Axulus
Veteran Member
Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R., Texas) said in his opening statement, “Fed reforms are needed and I for one believe Fed reforms are coming.”
One bill introduced by Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) would allow the Government Accountability Office to review the Fed’s monetary-policy decision making. Mr. Paul says the measure would improve central-bank transparency.
Ms. Yellen said she opposed the bill because it would impair the Fed’s ability to set interest rates independent of political influence.
Republicans at the hearing countered that Ms. Yellen’s calendars show the executive branch has far more access, and potentially more influence, than Congress.
Between February and December last year, Ms. Yellen held 23 meetings—including telephone calls and in-person sessions—with lawmakers, including 16 with Democrats and seven with Republicans, her calendar shows. She held 51 meetings with executive branch officials, including two with President Barack Obama and 25 with Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew .
Rep. Scott Garrett (R., N.J.), citing a Wall Street Journal online tool that allows readers to sort Ms. Yellen’s calendar for meetings with different officials by name and type, said her schedule was among many factors painting a picture of a Fed “guided by partisan politics.” Others included her speech on inequality in October a month before the midterm elections; her meeting with Mr. Obama the day before the elections; and her meeting with “liberal advocacy groups.”
“So having Congress oversee your agency more thoroughly will not make it more political than it already is,” Mr. Garrett said.
Rep. Bill Huizenga (R., Mich.), referring to the White House address, said, “I don’t want to see 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. policies pushed through the Fed.” He asked, “is [the Fed] being unduly influenced by the executive branch?”
Ms. Yellen said no.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-chief-janet-yellen-defends-fed-independence-1424883047
This lack of independence of the Fed sounds all like rumor and innuendo, and the proposed "cure" (partisan audits and other interference into the central bank affairs) is worse than the claimed disease.
What specific actions undertaken by the federal reserve can these Republicans point to that indicate partisan bias?
By all accounts, the federal reserve has done a fair job managing the financial crisis and implementing accommodative policy that helped dig us out of the great recession.
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