View original document

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

The Challenge of Concentrated Poverty :: June 22, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
home | news & media | careers | site map

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK o f CLEVELAND
A bout U
Tours

For the Public

News & Media

Com munit y D e velopm ent

S tream ing Media

Forefront M agazine

Speakers Bureau

I Our IRegion

I Research

I Ban kin g

I Learning Center

Savings Bonds

Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2006 > The Challenge of Concentrated
Poverty

Q _ SHARE

^

f ...

The Challenge of Concentrated
Poverty

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

So often lately, I find myself in front of an audience speaking in very
measured words about the economy and monetary policy. While
community development is a topic that may be less visible in the
financial press, it is one that is equally meaningful to all of us here.
The work that you do - whether in banking, community outreach,
public policymaking, teaching, or research - reflects a dedication to
bettering the lives of others.

President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Com m unity Development Policy
Summit
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
June 22, 2006

We are here today and tomorrow to examine concentrated poverty that is, poverty that affects more than 40 percent of people living in
a particular region or city - through the lens of community
development. I think we can all agree that community reinvestment
initiatives have done a great deal to help low- to moderate-income
families over the past generation. But we know that there is still a
long way to go.

It took a recent catastrophe - Hurricane Katrina - to refocus our
nation's attention on poverty. The disaster in New Orleans last year
reminded us that even in twenty-first-century America, some people
still have limited access to bank accounts, permanent homes, and
transportation. Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath have compelled
the public and our policymakers to recognize the enormity of poverty
in America and to explore public policy solutions to this enduring
problem.

In approaching this policy summit, you may be wondering: What is
the Federal Reserve System's connection to concentrated poverty?
Why does the Cleveland Fed care about this issue?

The fact is that we are committed to the goals of community
development. Our Community Affairs program helps us fulfill one of
our important public policy mandates - to enforce fair-lending
regulations that protect consumers in the financial marketplace. We
also believe that understanding the issues behind concentrated
poverty will help us better assess overall economic performance.

I will begin my remarks with an overview of the Federal Reserve's role
in community development. Next, I will describe more broadly some
of the progress made over the past few decades and some of the
continuing challenges we all face in addressing poverty. Finally, I will
share my thoughts on why I think this type of policy summit can help
lead to positive change.

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2006/Pianalto_20060622.cfm[4/29/2014 2:08:31 PM]

The Challenge of Concentrated Poverty :: June 22, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Please note that the views I express today are mine alone. I do not
presume to speak for any of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.

I. The Federal Reserve and Its Role in
Community Development
Let me begin with some background on the Federal Reserve System
and how our work relates to the overall area of public policy that you
are interested in: community development.

You are all probably familiar with the Federal Reserve's role in setting
our nation's monetary policy. The 12 Reserve Banks also provide
financial services to banks and the U.S. Treasury, cooperate with the
Board of Governors to supervise banks, and conduct economic
research.

Over the past few decades, the Federal Reserve has pursued a broad
range of research involving patterns of wealth and poverty. We want
to better understand how concentrated poverty affects market
efficiency and economic growth. We know that most people who are
trapped in poverty cannot participate fully in the labor market or the
financial system. So there is good reason, just from a macroeconomic
viewpoint, for the Federal Reserve to analyze these issues.

But our involvement actually reaches much further. As part of our
responsibilities to promote fair and equal access to credit and to
protect the rights of consumers, the Federal Reserve has become
involved in community development, especially as the nation's fairlending laws have evolved over the past few decades.

Congress gave the Federal Reserve a substantial role in the regulation
of lending practices through the Truth in Lending Act of 1968. This
law was designed to protect consumers in credit transactions by
requiring lenders to disclose the terms of credit and the costs
associated with borrowing money. As the civil rights movement
gained momentum across the nation, Congress quickly moved beyond
general consumer protection laws into various antidiscrimination
lending laws.

Before these laws were enacted, there was a growing concern that
access to credit was not being provided on a fair and equal basis. But
now an array of federal and state fair-lending laws have been
enacted to safeguard consumers' rights in our financial system,
including in home-mortgage lending. In fact, the Federal Reserve has
recently intensified its focus on data derived from the Home
Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975.

Another important law is the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977,
which we all know as CRA. The Federal Reserve has had a role not
only in writing and enforcing the regulations associated with this
legislation, but also in studying its effects over time. In fact, Glenn
Canner and Robert Avery at the Board of Governors have reported
that since the law was enacted, banks have greatly increased their
presence in low- to moderate-income communities and have
introduced products and services tailored to these markets - while

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2006/Pianalto_20060622.cfm[4/29/2014 2:08:31 PM]

The Challenge of Concentrated Poverty :: June 22, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

still making a profit.

Over the years, community reinvestment strategies have certainly
benefited people in these markets. By establishing banking
relationships, people gain a building block of economic success:
access to credit. Of course, access to credit - by itself - is certainly
not a solution to poverty. But the wise use of credit enables
individuals and families to accumulate wealth, make sound
investments, and avoid costly financial mistakes.

In light of all of these initiatives, the Federal Reserve has taken a
leadership role in supporting community development. Each of the 12
Federal Reserve Banks has a strong Community Affairs office. This
function has grown to encompass applied research, public programs,
outreach, and public education in "best practices" for community
development practitioners - all with the goal of improving conditions
in low- to moderate-income communities. Our policy summit today is
part of that education and outreach effort.

The Federal Reserve's Community Affairs offices are also working with
the Board of Governors on a multiyear project focusing on
concentrated poverty and its effect on community development. The
group is now collecting data, studying trends, and investigating the
outward migration of concentrated urban poverty. We hope to bring
new insights to the public policy debate over the coming years.

II. Addressing Poverty: What Has Been
Accomplished - What Remains to Be Done
So here we are in 2006, nearly 40 years after the fair-lending laws
first made their appearance. What has been accomplished in reducing
poverty over the past generation, and what still remains to be done?

By the late 1990s, poverty rates had fallen close to their historical
lows. However, census data indicate that overall poverty has actually
inched higher from 1999 to 2004. You will hear more about that
trend this afternoon. We also know that income inequality has
worsened, and there are increasing concerns that income mobility one of the cornerstones of the American dream - is decreasing. And
although concentrated poverty appears to have declined somewhat in
recent years, part of that decline was caused by the geographic
dispersion of poor people rather than by an actual reduction of
poverty itself.

Recent economic research has also verified what we have all been
reading and observing lately - Americans with weaker job-market
skills have not benefited as much from the growing U.S. economy as
have other Americans with higher-level skills. Economists call this
"skill-biased technical change." People who lack the skills needed to
keep up with changes in technology cannot take full advantage of the
benefits of the growing sectors of the economy. If lower-skilled
Americans fall further behind, the result will be increased income
inequality and, ultimately, greater poverty.

Despite these trends, we can learn from some recent experiences
that will help us focus on the most promising places to expend our
energies to combat poverty. Through the Federal Reserve's research
and outreach, we have been learning where different approaches can

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2006/Pianalto_20060622.cfm[4/29/2014 2:08:31 PM]

The Challenge of Concentrated Poverty :: June 22, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

lead to better outcomes.

At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, our research staff has
helped us to understand that human capital is every bit as important
as physical capital in driving innovation and income growth. That has
led our Bank to sponsor forums on the economics of educational
attainment and to conduct studies on the links among education,
innovation, investment, and economic performance.

Our Bank has also taken part in new research that aims to find a more
comprehensive measure of economic trends in Northeast Ohio. This is
the "Dashboard Indicators" project, which collects detailed
information about the economic performance of the region, including
poverty rates, to better focus regional economic development
efforts. You will hear more about this project in just a few minutes.

Data will be critical in any effort to overcome concentrated poverty.
Chairman Ben Bernanke expressed this idea well in a recent speech:
"Both government policymakers and community-development
organizations need the 'reality check' that hard data can provide. To
know whether our policies and programs are delivering the desired
results, we need to be able to measure inputs and outcomes,
program by program and community by community. Better
information increases accountability and promotes good governance
in both the public and the nonprofit sectors."

I could not agree more with the Chairman's comments. And indeed,
throughout the Federal Reserve System, we have been taking an
active role to uncover the hard data that will lead us to the priorities
of better accountability and better outcomes.

III. How This Policy Summit Can Lead to
Positive Change
We know the questions that must be answered: How can we
strengthen workforce skills? How can we reduce income inequality
and help promote the American ideal of income mobility?

Answers to those questions can begin to emerge from policy
conferences like this one. I am proud that the Federal Reserve can
serve as a facilitator for your analysis and collaboration.

Our conference agenda has brought together experts from across the
nation who can explore the complex details of concentrated poverty,
and who can suggest ways to overcome it. We are privileged to have
with us as our keynote speaker Dr. William Julius Wilson - a
nationally recognized expert on urban poverty - who will discuss
some of the root causes of poverty.

In your discussions here, both today and tomorrow, I encourage you
to be bold in your thinking, to challenge assumptions, to envision not
what has been but what could be.

Some will say that the problem of concentrated poverty is
insurmountable. Confronting the dilemmas of wealth and poverty
may, indeed, be the one of the most difficult challenges of our

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2006/Pianalto_20060622.cfm[4/29/2014 2:08:31 PM]

The Challenge of Concentrated Poverty :: June 22, 2006 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
generation. But let's step back and ask ourselves: What kind of
society will we leave to the next generation? One that is rigidly
stratified by economic class? Or one that allows for income mobility,
permitting individuals and families to rise as far and as fast as their
own talents will take them?

Even when the policy answers to these problems are identified,
mobilizing the public to pursue them will require tremendous efforts.
Yet throughout our history, each generation has faced challenges
involving such fundamental social questions.

A great American lawmaker of the nineteenth century, Daniel
Webster, once reminded the nation of the task ahead: "Let us
develop the resources of our land, call forth its powers, build up its
institutions, promote all its great interests, and see whether we also,
in our day and generation, may not perform something worthy to be
remembered."

Webster's comments are just as relevant for us today. In our day and
generation, our nation enjoys material wealth in a measure that
Americans have never before known. However, we know that not
everyone shares those advantages. There is no better time for bright,
talented, and motivated people to dig in - to grapple with the
enduring issue of poverty amid plenty - and to fulfill a task that will
truly be "worthy to be remembered."

Careers | Diversity | Privacy | Terms of Use | Contact Us | Feedback | RSS Feeds

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2006/Pianalto_20060622.cfm[4/29/2014 2:08:31 PM]