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Home > Former President Jim Bullard > Speeches, Presentations and Commentary

From the President

Welcoming Remarks: 2019 Homer Jones Memorial
Lecture
June 25, 2019
Remarks: pdf | text (below) | Photos | Event Videos
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard welcomed Dr. Carmen Reinhart, who delivered this
year’s Homer Jones Memorial Lecture. Reinhart’s professional experience spans Wall
Street, academia and public policy. She is currently the Minos A. Zombanakis Professor of
the International Financial System at Harvard Kennedy School. An expert in international
economics, she co-authored one of the most de�nitive books on �nancial crises, This Time
Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. Her presentation Tuesday was titled “A Short
Tour of Global Risks.”

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard welcomed attendees to the annual Homer Jones Memorial Lecture and
introduced this year’s speaker, Dr. Carmen Reinhart.
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Dr. Carmen Reinhart was the speaker at the St. Louis Fed’s annual Homer Jones Memorial Lecture honoring
leadership in economics and policy. She presented “A Short Tour of Global Risks.”
Download High Resolution Photo

Full text of remarks:
Welcoming Remarks1
James Bullard
President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
The 2019 Homer Jones Memorial Lecture
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
June 25, 2019
Welcome to the 29th Homer Jones Memorial Lecture.
Each year, the St. Louis Fed sponsors a lecture by a prominent individual who is attuned to
the great economic issues of the day—whether related to monetary policy, �scal policy,
trade policy or �nancial market developments more generally. Some of these individuals
have been well known in the policymaking sphere, while others have resided in academia,
seeking to improve living standards through new ideas or new approaches to policymaking.
Ideas matter! In a recent Wall Street Journal commentary that eulogized the passing of
Harvard Professor Martin Feldstein, Larry Summers said: “A doctor can treat a patient. An
economist, through research or policy advice, can improve life for a population.”2
You are here today in no small measure because of two economists in that tradition. The
�rst economist was Milton Friedman. As many of you know, Milton was honored with the
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1976.

The second economist was Homer Jones. In the early 1930s, Milton Friedman was a student
of Homer Jones at Rutgers University. Arthur Burns, a future chairman of the Fed, was also
on the Rutgers faculty at the time. Homer encouraged Milton to pursue a graduate degree in
economics. Milton did so and eventually joined the faculty at the University of Chicago.
Homer eventually landed at the St. Louis Fed. The two friends, with the help and assistance
of many others, would revolutionize global monetary policy by insisting that, at the end of
the day, as Milton put it, “In�ation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
It took some time, but that mantra would eventually carry the day in monetary
policymaking circles. In his recent book, Keeping At It: The Quest for Sound Money and
Good Government, Paul Volcker reminded readers: “[T]hat approach enforced upon the
Federal Reserve an internal discipline that had been lacking.”3
Although economic conditions today are much different from those of the 1970s, we can
nevertheless learn much from that episode. Namely, if the Fed fails in its mission, the
economy and society will be the worse for wear—and the Fed’s credibility will be tarnished.
Better to get it right from the beginning.
During his time as research director, Homer Jones presided over the rise of rigorous
macroeconomic research at the St. Louis Fed to support monetary policy positions
advanced by the Bank president at FOMC meetings. This tradition remains with us today.
This policymaking aspect of monetary policy analysis contributed to another innovation:
The use and dissemination of monetary and macroeconomic data. Homer worked to make
data available to every person who wanted access to it. His revolutionary
entrepreneurialism in the public dissemination of economic data continues today: Last
year, nearly 6 million people used the St. Louis Fed’s FRED database.4
We commemorate the legacy of Homer Jones through this signature lecture series.
The �rst lecture was given in 1987, shortly after his death. The lecture has persisted, in
large part, because of the support of many organizations and people. These have included
Saint Louis University, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, the University of
Missouri-St. Louis and Washington University in St. Louis. For the past several years, the
lecture series has been a joint collaboration between the St. Louis Gateway Chapter of the
National Association for Business Economics and the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Owing to its prominence, the lecture series has attracted many outstanding economists and
policymakers. Past speakers have included Allan Meltzer, Anna Schwartz, John Taylor, Ben
Bernanke, Robert E. Lucas Jr. and Larry Summers.
This year’s speaker is Carmen M. Reinhart.

Dr. Reinhart is the Minos A. Zombanakis Professor of the International Financial System at
Harvard Kennedy School. She was senior policy advisor and deputy director at the
International Monetary Fund and held positions as chief economist and vice president at
the investment bank Bear Stearns in the 1980s. She serves on the Economic Advisory Panel
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and was a member of the Congressional Budget
Of�ce Panel of Economic Advisers. Dr. Reinhart is probably best known for her work on
understanding �nancial crises in both advanced economies and emerging markets. One
product of this research effort is her best-selling book (with Kenneth S. Rogoff), This Time
Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. It has been translated to over 20 languages
and won the Paul A. Samuelson Award, among other awards.
Dr. Reinhart will present “A Short Tour of Global Risks.”
Please join me in welcoming Dr. Carmen Reinhart.
1 Any opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily re�ect those of the

Federal Open Market Committee.
2 Summers, Lawrence H. “The Economist Who Helped Me Find My Calling,” Wall Street

Journal, June 12, 2019.
3 Volcker, Paul A. and Harper, Christine. Keeping At It: The Quest for Sound Money and Good

Government, New York: PublicAffairs, Hachette Book Group, 2018, p. 118.
4 See Go Figure with FRED: The St. Louis Fed’s signature economic database, Annual Report

2018, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.