Fed is cutting staff after more than a decade of payroll growth
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[September 22, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve system is cutting about
300 people from its payroll this year, a small but rare reduction in
headcount across an organization that has grown steadily since 2010 as
its reach in the economy and regulatory agenda have expanded.
A Fed spokesperson said the cuts are focused on the staff of the U.S.
central bank's 12 regional reserve banks and mainly hit information
technology jobs, including some no longer needed because of the spread
of cloud-based computer software, and positions connected to the Fed's
various systems for processing payments, which are being consolidated.
The spokesperson, who would not speak for direct attribution, said the
staff cuts represented a combination of attrition, including
retirements, and layoffs.
According to annual reports and financial documents prepared by the Fed
each year, the number of staff budgeted for the system, including its
regional banks, the Washington-based Board of Governors, and three
smaller units, is due to fall by more than 500 positions from 2022 to
2023, from 24,428 to 23,895.
While small compared to the size of the Fed, it is the first time
budgeted headcount has fallen since 2010.
Since actual employment in 2022 fell below budget - a December Fed memo
cites "higher than-budgeted turnover and extended lags in filling open
positions," notably in the area of bank supervision, as the reason - the
number of positions being eliminated this year is somewhat smaller than
the budgeted decline.
The size of any drop in actual employment won't be known until early
next year when the Fed closes its books on 2023 and releases its latest
annual report.
While the December memo from the Board of Governors division that
oversees the regional reserve banks does not explicitly call for staff
cuts, it highlights the need to stick with internal budgeting protocols,
"with the most important focal points being alignment with long-term
strategy and stewardship of public funds."
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The U.S. Federal Reserve building in Washington, D.C./File Photo
SELF-FUNDED
The staff reductions are happening at a sensitive time for the Fed.
It has booked $100 billion in losses in recent months on operations
that currently involve paying more in interest to banks on reserve
deposits at the Fed than the central bank earns from its roughly
$7.5 trillion portfolio of bonds and mortgage-backed securities.
Unlike federal agencies that spend tax dollars allocated by
Congress, the Fed is self-funding. Its earnings from its asset
holdings and fees charged to banks for a range of services are used
to pay the roughly $6.3 billion in annual expenses of a system that
employs nearly 24,000 people in Washington and other cities across
the country.
In most years the Fed generates a profit that is turned over to the
U.S. Treasury. But since the central bank began to increase interest
rates to control a surge in inflation, it has been spending more
than it earns each year, and in effect gives the Treasury an IOU to
be paid later.
While the staff cuts are not directly tied to the Fed's losses, the
central bank's operations have been under scrutiny among Republicans
in Congress who have expressed concern about how deeply the Fed was
delving into issues, like climate change and the economics of
inequality, that seemed to them to be beyond its monetary policy and
bank supervisory missions.
The number of system-wide jobs at the Fed had been falling earlier
this century, from just shy of 24,000 as of 2003 to 19,735 as of
2010, as the end of the paper check era allowed the Fed to trim the
legions of workers it took to clear and process those documents.
With Congress layering on new responsibilities in the wake of the
2007-2009 financial crisis and recession, the push to modernize and
expand the Fed's role in processing payments, and new financial
stability and other initiatives, staffing since then has grown every
year, according to annual Fed budget and financial reports filed
with Congress.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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