View original document

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

At the Canisius College Richard J. Wehle School of Business Community Business
Luncheon, Buffalo, New York
April 18, 2005

The Economy and Managing Personal Finances
I am very pleased to join you. Today I want to begin with a brief assessment of the economic
outlook before discussing financial conditions of businesses and households in more detail.
Then, I will turn to some issues related to the management of personal credit and savings and
the greater need that consumers have to improve their understanding of financial services
and providers as the financial marketplace has expanded.
I also need to add that I am expressing my own opinions, which are not necessarily those of
my colleagues on the Board of Governors or on the Federal Open Market Committee.
The Economic Outlook
As you know, the economy has been expanding at a solid pace lately. Real gross domestic
product grew at an annual rate of 3-3/4 percent in the fourth quarter and growth in the first
quarter looks to have remained solid. Labor markets have continued to improve, albeit at a
slow pace, with private nonfarm payroll employment posting moderate gains in 2004 and in
the first three months of this year. Business outlays for capital equipment grew robustly in
the past two quarters. Consumer spending also has continued to expand, although higher
energy prices may be crimping household purchases recently. Consumer and business
confidence remain favorable, despite a slight dip in consumer sentiment in early April, and,
with accommodative financial conditions, I expect that the economy will continue to expand
at a solid pace this year.
On the inflation front, broad measures of consumer inflation have risen somewhat faster
than they did in the year-earlier period, boosted by higher energy prices. Focusing on the
core price index, which excludes food and energy, it too has been a bit higher than it was the
year before, likely reflecting the indirect effects of rising energy prices and the falling dollar.
Productivity is slowing from its exceptional pace of the past couple years and unit labor
costs are again increasing. Though inflation pressures have risen somewhat in recent months,
longer-term inflation expectations appear to have remained well contained. I believe that,
while underlying inflation is expected to continue to be low, the Federal Reserve must be
more alert to monitoring incoming data, and continue to remove policy accommodation at a
measured pace, consistent with the incoming data and its commitment to maintain price
stability.
Financial Conditions of Businesses
Business expansion solidified last year and continued growth by businesses will depend in
part on their financial conditions. So let me take a few minutes to review the financial
position of the business sector, and especially the dramatic improvement from a few years
ago. Since 2001, firms have improved their balance sheet liquidity, reduced leverage, and

restructured their liabilities, responding in part to investors' concerns arising from some
high-profile unanticipated meltdowns in the early part of this decade. In addition, firms have
significantly cut costs through dramatic gains in productivity, which has boosted profits. In
my view, even with a rise in interest rates and some moderation in profit growth, the
business sector should remain financially strong and continue to expand.
The improvement in corporate balance sheets in the past few years has been substantial.
Most noteworthy are the gains achieved in balance sheet liquidity. Firms have taken
advantage of low long-term interest rates to pay down short-term debt with longer-maturity
debt. At the same time, firms have built up their cash positions to extraordinary levels. At
the end of last year, the ratio of cash and equivalents to short-term debt at nonfinancial
corporations stood at about twice its average level since the 1950s.
In addition, many firms have taken advantage of low long-term interest rates to refinance
high-cost debt, and others have used profits from operations or asset sales to retire debt. As
a result, interest expense burdens have declined on balance and nonfinancial corporate debt
has grown only modestly in recent years, its slowest pace since the early 1990s.
These repairs to balance sheets have also reduced the exposure of many firms to rising
interest rates, especially in the near term. In particular, the replacement of short-term debt
by long-term bonds means that less debt will have to be rolled over in the near term at higher
rates. In addition, because much of the long-term debt has a fixed rate, interest payments
typically are unaffected over the life of the bond. Moreover, research by the Board staff
suggests that firms that rely more on floating-rate debt, and for that reason might be more
vulnerable to rising rates, have in recent years tended to use derivatives to hedge some of
their exposure to interest rate risk. Thus, for many firms, the effect of rising interest rates
will be mitigated and spread out over time.
Also, as we learned from the episode of policy tightening in 1994, rising interest rates have
little detrimental effect on the financial health of the corporate sector when the rate
increases occur in the context of an expanding economy. Indeed, corporate credit quality
improved on balance after 1994 with the pickup in economic activity and corporate profits.
Some of the improvement in financial conditions among businesses is due to significant
belt-tightening by many firms. Over the past few years, the drive to cut costs and boost
efficiency has generated rapid productivity gains. Fuller utilization of the capabilities of
capital already in place, ongoing improvements in inventory management, and streamlined
production processes requiring fewer workers, to name but a few examples of efficiency
enhancements, have boosted corporate profitability.
The pickup in revenue growth since mid-2002, combined with outsized productivity gains,
has produced a dramatic recovery in overall corporate profitability. The profits of
nonfinancial corporations as a share of sector output continued to climb and reached almost
12 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, up from its cyclical trough of 7 percent in 2001.
This share lies well above its long-run average over the past few decades. To be sure, the
profit share likely will slip a bit from its high level as the expansion gains steam and
businesses hire new workers more aggressively. But some decline in the profit share is to be
expected and will not, in my view, significantly impair the financial health of companies.
This favorable view is reflected in risk spreads on corporate bonds and credit default swaps,
which have dropped dramatically from their historic highs in the fall of 2002.
Household Financial Conditions

In the household sector, some analysts have expressed concern about the rapid growth in
household debt in recent years and the decline in the household saving rate. They fear that
households have become overextended and will need to rein in their spending to keep their
debt burdens under control. My view is considerably more sanguine. Although pockets of
financial stress exist among households, the sector as a whole appears to be in good shape.
It is true that households have taken on quite a bit of debt over the past several years.
According to the latest available data, total household debt grew at an annual rate of about
10 percent between 1999 and 2004; in comparison, after-tax household income increased at
a rate of about 5 percent over this period. This rapid growth in household debt largely
reflects a surge in mortgage borrowing, which has been fueled by historically low mortgage
interest rates, strong growth in house prices, and an increasing share of households owning
their home rather than renting.
Indeed, many homeowners have taken advantage of low interest rates to refinance their
mortgages, some having done so several times over the past couple years. Survey data
suggest that homeowners took out cash in more than one-half of these "refis," often to pay
down loans having higher interest rates. On net, the resulting drop in the average interest
rate on household borrowings, combined with the lengthening maturity of their total debt,
has damped the monthly payments made by homeowners on their growing stock of
outstanding debt.
The Federal Reserve publishes two data series that quantify the burden of household
obligations. The first series, the debt-service ratio, measures the required payments on
mortgage and consumer debt as a share of after-tax personal income. The second series, the
financial-obligations ratio, is a broader version of the debt-service ratio that includes
required household payments on rent, auto leases, homeowners insurance, and property
taxes. Both ratios rose during the 1990s, and both reached a peak in late 2002. Since then,
however, the debt-service ratio has been stable and the financial obligations ratio has
receded a bit, an indication that households, in the aggregate, have been keeping an eye on
their financial commitments. Consistent with these patterns, delinquency rates for a wide
range of household loans either have drifted down over the past year or held about steady at
levels below recent highs.
The low interest rates of the past few years, however, will give way as the economy
continues to expand, and we have already seen an increase in mortgage rates and on some
other consumer loans during this past year. To be sure, some households will be pressured by
the higher rates, but I believe that concerns about their effect on repayment burdens can be
overstated. First, most household debt--mortgage and consumer debt combined--carries a
fixed interest rate, which slows the adjustment of interest costs to rising rates. Second,
although interest rates on some variable-rate loans will rise quickly, the adjustment for a
large number of variable-rate loans could occur rather slowly. For example, many
adjustable-rate mortgages start off with a fixed rate for several years, providing households
with some protection from rising rates.
Another concern is that house prices will reverse and erase a considerable amount of home
equity built up in recent years. Recent gains in house prices have been notable: the average
house price rose 11 percent in 2004, and cumulative gains since 1997 now top 65 percent.1
Despite a rise in mortgage debt, the current loan-to-value ratio for outstanding mortgages is
estimated to be around 45 percent, roughly the level that has prevailed since the mid-1990s.
It is true that some households have considerably less equity in their homes, and these

households tend to have lower income and fewer other financial assets to cushion shocks.
Based on the 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), a small share, 7 percent, of
households had a loan-to-value ratio of 90 percent or more. Unfortunately, we cannot
characterize the current share as accurately, at least not until the 2004 survey becomes
available later this year, but it is unlikely that the share has risen by a lot. While new
originations of mortgages with high loan-to-value ratios in recent years would push this share
up, the substantial house price appreciation in that same period likely improved the financial
positions of the households with high loan-to-value ratios in 2001.
However, we are beginning to see signs that housing prices may be reaching a peak in some
markets. An increasing share of new mortgages is being taken out by investors rather than by
occupants of the property. Some borrowers are stretching to buy their new homes using
adjustable-rate, interest-only mortgages. Not only will these households face higher monthly
payments as interest rates rise, they are also not building equity in their homes as quickly as
they would with a traditional amortizing mortgage.
Some analysts have also expressed concerns about the decline in the personal saving rate.
Aggregate personal saving, measured by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, averaged just
above 1 percent of disposable income in 2004, more than 6 percentage points lower than the
average that has prevailed since the early 1960s. The saving rate, measured by the Board's
flow of funds accounts, is higher, at 4 percent of disposable income, though it, too, is
significantly lower than its average level in the past. Analysis by Board staff using data from
the SCF indicate that households in the top income quintile can account for nearly all of the
decline in the aggregate saving rate since 1989. Given that these higher-income households
have more financial resources to weather shocks, the significant decline in savings is less
troublesome than if it had occurred in the lower part of the income distribution.
This comparison points out two different perspectives on household financial health. While
analysts usually focus on the saving rate as a share of current income and funds flow, some
argue that a more relevant measure of saving adequacy is not the portion of current income
set aside for saving but rather the change in net worth. And in this regard, the picture of
household saving looks more favorable than suggested by the saving rate. The ratio of net
worth-to-disposable income has come down from its peak in 2000, but remains at a high
level relative to the past few decades, because capital appreciation on household assets, such
as equities and real estate, has considerably outpaced income gains. This is a passive
perspective on savings, though, where households rely on the markets to raise the value of
their assets over time. But, to create these assets, households need to consistently set aside
some of their current earnings to invest for their future needs. While the experience of the
past few years of exceptionally low interest rates and lower expected stock returns
encouraged a rational consumer to spend and not save, as the markets return to more
long-term trends, we should see consumers moderate their behavior as well.
Managing Personal Finances
I now want to turn from an aggregate view of household finances to savings and credit at the
individual level. In particular, I want to discuss issues relating to managing personal finances,
including managing personal credit and saving for retirement, and the special importance of
financial education.
College graduates preparing to enter the labor force will soon assume a new level of
responsibility for managing their finances. Personal financial management includes the
strategic use of both credit and savings to enhance asset accumulation and financial well

being. Just as the choices that students have made regarding their education play a vital role
in determining career opportunities, the decisions they make and behaviors they establish
regarding financial management in the coming years will also impact future opportunities
and their ability to capitalize on them.
Compared to a generation ago, the financial marketplace of today is significantly more
complex. There is now an extensive range of consumer financial products and services, and
providers of these goods and services. Advances in communications technologies and other
technological tools have dramatically broadened the provision of financial services. For
example, the development of sophisticated credit-scoring models permits lenders to more
efficiently evaluate credit risk and underwrite loans and thus provide a broader array of
loans to more closely meet the specific financial needs of different consumers. In addition,
as workers have become more mobile and more likely to change jobs several times over the
course of their careers, they have increased their demand for retirement savings vehicles that
are portable and have benefits that are less tied to longevity at a single firm. These
developments have increased the opportunity for consumers to build their asset base through
education and home ownership, exercise greater control over their retirement savings, as
well as acquire at lower cost the goods and services that enhance daily life.
With this increased access and availability of financial products, consumers also have to
assume greater personal responsibility for managing the use of credit and their financial
outcomes. As I have already noted, in the aggregate, household debt has grown more rapidly
than income in recent years. Of special relevance to this audience is that the increase in
consumer debt loads in recent years is particularly apparent among younger adults. The
majority of this increase is attributable to student loans, with a 2002 survey by Nellie Mae
indicating a 66 percent increase in the average undergraduate student loan debt from 1997.2
Credit card debt is another factor contributing to the increased level of debt among young
adults. The Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) data shows that 18-to-24 year olds
experienced on average about a 100 percent increase in credit card debt between 1992 and
2001, albeit from a small base, but still substantially higher than the rate for other
households.3 Moreover, there are indications that some of these younger households are
having difficulty managing their debt successfully. The 2001 SCF indicates that delinquency
rates (one debt payment more than 60 days past due) were twice as high among households
headed by someone less than 35 years old than for households in the 35-to-44-year age
group.4 Finally, surveys continue to indicate that many workers are not currently saving for
retirement, and many that are saving, by their own calculations, are not saving enough.5
Clearly, these statistics are sobering and raise some concerns about financial security. In
recognition of the reality of both the promises and pitfalls of the consumer finance market,
there has been a heightened appreciation for consumer protection. Lawmakers and
regulators are mindful of the possibility of abusive and fraudulent credit practices,
commonly known as predatory lending, and have undertaken efforts to thwart such activity.
In addition, employers have adopted strategies through plan design and education programs
to encourage retirement savings of its workers. But consumers cannot rely solely on the
efforts of others for financial security. They need to develop an understanding of the
available options and be able to comprehend the implications of their financing and savings
decisions. Indeed, lawmakers, regulators, and employers look to consumer savvy to promote
efficiency in the consumer financial services industry.
In recent years, surveys and other studies that evaluate the understanding of financial

concepts have demonstrated the need for improved financial education, especially among
younger consumers. One nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing financial education
for youth, the Jump$tart Coalition, has conducted a survey of financial literacy of high
school seniors every two years since 1997. Overall, the results have been disappointing:
Results from the 2004 survey showed more than 65 percent of students failed the survey's
questionnaire, with only 6 percent scoring a "C" or better. In terms of credit card usage by
college students, a Government Accountability Office (GAO) study found that students were
more likely than other borrowers to run up debts they could not pay because of financial
inexperience. In recognition of this behavior, many credit card issuers provided access to
financial education materials, and debt counseling services for students who faced
repayment difficulties, but the GAO did not try to determine the effectiveness of these
education efforts.6 Some preliminary research by others suggests some possible benefits
from online credit education tutorials to college student cardholders, but it is possible that
more responsible usage only reflects the type of student who would participate in the
tutorial.7 Clearly, more research is needed to assess the efficacy of consumer education, and
the Federal Reserve System has been an active promoter. In fact, the System hosted a
conference in early April on consumer financial awareness, including a session on the
efficiency of delivering financial education to consumers.
So what resources are available to consumers to help them become sufficiently familiar with
financial concepts to make sound financial decisions? Many public, private, and nonprofit
organizations have developed a variety of financial education programs, and many are
available on the Internet. These educational materials address the full range of personal
financial management, from the essential fundamentals of creating a budget and defining
specific savings plans to understanding more complex transactions, such as applying for
mortgage credit. Valuable information on consumer protection matters is also available,
concerning the rights of consumers if a credit or ATM card is stolen or if they are a victim of
identity theft. Similarly, many federal agencies publish a variety of consumer protection and
financial education materials. In fact, the Federal Reserve System offers a wide variety of
consumer information relating to financial services on its web site. In addition, the Federal
Reserve launched a national personal financial education campaign in 2001 to promote the
importance of financial education, as well as to provide support for the wide variety of
resources committed to this topic.
In addition, in recognition of the importance of financial education, Congress established the
Financial Literacy and Education Commission in 2003. This Commission, headed by the
Treasury Department, is composed of the heads of twenty federal agencies, including the
Federal Reserve Board, to encourage collaboration and coordination of government and
private-sector efforts to promote financial literacy. The Commission is also charged with
establishing a web site and toll-free number for obtaining financial education resources
offered by the government resources, as well as for developing a national strategy for
promoting financial literacy and education. Under the direction of the Treasury Department,
interagency task forces have worked to streamline access to the wide variety of consumer
information and financial education materials offered by government agencies. These
resources are available on the Internet at www.mymoney.gov. Consumers can also call
1-888-MYMONEY to obtain a tool kit of financial education information that can assist
them in understanding credit, savings, and investment products before they become
obligated, and provide a foundation for shopping for financial products and providers that
are most appropriate for their circumstances and needs. By obtaining a firm grasp of the
fundamentals of financial management, consumers can create savings and spending plans

that are compatible with their earnings throughout their lives and that help them meet their
short- and long-term life goals.
Turning to retirement savings in particular, workers entering the labor force today will bear
more of the risk of financial security later in life than workers of a generation ago. Far fewer
workers will be covered by defined-benefit pension plans established by their employers,
which provide pre-set benefits after retirement. Data from the SCF indicate that among
workers with a retirement savings plan, nearly 60 percent of workers aged 25 to 34 were
covered by a defined-benefit plan in 1989; by 2001, this share had declined to 31 percent.
Instead the vast majority of employees with retirement benefits will be offered the
opportunity to contribute to a defined-contribution pension plan, most likely a 401(k) plan,
which allows workers to take their retirement assets with them as they change jobs over the
course of their careers. Under a typical 401(k) plan, retirement wealth will depend primarily
on workers' own contributions, often supplemented with some matching contributions by the
employer, returns realized on the investments chosen, and what workers choose to do with
balances when they change jobs.
However, studies have found some troubling patterns related to individual savings in 401(k)
plans that suggest that workers may not be giving adequate attention to their retirement
savings. First, despite the tax advantages of 401(k) contributions, one-quarter of workers
eligible for 401(k) plans do not participate at all, even if the employer would match a portion
of their own contributions.8 These workers are effectively giving up a pay raise. And among
those that contribute, many save just a little. In a survey last year, one-quarter of firms
reported that their rank-and-file 401(k) participants saved an average of less than 4 percent
of pay.9
Another concern relates to the way employees manage their 401(k) plans. Some participants
simply invest contributions equally across the investment options or according to plan
defaults, which in many cases is a low-risk, low-return money market fund.10 And, as has
been publicized widely in recent years, many 401(k) participants invest heavily in employer
stock. Among companies that offer company stock as an investment option, more than
one-quarter of 401(k) balances are in company stock.11 This high concentration cannot be
attributed entirely to an employer match that is required to be held in company stock.
Instead, employees appear to voluntarily purchase and hold abundant amounts of company
stock, despite the obvious risk of linking their current income and retirement wealth to the
financial health of their employer.
These patterns are troubling because they raise doubts about the financial security of
workers in later life. Fortunately, new research in the discipline of behavioral finance
provides some important insights into the behavior of 401(k) participants and suggests some
promising changes that can lead workers to make savings choices that will leave them better
prepared for retirement. Contrary to predictions of traditional finance theory, the way the
retirement-plan options are framed affects the choices made by participants. Researchers
have found that "opt-out" plans--those that automatically enroll workers unless they actively
choose not to enroll--have substantially higher participation rates than plans in which
employees must take the initiative to opt in.12 Moreover, when defaults are designated,
many workers tend to enroll using the default contribution rates and investment options and
to leave these in place for many years after enrollment, even though the default may be set
too low to allow for the accumulation of sufficient retirement assets.13

If workers are influenced by how choices are offered, then employers can make changes to
the plans to help participants make better decisions. For example, employers might set
default contribution rates to rise as workers receive pay raises, or set the default investment
option to a diversified portfolio that adjusts as the worker ages.14 In addition, employees
have increasingly expressed interest in employer-provided financial education, and firms and
lawmakers are responding. Congress has passed legislation that makes it easier for firms to
provide investment advice with less fear of being held liable should such advice lead to
losses. Some firms have started to provide access to a third-party who will advise employees
about how much to contribute and how to invest their contributions. Moreover, a recent
study by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI ) suggests that education about
retirement planning provided by employers led to a substantial portion of employees altering
their retirement savings.
In closing, as credit availability and financial alternatives continue to expand, it has become
ever-more important for consumers to develop the skills necessary to make informed
financial choices. I encourage prospective graduates to place the same priority and attention
to managing their personal finances as they do to developing their careers. Beginning early
and remaining committed to thoughtful management of personal finances throughout one's
life is an essential element to long-term financial success.

Footnotes
1. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight House Price Index. Return to text
2. National Student Loan Survey - College on Credit: How Borrowers Perceive their
Education Debt Results of the 2002 National Student Loan Survey, February 2003. Return
to text
3. Draut, Tamara and Silva, Javier,"Generation Broke: The Growth of Debt Among Young
Americans," Demos: A Network for Ideas and Action, October 2004. Return to text
4. Aizcorbe, Ana; Kennickell, Arthur, and Moore, Kevin, "Recent Changes in U.S. Family
Finances: Evidence from the 1998 and 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances," January 2003.
Return to text
5. Employee Benefit Research Institute,"Will Americans Ever Become Savers? The 14th
Retirement Confidence Survey, 2004," April 2004. Return to text
6. "College Students and Credit Cards,"(1,082KB PDF) Government Accountability Office,
June 2001. Return to text
7. Kimberly Gartner and Richard M. Todd (2005),"Effectiveness of Online 'Early
Intervention' Financial Education for Credit Card Holders,"(303KB PDF) presented at
Federal Reserve System Community Affairs Research Conference, April 7-8, 2005. Return
to text
8. Deloitte and Touche, 2003 401(k) Annual Benchmarking Survey.(398KB PDF) Return to
text

9. Deloitte and Touche, 2003 401(k) Annual Benchmarking Survey. Return to text
10. Nellie Liang and Scott Weisbenner (2001), "Investor Behavior and Purchase of
Company Stock in 401(k) PlansThe Importance of Plan Design," FEDS Working Paper
2002-36 and NBER Working Paper W9131; James Choi, David Laibson, Brigitte Madrian,
and Andrew Metrick (2001), "For Better or for Worse: Default Effects and 401(k) Savings
Behavior," NBER Working Paper W8651. Return to text
11. Sarah Holden and Jack VanDerhei (2004),"401(k) Plan Asset Allocation, Account
Balances, and Loan Activity in 2003," ICI Perspective (August). Return to text
12. Brigitte Madrian and Dennis Shea (2001),"The Power of Suggestion: Inertia in 401(k)
Participation and Savings Behavior," Quarterly Journal of Economics. Return to text
13. James Choi, David Laibson, and Brigitte Madrian (2004),"Plan Design and 401(k) Plan
Savings Outcomes," NBER Working Paper W10486. Return to text
14. Shlomo Benartzi and Richard Thaler (2004), "Save More Tomorrow: Using Behavioral
Economics to Increase Employee Saving," Journal of Political Economy. Return to text

Return to top
2005 Speeches
Home | News and events
Accessibility | Contact Us
Last update: April 18, 2005