Senator Sherrod Brown, head of the subcommittee in charge of overseeing the Federal Reserve, has written President Obama urging him to use the THREE vacancies on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors to make the Fed more accountable. Letter and Huff Post report below.
These appointments are like Supreme Court appointments; they can shape the Federal Reserve — whose extraordinary powers were exposed during the financial collapse — for years to come.
Brown sets the bar clearly, urging appointees who were independent enough to see and warn about the housing bubble and the catastrophic financial collapse ahead of time; who are concerned about consumer protection and full employment, elements of the Federal Reserve’s mandate that have been woefully neglected; and who are committed to transparancy, including revealing the full details of the AIG transactions that shipped billions of dollars to private financial institutions here and abroad.
Other criteria would be usefully added to these:
1. Saw the housing bubble and warned about its dangers ahead of time
2. Saw the dangers of bailing out the banks without reforming them, and warned about the dangers during the bailout.
3. Urged the Fed to use its regulatory powers to curb rampant fraud and predatory lending that were pervasive in the bubble years,
4. Have urged the Fed to fulfill its dual mandate about price stability and full employment
5. Agree to an audit of the Fed, particularly the details of its transactions during the bailout that provided literally trillions of dollars to private financial instutions without a vote of Congress
Imagine if the President appointed
Elizabeth Warren, head of the Congressional Oversight Panel and leading advocate of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which is likely to be lodged in the Fed
Rob Johnson, former partner of Soros, current director of the Institute for a New Economic Thinking, who warned about the coming crisis as Bernanke was assuring Congress that the problems of the subprime mortgage market were minor;
Jamie Galbraith, Texas Professor, former chief economist of Joint Economic Committee, who has written widely about the importance of focusing on full employment in guiding the economy
The Federal Reserve — so long controlled by the large banks — would gain far greater balance. Given the trouble financial reform is having, these appointments are increasingly vital if we are to have any chance of avoiding the next bubble and bust. The President may not be able to convince Congress to change the regulations, but he can change the regulators.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/leading-senator-wants-new_n_493596.html
Leading Senator Wants New Fed Governors Committed To Full Transparency, Consumer Protection (LETTER)
First Posted: 03-10-10 02:00 PM | Updated: 03-10-10 03:05 PM
The chair of a Senate panel overseeing the Federal Reserve wants the Obama administration to appoint Fed officials committed to transparency, consumer protection and lowering the unemployment rate — three critical areas that the Fed needs to beef up.
In a Wednesday letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and top White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) expresses his concern about the two current vacancies on the Fed’s seven-member Board of Governors and the impending vacancy to be created with the June departure of vice chairman Donald L. Kohn.
With the three vacancies, President Obama can shape the direction of the Fed for years to come. Brown, acutely aware of the opportunity — he refers to the openings as the equivalent of openings on the U.S. Supreme Court — is pushing for nominees who will fill gaps in areas he feels have been ignored.
“The evidence presented to the Committee about the role that Fed policy decisions played in the financial crisis and the economic downturn has led me to conclude that the Fed’s monetary policy has focused almost entirely on controlling inflation rather than maximizing employment,” Brown, the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee’s Subcommittee on Economic Policy, writes. “And that the Fed has too often put banks’ soundness ahead of its other responsibilities.”
Rather, Brown argues, Obama should take the opportunity to appoint economic policy makers who:
• “Possess the foresight to identify harmful economic trends, the courage to speak out about the necessity of addressing these practices before they inflict lasting damage to our economy, and the wisdom to listen even if their views are challenged”;
• “Demonstrate dedication to protecting consumers and maximizing employment” and;
• Are committed “to releasing e-mails related to the Fed’s involvement in the AIG bailout” because “[f]ocusing on candidates committed to full transparency related to this particular economic event would help to restore the Fed’s stature and credibility in the eyes of many Americans.”
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Installing officials that meet these requirements would send a positive message, Brown writes.
“The American public has lost a great deal of confidence in the Federal Reserve. Selecting a Vice Chair and…members with the above qualifications will send the message that the Federal Reserve has learned from the financial crisis, and that the Fed’s weaknesses are being addressed with more than just cosmetic changes.”
READ the full letter below:
March 10, 2010
The Honorable Timothy Geithner
Secretary
United States Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20220
The Honorable Lawrence Summers
Director
National Economic Council
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Secretary Geithner and Director Summers,
I write to you today to express my concern about the vacancies at the Federal Reserve, both on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) and soon in the Vice Chairman’s office. This is the financial equivalent of leaving open vacancies on the United States Supreme Court, and it is essential that we fill these positions.
As Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee’s Subcommittee on Economic Policy, with jurisdiction over the Federal Reserve System’s monetary policy functions, I am acutely aware of the importance of monetary policy at the Fed. Both the full Banking Committee and the Economic Policy Subcommittee have examined the causes of the financial crisis and the resulting effects on lending, access to credit, and employment. The evidence presented to the Committee about the role that Fed policy decisions played in the financial crisis and the economic downturn has led me to conclude that the Fed’s monetary policy has focused almost entirely on controlling inflation rather than maximizing employment and that the Fed has too often put banks’ soundness ahead of its other responsibilities. In light of this experience, there are several other important qualifications that I would urge you to consider in selecting the new Vice Chairman and new members of the FOMC:
1. Recognition of the causes of the financial crisis before it occurred.
Many economic experts, including some at the Federal Reserve, failed to anticipate the impending economic crisis. However, there were exceptional people who sounded alarms about the rapidly inflating housing bubble, the proliferation of subprime lending, and the packaging, selling, and investing in toxic financial products by Wall Street. Unfortunately, regulators, including the Fed, ignored or attempted to discredit many of these courageous individuals, rather than heeding their warnings. We need economic policy makers who possess the foresight to identify harmful economic trends, the courage to speak out about the necessity of addressing these practices before they inflict lasting damage to our economy, and the wisdom to listen even if their views are challenged.
2. Demonstrated dedication to protecting consumers and maximizing employment.
For years, the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy has maintained an almost single-minded focus on inflation. This has been detrimental to the Fed’s other core missions, particularly maximizing employment and protecting consumers. The results of this fixation speak for themselves. The national unemployment rate is more than double the Fed’s statutorily mandated 4 percent unemployment target. The Fed also failed to act on repeated warnings about predatory mortgage lending and credit card abuses. Consumer protection experience is particularly important if the new consumer protection entity were to be housed at the Fed. Our economy will benefit from renewed attention to all of the Fed’s priorities.
3. Commitment to releasing e-mails related to the Fed’s involvement in the AIG bailout.
A growing number of experts – including economists, academics, and former regulators – have called upon the Federal Reserve to release all e-mails, internal accounting documents, and financial models related to AIG’s collapse. The American taxpayers now hold the majority of AIG shares, and they have a right to know how their money is being spent. Providing greater detail about the AIG bailout is particularly important because that episode continues to taint the Fed’s reputation. Focusing on candidates committed to full transparency related to this particular economic event would help to restore the Fed’s stature and credibility in the eyes of many Americans.
The American public has lost a great deal of confidence in the Federal Reserve. Selecting a Vice Chair and FOMC members with the above qualifications will send the message that the Federal Reserve has learned from the financial crisis, and that the Fed’s weaknesses are being addressed with more than just cosmetic changes.
I would be happy to discuss specific candidates with you at your convenience. Thank you for considering my views, and I look forward to working with you to address these vacancies at the Fed.
Sincerely,
Sherrod Brown
United States Senator