Biden looks to reshape Fed with historically diverse slate
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[January 14, 2022] By
Andrea Shalal and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe
Biden has picked former Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin for
the Fed's key regulatory post and two Black economists - Lisa Cook and
Philip Jefferson - to serve on its board in what would represent a
landmark demographic overhaul of the world's most powerful central bank.
The White House sent the nominations to the Senate late on Thursday,
according to two sources familiar with the process.
The appointments would fill out the ranks of a seven-member panel that
wields tremendous influence over the world's largest economy, and would
make the Fed's top leadership the most diverse by race and gender in its
108-year history.
The appointments come as Biden's own plans to reboot the economy after
the COVID-19 pandemic have run into an unexpected spike in inflation. It
presents an opportunity for him to leave a lasting imprint on a body
that sets economic policies - particularly about interest rates - that
reverberate across the globe.
"President Biden has nominated a serious, qualified, nonpartisan group
of five nominees for the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve who
together will bring an extraordinary amount of skill, experience, and
competence to the Federal Reserve," said the source familiar with the
nominations.
"They will prioritize the independence of the Federal Reserve and are
committed to fighting inflation, maintaining stability in our economy in
the midst of the pandemic, and making sure our economic growth broadly
benefits all workers."
The White House declined to comment.
The nominations drew immediate fire from the top Republican member of
the Senate Banking Committee, signaling a potentially rocky, and
partisan, nomination process ahead in a legislative body that Democrats
control only by virtue of Vice President Kamala Harris' dual role as
president of the Senate.
"I have serious concerns" about Raskin, Senator Pat Toomey of
Pennsylvania said in statement, adding he believes she would try to keep
banks from lending to oil and gas companies and otherwise stray from the
two congressional mandates that steer the Fed's core mission - maximum
employment and price stability.
Toomey and other Republicans repeatedly queried Fed Governor Lael
Brainard, nominated to the Fed's No. 2 role, about her support for
climate risk research during her nomination hearing earlier Thursday. He
also signaled skepticism toward Cook and Jefferson, saying he will
"closely examine" whether they have "the necessary experience, judgment,
and policy views to serve as Fed Governors."
MORE DIVERSE FED BOARD
Cook, a professor of economics and international relations at Michigan
State University, would be the first Black woman to serve as a Fed
governor. Jefferson, a professor and senior administrator at Davidson
College in North Carolina, would be only the fourth Black man to sit on
the panel and the first in more than 15 years.
Biden's picks would mean the seven-member Board of Governors would
include four women, also a first. Currently, the Fed's board has only
six members, all white and four of whom are men.
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A view of the Federal Reserve Building in Washington, September 16,
2008. REUTERS/Jim YOUNG/File Photo
"It's clearly a changing of the guard," Harvard University Professor Larry Katz
said. This is a "path-breaking new set of nominees who will bring important
perspectives and representation to the board."
Former Fed governor Elizabeth Duke, who served with Raskin, told Reuters that
Biden's nominees will "inspire more and more diverse people to go into economics
and to study the practice of economics."
The effort to make the Fed look more like America comes at a critical time.
Inflation is at its highest level in decades. Unemployment is down, but U.S.
employers have 3.6 million fewer workers on their payrolls than they did before
the pandemic.
Charged with both keeping prices stable and maximizing U.S. employment, the Fed
is debating how fast and how far to raise interest rates and otherwise tighten
monetary policy to rein in inflation without short-circuiting the labor market.
Its current leadership has already signaled readiness to start raising interest
rates as early as March, dialing back from an ultra-accommodative footing that
could test financial markets and influence the pace of recovery during an
election year in which control of Congress is on the line.
Leading the pivot is Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whom Biden late last year asked to
serve a second four-year term as chairman, starting next month. The Senate
Banking Committee held Powell's nomination hearing on Tuesday, while Fed
Governor Lael Brainard, who Biden has nominated to be the central bank's vice
chair, appeared before the panel on Thursday.
Progressives had favored more diverse picks to lead the Fed; the slate Biden put
forward Thursday helps meet that demand.
Raskin, who spent four years as a Fed governor before being tapped as a deputy
Treasury secretary from 2014 to 2017, is expected to bring tougher oversight to
bear on Wall Street than the Fed's previous vice chair of supervision, Randal
Quarles, who left the Fed at the end of last year.
Cook has written extensively about the economic consequences of racial
disparities and gender inequality, and growing up lived through the violence of
school desegregation in the U.S. South. Jefferson has written extensively on
wages, poverty and income distribution.
Kevin Hassett, who chaired the Council of Economic Advisers under former
President Donald Trump, said Jefferson was an "incredibly smart economist" and
serious academic who should be confirmed by the Senate quickly.
"He's the kind of honorable, serious person the Federal Reserve should have."
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing
by Dan Burns, Paul Simao and Leslie Adler)
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