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Ron Paul and Jim DeMint on the Importance of Fed Transparency

Thursday, November 19, 2009 10:15 AM Add to Facebook Add to Twitter

Today's Wall Street Journal features a piece penned jointly by Congressman Ron Paul and Senator Jim DeMint, both of whom are sponsors of their respective chamber's versions of the Federal Reserve Transparency Act. That bill, which has over 300 co-sponsors in the House, is currently being undermined by an amended version offered by Congressman Mel Watt from North Carolina during the Financial Services Committee markup of the financial market regulatory package.

CFA and ATR have endorsed Ron Paul's bill and his amendment to the package, while urging opposition to Watt's amendment.

Explain Rep. Paul and Sen. DeMint:

What is needed is a full audit of the Fed, something that has never happened. We need to know who the Fed is giving money to, what types of securities are being purchased and what backs those securities, how much money is being paid for those securities, etc.
 
While Rep. Mel Watt's (D., N.C.) efforts to audit the new lending facilities authorized to bail out private firms such as AIG is a step in the right direction, it is still just a first step. These facilities have the same effect on the money supply as securities purchased through open market operations. Why should securities placed on one line of the Fed's balance sheet be subject to audit while the exact same securities placed elsewhere on the balance sheet are not subject to audit? The loopholes need to be closed.

In coming weeks we plan to offer companion amendments to legislation already before the House and Senate that will open the Fed up to a complete audit. The amendments set a six-month time lag on the publication of previously unreleased audit data to address the Fed's concerns that actions undertaken in support of monetary policy would immediately be politicized. The transcripts and minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee meetings would continue to be made public at the Fed's discretion, with unpublicized details of meetings not subject to any additional scrutiny. Finally, the amendments make clear that the purpose of the audits is not to interfere with or dictate monetary policy.

As strong opponents of government intervention into the economy, we do not want to see Congress directly dictate monetary policy. But while the Fed is involved so heavily in monetary policy and its actions so heavily influence the future of our economy, it is necessary that it be fully transparent. Interventions into the economy on the order of trillions of dollars cannot continue to escape public scrutiny. American taxpayers deserve better.

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