View original document

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

For release on delivery
7:00 p.m. EST
February 6, 2019

Welcoming Remarks
by
Jerome H. Powell
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
Conversation with the Chairman: A Teacher Town Hall Meeting
Washington, D.C.
(And via video link)

February 6, 2019

Thank you to all the educators who are here with us in Washington or are joining
us online. I look forward to responding to your questions. But first, I have a few
thoughts about the vital work you do as economics educators and its connection to what
the Federal Reserve is trying to accomplish. I promise to be brief, because it is a school
night.
I am here today, and the Fed has organized this event, because of the importance
of economics education. Some of your students may go on to become professional
economists, but all of them, I hope, will apply the valuable lessons and the skills they
have gained from economics in other careers and in others aspects of their lives.
Studying economics can benefit students in multiple ways. The lessons of
economics are valuable in a wide variety of vocations. Moreover, the knowledge gained
will empower students as consumers, managers of their own finances, and as informed
citizens. Economics has been consistently useful to me over my career in law, finance,
and government service. It is, of course, central to my current role as a monetary
policymaker and financial regulator.
In government, economic analysis is one of the principal tools we use in making
policy decisions. Among other things, economics is an essential facet of the science of
public policy. What policies actually work? Which ones sound good but don’t work, or
are actually counter-productive? Economics gives us the tools to answer those questions
and help us make the best the decisions on behalf of the public.
Of course, economics is not only the basis for judgments and decisions made by
the Fed and other government agencies. It also underpins the countless decisions by
consumers, businesses, and investors that drive economic activity. The concepts you

-2teach and apply in the classroom guide those decisions and even help explain human
behavior outside of the workings of the economy. For example, to continue to grow and
succeed, any business owner should understand the differences between fixed cost,
variable cost, average cost, and marginal cost. Businesses and investors need to
understand present or discounted value, but so should any parent or grandparent starting a
college fund. Economics teaches us about the power of incentives, which are central to
thinking about and understanding regulatory and tax policy. But incentives also help
motivate people in a variety of other settings, such as encouraging students to do their
best in school, helping reduce traffic jams, or even nudging someone to save more or to
exercise regularly. Economics is a practical and powerful tool for understanding how we
relate to each other.
And that’s why what you do for your students is so important. Like all teachers,
you are helping prepare them for success in life. The knowledge you impart and the
intellect and talents you help develop are tools that your students can use to achieve that
success. Economics teaches analytical and critical thinking skills useful to anyone. Part
of your students’ success is their economic success as capable, creative, and productive
members of the workforce and as consumers adept at managing their finances. Your
students benefit from this education, but so does everyone else in society. We all benefit
when better-educated citizens support economic policies that help our nation prosper.
We all benefit from the capability, creativity, and productivity of our workforce, because
nothing is more important to a healthy and growing economy. Responsible consumers
skilled in managing their finances are better prepared to weather bad times, and stronger
household finances overall can help sustain economic growth and mitigate a downturn.

-3Stabilizing growth and mitigating a downturn, of course, are aspects of the
Federal Reserve’s mission. Monetary policy can be a powerful tool to achieve these
ends, but, in truth, its powers are dwarfed by larger forces, such as the productivity of the
American people and the strength of their finances. By educating students and
supporting their future contributions to the economy as workers and consumers, all
teachers, especially economics teachers, are furthering our goals at the Fed, so let me
offer my further thanks for making our job easier.
To help support your work as teachers, the Federal Reserve Board and the
12 Reserve Banks conduct programs, organize events, and publish books to spread
knowledge of economics, financial literacy, and the role of the Fed in promoting a
healthy economy and financial system. You can find some of those resources at our
websites: FederalReserve.gov and FederalReserveEducation.org.
Each of the Reserve Banks has community outreach and educational initiatives,
and the outreach to economics teachers is coordinated by the System Economic
Education Group, which has been chaired by Princeton Williams.
At the Board of Governors, for some years we have operated a program called
FedEd, which sends Board employees into high schools throughout the Washington,
D.C., area. This outreach depends on several dozen volunteers from our staff--typically,
recent college graduates--who help teach about the Fed, economics and finance, and
answer questions about work opportunities at the Board. The Federal Reserve is
dedicated to promoting diversity in our ranks and in the economics profession, and FedEd
and other programs across the Federal Reserve System have helped advance this goal by
reaching many schools with significant numbers of minority students.

-4Let me leave it there, and again thank you for participating in this town hall, and
thank you for the valuable work you do every school day.