Who¹s Looking at the Fed¹s Books?

By WILLIAM A. BARNETT
Published: October 21, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/opinion/22barnett-1.html?_r=1
 
Lawrence, Kan.

ON Tuesday, Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, and Senator Bob
Corker, Republican of Tennessee, introduced legislation to allow the
Government Accountability Office to audit some of the Federal Reserve¹s
lending programs. Different bills calling for more comprehensive Fed audits
already have widespread support in the House and Senate. Expanding this
oversight is long overdue.

After the financial turmoil of the last year, it should be clear that we
depend on the Fed for high-quality financial data and that the Fed should be
held to the highest standards of transparency. And yet we cannot be assured
of either of these things unless the Fed is subjected to a thorough audit of
its numbers. I worked on the staff of the Federal Reserve Board 30 years
ago, and I know that without comprehensive audits to double-check Federal
Reserve data, the risk exists of inadequate and sloppy accounting from the
Fed. 

Consider the data the Fed presented last year on nonborrowed reserves.
Nonborrowed reserves are total bank reserves minus money borrowed by banks
and held as reserves. Clearly, the money borrowed cannot exceed the total
reserves, so nonborrowed reserves should not be negative. Yet for a few
months last year, the Fed reported banks¹ nonborrowed reserves at billions
of dollars below zero. In its calculations of nonborrowed reserves, the Fed
included in borrowed reserves new forms of bank borrowing not being held as
reserves. Such incompetent accounting would not survive an unconstrained,
fully informed audit.

The information the Fed releases on bank deposits is similarly biased and
contaminates data on the money supply and thereby on the liquidity of the
economy produced by Federal Reserve policy. In order to evade reserve
requirements, which mandate that a certain fraction of deposits be held in
reserve and not lent out, many banks sweep much of their checking account
deposits into shadow money-market-deposit savings accounts before reporting
those deposits to the Fed. Since such accounts have no reserve requirements,
this allows the banks to decrease the amount of total reserves they¹re
required to have. But the liquidity provided to the economy from checking
accounts is the pre-sweeps amount, not the reported post-sweeps amount.

Why does the Fed not require banks to go public with their real checking
account deposit data? If the Fed doesn¹t see it as a problem that banks
evade reserve requirements on checking accounts, why doesn¹t it just remove
those requirements? Such evasion would be less likely to continue in the
face of a comprehensive audit by the Government Accountability Office.

But while the Fed needs to be audited substantially, creating an independent
data institute to monitor the Fed¹s monetary and financial data would be
better than expanding a Government Accountability Office audit. An
independent institute would have the highest specialized expertise to
produce economic data for the Fed.

Neither an independent monitoring institute, nor ‹ a reasonable second best
‹ an expanded Congressional audit would constrain the Fed¹s ability to act
in the country¹s best interests. It would simply ensure that the country
knew what the Fed was doing, and why.

William A. Barnett is a professor of macroeconomics at the University of
Kansas and the editor of the journal Macroeconomic Dynamics. 


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