Fisher Says Central Bank Is Under Attack From Ron Paul,

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Fisher Says Central Bank Is Under Attack From Ron Paul, By Vivien Lou Chen and Margot Habiby - Sep 27, 2011 5:09 PM ET Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said the central bank’s independence is under attack from both ends of the political spectrum in Congress, and he singled out two of the critics by name. “We are being attacked from the right and from the left, and I don’t see much difference between a certain congressman from Texas named Ron Paul and a certain congressman from Massachusetts named Barney Frank,” Fisher said in response to audience questions after a speech in Dallas. Paul is a Republican and Frank is a Democrat. Fisher’s remarks are uncommon among central bank officials, who tend to defer to Congress and its members, said Sung Won Sohn, former chief economist at Wells Fargo & Co. The Dallas Fed chief is the only member of the Federal Open Market Committee to have run for Congress, losing as a Democrat to Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison twice, in 1993 and 1994. His comments are “true as a factual matter,” said Sohn, who served as a White House staff economist under Richard Nixon from 1973 to 1974 and is now a professor at California State University-Channel Islands. “But a person in the position of president of a Federal Reserve bank should be careful about what he says and how he says it because the Fed actually reports to Congress and Congress can do anything it wants to the Fed.” ‘End the Fed’ Paul, now a Republican presidential candidate, advocates limited government and has written a book titled “End the Fed.” In 2010, the House passed his legislation requiring audits of central bank interest-rate decisions. The Senate rejected the measure, and Congress ended up approving a compromise that requires disclosure of details of the Fed’s emergency lending and monetary-policy actions during the financial crisis. Frank, who has served in Congress since 1981, says regional Federal Reserve bank presidents shouldn’t be allowed to vote on interest rates because they aren’t appointed by elected officials. He said this month he will submit a new version of legislation to cut the voting rights of five rotating regional representatives from the 12-member Federal Open Market Committee. “I don’t see any difference between them,” Fisher said, referring to Frank and Paul. “They believe we have too much independence. They believe that Congress should be in charge of monetary policy.”


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