Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Monday, 23 January 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)CONGRESS IS KEPT IN THE DARK AND FED BS, JUST LIKE ANY OTHER MUSHROOM FACTORY WHERE THE "WORKERS" ARE EXPLOITED BY THEIR MASTERS--IN THIS CASE, THE CORPORATIONS WITH THEIR HIRED SUPERVISORS, THE K STREET LOBBYISTS--AND PAID HANDSOMELY FOR IT, TO BOOT. IT'S CALLED CORRUPTION. AFTER ALL:
It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.
― Upton Sinclair, I, Candidate for Governor: And How I Got Licked
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/01/matt-stoller-fed-transcripts-%E2%80%93-why-was-congress-in-the-dark-during-the-crafting-of-dodd-frank.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+NakedCapitalism+%28naked+capitalism%29
By Matt Stoller, the former Senior Policy Advisor to Rep. Alan Grayson and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. You can reach him at stoller (at) gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at @matthewstoller. Cross posted from New Deal 2.0
Records of the Feds meetings at the height of the housing bubble provide more evidence that our central bankers need to be held accountable. The latest release of the Federal Reserves Open Market Committee transcripts is a doozy. Binyamin Appelbaum read through the transcripts and wrote a great article on what he found. The people on the FOMC straight up did not understand the economy, and that becomes very obvious when you parse their nonchalance through the pivotal year of 2006. Thats true as far as it goes, but theres a political angle here as well.
My question is, why dont we have the transcript for 2007? Or 2008? Or beyond that? Why didnt Congress have the evidence that Bernanke was an incompetent central banker when he was up for reconfirmation in late 2009? Why didnt Congress know any of what was revealed yesterday while it was tasked with rewriting the rules governing our entire financial architecture?!? It might have been useful to know that the Fed was staffed by an inept, embarrassing group of fools fiddling over inflation while Rome was being set ablaze.
I wrote a piece on this back in May of 2011:
Theres an easy way, however, for the Federal Reserve to lose its aura of undemocratic secrecy. It could release transcripts of its Federal Open Market Committee meetings within one year or be compelled to do so with a congressional subpoena.
These committee meetings are the real guts of U.S. economic policymaking. You can already get a summary of each meeting within three weeks. But the actual transcripts the debates among Fed policymakers at those meetings are released with a minimum lag time of five years.
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, had pledged last year to look into this issue. But he has not acted.
So, we still do not know what top Fed officials were debating from 2006 through 2010 as the housing bubble ballooned and the banking system collapsed. Were Fed officials privately worrying about the housing market? Were they aware of leverage in the system? Did they understand the dangers of credit default swaps?
The democratically elected Congress should have known these things before attempting to fix the financial system. Several congressional postmortems on the crisis should have had access to these records. And as Congress debates Rep. Mike Pences bill to change the Feds mandate, it should have access to this information.
Why doesnt Congress issue a subpoena to get the information about FOMC meetings from 2007-2010, so that we know what the Fed is thinking? They do not deserve the presumption of competence anymore. Darryl Issa promised this during the transition to GOP congressional rule in 2010 but he has not followed through. Perhaps he should.
Many people did get what was happening 2006 was the year that the big banks began cutting warehouse lines of credit to mortgage originators, which would eventually topple the whole housing ponzi scheme. Dean Baker had been trying to sound the alarm about a housing bubble as early as 2003. Yves Smith started her site Naked Capitalism in 2006 and Josh Rosner began noticing what was going on that year; moreover, the dangers of leverage had been recognized as far back as the early 1990s by such economic luminaries as Jane DArista.
Its not just that the people on the Federal Reserves Open Market Committee the real rulers of America are insultingly out of touch with reality. Its also that the public does not even get to see what they are doing and that Congress doesnt really want to know. This, more than anything else, is animating figures like Ron Paul, who accuses the Federal Reserve of foisting an unwanted monetary system on the American public.
The reality of our times is that the people in charge of powerful institutions are driven by nothing so much as a desire to be the maintainers of consensus. That is what the FOMC participants were. And if we dont fix this state of affairs and hold powerful people accountable for being incompetent and wrong at least some of the time, America is done for.