Congress has chance to help undo some damage

Published 10:12 am Thursday, November 18, 2010

George Will, syndicated columnist

WASHINGTON — This lame-duck Congress — its mandate exhausted, many of its members repudiated — should merely fund the government for a few months at current spending levels with a “continuing resolution,” then apologize for almost everything else it has done, and depart. If, however, the 111th Congress wants to make amends, it should repeal something the 95th did.

The Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act of 1978 gave the Federal Reserve a “dual mandate.” Although the central bank is a creature of Congress, it is, in trying to fulfill this mandate, becoming a fourth branch of government.

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The Fed’s large, and sufficient, original mission was to maintain price stability — to preserve the currency as a store of value. “Mission creep” usually results from a metabolic urge of government agencies. The Fed, however, had institutional imperialism thrust upon it when Congress — forgetting, not for the first or last time, its core functions — directed the Fed “to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long-term interest rates.”

Those running the Fed, says Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., dryly, “are really putting the fiat in fiat money” — money backed by nothing but trust in the judgment and good faith of the government creating it. The Fed is doing what the executive branch wants done but that the legislative branch will not do — another stimulus.

By seeming to do the president’s bidding, the Fed stumbled into a diplomatic thicket. While the president was impotently accusing China of keeping the value of its currency low in order to facilitate exports, many nations were construing America’s quantitative easing as similarly motivated currency manipulation. The primary purpose of quantitative easing might be to force down the yields of government bonds in order to induce investors to invest in corporate bonds and stocks. It is a pointless parsing of words for Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to say that America will never weaken its currency “as a tool to gain competitive advantage.”

In a 2007 speech, Frederic S. Mishkin, then of the Fed’s Board of Governors, lauded the dual mandate as “consistent with” the Fed’s “ultimate purpose of fostering economic prosperity and social welfare.” Note how easily the mandate to “maximize employment” becomes the grandiose, and certainly political, function of promoting, and therefore defining, “social welfare.”

Mishkin said “the rationale for maximizing employment is fairly obvious”: “The alternative situation — high unemployment — is associated with human misery, including lower living standards and increases in poverty as well as social pathologies such as loss of self-esteem, a higher incidence of divorce, increased rates of violent crime, and even suicide.” Obviously some of the central bank’s governors have been encouraged by Congress to think of themselves as more than mere bankers — as wizards of social control, even regulating society’s reservoirs of self-esteem.

The Fed cannot perform such a fundamentally political function and forever remain insulated from politics. Only repeal of the dual mandate can rescue the Fed from the ruinous role as the savior of the economy.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has wistfully imagined a day when economists might get “themselves thought of as humble, competent people on a level with dentists.” But that day will not dawn as long as the dual mandate makes it almost mandatory for him to vow that the Fed “can assist keeping employment close to its maximum level through adroit policies.” Even defining “maximum employment” is a political as well as technical act.

Ryan, incoming chairman of the House Budget Committee, says the Fed thinks it can adroitly “put the cruise missile through the goal posts.” But how adroit can Fed management of the economy be? No complex economy can be both managed and efficient, meaning dynamic. To think otherwise is what Friedrich Hayek called “the fatal conceit.” That conceit can be fatal to the Fed’s independence.