Arab Times

Fed nominee Shelton faces skepticism at Senate hearing

Nomination at risk of remaining stuck in the Banking Committee

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WASHINGTON, Feb 16, (AP): One of President Donald Trump’s nominees for the Federal Reserve came under sharp questionin­g Thursday from senators over her unorthodox economic views, including from two Republican­s whose doubts about her nomination could imperil it.

The nominee, Judy Shelton, sought to make her unconventi­onal views an asset by promising to bring “intellectu­al diversity” to the Fed. Shelton has previously expressed support for a wide range of out-of-themainstr­eam perspectiv­es, including tying the dollar’s value to gold. She has also raised concerns among economists and Fed watchers by questionin­g the need for the central bank’s independen­ce.

After the hearing, two key Republican­s – Sens Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia and Richard Shelby of Alabama – reiterated their misgivings about her nomination. A third, Sen John Kennedy of Louisiana, said he was undecided.

With three Republican­s leaning against her or undecided, Shelton’s nomination is at risk of remaining stuck in the Banking Committee. She would need all the Republican votes on the committee to recommend her nomination to the full Senate. The committee has a slim Republican majority of 13 to 12. Republican­s also control the Senate.

During the hearing, Toomey criticized Shelton’s view that the Fed should consider acting to lower the value of the dollar if other nations appeared to be manipulati­ng their own currencies.

“I think that’s a very, very dangerous path to go down,” Toomey said. “It’s not in the Fed’s mandate.”

Economists generally consider such policies, sometimes referred to as “beggar thy neighbor,” as risky and ineffectiv­e. Toomey later told reporters that Shelton’s answers failed to satisfy his concerns.

In the aftermath of his impeachmen­t trial, Trump has appeared emboldened to confront and even attack Republican­s who oppose his policies or nominees for federal positions. In answer to a question Thursday, Toomey said he wasn’t concerned about opposing a Trump nominee if he or she were “unqualifie­d.”

Likewise, Sen Richard Shelby, Republican from Alabama, told Shelton, “I do have trouble with some of your writings and some of your articles.” After the hearing, Shelby said he was still “concerned.” Shelby is a former chairman of the Banking Committee who recently became its longestser­ving member.

Democrats on the committee highlighte­d Shelton’s previous criticism of the Fed for cutting interest rates to nearly zero in the aftermath of the Great Recession, which it did amid a global financial crisis and soaring unemployme­nt rate. Democrats noted that Shelton, like Trump, has reversed herself and now supports lower rates despite a much more robust economy.

“Ms. Shelton has too many alarming ideas and has flipfloppe­d on too many important issues to have this job,” said Sen Sherrod Brown from Ohio, the top Democrat on the committee.

The nominee also said she now strongly supports government insurance for bank deposits - a key pillar of the US banking system since the Great Depression – even though she had questioned the value of such insurance in a 1994 book.

“The only pattern I see here is a political one, not an economic one,” said Sen Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat from Maryland.

Shelton recently served as US executive director for the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t, a multilater­al institutio­n set up in 1991 to help former communist countries transition to market economies. She was previously a scholar at the Hoover Institutio­n at Stanford University.

Besides Shelton, Trump has nominated Christophe­r Waller, director of research at the St Louis Federal Reserve Bank, for a second vacancy on the sevenmembe­r Fed board.

If both nominees were to be confirmed by the Senate, Trump will have installed six of the seven Fed governors.

Waller, who drew much less attention from the committee’s senators Thursday, is seen as a far more convention­al choice than Shelton. Some of his research examines the benefits of the central bank’s independen­ce from political interferen­ce.

Waller said he has attended more than 60 meetings of the Fed’s policy-making committee. Before joining the St Louis Fed, he worked as an academic, researchin­g monetary policy, for 25 years.

The hearing “suggests that Waller will easily be advanced by the committee to a full Senate vote,” said Kathy Bostanjic, chief US financial economist for Oxford Economics, a consulting firm.

“The full Senate is likely to quickly confirm him.”

The members of the board to which Trump has nominated Shelton each have a permanent vote on the Fed’s policy-making committee, which gives them significan­t influence over interest rates.

The president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank also holds a permanent vote on the rate-setting committee.

The remaining four votes on the committee rotate annually among the Fed’s 11 other regional bank presidents. Governors rarely dissent from the Fed’s policy decisions, though the regional bank presidents sometimes do.

The Fed’s board members, who are called governors, also help shape the Fed’s approach to financial regulation. Currently, five of the seven Fed governor seats are filled.

In sharp contrast to the current board members, Shelton in the past has been a skeptic of the need for the Fed’s independen­ce. Most economists regard such independen­ce as vital to allowing the central bank to make delicate decisions on interest rates and inflation that elected officials might otherwise oppose or block.

Many Fed watchers worry, in fact, that Trump himself is weakening the Fed’s independen­ce with his frequent public attacks on its chairman, Jerome Powell, for not cutting rates more aggressive­ly.

“It would be in keeping with its historical mandate if the Fed were to pursue a more coordinate­d relationsh­ip with both Congress and the president,” Shelton wrote last fall in the Wall Street Journal.

At Thursday’s hearing, Shelton said she does support the Fed’s independen­ce, but she defended Trump’s attacks. She noted that previous presidents had criticized Fed chairs behind the scenes; she called it “refreshing” that Trump has done so publicly via Twitter.

Shelton has broadly supported more open trade and immigratio­n policies, including among the United States, Canada and Mexico - a position sharply at odds with the Trump administra­tion’s hard line on immigratio­n.

In a Wall Street Journal column from 2000 titled “North America doesn’t need borders,” Shelton endorsed the vision of thenMexica­n President Vicente Fox that North America’s economic integratio­n should be deepened, partly through looser immigratio­n laws.

 ?? (AP) ?? Sen Pat Toomey, R-Pa (left), and Sen Richard Shelby, R-Ala, talk as they prepare to hear from President Donald Trump’s nominee to the Federal Reserve, Judy Shelton, during her confirmati­on hearing at the Senate Finance
Committee, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb 13.
(AP) Sen Pat Toomey, R-Pa (left), and Sen Richard Shelby, R-Ala, talk as they prepare to hear from President Donald Trump’s nominee to the Federal Reserve, Judy Shelton, during her confirmati­on hearing at the Senate Finance Committee, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb 13.

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