Regional Feds’ authority “usurped,” Poole says
Bloomberg has a good analysis today of how the Federal Reserve Board’s emergency actions have diminished the authority of regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The strongest criticism comes from Bill Poole, who held the regional presidency in St. Louis until he retired earlier this year. Poole, now a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, tells Bloomberg:
The Board has usurped authority. This dramatic change in policy direction has not been announced or even acknowledged.
The story mentions the Fed’s $600 billion intervention in the mortgage market, on which the regional officials didn’t have a vote. It also mentions the fact that the effective federal funds rate has been trading well below the target set by the Federal Open Market Committee, which includes the regional presidents. “That can’t be an accident,” Poole says.
Here’s how Barclays Capital analyst Ethan Harris sums up the new governance model:
If I am a regional Fed bank president, I have had my power diminished a lot. I think of it as war powers for the Board of Governors.


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David Nicklaus has covered St. Louis business for more than 25 years. His column appears three days a week on the Post-Dispatch business page.
So the Fed in DC doesn’t really care about the regional offices - those appear to be facads to the real power in DC. The very few elite are in total control of our destiny.
The Federal Reserve needs to be abolished - quickly!!!