Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Representative Ron Paul’s proposal to allow audits of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy is “incredibly dangerous” and could stoke inflation, said Frederic Mishkin, a former Fed governor.
“The Ron Paul bill is incredibly dangerous,” said Mishkin, who is now a Columbia University professor, in a Bloomberg Radio interview. “It is remarkable the kind of attacks that are occurring on Fed independence.”
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke has opposed the proposal by Paul, a Texas Republican, saying it might open the door to interference in monetary policy. A separate proposal in the Senate backed by Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd would strip the Fed of authority to supervise banks.
Paul’s bill “would be very dangerous in terms of promoting inflation,” Mishkin said. “If you make the central bank beholden to politicians on a short-run basis, you get very bad outcomes: high inflation and less of the ability to deal with shocks like the ones we had recently.”
Bernanke goes before Dodd’s Senate panel Dec. 3 in a confirmation hearing for his second term as central bank chief. He is likely to face questions about the central bank’s record of supervision during the financial crisis and its role in taxpayer-funded rescues of firms including insurer American International Group Inc.
The Fed chairman, in a Nov. 29 commentary in the Washington Post, said curbing the central bank’s authority to supervise the banking system and tampering with its independence would “seriously impair” economic stability in the U.S.
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It's dangerous to know what the Fed has been doing for so long?
So be it.
This administration promised 'transparency' and it ought to be delivered in some form.