Republican senators propose overhaul of Federal Reserve amid concerns
about politics
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[December 22, 2022]
By Michael S. Derby
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Seven Republican U.S. senators on Wednesday
announced a new bill aimed at reshaping the Federal Reserve's 12
regional banks, amid concerns that those institutions have become too
political.
In a news release from outgoing Senator Pat Toomey, the legislators said
they are calling for regional Fed bank presidents to be presidentially
nominated and confirmed by the Senate, matching the requirements to
become a member of the central bank's Board of Governors.
Among its provisions, the bill would also shrink the 12 regional Fed
banks to five. "This will enable more effective congressional oversight
and ensure that all presidents of Fed regional banks have permanent
seats on the Federal Open Market Committee," the news release said.
Regional Fed leaders contribute to monetary policy debates, gather local
economic intelligence and vote on interest rate decisions on a rotating
basis.
The bill would make the Fed's Inspector General a position subject to
Senate confirmation, ending the current system where the in-house
watchdog chief is selected by the Fed leader, which has long raised
questions about the IG's independence.
The news release from Toomey's office said the legislation is aimed at
clipping the wings of a Fed that he and his colleagues see as straying
from its legally determined mission. The U.S. central bank, created just
over a century ago, is charged by Congress with achieving price
stability, promoting maximum employment and ensuring the safety of the
financial system.
In recent years, largely at the regional bank level, the Fed has
increasingly turned its research interests to explore how things like
climate change and social and racial inequalities affect its mission.
Fed officials have defended this work as vital to fully understanding
how the economy functions, but critics, mainly on the conservative side,
see the work as a distraction.
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The Federal Reserve building is seen
before the Federal Reserve board is expected to signal plans to
raise interest rates in March as it focuses on fighting inflation in
Washington, U.S., January 26, 2022. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File
Photo
The structure of regional Fed banks has long made reformers, both on
the left and right, uncomfortable. They are quasi-private
institutions technically owned by private banks in their respective
districts, and are overseen by local boards of directors drawn from
the private sector. Leaders of these regional Fed boards are chosen
by their private boards, although they must be approved by the board
in Washington before taking office.
Meanwhile, the New York Fed implements monetary policy and gathers
information from the financial system. In contrast, the Fed in
Washington, which oversees the regional Fed banks, is explicitly
part of the government.
The number and distribution of the regional banks has also been a
matter of concern, given that the San Francisco Fed oversees
essentially the entire U.S. West, while Missouri has two Fed banks.
The bill's prospects are unclear given that Democrats will retain
control of the Senate in the next Congress which begins on Jan. 3.
Toomey, even as he heads for the exit, has managed to find common
ground with some Democrats over other Fed changes, having announced
legislation recently with Senator Elizabeth Warren that would
improve transparency at the regional banks.
(Reporting by Michael S. Derby in New York; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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