View original document

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

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: 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

S tream ing Media

Forefront M agazine

Embracing Change...

Com munit y D e velopm ent
Speakers Bureau

I Our IRegion

I Research

I Ban kin g

I Learning Center

Savings Bonds

Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2014 > My Life at the Federal Reserve:
^ sh are
^
...

My Life at the Federal Reserve:
Embracing Change and
Collaboration

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

P resident and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank o f Cleveland
The College of Wooster
Wooster, Ohio

February 26, 2014

AMERICA'S
YP 1ft! Ft

COLLEGE

'Or Mentored

External Links
Live streaming, Sandra Pianalto at
The College of Wooster
Ustream □
The College of Wooster □

^graduate

This year, the Federal Reserve commemorates its 100th anniversary,
and I will complete my more-than-three decades of service to this
remarkable institution. It is sometimes hard for me to fathom that I
have spent more than half my life in the Federal Reserve System, and
roughly one-third of its existence! In many ways, I have grown up
with this institution. When I reflect back on those 30 years, I am
struck by the many changes that I have witnessed. The Federal
Reserve has adapted and evolved. It is very much a learning
organization. I don’t have time today to go through all the changes I
have seen over this 30-year period, so tonight I will share my
reflections on some of the changes that have occurred in Federal
Reserve operations. Then I will walk through some of the changes
resulting from the financial crisis and severe economic recession. I
will wrap up with thoughts on the collaborative spirit of the Federal
Reserve. Before I start, I need to give the standard disclaimer that
these are my views alone and not necessarily those of others in the
Federal Reserve System.
On December 23, 1913, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal
Reserve Act, which created the nation’s central bank and set the
stage for the establishment of 12 Reserve Banks, including one in

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Cleveland. My Federal Reserve District covers all of Ohio, western
Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the northern panhandle of West
Virginia. The Federal Reserve was purposefully designed as a
decentralized organization, with both public and private components
and broad geographic representation. Our congressional founders
recognized that the central bank needed to reflect the diversity of
the nation while protecting decisions from political interference.
So what does a Federal Reserve Bank do? The Federal Reserve Banks
cooperate with the Board of Governors in Washington, DC, in
supervising commercial banks in our respective regions. We also
conduct research on national and regional economic conditions; we
provide financial services to banks and the US Treasury; and we are a
resource for people and organizations that are involved in community
and economic development. A Reserve Bank is a multifaceted
operation with many moving parts, and over the past three decades
or so, I have witnessed many changes and many accomplishments at
the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
When I started at the Bank, most of our employees were involved in
operational activities—that is, processing checks, cash, and savings
bonds. Cash processing remains a core function at the Federal
Reserve Bank of Cleveland, but we no longer process paper checks or
Treasury bonds.
We once processed 11 million paper checks every night in my Reserve
Bank District. That means we took in trucks full of checks, ran them
through high-speed sorting machines, debited and credited the
appropriate financial institutions, and then sent those checks to their
ultimate destinations—it was a really large operation. But today the
number of paper checks we process is zero. The Federal Reserve now
primarily processes checks electronically. Other forms of payment
have become popular, and Americans have simply stopped writing
paper checks like they used to. Technological innovations have also
produced new efficiencies, allowing Federal Reserve Banks to
consolidate many operations. Those trends are a large part of the
reason why our employee base at the Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland has shrunk from 1,600 people when I took over as
president to about 900 today. In fact, across the whole System, about
4,000 fewer people work at Reserve Banks today compared with
2003.1 Like the rest of the world, we at the Federal Reserve have
harnessed the power of technology to become more efficient.
As the fiscal agent to the US Treasury, we are also using technology
to make payments to and from government agencies more efficient.
At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, we have developed a
website called Pay.gov where the public can make payments to 175
agencies. In 2013, we processed 121 million transactions valued at
more than $115 billion. If you have made a payment on your federal
student loan recently, one of our Pay.gov employees processed that
payment for you.
Advances in technology have had a tremendous positive impact on
what we do at the Federal Reserve and how we do our work. Now let
me turn to some of the changes that have occurred as a result of the
financial crisis and severe economic recession.
In many ways, the 2008 financial crisis resembled a classic financial
panic. A panic happens when investors and the public lose confidence
in key financial institutions and markets. One of the first actions we
took at the Federal Reserve to restore confidence in the banking
system was to do what we were created to do—to serve as a lender
of last resort. At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, lending to
financial institutions in my District in 2008 totaled almost $100
billion. To give you an idea of how big that number is, in 2006 when

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
financial markets were more normal, our lending total was less than
$2 billion.2 Put another way, we needed to provide 50 times the
usual amount of liquidity to respond to the 2008 financial crisis.
Another move we made to restore confidence in financial markets
was to conduct a series of stress tests on the 19 largest financial
institutions. Three of them are headquartered in my District. Stress
tests put institutions through severe scenarios to see if they would
have enough capital should housing prices suddenly plummet or the
unemployment rate spike. Letting the public know that most banks
had enough capital and making capital available through the
government for those that didn’t was helpful in restoring public
confidence in the banking system.
At the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and across the Federal
Reserve System, we now conduct stress tests every year on the
largest institutions, and we help smaller banks conduct their own. We
also lead the banks we supervise in annual capital planning exercises
to ensure that they have enough capital to handle an economic
shock. Another benefit of stress tests is they help ensure that banks
have sufficient capital to continue to provide loans to creditworthy
customers during a downturn. We learned during the crisis that some
banks stopped lending in order to shrink assets to improve their
capital ratios, which only aggravated the tight-credit situation. We
also make public the results of those stress tests on the largest
institutions. It is obviously useful for banks themselves to know they
can weather a storm, but it is equally useful for the public to know
that the banks are well capitalized. Again, it helps promote
confidence.
An important feature of stress testing is the comparison of risks
across banks. For example, we might look at levels of commercial
real estate holdings across banks. We want to identify risks that are
evident in multiple banks and which could have a larger impact on
the financial system. The Federal Reserve has recognized the
importance of monitoring banks as a group and not just as individual
institutions. That is why, today, my staff at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Cleveland includes a large number of financial system supervisors
whose job goes beyond assessing the condition of individual banks. It
is also why my staff has taken it upon themselves to better
understand regional banks—what you might think of as mid-sized
institutions. Understanding the proper level of regulation and
supervision for regional banks is important given the relationships and
common vulnerabilities among them.
These changes represent significant progress in the Federal Reserve’s
approach to supervision and regulation in the aftermath of the
financial crisis. Quite appropriately, we have shifted from a focus on
the safety and soundness of individual banks to the financial stability
of the entire system.
Another area where the financial crisis, severe recession, and slow
recovery have prompted changes at the Federal Reserve is in the
conduct of monetary policy. The Federal Open Market Committee, or
FOMC, is the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy body. It consists of
the seven members of the Board of Governors in Washington and the
12 Federal Reserve Bank presidents. Right now, I happen to be the
longest-serving Federal Reserve Bank president. Janet Yellen is the
new chair of the FOMC. We meet eight times a year to review
financial and economic conditions and determine appropriate
monetary policy responses. At each meeting, we have to decide how
to best achieve the mandate that Congress has given us to promote
maximum employment and stable prices. Put another way, monetary
policy is supposed to preserve the value of the dollar while
cultivating an economy where there are enough jobs for everyone

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
who wants one.
At each FOMC meeting, we begin with reports from the staff on
financial market developments and on US and worldwide economic
developments. Then each Reserve Bank president and each governor
provides comments on business conditions and their economic
outlook. This is called the economic “go-round.” Next, we turn to a
discussion of possible monetary policy actions, the so-called policy
go-round. We usually have a selection of policy alternatives to
discuss. Each participant gives his or her view, and the meeting ends
with a vote on the federal funds rate target.
Eleven years ago, my description of an FOMC meeting might have
stopped right there. But things have grown a bit more complicated in
the interim. In the uncertain aftermath of the financial crisis,
recession, and slow recovery, achieving our inflation and employment
objectives has become much more challenging.
Before the crisis, the main policy tool we voted on was the federal
funds rate. By way of background, the federal funds rate influences a
whole host of other interest rates. So when the federal funds rate
goes down, car loans get cheaper, home mortgages decline, and even
credit card rates may get less expensive, to name just a few. And
that has a positive impact on the broader economy. When consumers
can borrow at lower interest rates, they can afford to buy more goods
and services, and the businesses that supply those goods and services
can hire more people. And when more people are working, they have
more money in their bank accounts and may be more likely to spend.
More spending creates more jobs, and more jobs create more
spending. The entire economy benefits in a virtuous circle of growth.
The reverse happens when we raise the federal funds rate. So that is
why targeting the federal funds rate for many, many years was an
effective way for the Federal Reserve to fulfill its objectives.
But that ended in late 2008. With the economy on the brink of
another depression, we lowered the federal funds rate to zero. It
can’t go any lower than that, so when the economy needed further
support we had to turn to unconventional tools. The most well-known
of those tools is what we call large-scale asset purchases, or what
you may know as Quantitative Easing, or QE. The goal of the asset
purchase program is to maintain downward pressure on long-term
interest rates. After the crisis, the Federal Reserve’s asset purchases
have risen to unprecedented levels, although the purpose of the
program is still to lower interest rates for consumers and businesses.
Today we are in our third round of QE, and studies show that the
asset purchases have succeeded in pushing down longer-term interest
rates and have generally eased financial conditions.
Another tool we have turned to is what we call forward guidance. We
are telling the public that we expect that a highly accommodative
stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable
time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic
recovery strengthens. Again, we had limited previous experience with
forward guidance. Yet like our experience with large-scale asset
purchases, this unconventional tool has also proven itself effective. It
has helped convince the public that interest rates will remain low,
just as we had hoped. Lenders are more willing to continue making
loans at lower rates because they have confidence that interest rates
will stay low, and businesses and consumers can make decisions with
more certainty about the borrowing environment.
So those are two unconventional tools we are using to attain our
objectives. Not only are they new to us in scale and scope, they are
also new to the American public. Recognizing that, we have engaged
in a parallel effort to help the public and financial markets
understand why we are doing what we are doing. That is because the

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
effectiveness of monetary policy depends importantly on the public’s
expectations of how policy will evolve.
So let me give some specific examples of how the Federal Reserve
has tried to make clearer the link between our policy actions and
developing economic conditions. In January 2012, the FOMC published
a statement of longer-run goals and policy strategy. It was in that
statement that we first announced that our inflation objective would
be 2 percent. That was a big step—we had never before publicly
announced a numerical goal for inflation. We also began publishing
FOMC participants’ estimates of the longer-run normal unemployment
rate. That way, people will know what we think of as maximum
employment. Right now, the range is from 5.2 percent to 6 percent,
but that is subject to revision over time.
Another way that we have enhanced communications around our
objectives is by releasing FOMC participants’ forecasts for inflation,
the unemployment rate, and economic growth. These forecasts also
include projections of future federal funds rates that we see as most
appropriate for achieving the Committee’s objectives. All of this
information is included in our quarterly Summary of Economic
Projections, which is posted on the Federal Reserve Board’s website.
So now, the public can see more transparently how the FOMC expects
the economy to develop relative to its longer-run objectives. And
forgive me for sounding like a late-night TV commercial, but wait—
there’s more! The chair of the FOMC now takes questions at quarterly
press conferences, another first. In a time when the use of
unconventional tools could have ratcheted up uncertainty about
monetary policy, these communications have instead delivered a
much-needed dose of clarity to the public and financial markets.
Through all of these changes, what has impressed me the most has
been the commitment of the people around the FOMC table to
consistently come together on policy actions aimed at achieving our
shared objectives. I would even venture to say that we could not
have made as much progress as we have in getting people back to
work and keeping prices stable without this commitment.
We arrive at each meeting with our own forecasts based on analysis
by our own staffs. We have widely different backgrounds—you may
have heard the old joke that it’s difficult to get two economists to
agree on anything; well, at the FOMC you can add lawyers, former
bankers, and bank examiners to that mix. We work hard to develop a
policy action that the Committee can broadly support.
I don’t think I’m going out on a limb to say that the FOMC has always
been a collegial group. What I can tell you for certain as an
eyewitness for the past 11 years, however, is that the Committee
under Ben Bernanke’s leadership took purposeful steps to strengthen
its commitment to collaboration and consensus-building.
For example, at his first meeting as chairman in 2006, Ben Bernanke
wanted to increase interactions among participants at the FOMC
meeting, so he introduced what he called a “two-handed”
intervention. Instead of raising just one hand to get the chair’s
attention to be called on to give comments in the economic and
policy go-rounds, you could raise both hands to signal that you
wanted to ask a question of someone else at the table or to add a
comment. Chairman Bernanke also started the practice of going last
on the important policy go-round. He listened to everyone’s views
around the table before laying out his own views and suggesting a
way forward.
Hearing the diversity of views and interacting in this way around the
table helps us reach better decisions. I draw this picture in contrast
to the stereotypical portrayal of FOMC participants in the media. The

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
media is fond of classifying FOMC participants as the “hawks” who
want to tighten policy and the “doves” who want more
accommodation. I myself have been called a “centrist,” and it has
been said that watching the center tends to give you a good sense of
which way the Committee is leaning.
I have also never dissented at a meeting. But I want to point out that
for all the headlines the dissenters grab, dissents are actually quite
rare on the FOMC. In my 11 years serving on the Committee, only 11
of my 40 colleagues have dissented.3 To put it even more plainly,
there have been 48 total dissenting votes since 2003 compared with
about 1,000 votes supporting the consensus.
Overall, I think the Committee’s nearly unanimous voting record is
extraordinary given everything we have gone through since the
financial crisis, severe economic recession, and ensuing slow
recovery. A less-collaborative FOMC may not have been able to move
as aggressively or creatively to embrace the unconventional tools
that proved vital in stabilizing the financial system and putting the
economy on a path to recovery. It w asn’t uncommon in the thick of
the crisis for any of us on the FOMC to receive a weekend phone call
from Ben Bernanke asking us about our views. The collegial and
respectful atmosphere of the FOMC allowed us to quickly process a
range of different views and forecasts, and then move forward with a
well-considered decision. You never know where the best ideas are
going to come from, so you have to be open to hearing different
perspectives. We do not have to look too far, unfortunately, to see
examples of institutions that have failed to foster a collaborative
atmosphere, with gridlock and standoffs the unfortunate
consequence.
Now I would like you to think back to the opening of my remarks
when I told you about the Federal Reserve’s origins. I noted that the
Federal Reserve was designed to be decentralized so that different
views could be heard and it would be protected from short-term
political influence so the best long-term interests of the country
could be pursued. I did not say that Congress forced us to embrace
change and collaboration. Those words are not in the Federal Reserve
Act, or in any subsequent legislation. But we do have the freedom to
work together toward our objectives of getting Americans back to
work and keeping prices stable. To me, that is the genius of the
System.
Incidentally, Janet Yellen’s first meeting as chair of the FOMC will be
next month. Though I will be a part of only two meetings under her
leadership, I would wager that one thing she won’t change will be
the commitment to building consensus and being open-minded in
order to reach solutions that benefit the US economy.
So to sum up, today I have talked about some of the changes I have
observed during my time at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
We have moved away from processing paper payments and enhanced
the way we supervise the banking system. The Federal Reserve has
adopted some unconventional monetary policy tools and we have
changed the way we communicate. And the Federal Open Market
Committee has embraced a consensus-building approach to achieving
its objectives.
My career with the Federal Reserve has been extremely satisfying. My
family immigrated to this country from Italy when I was five years
old, and I remember helping my parents study for their citizenship
test. I was fascinated by the way the American government was set
up and the different responsibilities the various entities carried.
From then on, I knew I wanted a career in public service. But as they
say, “be careful what you wish for,” because I never in my wildest

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]

My Life at the Federal Reserve: Embracing Change and Collaboration :: February 26, 2014 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
dreams could have imagined participating in policymaking during this
extraordinary time in our country’s economic history. It has been a
humbling and inspiring experience. And I have felt enormously
privileged to serve in this capacity. Thank you for the opportunity to
speak with you tonight, and I look forward to taking your questions.
1. 21,459 vs. 17,724.
2. Lending in 2006 was through the Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland’s discount window. The 2008 total encompasses
$25.7 billion in Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland discount
window (primary credit) lending and $71.6 billion in loans
through the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland under the Term
Auction Facility, a Federal Reserve discount window lending
program created in December 2007.
3. FOMC voters who served in an interim capacity (alternating for
their president) are not included in this count.

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

http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2014/Pianalto_20140226.cfm[4/29/2014 9:47:54 AM]