speeches · September 6, 2016
Regional President Speech
Esther L. George · President
Statement of
Esther L. George
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
before the
House Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade
United States House of Representatives
Sept. 7, 2016
The views expressed by the author are her own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve System, its
governors, officers or representatives.
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Chairman Huizenga, Ranking Member Moore and members of the subcommittee, thank
you for this opportunity to share my views on the role of regional Federal Reserve Banks as part
of the Federal Reserve System.
Because the Federal Reserve is an institution that makes decisions of consequence to the
broad public, a discussion of these matters is worthwhile. If changes are to be considered, the
public should understand not only the Congressional intent for its current design, but also the
strong safeguards that assure its accountability.
Central banks are unique institutions. They have important responsibilities for a nation’s
financial system and economy. Congress, as it contemplated a central bank for the United States
more than 100 years ago, took note of central bank models from other countries, while keeping
in mind two earlier attempts at central banking in the United States. Ultimately, it opted for a
different approach: one that recognized the public’s distrust of concentrated power and greater
confidence in decentralized institutions. The Federal Reserve’s unique public/private structure
reflects these strongly-held views and is designed to provide a system of checks and balances.
Challenges to this public/private design have surfaced throughout the Federal Reserve’s history,
not unlike they have today. But in the end, our country has remained most confident in this
decentralized governance structure.
Criticism of the quasi-private nature of the regional Reserve Banks was anticipated from
the start. Indeed, the Federal Reserve Act leaves no unchecked power in Reserve Banks. The
politically-appointed members of the Board of Governors have oversight authority of the most
important governance aspects of Reserve Banks. For example, they appoint the Chair and
Deputy Chair of a Reserve Bank’s board; they vote to approve the selection of the Bank’s
president as well as its chief operating officer; and they approve the Reserve Bank’s budget and
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salaries. The Board of Governors also meets with each Banks’ Chair and Deputy Chair annually
to review the Bank’s performance and that of its president. Finally, the Reserve Bank’s
operations are reviewed by the Board of Governors and an outside independent auditor.
Notwithstanding this strong public oversight, some question the role of commercial banks
within the Fed structure. Here too, important safeguards exist. The supervision and regulation
of the Federal Reserve’s member banks is a statutory responsibility of the Congressionally-
confirmed Board of Governors. Bankers who serve on Reserve Bank boards are prohibited by
law from participating in the selection of the Bank president, and no director can participate in
bank supervisory matters. Finally, all directors are required to adhere to high ethical standards of
conduct and avoid actions that might impair the effectiveness of the Federal Reserve’s operations
or in any way discredit the reputation of the System.
The capital stock supplied by these member banks serves as the foundation for the
decentralized structure allowing for separate corporate entities. Through the regional Reserve
Banks, private citizens from diverse backgrounds and from the largest to the smallest
communities, have input into national economic policy; strong and varied independent
perspectives more easily emerge to engage in difficult monetary policy discussions; and the
central bank is provided insulation from short-term political pressures.
Altering this public/private structure in favor of a fully public construct diminishes these
defining characteristics in my view. It also risks putting more distance between Main Street and
the nation’s central bank.
Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker understood this well. He experienced first-hand how
public pressure can be exerted on a central bank when it must make unpopular decisions that he
and the FOMC judged to be in the long-run best interest of the economy. In a 1984 speech, he
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noted the important role of the structure of the Federal Reserve System in supporting the central
bank’s decision making by saying, “It was all quite deliberately done by men of political
imagination -- designed to assure a certain independence of judgment, a continuity and
professionalism in staff, a close contact with economic developments and opinion throughout our
great land and a large degree of insulation from partisan or passing political concerns.”1
To that end, I extend a personal invitation for any of you to visit the Federal Reserve
Bank of Kansas City to see what a regional Federal Reserve Bank provides in support of the
central bank’s objectives for economic stability. Thank you. I look forward to taking your
questions.
1 Paul A. Volcker, “Remarks at the 78th Commencement of the American University,” (speech, Washington, D.C., Jan. 29, 1984),
https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/docs/historical/volcker/Volcker_19840129.pdf
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Cite this document
APA
Esther L. George (2016, September 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160907_esther_l_george
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20160907_esther_l_george,
author = {Esther L. George},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2016},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20160907_esther_l_george},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}