[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 90 (Wednesday, June 11, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H5253-H5254]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FEDERAL RESERVE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Woodall) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I have the Federal Reserve on my mind this
morning.
You can't really get through the Federal Reserve in 5 minutes, Mr.
Speaker, but I wanted to start down the road today because I saw a
headline Bloomberg reported to say that what had been intended to be
the beginning of an unwinding of a Federal Reserve balance sheet wasn't
going to occur in the timely fashion that had been intended. This was
news to me, based on what we have seen in the Budget Committee.
I have with me this morning the Federal Reserve Act authorization.
Folks often wonder where the Federal Reserve comes from. The truth is
it comes from the Federal Reserve Act.
I point to section 2A, ``Monetary policy objectives.'' Its says that:
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and the Open
Market Committee shall maintain long-run growth of the
monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the
economy's long-run potential to increase production, so as to
promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable
prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.
Now, I know there are some high school economic students out there
who are thinking: Hey, wait a minute. Can you really promote stable
prices, maximum employment, and moderate long-term interest rates with
the same set of policies?
I share that high school economics concern about whether or not those
three goals can be pursued collectively, but this is the mandate the
Federal Reserve has, and this is why the Federal Reserve is involved in
what they are involved in.
Now, Mr. Speaker, what I have here is the Federal Reserve balance
sheet. It goes back to 2007, back when the Federal Reserve balance
sheet was relatively stable. By stable, I mean it was at about $800
billion--$800 billion, the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve.
I want you to watch on the chart as we go out through these stable
times, right up until the balance sheet triples in 2008. Now, when we
are trying to promote economic stability, the tripling of any
government balance sheet should be of concern. The Federal Reserve
balance sheet triples in 2008.
Mr. Speaker, I hold in my hand a hearing transcript from my very
first month on the Budget Committee. That occurred 3 years ago. It was
2011, and Chairman Paul Ryan was questioning Ben Bernanke, then the
Federal Reserve chairman.
[[Page H5254]]
Chairman Ryan said, ``I want to talk to you about QE2''--quantitative
easing 2--and what it is doing to the American economy.
Chairman Bernanke's response was this, Mr. Speaker. He said:
What we are doing here is a temporary measure which will be
reversed, so that at the end of this process, the money
supply will be normalized, the amount of the Fed's balance
sheet will be normalized, and there will be no permanent
increase, either in money outstanding, in the Fed's balance
sheet, or in inflation.
That was February 2011. I point to February 2011 on my chart here,
Mr. Speaker, where the Federal Reserve chairman said that the balance
sheet would begin to normalize.
What I want you to observe in the intervening months between February
2011, when normalization was discussed and projected, we have actually
seen the balance sheet increase almost 100 percent. Today, we are met
with the news that a return to a normalized balance sheet may be
delayed even further.
Mr. Speaker, these are decisions on which no Member of this Chamber
votes. These are decisions on which no member of America's board of
directors--being the American voters--have a voice, and this is a
decision that will either rescue or destroy the economic future of this
country.
It needs to be discussed more often, Mr. Speaker. I intend to bring
these issues to the floor on a regular basis. No harm will come from
shining the bright light of transparency on these Federal Reserve
decisions. No harm will come from incorporating 330 million Americans
into this debate about America's economic security.
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