new power hitter,
perhaps, or a left-handed relief pitcher who can get timely
outs in the late innings of a game? Or is it, like the Chicago
Cubs, a situation that requires a total revamp of the entire
approach to the game?
Today’s speaker will likely offer some thoughts on this
matter.
This is the 27th Homer Jones Memorial Lecture. This
lecture series, which began in 1986 shortly after Homer’s
death, honors the contributions and legacy of a former
Research director at the St. Louis Fed. The series, much
like the vaunted St. Louis-based Energizer Bunny, has
persisted, in large part because of the past support of
many organizations and people—several of whom are in
this audience or who represent some of the institutions
that were vital in the lecture series’ long run. These include
the St. Louis Gateway Chapter of the National Association
for Business Economics, Saint Louis University, Southern
Illinois University at Edwardsville, the University of Missouri
at St. Louis and Washington University in St. Louis.
Homer Jones is often described as “Milton Friedman’s
teacher.” Jones taught Friedman when Friedman was an
undergraduate at Rutgers University in the early 1930s.
Jones had gone to Rutgers after studying at the University
of Chicago, where he was a student of legendary Chicago
professor Frank Knight. Friedman wasn’t the only person at
Rutgers during Homer’s time there to go on to become a
well-known economist—the Rutgers economics faculty
also included future Fed Chairman Arthur Burns.1
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.”2 They remained lifelong
friends, eventually teaming up to oppose the high in ation
monetary policy of the Burns era.
In 1958, Homer Jones joined the St. Louis Fed. He is
remembered for many contributions to the Bank, but his
role in the Bank’s development as a leader in monetary
research and statistics stands out. Jones was a pioneer,
perhaps the pioneer, within the Fed in developing the
concept of independent research departments at the
Reserve banks. This development, which subsequently
spread across the Federal Reserve System, has been

invaluable to the Fed over the years. 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.
Today, the St. Louis Fed is a leader in the public
dissemination of economic data. Many of my current and
previous colleagues, building upon the legacy of Homer
Jones, have designed and introduced Bank products like
FRED, mobile FRED, ALFRED, GeoFRED, CASSIDI, FRASER
and IDEAS. Underlying all of these products is the core
belief that underpinned Homer’s initial innovative efforts: to
keep the public better informed about its central bank and
the U.S. economy, and to provide accurate, timely data for
economic researchers. Like Homer, we are always striving
to innovate—so stay tuned for some future St. Louis Fed
acronym!
This year’s speaker is Lawrence H. Summers.
Some of you may have heard of him!
Dr. Summers is the Charles W. Eliot University Professor
and President Emeritus at Harvard University. He served as
the 71st Secretary of the United States Treasury for
President Clinton and the Director of the National
Economic Council for President Obama. Currently, Dr.
Summers directs Harvard University’s Mossavar-Rahmani
Center for Business and Government. Dr. Summers was
the rst social scientist to receive the National Science
Foundation’s Alan Waterman Award for scienti c
achievement. In 1993, he was awarded the John Bates
Clark Medal, which is given to the most outstanding
economist under 40 in the United States. He was elected to
the National Academy of Sciences in 2002. He has
published more than 150 papers in scholarly journals and
maintains an active presence as a public intellectual.
Please join me in welcoming Dr. Larry Summers.
1

See Friedman, Milton. “Homer Jones: A Personal
Reminiscence.” Journal of Monetary Economics, November
1976, 2(4), pp. 433-6.
2

GENERAL
Home
About Us
Bank Supervision
Careers
Community Development
Economic Education
Events

Friedman (1976).

Inside the Economy Museum
Newsroom
On the Economy Blog
Open Vault Blog
OUR DISTRICT
Little Rock Branch
Louisville Branch
Memphis Branch
Agricultural Finance Monitor
Housing Market Conditions
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Bridges
Economic Synopses
Housing Market Perspectives
In the Balance
Page One Economics
The Quarterly Debt Monitor
Review
Regional Economist
ST. LOUIS FED PRESIDENT
James Bullard's Website
INITIATIVES
Center for Household Financial Stability
Dialogue with the Fed
Federal Banking Regulations
FOMC Speak
In Plain English - Making Sense of the Federal Reserve
Timely Topics Podcasts and Videos
DATA AND INFORMATION SERVICES
CASSIDI®
FRASER®
FRED®
FRED® Blog
GeoFRED®
IDEAS
FOLLOW THE FED
Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Google Plus
Email Subscriptions

RSS

CONTACT US

|

LEGAL INFORMATION

|

PRIVACY NOTICE & POLICY

|

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ONLINE