The Regulatory Record of the Greenspan Fed

The Fed's two main roles in the economy are (1) setting monetary policy and (2) regulating the financial system via both the regulation and supervision of Fed member banks (which are supervised by the regional Feds) and the regulation and supervision of bank holding companies (which are supervised by the Board of Governors, which Alan Greenspan has chaired since 1987). The structure and authority of the Fed in performing its monetary function is well understood and often commented upon (e.g., the timing, membership, voting rules, and press releases related to FOMC meetings). The Fed's role in banking regulation, or more broadly in financial regulation, receives less attention, is not as well understood, and has been much more subject to change over time.

The Fed plays an important role as a regulatory policy advocate in Washington, as a writer of regulations, and as a supervisor. It also represents the United States at the Basel Committee, which sets international prudential regulatory standards for banks. These regulatory functions are performed by the Fed alongside many other (sometimes "competing") financial regulators--the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and the state banking and insurance authorities, as well as the courts. This is an activity that has occupied a great deal of time and energy at the Fed, as the structure and rules of the financial regulation game have changed dramatically and much more frequently in the U.S. over the past two decades than the structure and rules for monetary policy. . . .

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Charles W. Calomiris is a visiting scholar at AEI.

About the Author

 

Charles W.
Calomiris
  • Charles W. Calomiris, who codirected AEI's Financial Deregulation Project until 2007, is concurrently the Henry Kaufman Professor of Financial Institutions at Columbia Business School. He is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, a member of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee and the Financial Economists Roundtable, and the coordinator of the "Bank Performance and the Economy" program at the Center for Financial Research at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. His research at AEI spans several areas, from banking and corporate finance to financial history and monetary economics. Mr. Calomiris also served on the 2000 International Financial Institution Advisory Commission. Known as the Meltzer Commission, this congressionally mandated group recommended specific reforms of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the regional development banks, and the World Trade Organization to the U.S. government.
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    Email: ccalomiris@aei.org
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