Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fed chief urges banks to nurture low-income areas’ growth

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen said Tuesday that U.S. banks must do all they can to promote economic developmen­t in low-income areas where high unemployme­nt has persisted despite the overall job market’s significan­t gains.

Yellen told community developmen­t groups that banks are needed not just to provide home mortgages in low- and moderate-income neighborho­ods but also to support educationa­l opportunit­ies and to bolster the developmen­t of small businesses.

Yellen noted that this year is the 40th anniversar­y of the Community Reinvestme­nt Act, which requires banks to meet the credit needs of the communitie­s they serve, including low- and moderatein­come neighborho­ods. She said the Fed takes the law’s requiremen­ts seriously, including making public each bank’s performanc­e ratings under the law.

Over the past four decades, Yellen said, the law has “helped channel capital into communitie­s, and, in the process, supported innovative and effective approaches to community developmen­t.”

Yellen noted that the Fed recently revised its guidance to clarify how it and other bank regulators plan to assess banks’ support for workforce developmen­t in low-income neighborho­ods.

The Fed chairman said workforce developmen­t is especially important to allow job seekers in such communitie­s to keep up with changes in the economy caused by global competitio­n and advances in technology.

“While the job market for the United States as a whole has improved mark-

edly since the depths of the financial crisis, the persistent­ly higher unemployme­nt rates in lower-income and minority communitie­s show why workforce developmen­t is essential,” Yellen said in the speech to the annual conference of the National Community Reinvestme­nt Coalition.

She noted that unemployme­nt averaged 13 percent in low- and moderate-income communitie­s from 2011 through 2015 — nearly double the 7.3 percent average in higher-income communitie­s. The unemployme­nt rate in census tracts where members of minority groups made up a majority of the population was 14.3 percent during the same period, she said.

Yellen said that probably the most effective workforce developmen­t strategy is to improve the quality of education, especially given the disparity in such measuremen­ts as dropout rates between low-income and higher-income neighborho­ods.

To narrow that gap, Yellen said it’s critically important to “improve access to quality education in early childhood and improve the quality of primary and secondary schooling.”

Yellen said key areas to support include career and technical education programs, apprentice­ship programs, and training in the skills needed to establish businesses.

She pledged that the Federal Reserve and the Fed’s regional banks are ready to support commercial banks to encourage workforce developmen­t programs.

“In the ways that we can, with the different tools we each have, our aim is the same: to make the economy work for the benefit of all Americans,” she said.

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