The
Senate Banking Committee will consider Powell's renomination on
Jan. 11 at 10 a.m. Eastern (1500 GMT), the panel said on its
website Tuesday. It will hold a separate hearing on Jan. 13 to
consider the nomination of Fed Governor Lael Brainard to be vice
chair.
Biden is making diversity a priority in his selection of other
Fed leaders, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said on Tuesday,
even as she declined to specify when an announcement about
filling more Fed seats would be made. "I expect we will have
more soon," she said.
Biden is said to be considering former Fed Governor Sarah Bloom
Raskin for vice chair of supervision, as well as two Black
economists - Michigan State University's Lisa Cook and Davidson
College's Philip Jefferson - to round out the seven-member
Board. If those are his picks, it would make the Fed Board more
diverse than it has ever been.
The Board has only had three Black governors since the Fed's
founding in 1913, and has never had a Black female member.
Of the five members of the current Fed Board, all are white; two
are women.
Powell's nomination hearing will be his first time speaking
publicly since the Fed last month decided to bring its
bond-buying program to an end by March and signaled it could
raise interest rates three times this year.
Since then COVID-19 cases have surged to records, causing
disruptions to schools, travel and some businesses, and denting
the supply of labor.
Powell was first nominated to the Fed Board in 2012 by President
Barack Obama, and in 2018 was picked by President Donald Trump
to lead the central bank for a four-year term expiring in
February 2022.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Jeff Mason, Ann Saphir, Howard
Schneider; editing by Richard Pullin)
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