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윌리엄 풀 세인트루이스 연준총재, '거시지표' 주제 연설(원문)

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Data, Data and Yet More Data
William Poole*
President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

The Association for University Business and Economic Research (AUBER) Annual Meeting
University of Memphis
Memphis, Tenn.
Oct. 16, 2006

*I appreciate comments provided by my colleagues at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Robert H. Rasche, senior vice president and director of research, provided special assistance. However, I take full responsibility for errors. The views expressed are mine and do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System.


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Data, Data and Yet More Data

I am very pleased to be here today at the annual meeting of the Association for University Business and Economic Research. I’ve long had an interest in data, and I think that this topic is a good one for this conference. The topic is also one I’ve not addressed in a speech.

A personal recollection might be a good place to begin. In the early 1960s, in my Ph.D. studies at the University of Chicago, I was fortunate to be a member of Milton Friedman’s Money Workshop. Friedman stoked my interest in flexible exchange rates, in an era when mainstream thinking was focused on the advantages of fixed exchange rates and central banks everywhere were committed to maintaining the gold standard. Well, I should say central banks almost everywhere, given that Canada had a floating rate system from 1950 to 1962. Friedman got me interested in doing my Ph.D. dissertation on the Canadian experience with a floating exchange rate, and later I did a paper on nine other floating rate regimes in the 1920s. For this paper I collected daily data on exchange rates from musty paper records at the Board of Governors in Washington.

What was striking about the debates over floating rates in the 1950s is that economists were so willing to speculate about how currency speculators would destabilize foreign exchange markets without presenting any evidence to support those views. In this and many other areas, careful empirical research has resolved many disputes. Our profession has come a long way in institutionalizing empirical approaches to resolving empirical disputes. The enterprise requires data, and what I will discuss is some of the history of the role of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis in providing the data.

Before proceeding, I want to emphasize that the views I express here are mine and do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System. I thank my colleagues at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis for their comments. Robert H. Rasche, senior vice president and director of research, provided special assistance. However, I retain full responsibility for errors.

Origins
The distribution of economic data by the Research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis can be traced back at least to May 1961. At that time, Homer Jones, then director of research, sent out a memo with three tables attached showing rates of change of the money supply (M1), money supply plus time deposits, and money supply plus time deposits plus short-term government securities. His memo indicated that he “would be glad to hear from anyone who thinks such time series have value, concerning promising applications or interpretations.” Recollections of department employees from that time were that the mailing list was about 100 addressees.

Apparently Homer received significant positive feedback, since various statistical releases emerged from this initial effort. Among these were Weekly Financial Data, subsequently U.S. Financial Data; Bank Reserves and Money, subsequently Monetary Trends; National Economic Trends (1967) and International Economic Trends (1978), all of which continue to this date. In April 1989, before a subscription price was imposed, the circulation of U.S. Financial Data had reached almost 45,000. A Business Week article published in 1967 commented about Homer that “while most leading monetary economists don’t buy his theories, they eagerly subscribe to his numbers.”(1) As an aside, as a Chicago Ph.D. I both bought the theories and subscribed to the data publications. By the late 1980s, according to Beryl Sprinkel, a prominent business economist of the time, “weekly and monthly publications of the Research Department, which have now become standard references for everyone from undergraduates to White House officials, were initially Homer’s products.”(2)

Why should a central bank distribute data as a public service? Legend has it that Homer Jones viewed as an important part of his mission to provide the general public with timely information about the stance of monetary policy. In this sense he was an early proponent, perhaps the earliest proponent, of central bank accountability and transparency. While Homer was a dedicated monetarist, and data on monetary aggregates have always figured prominently in St. Louis Fed data publications, data on other variables prominent in the monetary policy debates at the time, including short-term interest rates, excess reserves and borrowings, were included in the data releases.

Early on, the various St. Louis Fed data publications incorporated “growth triangles,” which tracked growth rates of monetary aggregates over varying horizons. Accompanying graphs of the aggregates included broken trend lines that illustrated rises and falls in growth rates. This information featured prominently in monetarist critiques of “stop-go” and procyclical characteristics of monetary policy during the Great Inflation period.

Does the tradition of data distribution initiated by Homer Jones remain a valuable public service? I certainly believe so. But I will also note that the St. Louis Fed’s data resources are widely used within the Federal Reserve System. This information is required for Fed research and policy analysis; the extra cost of making the information available also to the general public is modest.

Rational Expectations Macroeconomic Equilibrium
The case for making data readily available is simple. Most macroeconomists today adhere to a model based on the idea of a rational expectations equilibrium. Policymakers are assumed to have a set of goals, a conception of how the economy works and information about the current state and history of the economy. The private sector understands, to the extent possible, policymakers’ views, and has access to the same information about the state and history of the economy as policymakers have.

An equilibrium requires a situation in which the private sector has a clear understanding of policy goals and the policymakers’ model of the economy, and the policy model of the economy is as accurate as economic science permits. Based on this understanding, market behavior depends centrally on expectations concerning monetary policy and the effects of monetary policy on the economy, including effects on inflation, employment and financial stability. If the policymakers and private market participants do not have views that converge, no stable equilibrium is possible because expectations as to the behavior of others will be constantly changing.

The economy evolves in response to stochastic disturbances of all sorts. The continuous flow of new information includes everything that happens—weather disturbances, technological developments, routine economic data reports and the like. The core of my policy model is that market responses and policy responses to new information are both maximizing—households maximize utility, firms maximize profits and policymakers maximize their policy welfare function.

A critical assumption in this model is the symmetry of the information that is available to both policymakers and private market participants. In cases where the policymakers have an informational advantage over market participants, policy likely will not unfold in the way that markets expect, and the equilibrium that I have characterized here will not emerge. Hence public access to current information on the economy at low cost is a prerequisite to good policy outcomes.

The Evolution of St. Louis Fed Data Services
Data services provided by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis have evolved significantly from the paper publications initiated by Homer Jones. The initial phase of this evolution began in April 1991 when FRED, Federal Reserve Economic Data, was introduced as a dial-up electronic bulletin board. This service was not necessarily low cost. For users in the St. Louis area, access was available through a local phone call. For everyone else, long-distance phone charges were incurred. Nevertheless, within the first month of service, usage was recorded from places as wide ranging as Taipei, London, England and Vancouver, Canada.(3) FRED was relatively small scale. The initial implementation included only the data published in U.S. Financial Data and a few other time series. Subsequently it was expanded to include the data published in Monetary Trends, National Economic Trends and International Economic Trends. At the end of 1995, the print versions of these four statistical publications contained short histories on approximately 200 national and international variables; initially FRED was of comparable scope.

The next step occurred in 1996 when FRED migrated to the World Wide Web. At that point, 403 national time series became available instantaneously to anyone who had a personal computer with a Web browser. An additional 70 series for the Eighth Federal District were also available. The data series were in text format and had to be copied and pasted into the user’s PC. In July 2002, FRED became a true database and the user was offered a wider range of options. Data can be downloaded in either text or Excel format. Shortly thereafter user accounts were introduced so that multiple data series can be downloaded into a single Excel workbook, and data lists can be stored for repeated downloads of updated information. In the first six months after this version of FRED was released, 3.8 million hits were recorded to the website. In a recent six-month period, FRED received 21 million hits from over 109 countries around the world. FRED currently contains 1175 national time series and 1881 regional series. FRED data are updated on a real-time basis as information is released from various statistical agencies.

After 45 years, Homer Jones’s modest initiative to distribute data on three variables has developed into a broad-based data resource on the U.S. economy that is available at the click of a mouse around the globe. Through this resource, researchers, students, market participants and the general public can reach informed decisions based on information that is comparable to the information policymakers have.

In the past year we have introduced a number of additional data services. One of these, ALFRED, adds a vintage (or real-time) dimension to FRED. The ALFRED database stores revision histories of the FRED data series. Since 1996, we have maintained monthly or weekly archives of the FRED database. All the information in these archives has been populated to the ALFRED database, and the user can access point-in-time revisions of these data.(4) We have also extended the revision histories of many series back in time using data that were recorded in U.S. Financial Data, Monetary Trends and National Economic Trends. For selected quarterly National Income and Product data we have complete revision histories back to 1959 for real data and 1947 for nominal data. Revision histories are available on household and payroll employment data back to 1960. A similar history for industrial production is available back to 1927.

Preserving such information is crucial to understanding historical monetary policy. For example, Orphanides shows “that real-time policy recommendations differ considerably from those obtained with ex-post revised data. Further, estimated policy reaction functions based on ex-post revised data provide misleading descriptions of historical policy and obscure the behavior suggested by information available to the Federal Reserve in real time.”(5) Orphanides concludes that “reliance on the information actually available to policymakers in real time is essential for the analysis of monetary policy rules.”(6)

Such vintage information also is essential for analysis of conditions at subnational levels. For example, in January 2005 the BLS estimated that nonfarm employment in the St. Louis MSA had increased by 38.8 thousand between December 2003 and December 2004. This increase was widely cited as evidence that the MSA had returned to strong employment growth after four years of negative job growth. However, these data from the Current Employment Statistics (CES) were not benchmarked to more comprehensive labor market information that is available only with a lag.(7) The current estimate of nonfarm employment growth in the St. Louis MSA for this period, after several revisions, is only 11.6 thousand, less than 30 percent of the increase originally reported.

Another data initiative that we launched several years ago is FRASER – the Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research. The objective of this initiative is to digitize and distribute the monetary and economic record of the U.S. economy. FRASER is a repository of image files of important historical documents and serial publications. At present we have posted the entire history of The Economic Report of the President, Economic Indicators and Business Conditions Digest. We have also posted images of most issues of the Survey of Current Business from 1925 through 1990 and are working on filling in images of the remaining volumes. The collection also includes Banking and Monetary Statistics and the Annual Statistical Digests published by the Board of Governors, as well as the Business Statistics supplements to the Survey of Current Business published by the Department of Commerce. We are currently working, in a joint project with the Board of Governors, to image the entire history of the Federal Reserve Bulletin. Finally, we are posting images of historical statistical releases that we have collected in the process of extending the vintage histories in ALFRED back in time. These images should allow scholars, analysts and students of economic history to reconstruct vintage data on many series in addition to those we are maintaining on ALFRED.

Transparency, Accountability and Information Distribution
As just indicated, the scope of the archival information in FRASER extends beyond numeric data. Ready access to a wide variety of information is essential for transparency and accountability of monetary authorities and a full understanding of policy actions by the public. Since 1994 the Federal Reserve System and the FOMC have improved the scope and timeliness of information releases. I have discussed this progress in previous speeches.(8) Currently the FOMC releases a press statement at the conclusion of each scheduled meeting and three weeks later follows up with the release of minutes of the meeting. The press release and the minutes of the meetings record the vote on the policy action. The policy statement and minutes give the public a clear understanding of the action taken and insight into the rationale for the action.

Contrast the current situation with the one in 1979. At that time, actions by the Board of Governors on discount rate changes were reported promptly, but there was no press release subsequent to an FOMC policy action and FOMC meeting minutes were released with a 90-day delay. On Sept. 19, 1979, the Board of Governors voted by the narrow margin of 4-3 to approve a ½ percentage-point increase in the discount rate, with all three dissents against the increase. This information generated the public perception that the Fed officials were sharply divided and, therefore, that the Fed was not prepared to act decisively against inflation. John Berry, a knowledgeable reporter at the Washington Post, observed that “the split vote, with its clear signal that from the Fed’s own point of view interest rates are at or close to their peak for this business cycle, might forestall any more increases in market interest rates.”(9) However, the interpretation of the “clear signal” was erroneous. On that same day, the FOMC had voted 8 to 4 to raise the range for the intended funds rate to 11-1/4 to 11-3/4 percent. More importantly, three of the four dissents were in favor of a more forceful action to restrain inflation.(10) Neither the FOMC’s action, the dissents nor the rationale for the dissents were revealed to the public under the disclosure policies then in effect. The result was to destabilize markets, with commodity markets, in particular, exhibiting extreme volatility.

Conclusion
The tradition of data services was well established when I arrived in St. Louis in 1998, and I must say that I am proud that leadership in the Bank’s Research division has extended that tradition. Data are the lifeblood of empirical research in economics and of policy analysis. Our rational expectations conception of how the macroeconomy works requires that the markets and general public understand what the Fed is doing and why. Of all the things on which we spend money in the Federal Reserve, surely the return on our data services is among the highest.

 

References
1. “Maverick in the Fed System,” Business Week, November 18, 1967.

2. Beryl W. Sprinkel, “Confronting Monetary Policy Dilemmas: the Legacy of Homer Jones,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, March 1987, p 6.

3. “Introducing FRED,” Eighth Note, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, May/June 1991, p. 1.

4. We do not maintain histories of daily data series in ALFRED. Interest rates and exchange rates appear at daily frequencies in FRED. In principal these data are not revised, though occasional recording errors are observed to slip into the initial data releases. Such reporting errors get corrected in subsequent publications, so sometimes there is a vintage dimension to one of these series.

5. A. Orphanides, “Monetary Policy Rules Based on Real-Time Data,” American Economic Review, 91(4), September 2001, pp. 964.

6. ibid.

7. H.J. Wall and C.H. Wheeler, “St. Louis Employment in 2004: A Tale of Two Surveys,” CRE8 Occasional Report No. 2005-1, February 9, 2005.

8. See for example, FOMC Transparency,

9. J. Berry, “Fed Lists Discount Rate to Peak of 11% on Close Vote,” Washington Post, September 19, 1979, p. A1.

10. See, D.E. Lindsey, A. Orphanides, and R.H. Rasche, “The Reform of October 1979: How it Happened and Why,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Reivew, 87(2), Part 2,March/April 2005, pp 195-6.

[관련키워드]

[뉴스핌 베스트 기사]

사진
버넘 의원, 英 집권 노동당 새 대표로 [런던=뉴스핌] 장일현 특파원 = '북부의 왕'으로 불리는 앤디 버넘 의원이 17일(현지 시각) 영국 집권 여당인 노동당의 새 대표에 올랐다.  버넘 대표는 오는 20일 키어 스타머 총리를 이어 영국의 차기 총리 자리를 확정했다. 의원내각제를 채택하고 있는 영국은 의회 다수를 차지하고 있는 집권당의 대표가 총리가 된다. 노동당은 이날 특별 당대회를 열고 버넘 의원을 당 대표로 공식 선출했다. 버넘은 전날 마감된 당 대표 경선 후보 등록에서 단독으로 등록했다. 영국 일간 가디언은 "노동당 공보에 따르면 버넘은 노동당 소속 하원의원 379명과 노동조합·사회주의 단체 23곳의 지지를 받아 당 대표로 선출됐다"고 했다. 현재 노동당은 전체 의석 650석 중 403석을 보유하고 있는데 이중 94%가 버넘을 당 대표로 선택한 것이다.  앤디 버넘 영국 노동당 새 대표가 17일(현지 시각) 특별 당대화에서 대표 수락 연설을 하고 있다. [사진=로이터 뉴스핌] 샤바나 마무드 내무장관의 새 대표 선출 결과 발표와 함께 무대에 오른 버넘은 일성으로 "국민에게 희망을 되돌려주겠다"고 했다.  그는 "저를 지지한 노동당 의원들이 모두 영국 곳곳의 잊혀진 지역을 위해 과거의 노동당을 되찾아 달라는 요구를 들었다"면서 "우리는 그 부름에 응답할 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "우리는 오늘 하나로 뭉쳤고, 그 힘을 오랫동안 정치로부터 희망을 잃은 사람들과 지역을 위해 사용할 것"이라고 했다.  그는 이날 연설에서 다섯 가지 변화와 약속을 실천하겠다고 했다. 노당동의 단결을 위해 '파벌 문화'를 종식하겠다고 했고, "이번이 바뀔 수 있는 마지막 기회"라면서 비난보다 문제 해결의 정치를 추구하겠다고 했다. 그는 "영국 정치가 덜 독해졌으면 좋겠다"고도 했다.  세번째 변화로는 노동당의 정치적 지향을 거론하며 노동당답게 승리할 것이라고 했다. 그는 "녹색당보다 더 녹색당처럼 행동하려 하지도 않을 것이고, 영국개혁당(Reform UK)보다 더 개혁당처럼 행동하려 하지 않을 것이며 과거처럼 보수당 옷을 너무 많이 입지도 않을 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "담대하고 자신감 있게, 진정한 노동당으로 승리할 것"이라고 했다.  이어 "북부와 남부, 동부와 서부, 스코틀랜드와 웨일스, 북아일랜드 모두를 위한 지도자가 되겠다"는 것이 네 번째 약속이고, 중앙정부가 독접하고 있는 권한을 웨스트민스터와 화이트홀에서 지역 사회로 되돌려주는 지방분권이 다섯 번째 약속이라고 했다.  버넘 대표는 자신이 친기업 노선을 취할 것이라고도 했다. 그는 "그레이터맨체스터 시장 시절 친기업적인 시장이었듯이 노동당 대표가 된 뒤에도 친기업적인 지도자가 될 것"이라며 "우리는 기업과 함께 지역을 되살렸고 그 방식을 영국 전체로 확대할 것"이라고 했다.  1970년 1월 리버풀 북쪽 교외 지역에서 태어난 그는 15세 때 노동당에 가입했다. 케임브리지대에서 영어를 전공한 뒤 의원 보좌관 등을 거쳐 2001년 총선에서 그레이터맨체스트의 리(Leigh) 선거구에서 하원의원에 당선됐다. 이후 16년간 하원의원을 지냈다.  이 기간 토니 블레어와 고든 브라운 정부에서 내무부·재무부 차관, 문화장관, 보건장관 등을 역임했다.  2010년과 2015년에 당 대표에 도전했지만 에드 밀리밴드와 제러미 코빈에서 패했다.  2017년 중앙정치를 떠나 새로 만들어진 그레이터맨체스터 광역시장 선거에 출마해 당선됐고, 2021년과 2024년 선거에서도 내리 승리했다.  시장으로 재직하면서 버스 공영화를 추진하고 통합 대중교통망 구축과 주택 공급 확대 등으로 시민들의 지지를 받았다. 특히 코로나19 팬데믹 당시 중앙 정부에 맞서 북부 지역 지원 확대를 요구하면서 전국적인 인지도를 얻었다. 이때부터 '북부의 왕(King of the North)'이라는 별명이 널리 퍼졌다. 버넘 시장 재임 시절 그레이터맨체스터는 전국 평균을 상회하는 경제성장률을 기록했다.  버넘 대표는 당 대회 연설에 앞서 소셜미디어에 "앞으로 며칠은 영국을 누가 통치하느냐만 바꾸는 것이 아니며 영국이 어떻게 통치되는지를 바꾸는 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "권력을 있어야 할 곳으로 되돌릴 기회"라고 했다.  그는 정치적으로는 현 스타머 총리보다 더욱 왼쪽에 있는 것으로 평가되고 있다. 주택과 교통, 교육 등과 관련된 권한을 지방으로 분산해 각 지역에 맞는 경제 발전을 추구해야 한다는 내용의 '맨체스터리즘'(Manchesterism)을 주장한다.  맨체스터에 제2 총리실을 둬 중앙정부와 효율적으로 업무를 조율하는 '북부 총리실(No. 10 North)' 구상도 밝혔다.  ihjang67@newspim.com   2026-07-17 23:06
사진
신진서, AI카타고에 제1국 불계패 [서울=뉴스핌] 박상욱 기자 = 두 점을 먼저 놓고 시작했어도 인공지능(AI)의 벽은 높았다. 세계 최강 신진서 9단이 바둑 AI 카타고(KataGo)와의 첫 맞대결에서 아쉬운 역전패를 당했다. 신진서는 17일 서울 중구 한국경제TV 스튜디오에서 열린 카타고와의 '쎈수학·한경 기신전' 3번기 제1국에서 4시간 20분의 혈투 끝에 245수 만에 흑 불계패했다. 이번 대국은 2016년 이세돌과 알파고의 대결 이후 10년 만에 성사된 인간과 AI의 맞대결로 큰 관심을 모았다. 비약적으로 발전한 AI의 기력을 고려해 이번에는 신진서가 2점을 먼저 까는 접바둑으로 진행됐다. 카타고는 첫 수부터 흔들기에 나섰다. 좌상귀 화점에 첫 수를 놓는 변칙수로 신진서의 초반 포석 구상을 깨뜨렸다. 이어 우상귀 쪽에도 높은 걸침 수를 두며 변칙 전술을 이어갔다. 신진서는 전투를 피하고 잔잔하게 국면을 이끌며 중반까지 우세를 유지했다. [AI 챗GPT가 제작한 AI '카타고(KataGo)'와 신진서 9단 기신전(棋神戰) 3번기 일러스트] psoq1337@newspim.com 100수를 넘어서면서 승부처가 나왔다. 미세하게 격차가 좁혀지자 신진서는 백 대마를 잡기 위해 중앙에 승부수를 던졌다. 사람을 상대로는 충분히 통할 수 있는 강력한 공격이었다. 하지만 카타고는 완벽한 계산으로 이를 가뿐하게 타개해 냈다. 112수째에 이르러 흐름은 완전히 뒤집혔다. 역전을 허용한 신진서가 다시 전투를 걸었으나 격차는 오히려 더 벌어졌다. 패색이 짙어진 상황에서도 신진서는 다음 대국을 대비해 30분 가까이 끝내기를 이어가며 카타고를 분석했다. 단 한 차례의 실수도 범하지 않고 버텼지만, 30집 가까이 벌어진 격차를 뒤집기에는 역부족이었다. 결국 신진서는 돌을 던졌고 대국이 끝난 뒤에도 한참 동안 자리를 뜨지 못했다. '쎈수학·한경 기신전'은 승패와 관계없이 3국까지 치러진다. 신진서는 기본 대국료 1억 5000만 원을 확보했으며, 승리할 때마다 5000만 원의 수당을 추가로 받는다. 2승 이상을 거둘 경우 제네시스 G90이 부상으로 주어진다. 설욕을 노리는 신진서의 제2국은 오는 19일 같은 장소에서 열린다. psoq1337@newspim.com 2026-07-17 14:59
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