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Testimony
Donald L. Kohn, Vice Chairman
Federal Reserve independence

Before the Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology, Committee on
Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C.

July 9, 2009
Chairman Watt, Ranking Member Paul, and other members of the Subcommittee, I appreciate the
opportunity to discuss with you the important public policy reasons why the Congress has long
given the Federal Reserve a substantial degree of independence to conduct monetary policy while
ensuring that we remain accountable to the Congress and to the American people. In addition, I will
explain why an extension of the Federal Reserve’s supervisory and regulatory responsibilities as
part of a broader initiative to address systemic risks would be compatible with the pursuit of our
statutory monetary policy objectives. I also will discuss the significant steps the Federal Reserve has
taken recently to improve our transparency and maintain accountability.
Independence and Accountability
A well-designed framework for monetary policy includes a careful balance between independence
and accountability. A balance of this type conforms to our general inclination as a nation to have
clearly drawn lines of authority, limited powers, and appropriate checks and balances within our
government; such a balance also is conducive to sound monetary policy.
The Federal Reserve derives much of the authority under which it operates from the Federal Reserve
Act. The act specifies and limits the Federal Reserve’s powers. In 1977, the Congress amended the
act by establishing maximum employment and price stability as our monetary policy objectives; the
Federal Reserve has no authority to establish different objectives. At the same time, the Congress
has--correctly, in my view--given the Federal Reserve considerable scope to design and implement
the best approaches to achieving those statutory objectives. Moreover, as I will discuss in detail
later, the independence that is granted to the Federal Reserve is subject to a well-calibrated system
of checks and balances in the form of transparency and accountability to the public and the
Congress.
The latitude for the Federal Reserve to pursue its statutory objectives is expressed in several
important ways. For example, the Congress determined that Federal Reserve policymakers cannot
be removed from their positions merely because others in the government disagree with their views
on policy issues. In addition, to guard against indirect pressures, the Federal Reserve determines its
budget and staff, subject to congressional oversight. Thus, the system has three essential
components: broad objectives set by the Congress, independence to pursue those legislated
objectives as efficiently and effectively as possible, and accountability to the Congress through a
range of vehicles.
Benefits of Independence to Conduct Policy in Pursuit of Legislated Objectives
The insulation from short-term political pressures--within a framework of legislated objectives and
accountability and transparency--that the Congress has established for the Federal Reserve has come
to be widely emulated around the world. Considerable experience shows that this type of approach
tends to yield a monetary policy that best promotes economic growth and price stability. Operational
independence--that is, independence to pursue legislated goals--reduces the odds on two types of
policy errors that result in inflation and economic instability. First, it prevents governments from
succumbing to the temptation to use the central bank to fund budget deficits. Second, it enables
policymakers to look beyond the short term as they weigh the effects of their monetary policy

actions on price stability and employment.
History provides numerous examples of non-independent central banks being forced to finance large
government budget deficits. Such episodes invariably lead to high inflation. Given the current
outlook for large federal budget deficits in the United States, this consideration is especially
important. Any substantial erosion of the Federal Reserve’s monetary independence likely would
lead to higher long-term interest rates as investors begin to fear future inflation. Moreover, the bond
rating agencies view operational independence of a country’s central bank as an important factor in
determining sovereign credit ratings, suggesting that a threat to the Federal Reserve’s independence
could lower the Treasury’s debt rating and thus raise its cost of borrowing.1 Higher long-term
interest rates would further increase the burden of the national debt on current and future
generations.2
The second way in which political interference with monetary policy can damage the economy is by
promoting an undue focus on the short term. Because excessively easy monetary policy tends to
boost economic activity temporarily before the destabilizing effects of higher inflation are felt,
policymakers with a relatively short-term outlook may be tempted to ease monetary policy too
much. The eventual result is higher inflation without any permanent benefit in terms of
employment, an outcome that is inconsistent with the dual mandate for maximum employment and
price stability. Thus the increase in inflation must be followed by policies to bring inflation back
down--policies that have the side effect of temporarily reducing output and employment. The fixed,
lengthy, and overlapping terms of Federal Reserve Board members, in combination with the other
elements of operational independence, help ensure that the Federal Reserve appropriately considers
both the short-term and long-term effects of its policy decisions.
Statistical studies have confirmed that countries with more independent central banks experience
lower and more stable rates of inflation with no sacrifice of jobs or income.3 Moreover, low and
stable rates of inflation help to deliver strong economic growth and high rates of employment. The
benefits of central bank independence appear to be a major explanation for the trend I mentioned
earlier of countries moving to establish or to enhance the independence of their central banks. It is
surely no coincidence that countries around the world have experienced sustained declines in the
level and variability of inflation as they have moved to grant their central banks greater operational
independence.
Monetary Policy Independence and the Mitigation of Systemic Risk
Is monetary policy independence threatened by giving a central bank other responsibilities, such as
supervisory and regulatory authority for some parts of the financial system? Are there potential
conflicts between a high degree of independence for monetary policy and accountability in
supervisory and regulatory policy? I believe that U.S. and foreign experience shows that monetary
policy independence and supervisory and regulatory authority are mutually compatible and even
have beneficial synergies.
The current financial crisis has clearly demonstrated the need for the United States to have a
comprehensive and multifaceted approach to containing systemic risk. The Administration recently
released a proposal for strengthening the financial system that would provide new or enhanced
responsibilities to a number of federal agencies, including the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission with respect to over-the-counter
derivatives, the SEC with respect to hedge funds and their advisers, and several agencies, including
the Treasury, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board, and the SEC
with respect to the resolution of systemically important failing nonbank financial institutions. In
addition, the proposal would provide the Federal Reserve certain new responsibilities for overseeing
systemically important financial institutions and payment, clearing, and settlement arrangements.
These incremental new responsibilities are a natural outgrowth of the Federal Reserve’s existing
supervisory and regulatory responsibilities. Through our role as consolidated supervisor of all bank
holding companies (BHCs), the Federal Reserve has long been responsible for supervising many of

the most important U.S. financial organizations, and in the current crisis several more large complex
financial firms--including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and American Express--have become
bank holding companies. And the expanded regulatory authority of the Federal Reserve with respect
to payment and settlement systems builds upon our existing responsibilities for supervising certain
critical payment, clearing, and settlement systems, such as the Depository Trust Company and CLS
Bank, as well as our historical efforts to reduce risk in such systems through, for example, our
Payment System Risk Policy.4
The authorities that the Administration’s proposal would provide the Federal Reserve with respect
to systemically important non-BHC financial firms and payment, clearing and settlement systems
also are similar in many respects to the authorities that the Federal Reserve currently has with
respect to bank holding companies and payment, clearing, and settlement systems under our
supervision. The Administration’s proposal does call for a more macro-prudential approach to the
supervision and regulation of systemically important financial firms and payment, clearing, and
settlement systems, including the establishment of higher capital, liquidity, and risk-management
requirements for systemically important firms. The Federal Reserve already has been moving to
incorporate a more macro-prudential approach to our supervisory and regulatory programs, as
evidenced by the recently completed Supervisory Capital Assessment Program. The Federal Reserve
has also long been a leader in the development of strong international risk-management standards
for payment, clearing, and settlement systems and has implemented these standards for the systems
it supervises.
In our supervision of bank holding companies and our oversight of some payment systems, we
already work closely with other federal and state agencies and participate in groups of regulators
and supervisors such as the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council and the President’s
Working Group on Financial Markets. These responsibilities and close working relationships have
not impinged on our monetary policy independence, and we do not believe that the enhancements
proposed by the Administration to the Federal Reserve’s supervisory and regulatory authority would
undermine the Federal Reserve’s ability to pursue our monetary policy objectives effectively and
independently.
Indeed, these enhancements would complement the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy
responsibilities. The Federal Reserve and other central banks have always been involved in issues of
systemic risk, most notably because central banks act as lenders of last resort. Central banks, which
operate in markets daily and have macroeconomic responsibilities, bring a broad and unique
perspective to analysis of developments in the financial system. And, as we have seen over the past
two years, threats to the stability of the financial system can have major implications for
employment and price stability. Thus, the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy objectives are closely
aligned with those of minimizing systemic risk. To the extent that the proposed new regulatory
framework would contribute to greater financial stability, it should improve the ability of monetary
policy to achieve maximum employment and stable prices.
Accountability and Transparency
In a democracy, any significant degree of independence by a government agency must be
accompanied by substantial accountability and transparency. The Congress and the Federal Reserve
have established a number of policies and procedures to ensure that the Federal Reserve continues to
use its operational independence in a manner that promotes the nation’s well-being. The Federal
Reserve reports on its experience toward achieving its statutory objectives in the semiannual
Monetary Policy Reports and associated congressional testimony. The Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) releases a statement immediately after each regularly scheduled meeting and
detailed minutes of each meeting on a timely basis. We also publish summaries of the economic
forecasts of FOMC participants four times a year. In addition, Federal Reserve officials frequently
testify before the Congress and deliver speeches to the public on a wide range of topics, including
economic and financial conditions and monetary and regulatory policy.
Our financial controls are examined by an external auditor, and Reserve Bank operations and
controls are reviewed by each Reserve Bank’s independent internal audit function and by Board

staff who oversee Reserve Bank activities. We provide the public and the Congress with detailed
annual reports on the consolidated financial activities of the Federal Reserve System that are audited
by an independent public accounting firm. We also publish a detailed balance sheet on a weekly
basis.
The Federal Reserve recognizes that the new programs we have instituted to combat the financial
crisis must be accompanied by additional transparency. Americans have a right to know how the
Federal Reserve is using taxpayer resources and they need to be assured that we are acting in a
responsible manner that minimizes risk and maintains the integrity of our operations. We have
increased the transparency of our actions while safeguarding our ability to achieve our public policy
goals of fostering financial and economic stability. This year we expanded our website to include
considerable background information on our financial condition and our policy programs. Recently,
we initiated a monthly report to the Congress and the public on Federal Reserve liquidity programs
that provides even more information on our lending, the associated collateral, and other facets of
programs established to address the financial crisis. These steps should help the public understand
the considerable efforts we have taken to minimize the risk of loss as we provide liquidity to the
financial system in our role as lender of last resort. Altogether, we now provide a higher degree of
transparency than at any other time in the history of the Federal Reserve System. Because of the
large volume of information we publish, the Federal Reserve is among the most transparent central
banks in the world.
Federal Reserve policymakers are highly accountable and answerable to the government of the
United States and to the American people. The seven members of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate after a
thorough process of public examination. The key positions of Chairman and Vice Chairman are
subject to presidential and congressional review every four years, a separate and shorter schedule
than the 14-year terms of Board members. The members of the Board of Governors account for
seven seats on the FOMC. By statute, the other five members of the FOMC are drawn from the
presidents of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks. District presidents are appointed through a process
involving a broad search of qualified individuals by local boards of directors; the choice must then
be approved by the Board of Governors. In creating the Federal Reserve System, the Congress
combined a Washington-based Board with strong regional representation to carefully balance the
variety of interests of a diverse nation. The Federal Reserve Banks strengthen our policy
deliberations by bringing real-time information about the economy from their district contacts and
by their diverse perspectives.
Oversight by the Government Accountability Office
On the topic of Federal Reserve accountability and transparency, the possibility of expanding the
audit authority of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) over the Federal Reserve has
recently been discussed. As you know, the Federal Reserve is subject to frequent audits by the GAO
on a broad range of our functions.
For example, the supervisory and regulatory functions of the Federal Reserve are subject to audit by
the GAO to the same extent as the supervisory and regulatory functions of the other federal banking
agencies. Thus, the GAO has full authority to--and does in fact--audit the manner in which the
Federal Reserve supervises and regulates bank holding companies on a consolidated basis.
Moreover, if the Congress were to provide the Federal Reserve with responsibility for serving as the
consolidated supervisor of systemically important financial firms that are not bank holding
companies, the GAO would, under existing law, have full authority to audit the Federal Reserve’s
supervision and regulation of such firms as well. We would expect the GAO to actively use that
authority, as it does today. Indeed, as of June 29, 2009, the GAO had 19 engagements under way
involving the Federal Reserve, including 14 that were initiated at the request of the Congress. In
addition, since the beginning of 2008, the GAO has completed 26 engagements involving the
Federal Reserve, including engagements related to the Basel II capital framework, risk-management
oversight, the Bank Secrecy Act, and the Board’s Regulation B, which implements the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act.

The Congress also recently clarified the GAO’s ability to audit the Term Asset-Backed Securities
Loan Facility (TALF), a joint Treasury-Federal Reserve initiative, in conjunction with the GAO’s
reviews of the performance of Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The Federal
Reserve has been working closely with the GAO to provide that agency with access to information
and personnel to permit it to fully understand the terms, conditions, and operations of the TALF so
that the TARP can be properly audited. At the same time, the Congress granted the GAO new
authority to conduct audits of the credit facilities extended by the Federal Reserve to “single and
specific” companies under the authority provided by section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act,
including the loan facilities provided to, or created for, American International Group and Bear
Stearns. These facilities are markedly different from the widely available credit facilities--such as
the discount window access for depository institutions, the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, and the
Commercial Paper Funding Facility--that the Federal Reserve either has historically used or has
recently established to address broad credit and liquidity issues in the financial system. For this
reason, the Federal Reserve did not object to granting the GAO audit authority over these
institution-specific, emergency credit facilities.
The Congress, however, has purposefully--and for good reason--excluded from the scope of
potential GAO audits monetary policy deliberations and operations, including open market and
discount window operations, and transactions with or for foreign central banks, foreign
governments, and public international financing organizations. By excluding these areas, the
Congress has carefully balanced the need for public accountability with the strong public policy
benefits that flow from maintaining the independence of the central bank’s monetary policy
functions and avoiding disruption to the nation’s foreign and international relationships.
The same public policy reasons that supported the creation of these exclusions in 1978 remain valid
today. The Federal Reserve strongly believes that removing the statutory limits on GAO audits of
monetary policy matters would be contrary to the public interest by tending to undermine the
independence and efficacy of monetary policy in several ways. First, the GAO serves as the
investigative arm of the Congress and, by law, must conduct an investigation and prepare a report
whenever requested by the House or Senate or a committee with jurisdiction of either body.
Through its investigations and audits, the GAO typically makes its own judgments about policy
actions and the manner in which they are implemented, as well as recommendations to the audited
agency and to the Congress for changes or future actions. Accordingly, financial markets likely
would see the grant of audit authority with respect to monetary policy to the GAO as undermining
monetary independence--with the adverse consequences discussed previously--particularly because
GAO audits, or the threat of a GAO audit, could be used to try to influence monetary policy
decisions.
Permitting GAO audits of monetary policy also could cast a chill on monetary policy deliberations
through another channel. Although Federal Reserve officials regularly explain the rationale for their
policy decisions in public venues, the process of vetting ideas and proposals, many of which are
never incorporated into policy decisions, could suffer from the threat of public disclosure. If
policymakers believed that GAO audits would result in published analyses of their policy
discussions, they might be less willing to engage in the unfettered and wide-ranging internal debates
that are essential to identifying the best possible policy options. Moreover, the publication of the
results of GAO audits related to monetary policy actions and deliberations could complicate and
interfere with the communication of the FOMC’s intentions regarding monetary policy to financial
markets and the public more broadly. Households, firms, and financial market participants might be
uncertain about the implications of the GAO’s findings for future decisions of the FOMC, thereby
increasing market volatility and weakening the ability of monetary policy actions to achieve their
desired effects.
These concerns extend to the policy decisions to implement the discount window and broadly
available credit facilities. These facilities are extensions of our responsibility for promoting financial
stability, maximum employment and price stability. Indeed, unlike the institution-specific loans that
the Federal Reserve has made that now are subject to GAO audit, these broader market facilities are
designed to unfreeze financial markets and lower interest rate spreads in concert with our other

monetary policy actions. It is important that, like other monetary policy decisions, the Federal
Reserve remain independent in making policy decisions regarding these facilities.
An additional concern is that permitting GAO audits of the broad liquidity facilities the Federal
Reserve uses to affect credit conditions could reduce the effectiveness of these facilities in helping
promote financial stability, maximum employment, and price stability. For example, even if strong
confidentiality restrictions were established, individual banks might be more reluctant to borrow
from the discount window if they knew that their identity and other sensitive information about their
borrowings could be disclosed to the GAO. Rumors that a bank may have used the discount window
can cause a damaging loss of confidence even to a fundamentally sound institution. Experience,
including experience in the current financial crisis, shows that banks’ unwillingness to use the
discount window can result in high and volatile short-term interest rates and limit the effectiveness
of the discount window as a tool to enhance financial stability.
Overall, the Federal Reserve believes that removing the remaining statutory limits on GAO audits of
monetary policy and discount window functions would tend to undermine public and investor
confidence in monetary policy by raising concerns that monetary policy judgments in pursuit of our
legislated objectives would become subject to political considerations. As a result, such an action
would increase inflation fears and market interest rates and, ultimately, damage economic stability
and job creation.
Thank you for inviting me to present the Board’s views on this very important subject. I look
forward to answering any questions you may have.

Footnotes
1. Standard & Poor's (2004), "Sovereign Credit Ratings: A Primer," March 15,
www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/pdf/products/SovRatingsPrimer_sov.pdf. Return to text
2. The beneficial effects of central bank independence on a government's borrowing costs have
been observed even when budget deficits are not unusually large. For example, on May 6, 1997, the
U.K. government announced that the Bank of England would be given considerable operational
independence. The yield on 10-year U.K. government bonds fell 30 basis points that day, even
though the government made no change to the Bank of England's policy objectives and there was no
other prominent economic or policy news. Market participants widely attributed the decline in longterm interest rates to the surprise announcement of independence and the consequent increased
confidence in future price stability. Return to text
3. See, for example, the survey in Alex Cukierman (2008), "Central Bank Independence and
Monetary Policymaking Institutions--Past, Present, and Future," European Journal of Political
Economy, vol. 24 (December), pp. 722-36. Return to text
4. The Federal Reserve's Payment System Risk Policy can be found at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/psr/default.htm. Return to text
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