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Before the African American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
November 12, 2002

Economic Progress and Small Business
I am pleased to join you today. I would like to focus first on the economic status of minority
Americans, including some information from the Federal Reserve's most recent Survey of
Consumer Finances. I will then turn to the role of small businesses in our economy, drawing
on our research on small business finances and our efforts to promote small business access
to capital and credit.
Labor Market Developments
During the 1990s, we were fortunate to have experienced the longest uninterrupted
economic expansion in U.S. history. By late 2000, the unemployment rate was the lowest it
had been in more than thirty years. The expansion benefited all segments of the population,
including minority groups. In fact, the unemployment rate for blacks dropped to less than
7-1/2 percent in late 2000; it had not been lower than 9 percent since statistics on the
minority labor force were first collected in 1972. But despite the improvement, blacks still
lagged, with an unemployment rate that was nearly twice the national average.
Over the past year and a half, as all of you know, we have experienced a business cycle
downturn that has been followed, more recently, by a very slow recovery in the labor
market. As a result, we have retraced some of the gains recorded during the 1990s. The
overall unemployment rate has moved back up to 5-3/4 percent in recent months, and the
jobless rate for blacks has hovered just below 10 percent.
The fact that the business cycle has had broad effects on the labor market outcomes--both
on the upside and on the downside--highlights the limited scope for monetary policy to be
calibrated to target or to exempt a particular segment of our economy from cyclical changes
in economic activity. Over the course of the business cycle, in both good times and bad,
minority unemployment rates tend to run significantly higher than the national average.
Economists have determined that a variety of factors contribute to that persistent disparity,
including educational levels, work experience, and proximity to available jobs. Nonetheless,
the particularly troubling longer-run trend of declining labor force activity of black men
remains subject to considerable debate.
Monetary policy alone cannot address the underlying structural causes of differences in
economic outcomes for various groups, but it can contribute to an environment in which
progress toward equality is more likely to be made. Adjusting monetary policy in a forwardlooking manner to attain the maximum sustainable growth path for the aggregate economy
and stable prices will help foster conditions under which the greatest number of Americans-including minorities--share in the nation's prosperity. The Federal Open Market Committee's
accommodative policy over the past 22 months has been aimed at supporting aggregate

demand to lay the groundwork for a return to a sustainable rate of economic expansion.
And, last week's decision to ease further was aimed at increasing the chances that the
economic recovery would stay on track and not be derailed by the recent soft spot.
Private Wealth Creation
Just as the long expansion of the 1990s brought marked reductions in unemployment, it also
supported individual wealth creation. Because the creation of wealth is an important benefit
of policies that encourage stable economic conditions and sustainable job creation, my
colleagues and I at the Fed take an active interest in understanding the process of wealth
creation. The Board's Surveys of Consumer Finances, which are conducted every three
years, help us understand issues of personal finance.
With the information for 2001 tabulated so far, our survey shows that U.S. families saw
sizable gains in both their mean and their median net worth over the past decade: Median
real net worth rose 40 percent, and mean net worth rose 72 percent, between 1992 and
2001. Roughly half those gains occurred between 1992 and 1998, and half occurred in just
three years, from 1998 to 2001. Between 1992 and 1998, although the level of net worth for
minority families remained well below that of other families, their median real net worth was
rising at roughly the same pace, 20 percent, as nonminority families. However, between
1998 and 2001, inequality in family net worth increased significantly: Median real net worth
changed little for minority families while it increased an additional 17 percent for
nonminority families. As a result, the striking difference in the level of wealth between
minority and other families widened further: In 2001, the median net worth was $17,100 for
minority families versus $120,900 for non-Hispanic white families. I note, for this audience,
that the story for African Americans alone is somewhat more positive: Median wealth did
increase about 13 percent between 1998 and 2001, but the median level of net worth in
2001 was still only $19,000.
A substantial part of the wealth gap is associated simply with differences in family
ownership of assets. In 2001, about 22 percent of minority families had no type of
nonfinancial asset--such as a residence, a vehicle, or a business; almost 18 percent had no
type of financial asset--such as a checking or savings account, stocks, bonds, or other such
assets. For other families, the comparable figures were well below 10 percent. Obviously,
with their more limited asset ownership, minorities had less opportunity to benefit from the
substantial appreciation of assets, such as houses and corporate equities, that occurred over
the 1990s.
Nonetheless, increases in ownership are an important factor in explaining the gains in net
worth that we did see for minorities over the past decade. Two items stand out as
particularly important: transaction accounts and personal residences. Transaction accounts-including checking and savings accounts--are the most basic type of financial asset. Without
such holdings, families are unlikely to acquire the sophistication to move further into the
financial system. Over the period from 1992 to 2001, the share of minority families with
such accounts rose from 64 percent to 78 percent.
No doubt, a large part of the differences in asset holdings between minorities and other
families may be attributed to differences in income. By the definitions used in our survey,
the median income of minority families in 2001 was only 57 percent that of other families.
However, earlier work by our staff suggests that, even after controlling for such factors as
income and formal education, minorities are still less likely to hold even a basic checking
account. This finding suggests that fostering equal opportunity and supporting financial

literacy campaigns may help minorities move into the financial mainstream.
I do not have time today to cover the full range of detailed findings on asset and debt
holdings from our 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances. Clearly, the survey is an important
source of information on how changes in financial markets, innovations in lending, and other
factors affect the financial situation of families. Our staff is preparing an article for
publication in the Federal Reserve Bulletin early next year, which will provide a fuller
review of the results.
Changes in Home Ownership
The other important contributor to the rise in wealth among minorities has been the rise in
home ownership. Indeed, for many households, the largest and most important asset is the
home they own. Home ownership is one of the cornerstones of wealth building and is
generally associated with a range of socially desirable outcomes, including good schools, less
crime, and neighborhood stability. For these and other reasons, increasing the rate of home
ownership has been a long-standing national priority.
Over the past decade or so, strong gains in employment, relatively low interest rates, and
modest price inflation have spurred home buying across all segments of our society. In
addition to favorable general economic conditions, home ownership has benefited from the
introduction of new information processing technologies, including credit scoring, that have
reduced the costs of obtaining a mortgage and from the introduction of a host of new, more
affordable mortgage products.
Strong private and public support for home ownership has helped to push the national
homeownership rate to 67.8 percent in the third quarter of 2002. While rates for all groups
have risen over the past decade, minority households have experienced the largest gains in
home ownership. For blacks and Hispanics, homeownership rates averaged 47.5 and 48
percent, respectively, over the past year, up from rates of around 43 percent and 40 percent,
respectively, a decade earlier. These trends in minority home ownership are quite positive,
but more work remains to further close the substantial gap between minorities and
non-Hispanic whites, whose homeownership rate is above 70 percent.
The Role of Small Businesses in our Economy
Business ownership has been another area of economic progress for minorities. The Federal
Reserve has an ongoing interest in small businesses and their access to credit, which stems,
in part, from the significant role that small businesses play in our dynamic economy. By
some estimates, we have upwards of twenty-five million small businesses in the United
States accounting for more than 99 percent of all firms. Although a great number of these
firms involve individuals who are self-employed or who have no employees, small
businesses, collectively, employ more than half the private-sector workforce and generate
about three-fourths of net new jobs each year. These firms also generate more than half the
sales revenues of all U.S. firms. In addition, research has consistently found that small
businesses contribute vitally to the economies of urban and rural communities.
The expansion of the last decade provided a favorable climate for small businesses generally
and for minority-owned firms in particular. The year 2000 alone saw the creation of more
than 600,000 new firms with employees in the United States. Moreover, in recent years, the
number of minority-owned firms has been expanding at a rate more than four times that of
U.S. businesses overall. Nonetheless, minority-owned firms still constitute only a small
proportion of all small businesses. As of 1998, about 15 percent of all small businesses were
minority-owned: about 4 percent each were black-owned and Asian-owned, and 6 percent

were Hispanic-owned.
Small Business Access to Capital and Credit
Given the importance of small businesses to our economy, and their heavy reliance on credit
to facilitate growth, the Federal Reserve has taken a leading role in efforts to improve the
understanding of factors that bear on the availability of funds to support small business
activity. Our most recent report to the Congress in September on the availability of credit to
small businesses provides an extensive review of developments in recent years. In the report,
we noted that business-financing flows to both large and small borrowers, after having been
strong in the late 1990s, have since moderated along with the pace of economic activity.
Debt growth appears to have held up better at small firms than it has at large firms, and small
businesses did not report material difficulties in obtaining credit during the recent downturn.
From 1997 to 2002, the demand for credit by small businesses tracked the pattern of debt
growth. Equity financing of small businesses showed a similar pattern: It surged in the late
1990s but then slowed after 2000 when stock prices began to decline and venture capital
funding became less available.
An important input into our analysis of small businesses is the Board's Survey of Small
Business Finances, which is conducted every five years; the most recent was in 1998. These
surveys collect detailed information on the financial and other characteristics of a nationally
representative sample of small businesses. To help us gain a better understanding of the
nature and needs of minority-owned firms, the survey over-samples firms owned by various
minority groups.
These data have been extremely useful for our understanding of the role that discrimination
may play in affecting small business credit markets. Research based on data from the
surveys has provided many insights on similarities and differences in the characteristics of
white-owned and minority-owned firms and of male-owned and female-owned firms. For
example, firms owned by blacks tend to be smaller (whether measured by assets, sales, or
employment), newer, and more likely to be located in an urban area than their nonminority
counterparts. Black-owned businesses also tend to be owned by younger individuals with
fewer years of experience and poorer credit histories. Finally, black-owned businesses are
more likely to be sole proprietorships and in the services industry. Other differences between
other minority-owned firms and white-owned firms have been identified, but they tend to be
less pronounced.
Clearly, many factors are considered in credit decisions. Smaller businesses, which tend to
have less equity capital available, fewer assets to pledge as collateral, greater variation in
earnings streams, and higher failure rates, may be expected, on the whole, to experience
greater scrutiny in the process of obtaining credit than larger businesses experience. The
personal creditworthiness of the business owner in sole proprietorships or small partnerships,
as well as in small corporations, is also an important consideration. Creditor evaluations of
risk, based on these and other legitimate economic factors, properly play a central role in
credit decisions.
Aside from these differences along financial and nonfinancial dimensions, research has also
shown that many minority- and women-owned firms differ from white- and male-owned
firms in some of their credit market experiences. In general, studies have concluded that
black-owned firms are generally more likely to be turned down for credit. However, when
examined more closely, the general pattern has been found to mask more complex
relationships. For example, differences in denial rates are less pronounced in urban markets,

which account for a vast majority of firms in the study, than in rural areas. And when small
retail firms are considered separately, denial rates for black-owned firms and for
white-owned firms are similar. Clearly, additional research is needed to fully understand
these complexities. Indeed, these data alone cannot identify discrimination because they do
not include all the unique factors involved in each credit-granting decision.
Whether discrimination helps to explain the various credit market experiences of small
businesses owned by individuals from different demographic groups--and, if it does, to what
extent--is difficult to determine. Discrimination in any creditor's decision is disturbing, and
the moral and legal objections to it are obvious. In addition, constraints on access to credit
due to discrimination carry real costs and serious economic consequences. Such constraints
inhibit economic opportunities by limiting the ability of victims to purchase homes, expand
businesses, and accumulate wealth. At its heart, discrimination in granting credit artificially
restricts the flow of capital. It means that viable economic activity goes unfunded and that
markets that should work do not.
I can assure you that the Federal Reserve will remain vigilant for any indications of illegal
discrimination in credit decisions. We, of course, continue to examine banks to measure and
ensure their compliance with the Equal Credit Opportunity Act. And we will continue to
sponsor research on credit availability and constraints, including potential illegal
discrimination.
Information and Educational Programs
Besides collecting and analyzing data on small businesses and consumers, the Federal
Reserve has also supported programs to encourage community development in low- and
moderate-income areas and to promote small business development. Through our
Community Affairs programs at each of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks, we conduct
ongoing outreach and educational activities and give hands-on technical assistance to help
financial institutions, their customers, and communities understand and address community
credit needs. This is no small commitment. The Federal Reserve Board and the Reserve
Banks devote more than 100 full-time staff members to help institutions understand and
participate in community development.
To give you an idea of the kinds of activities we engage in, the Federal Reserve Banks over
the past three years have sponsored educational conferences, seminars, and workshops
focusing on emerging community development issues, which more than 45,000 people have
attended. Some issues addressed have been related to affordable housing, but recently our
activities have focused increasingly on issues related to small business, economic
development, and financial literacy. Each Reserve Bank develops programs that are tailored
to local needs. For example, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta worked with staff at
Georgia State University to research growth patterns of minority-owned businesses. The
New York Bank, in partnership with the University of Buffalo, held a conference that
explored economic challenges faced by inner-city communities and effective strategies for
business development. A recent conference at the Dallas Bank examined the role of
technology in community development, discussed financial services in distressed
communities, and considered ways of delivering financial services to those without bank
accounts.
In 2001, the System's Community Affairs Offices held their second biennial research
conference, featuring studies on the delivery of financial services to lower-income
populations and small businesses. Topics included the Community Reinvestment Act,

predatory lending, credit scoring, wealth creation, and alternative financial services. The
published proceedings are available on the Board's web site. The 2003 conference will be an
opportunity for researchers to explore subjects such as evaluating the role of social and
private capital in fostering economic development and measuring the success of programs
designed to support business development and economic well-being.
Besides these programs, Reserve Banks provide direct technical assistance to bankers,
businesses, and community development organizations to help them identify and address
capital and credit issues. Many of our Reserve Banks have helped bankers create multibank
community development corporations (CDCs) and other consortium lending intermediaries,
which focus on equity and debt financing for small and disadvantaged businesses. They also
help banks deal with regulatory requirements that often must be addressed before investing
in CDCs, small business investment companies, or multibank loan consortiums.
As I noted earlier, many Americans do not understand the basics of personal finance and
lack the sophistication to fully exploit the range of available financial services. Some are
easy targets for abuses or make poor choices in the use of credit. The inability of many
households to effectively budget, save, and invest is a barrier to their securing their financial
future. The Fed is actively supporting efforts across the nation to increase financial literacy.
In fact, we offer programs to our own workforce on financial matters. Our Community
Affairs and Public Information Offices have recently embarked on a national initiative to
highlight the importance of financial literacy and heighten the visibility of economic
education programs. Here, for example, staff members of the Pittsburgh Branch of the
Cleveland Bank are working with officials of the Pittsburgh Community Reinvestment
Group to host a December workshop on preventing predatory lending. This event will offer
credit counselors additional information on the use of credit reports and detailed instructions
on how to read loan documents, enabling them to serve as more highly trained resources for
their constituents.
Conclusion
Let me conclude by emphasizing that the Federal Reserve employs many tools that help us
understand credit markets and address credit and capital availability issues confronting
consumers and small businesses. Our goal is, through effective monetary policy, to help
maintain price stability and to create conditions for sustainable economic growth, which will
provide continued opportunities for families and small businesses to flourish. In an
environment of sustainable economic growth and stable prices, a rising proportion of our
citizens will be able to enter the job market and obtain important skills that can be
life-transforming. By creating conditions conducive to maximum sustainable growth, the
Federal Reserve can best do its part to improve the chances that all Americans have to
ensure their financial well-being. Through our supervision of banks, we monitor financial
institutions' compliance with laws requiring them to offer credit fairly and impartially. We
will continue to collect information and conduct research on consumer finances and on small
business credit markets. Finally, we will continue to promote financial literacy. Through all
these efforts, we are working to ensure enhanced job opportunity, business expansion, and
wealth creation for all Americans.

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