What Bernie Sanders Thinks Is Wrong With the Fed
Bernie Sanders detailed a number of his financial-policy proposals in New York on Tuesday. Though hes been clear in the past that he thinks Americas biggest banks should be broken up, one particularly notable section of his speech on Tuesday was the part outlining how exactly he plans to reform the Federal Reserve, the U.S.s central bank:
In my view, it is unacceptable that the Federal Reserve has been hijacked by the very bankers it is in charge of regulating. I think the American people would be shocked to learn that Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, served on the board of the New York Fed at the same time that his bank received a $391 billion bailout from the Federal Reserve. That is a clear conflict of interest that I would ban as president. When I am elected, the foxes will no longer be guarding the henhouse at the Fed. Under my administration, banking industry executives will no longer be allowed to serve on the Feds boards and handpick its members and staff.
Sanders is referring to what critics call the revolving door, the shuffle of financiers between positions at the Fed and jobs in the financial sector. This public-private overlap has prompted concerns that regulators are going easy on the firms they oversee, with the hope that someday theyd get a job from one of those firmswhich would be a huge conflict of interest.
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Concerns over the revolving door is especially high in New York, where the New York Fed exists in close proximity to major outposts of Americas biggest financial institutions. This proximity became the focus of a 2014 ProPublica investigation that documented not only the coziness of rulemakers and bankers, but the way it leads to lax regulation: One former New York Fed examiner claimed she was fired for questioning policies at Goldman Sachs, though her lawsuit against the Fed has been dismissed.
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2016/01/bernie-sanders-reform-revolving-door/422772/