Myth of Fed 'groupthink' not apparent in bank regulation

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The Federal Reserve has a reputation for making decisions on a near-unanimous basis. Fed insiders laud it as “consensus-driven” policy; critics call it “groupthink.” The criticism has ramped up amid the Trump administration’s efforts to disrupt Fed consensus by placing Stephen Moore and Herman Cain, both friends of the president, onto the Fed board.

While Fed officials acknowledge that monetary policy decisions rarely face dissent, the Fed board has faced some disagreement as of late in the regulatory space, where the pendulum is swinging in favor of softer banking regulations.

Lael Brainard, the last remaining Fed governor not to have been nominated by President Donald Trump, has dissented on regulatory matters five times in just the last year, amid the central bank’s efforts to pare back some post-crisis bank rules.

‘I see no change in the financial environment’

Although outnumbered by the existing Trump appointees who have advocated for a lighter regulatory touch, Brainard’s outspoken criticism speaks to a difference in opinion over the appropriate way to police the banking industry.

Most recently, she dissented against a proposal to reduce requirements on “living wills,” an annual submission detailing a bank’s strategy for winding down its assets in the event of financial distress or failure. The exercise is designed to make sure banks can manage insolvency without risking contagion to the rest of the banking industry.

FILE PHOTO --  Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard delivers remarks on "Coming of Age in the Great Recession" at the Federal Reserve's ninth biennial Community Development Research Conference focusing on economic mobility in Washington, DC, U.S. on April 2, 2015. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
FILE PHOTO -- Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard delivers remarks on "Coming of Age in the Great Recession" at the Federal Reserve's ninth biennial Community Development Research Conference focusing on economic mobility in Washington, DC, U.S. on April 2, 2015. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo

Currently, banks above $50 billion must submit living wills once a year. But under the proposal released Monday, banks with between $100 billion to $250 billion in assets will be exempt from the requirements entirely, and banks with between $250 billion to $700 billion would only file a full submission every six years. Banks above $700 billion, covering the eight largest U.S. banks, will submit plans every four years.

Voting against the proposal, Brainard warned that the banks benefiting from the proposal are still of systemic risk to the financial system.

“I see no change in the financial environment that would require us to weaken protections that are vital to a safe and sound financial system and ensure large banks—and not taxpayers—are on the hook,” Brainard said in a statement.

5 Brainard dissents in just the past year

In the last two years, Washington, D.C. has been in the process of reviewing the bank regulations put in place after the financial crisis. When President Donald Trump and a Republican-controlled Congress took power, lawmakers began a review of the Dodd-Frank post-crisis regulatory framework, suggesting that some of the rules went too far and constrained bank lending in the U.S.