The Federal Reserve, through its
extensive network of consultants, visiting scholars, alumni and
staff economists, so thoroughly dominates the field of economics
that real criticism of the central bank has become a career
liability for members of the profession, an investigation by the
Huffington Post has found.
This dominance helps explain how, even
after the FED failed to foresee the greatest economic collapse since
the Great Depression, the central bank has largely escaped criticism
from academic economists.
In the Fed's thrall, the economists
missed it, too.
"The FED has a lock on the economics
world," says Joshua Rosner, a Wall Street analyst who correctly
called the meltdown. "There is no room for other views, which I
guess is why economists got it so wrong."
One critical way the FED exerts control
on academic economists is through its relationships with the field's
gatekeepers.
For instance, at the Journal of Monetary
Economics, a must-publish venue for rising economists, more than
half of the editorial board members are currently on the FED payroll
- and the rest have been in the past.
The FED failed to see the housing bubble
as it happened, insisting that the rise in housing prices was
normal.
In 2004, after "flipping" had become a
term cops and janitors were using to describe the way to get rich in
real estate, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said that,
"a national severe price distortion
[is] most unlikely."
A year later, current Chairman Ben
Bernanke said that the boom "largely reflect strong economic
fundamentals."
The FED also failed to sufficiently
regulate major financial institutions, with Greenspan - and the
dominant economists - believing that the banks would regulate
themselves in their own self-interest.
Despite all this, Bernanke has been
nominated for a second term by President Obama.
In the field of economics, the chairman
remains a much-heralded figure, lauded for reaction to a crisis
generated, in the first place, by the FED itself. Congress is even
considering legislation to greatly expand the powers of the FED to
systemically regulate the financial industry.
"How Did Economists Get It So
Wrong?" Krugman concludes that "[e]conomics, as a field, got in
trouble because economists were seduced by the vision of a
perfect, frictionless market system."
So who seduced them?
The FED did it.
Three Decades of
Domination
The FED has been dominating the
profession for about three decades.
"For the economics profession that
came out of the [second world] war, the Federal Reserve was not
a very important place as far as they were concerned, and their
views on monetary policy were not framed by a working
relationship with the Federal Reserve. So I would date it to
maybe the mid-1970s," says University of Texas economics
professor - and FED critic - James Galbraith.
"The generation that I grew up
under, which included both Milton Friedman on the right and Jim
Tobin on the left, were independent of the FED. They sent
students to the FED and they influenced the FED, but there
wasn't a culture of consulting, and it wasn't the same vast
network of professional economists working there."
But by 1993, when former FED Chairman Greenspan provided the House banking committee with a breakdown of
the number of economists on contract or employed by the FED, he
reported that 189 worked for the board itself and another 171 for
the various regional banks.
Adding in statisticians, support staff
and "officers" - who are generally also economists - the total
number came to 730. And then there were the contracts. Over a
three-year period ending in October 1994, the FED awarded 305
contracts to 209 professors worth a total of $3 million.
Just how dominant is the FED today?
The Federal Reserve's Board of Governors
employs 220 PhD economists and a host of researchers and support
staff, according to a FED spokeswoman. The 12 regional banks employ
scores more. (HuffPost placed calls to them but was unable to get
exact numbers.)
The FED also doles out millions of
dollars in contracts to economists for consulting assignments,
papers, presentations, workshops, and that plum gig known as a
"visiting scholarship."
A FED spokeswoman says that exact
figures for the number of economists contracted with weren't
available.
But, she says, the Federal Reserve spent $389.2 million
in 2008 on "monetary and economic policy," money spent on analysis,
research, data gathering, and studies on market structure; $433
million is budgeted for 2009.
That's a lot of money for a relatively
small number of economists. According to the American Economic
Association, a total of only,
487 economists list, "monetary
policy, central banking, and the supply of money and
credit," as either their primary or secondary specialty
310 list "money and interest
rates"
244 list "macroeconomic policy
formation [and] aspects of public finance and general
policy"
The National Association of Business
Economists tells HuffPost that 611 of its roughly 2,400 members are
part of their "Financial Roundtable," the closest way they can
approximate a focus on monetary policy and central banking.
Robert Auerbach, a former
investigator with the House banking committee, spent years looking
into the workings of the FED and published much of what he found in
the 2008 book, "Deception
and Abuse at the FED".
A chapter in that book,
excerpted here, provided the impetus for this investigation.
Auerbach found that in 1992, roughly 968
members of the AEA designated "domestic monetary and financial
theory and institutions" as their primary field, and 717 designated
it as their secondary field.
Combining his numbers with the current
ones from the AEA and NABE, it's fair to conclude that there are
something like 1,000 to 1,500 monetary economists working across the
country. Add up the 220 economist jobs at the Board of Governors
along with regional bank hires and contracted economists, and the
FED employs or contracts with easily 500 economists at any given
time.
Add in those who have previously worked
for the FED - or who hope to one day soon - and you've accounted for
a very significant majority of the field.
"problems associated with the Fed's
employing or contracting with large numbers of economists" arise
"when these economists testify as witnesses at legislative
hearings or as experts at judicial proceedings, and when they
publish their research and views on FED policies, including in
FED publications."
Gatekeepers On
The Payroll
The FED keeps many of the influential
editors of prominent academic journals on its payroll. It is common
for a journal editor to review submissions dealing with FED policy
while also taking the bank's money.
A HuffPost review of seven top journals
found that 84 of the 190 editorial board members were affiliated
with the Federal Reserve in one way or another.
"Try to publish an article critical
of the FED with an editor who works for the FED," says
Galbraith.
And the journals, in turn, determine
which economists get tenure and what ideas are considered
respectable.
The pharmaceutical industry has
similarly worked to control key medical journals, but that involves
several companies. In the field of economics, it's just the FED.
Being on the FED payroll isn't just
about the money, either. A relationship with the FED carries
prestige; invitations to FED conferences and offers of visiting
scholarships with the bank signal a rising star or an economist who
has arrived.
Affiliations with the FED have become
the oxygen of academic life for monetary economists.
"It's very important, if you are
tenure track and don't have tenure, to show that you are valued
by the Federal Reserve," says Jane D'Arista, a FED critic and an
economist with the Political Economy Research Institute at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Robert King, editor in chief of the
Journal of Monetary Economics and a visiting scholar at the
Richmond
Federal Reserve Bank, dismisses the notion that his journal was
influenced by its FED connections.
"I think that the suggestion is a
silly one, based on my own experience at least," he wrote in an
e-mail.
Galbraith, a FED critic, has seen the
Fed's influence on academia first hand.
He and co-authors Olivier Giovannoni and
Ann Russo found that in the year before a presidential election,
there is a significantly tighter monetary policy coming from the FED
if a Democrat is in office and a significantly looser policy if a
Republican is in office. The effects are both statistically
significant, allowing for controls, and economically important.
They submitted a paper with their
findings to the Review of Economics and Statistics in 2008, but the
paper was rejected.
"The editor assigned to it turned
out to be a fellow at the FED and that was after I requested
that it not be assigned to someone affiliated with the FED,"
Galbraith says.
Publishing in top journals is, like in
any discipline, the key to getting tenure. Indeed, pursuing tenure
ironically requires a kind of fealty to the dominant economic
ideology that is the precise opposite of the purpose of tenure,
which is to protect academics who present oppositional perspectives.
And while most academic disciplines and
top-tier journals are controlled by some defining paradigm, in an
academic field like poetry, that situation can do no harm other than
to, perhaps, a forest of trees.
Economics, unfortunately, collides with
reality - as it did with the Fed's incorrect reading of the housing
bubble and failure to regulate financial institutions. Neither was a
matter of incompetence, but both resulted from the Fed's
unchallenged assumptions about the way the market worked.
Even the late Milton Friedman,
whose monetary economic theories heavily influenced Greenspan, was
concerned about the stifled nature of the debate.
Friedman, in a 1993 letter to Auerbach
that the author quotes in his book, argued that the FED practice was
harming objectivity:
"I cannot disagree with you that
having something like 500 economists is extremely unhealthy. As
you say, it is not conducive to independent, objective research.
You and I know there has been
censorship of the material published.
Equally important, the location of
the economists in the Federal Reserve has had a significant
influence on the kind of research they do, biasing that research
toward noncontroversial technical papers on method as opposed to
substantive papers on policy and results," Friedman wrote.
Greenspan told Congress in October 2008
that he was in a state of "shocked disbelief" and that the "whole
intellectual edifice" had "collapsed."
House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) followed
up:
"In other words, you found that your
view of the world, your ideology, was not right, it was not
working."
"Absolutely, precisely," Greenspan
replied. "You know, that's precisely the reason I was shocked,
because I have been going for 40 years or more with very
considerable evidence that it was working exceptionally well."
But, if the intellectual edifice has
collapsed, the intellectual infrastructure remains in place.
The same economists who provided
Greenspan his "very considerable evidence" are still running the
journals and still analyzing the world using the same models that
were incapable of seeing the credit boom and the coming collapse.
Joshua Rosner, the Wall Street analyst who
foresaw the crash, says that the Fed's ideological dominance of the
journals hampered his attempt to warn his colleagues about what was
to come.
Rosner wrote a strikingly
prescient paper in 2001 arguing that relaxed lending standards
and other factors would lead to a boom in housing prices over the
next several years, but that the growth would be highly susceptible
to an economic disruption because it was fundamentally unsound.
He expanded on those ideas over the next
few years, connecting the dots and concluding that the coming
housing collapse would wreak havoc on the collateralized debt
obligation (CDO) and mortgage backed securities (MBS) markets, which
would have a ripple effect on the rest of the economy.
That, of course, is exactly what
happened and it took the FED and the economics field completely by
surprise.
"What you're doing is, actually, in
order to get published, having to whittle down or narrow what
might otherwise be oppositional or expansionary views," says
Rosner.
"The only way you can actually get in a journal is by
subscribing to the views of one of the journals."
When Rosner was casting his paper on
CDOs and MBSs about, he knew he needed an academic economist to
co-author the paper for a journal to consider it.
Seven economists
turned him down.
"You don't believe that markets are
efficient?" he says they asked, telling him the paper was
"outside the bounds" of what could be published.
"I would say 'Markets are efficient
when there's equal access to information, but that doesn't
exist,'" he recalls.
The CDO and MBS markets froze because,
as the housing market crashed, buyers didn't trust that they had
reliable information about them - precisely the case Rosner had been
making.
He eventually found a co-author, Joseph
Mason, an associate Professor of Finance at Drexel University LeBow
College of Business, a senior fellow at the Wharton School, and a
visiting scholar at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
But the pair could only land their
papers with the conservative Hudson Institute.
Together, the two papers offer a better
analysis of what led to the crash than the economic journals have
managed to put together - and they were published by a non-PhD
before the crisis.
Not As Simple As
A Pay-Off
Economist
Rob Johnson serves on the UN
Commission of Experts on Finance and International Monetary Reform
and was a top economist on the Senate banking committee under both a
Democratic and Republican chairman.
He says that the consulting gigs
shouldn't be looked at,
"like it's a payoff, like money. I
think it's more being one of, part of, a club - being respected,
invited to the conferences, have a hearing with the chairman,
having all the prestige dimensions, as much as a paycheck."
The Fed's hiring of so many economists
can be looked at in several ways, Johnson says, because the
institution does, of course, need talented analysts.
"You can look at it from a
telescope, either direction. One, you can say well they're
reaching out, they've got a big budget and what they're doing,
I'd say, is canvassing as broad a range of talent," he says.
"You might call that the 'healthy
hypothesis'."
The other hypothesis, he says,
"is that they're essentially using
taxpayer money to wrap their arms around everybody that's a
critic and therefore muffle or silence the debate. And I would
say that probably both dimensions are operative, in reality."
To get a mainstream take, HuffPost
called monetary economists at random from the list as members of the
AEA.
"I think there is a pretty good
number of professors of economics who want a very limited use of
monetary policy and I don't think that that necessarily has a
negative impact on their careers," said Ahmed Ehsan, reached at
the economics department at James Madison University.
"It's quite possible that if they
have some new ideas, that might be attractive to the Federal
Reserve."
Ahmed Ehsan, reflecting on his
own career and those of his students, allowed that there is, in
fact, something to what the FED critics are saying.
"I don't think [the FED has too much
influence], but then my area is monetary economics and I know my
own professors, who were really well known when I was at
Michigan State, my adviser, he ended up at the St. Louis FED,"
he recalls.
"He did lots of work. He was a
product of the time...so there is some evidence, but it's not an
overwhelming thing."
There's definitely prestige in spending
a few years at the FED that can give a boost to an academic career,
he added.
"It's one of the better career moves
for lots of undergraduate students. It's very competitive."
Press officers for the Federal Reserve's
board of governors provided some background information for this
article, but declined to make anyone available to comment on its
substance.
The Fed's
Intolerance For Dissent
When dissent has arisen, the FED has
dealt with it like any other institution that cherishes homogeneity.
Take the case of Alan Blinder.
Though he's squarely within the
mainstream and considered one of the great economic minds of his
generation, he lasted a mere year and a half as vice chairman of the
FED, leaving in January 1996.
Rob Johnson, who watched the Blinder
ordeal, says Blinder made the mistake of behaving as if the FED was
a place where competing ideas and assumptions were debated.
"Sociologically, what was happening
was the FED staff was really afraid of Blinder. At some level,
as an applied empirical economist, Alan Blinder is really
brilliant," says Johnson.
In closed-door meetings, Blinder did
what so few do: challenged assumptions.
"The FED staff would come out and
their ritual is: Greenspan has kind of told them what to
conclude and they produce studies in which they conclude this.
And Blinder treated it more like an
open academic debate when he first got there and he'd come out
and say,
'Well, that's not true. If you
change this assumption and change this assumption and use
this kind of assumption you get a completely different
result.'
And it just created a stir inside -
it was sort of like the whole pipeline of
Greenspan-arriving-at-decisions was disrupted."
It didn't sit well with Greenspan or his
staff.
"A lot of senior staff... were
pissed off about Blinder - how should we say? - not playing by
the customs that they were accustomed to," Johnson says.
And celebrity is no shield against FED
excommunication.
Paul Krugman, in fact, has gotten
rough treatment.
"I've been blackballed from the
FED
summer conference at Jackson Hole, which I used to be a regular
at, ever since I criticized him," Krugman said of Greenspan in a
2007 interview with
Pacifica Radio's Democracy Now!
"Nobody really wants to cross him."
An invitation to the annual conference,
or some other blessing from the FED, is a signal to the economic
profession that you're a certified member of the club.
Even Krugman seems a bit burned by the
slight.
"And two years ago," he said in
2007, "the conference was devoted to a field, new economic
geography, that I invented, and I wasn't invited."
Three years after the conference,
Krugman won a Nobel Prize in 2008 for his work in economic
geography.
One Journal, In
Detail
The Huffington Post reviewed the
mastheads of,
the American Journal of
Economics
the Journal of Economic
Perspectives
Journal of Economic Literature
the American Economic Journal:
Applied Economics
American Economic Journal:
Economic Policy
the Journal of Political Economy
the Journal of Monetary
Economics
HuffPost interns Googled around looking
for resumes and otherwise searched for FED connections for the 190
people on those mastheads.
Of the 84 that were affiliated with the
Federal Reserve at one point in their careers, 21 were on the FED
payroll even as they served as gatekeepers at prominent journals.
At the Journal of Monetary Economics,
every single member of the editorial board is or has been affiliated
with the FED and 14 of the 26 board members are presently on the FED
payroll.
After the top editor, King, comes senior
associate editor Marianne Baxter, who has written papers for the
Chicago and Minneapolis banks and was a visiting scholar at the
Minneapolis bank in '84, '85, at the Richmond bank in '97, and at
the board itself in '87. She was an advisor to the president of the
New York bank from '02-'05.
Tim Geithner, now the Treasury
Secretary, became president of the New York bank in '03.
The senior associate editors:
Janice C Eberly was a FED
visiting-scholar at Philadelphia ('94), Minneapolis ('97)
and the board ('97).
Martin Eichenbaum has written
several papers for the FED and is a consultant to the
Chicago and Atlanta banks.
Sergio Rebelo has written for
and was previously a consultant to the board
Stephen Williamson has written
for the Cleveland, Minneapolis and Richmond banks, he worked
in the Minneapolis bank's research department from '85-'87,
he's on the editorial board of the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis Review, is the co-organizer of the '09 St. Louis
Federal Reserve Bank annual economic policy conference and
the co-organizer of the same bank's '08 conference on Money,
Credit, and Policy, and has been a visiting scholar at the
Richmond bank ever since '98
And then there are the associate
editors.
Klaus Adam is a visiting scholar
at the San Francisco bank
Yongsung Chang is a research
associate at the Cleveland bank and has been working with
the FED in one position or another since '01
Mario Crucini was a visiting
scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in '08 and
has been a senior fellow at the Dallas bank since that year
Huberto Ennis is a senior
economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, a
position he's held since '00
Jonathan Heathcote is a senior
economist at the Minneapolis bank and has been a visiting
scholar three times dating back to '01
Ricardo Lagos is a visiting
scholar at the New York bank, a former senior economist for
the Minneapolis bank and a visiting scholar at that bank and
Cleveland's. In fact, he was a visiting scholar at both the
Cleveland and New York banks in '07 and '08. Edward Nelson
was the assistant vice president of the St Louis bank from
'03-'09
Esteban Rossi-Hansberg was a
visiting scholar at the Philadelphia bank from '05-'09 and
similarly served at the Richmond, Minneapolis and New York
banks.
Pierre-Daniel Sarte is a senior
economist at the Richmond bank, a position he's held since
'96
Frank Schorfheide has been a
visiting scholar at the Philadelphia bank since '03 and at
the New York bank since '07. He's done four such stints at
the Atlanta bank and scholared for the board in '03
Alexander Wolman has been a
senior economist at the Richmond bank since 1989
Here is the complete response from King,
the journal's editor in chief:
"I think that the suggestion is a
silly one, based on my own experience at least.
In a 1988 article for AEI later
republished in the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Review,
Marvin Goodfriend (then at FRB Richmond and now at Carnegie
Mellon) and I argued that it was very important for the FED to
separate monetary policy decisions (setting of interest rates)
and banking policy decisions (loans to banks, via the discount
window and otherwise).
We argued further that there was
little positive case for the FED to be involved in the latter: broadbased liquidity could always be provided by the former. We
also argued that moral hazard was a cost of banking
intervention.
"Ben Bernanke understands this distinction well: he and other
members of the FOMC have read my perspective and sometimes use
exactly this distinction between monetary and banking policies.
In difficult times, Bernanke and his
fellow FOMC members have chosen to involve the FED in major
financial market interventions, well beyond the traditional
banking area, a position that attracts plenty of criticism and
support. JME and other economics major journals would certainly
publish exciting articles that fell between these two distinct
perspectives: no intervention and extensive intervention.
An upcoming Carnegie-Rochester
conference, with its proceeding published in JME, will host a
debate on 'The Future of Central Banking'.
"You may use only the entire quotation above or no quotation at
all."
Auerbach, shown King's e-mail, says it's
just this simple:
"If you're on the FED payroll
there's a conflict of interest."
by Ryan Grim
October 23, 2009
from HuffingtonPost Website
The Federal Reserve, through its extensive network of consultants, visiting scholars, alumni and staff economists, so thoroughly dominates the field of economics that real criticism of the central bank has become a career liability for members of the profession, an investigation by the Huffington Post has found.
This dominance helps explain how, even after the FED failed to foresee the greatest economic collapse since the Great Depression, the central bank has largely escaped criticism from academic economists.
In the Fed's thrall, the economists missed it, too.
One critical way the FED exerts control on academic economists is through its relationships with the field's gatekeepers.
For instance, at the Journal of Monetary Economics, a must-publish venue for rising economists, more than half of the editorial board members are currently on the FED payroll - and the rest have been in the past.
The FED failed to see the housing bubble as it happened, insisting that the rise in housing prices was normal.
In 2004, after "flipping" had become a term cops and janitors were using to describe the way to get rich in real estate, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said that,
A year later, current Chairman Ben Bernanke said that the boom "largely reflect strong economic fundamentals."
The FED also failed to sufficiently regulate major financial institutions, with Greenspan - and the dominant economists - believing that the banks would regulate themselves in their own self-interest.
Despite all this, Bernanke has been nominated for a second term by President Obama.
In the field of economics, the chairman remains a much-heralded figure, lauded for reaction to a crisis generated, in the first place, by the FED itself. Congress is even considering legislation to greatly expand the powers of the FED to systemically regulate the financial industry.
Paul Krugman, in Sunday's New York Times magazine, did his own autopsy of economics, asking,
So who seduced them?
The FED did it.
Three Decades of Domination
The FED has been dominating the profession for about three decades.
But by 1993, when former FED Chairman Greenspan provided the House banking committee with a breakdown of the number of economists on contract or employed by the FED, he reported that 189 worked for the board itself and another 171 for the various regional banks.
Adding in statisticians, support staff and "officers" - who are generally also economists - the total number came to 730. And then there were the contracts. Over a three-year period ending in October 1994, the FED awarded 305 contracts to 209 professors worth a total of $3 million.
Just how dominant is the FED today?
The Federal Reserve's Board of Governors employs 220 PhD economists and a host of researchers and support staff, according to a FED spokeswoman. The 12 regional banks employ scores more. (HuffPost placed calls to them but was unable to get exact numbers.)
The FED also doles out millions of dollars in contracts to economists for consulting assignments, papers, presentations, workshops, and that plum gig known as a "visiting scholarship."
A FED spokeswoman says that exact figures for the number of economists contracted with weren't available.
But, she says, the Federal Reserve spent $389.2 million in 2008 on "monetary and economic policy," money spent on analysis, research, data gathering, and studies on market structure; $433 million is budgeted for 2009.
That's a lot of money for a relatively small number of economists. According to the American Economic Association, a total of only,
The National Association of Business Economists tells HuffPost that 611 of its roughly 2,400 members are part of their "Financial Roundtable," the closest way they can approximate a focus on monetary policy and central banking.
Robert Auerbach, a former investigator with the House banking committee, spent years looking into the workings of the FED and published much of what he found in the 2008 book, "Deception and Abuse at the FED".
A chapter in that book, excerpted here, provided the impetus for this investigation.
Auerbach found that in 1992, roughly 968 members of the AEA designated "domestic monetary and financial theory and institutions" as their primary field, and 717 designated it as their secondary field.
Combining his numbers with the current ones from the AEA and NABE, it's fair to conclude that there are something like 1,000 to 1,500 monetary economists working across the country. Add up the 220 economist jobs at the Board of Governors along with regional bank hires and contracted economists, and the FED employs or contracts with easily 500 economists at any given time.
Add in those who have previously worked for the FED - or who hope to one day soon - and you've accounted for a very significant majority of the field.
Auerbach concludes that the,
Gatekeepers On The Payroll
The FED keeps many of the influential editors of prominent academic journals on its payroll. It is common for a journal editor to review submissions dealing with FED policy while also taking the bank's money.
A HuffPost review of seven top journals found that 84 of the 190 editorial board members were affiliated with the Federal Reserve in one way or another.
And the journals, in turn, determine which economists get tenure and what ideas are considered respectable.
The pharmaceutical industry has similarly worked to control key medical journals, but that involves several companies. In the field of economics, it's just the FED.
Being on the FED payroll isn't just about the money, either. A relationship with the FED carries prestige; invitations to FED conferences and offers of visiting scholarships with the bank signal a rising star or an economist who has arrived.
Affiliations with the FED have become the oxygen of academic life for monetary economists.
Robert King, editor in chief of the Journal of Monetary Economics and a visiting scholar at the Richmond Federal Reserve Bank, dismisses the notion that his journal was influenced by its FED connections.
Galbraith, a FED critic, has seen the Fed's influence on academia first hand.
He and co-authors Olivier Giovannoni and Ann Russo found that in the year before a presidential election, there is a significantly tighter monetary policy coming from the FED if a Democrat is in office and a significantly looser policy if a Republican is in office. The effects are both statistically significant, allowing for controls, and economically important.
They submitted a paper with their findings to the Review of Economics and Statistics in 2008, but the paper was rejected.
Publishing in top journals is, like in any discipline, the key to getting tenure. Indeed, pursuing tenure ironically requires a kind of fealty to the dominant economic ideology that is the precise opposite of the purpose of tenure, which is to protect academics who present oppositional perspectives.
And while most academic disciplines and top-tier journals are controlled by some defining paradigm, in an academic field like poetry, that situation can do no harm other than to, perhaps, a forest of trees.
Economics, unfortunately, collides with reality - as it did with the Fed's incorrect reading of the housing bubble and failure to regulate financial institutions. Neither was a matter of incompetence, but both resulted from the Fed's unchallenged assumptions about the way the market worked.
Even the late Milton Friedman, whose monetary economic theories heavily influenced Greenspan, was concerned about the stifled nature of the debate.
Friedman, in a 1993 letter to Auerbach that the author quotes in his book, argued that the FED practice was harming objectivity:
Greenspan told Congress in October 2008 that he was in a state of "shocked disbelief" and that the "whole intellectual edifice" had "collapsed."
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) followed up:
But, if the intellectual edifice has collapsed, the intellectual infrastructure remains in place.
The same economists who provided Greenspan his "very considerable evidence" are still running the journals and still analyzing the world using the same models that were incapable of seeing the credit boom and the coming collapse.
Joshua Rosner, the Wall Street analyst who foresaw the crash, says that the Fed's ideological dominance of the journals hampered his attempt to warn his colleagues about what was to come.
Rosner wrote a strikingly prescient paper in 2001 arguing that relaxed lending standards and other factors would lead to a boom in housing prices over the next several years, but that the growth would be highly susceptible to an economic disruption because it was fundamentally unsound.
He expanded on those ideas over the next few years, connecting the dots and concluding that the coming housing collapse would wreak havoc on the collateralized debt obligation (CDO) and mortgage backed securities (MBS) markets, which would have a ripple effect on the rest of the economy.
That, of course, is exactly what happened and it took the FED and the economics field completely by surprise.
When Rosner was casting his paper on CDOs and MBSs about, he knew he needed an academic economist to co-author the paper for a journal to consider it.
Seven economists turned him down.
The CDO and MBS markets froze because, as the housing market crashed, buyers didn't trust that they had reliable information about them - precisely the case Rosner had been making.
He eventually found a co-author, Joseph Mason, an associate Professor of Finance at Drexel University LeBow College of Business, a senior fellow at the Wharton School, and a visiting scholar at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
But the pair could only land their papers with the conservative Hudson Institute.
Together, the two papers offer a better analysis of what led to the crash than the economic journals have managed to put together - and they were published by a non-PhD before the crisis.
Not As Simple As A Pay-Off
Economist Rob Johnson serves on the UN Commission of Experts on Finance and International Monetary Reform and was a top economist on the Senate banking committee under both a Democratic and Republican chairman.
He says that the consulting gigs shouldn't be looked at,
The Fed's hiring of so many economists can be looked at in several ways, Johnson says, because the institution does, of course, need talented analysts.
The other hypothesis, he says,
To get a mainstream take, HuffPost called monetary economists at random from the list as members of the AEA.
Ahmed Ehsan, reflecting on his own career and those of his students, allowed that there is, in fact, something to what the FED critics are saying.
There's definitely prestige in spending a few years at the FED that can give a boost to an academic career, he added.
Press officers for the Federal Reserve's board of governors provided some background information for this article, but declined to make anyone available to comment on its substance.
The Fed's Intolerance For Dissent
When dissent has arisen, the FED has dealt with it like any other institution that cherishes homogeneity.
Take the case of Alan Blinder.
Though he's squarely within the mainstream and considered one of the great economic minds of his generation, he lasted a mere year and a half as vice chairman of the FED, leaving in January 1996.
Rob Johnson, who watched the Blinder ordeal, says Blinder made the mistake of behaving as if the FED was a place where competing ideas and assumptions were debated.
In closed-door meetings, Blinder did what so few do: challenged assumptions.
It didn't sit well with Greenspan or his staff.
And celebrity is no shield against FED excommunication.
Paul Krugman, in fact, has gotten rough treatment.
An invitation to the annual conference, or some other blessing from the FED, is a signal to the economic profession that you're a certified member of the club.
Even Krugman seems a bit burned by the slight.
Three years after the conference, Krugman won a Nobel Prize in 2008 for his work in economic geography.
One Journal, In Detail
The Huffington Post reviewed the mastheads of,
HuffPost interns Googled around looking for resumes and otherwise searched for FED connections for the 190 people on those mastheads.
Of the 84 that were affiliated with the Federal Reserve at one point in their careers, 21 were on the FED payroll even as they served as gatekeepers at prominent journals.
At the Journal of Monetary Economics, every single member of the editorial board is or has been affiliated with the FED and 14 of the 26 board members are presently on the FED payroll.
After the top editor, King, comes senior associate editor Marianne Baxter, who has written papers for the Chicago and Minneapolis banks and was a visiting scholar at the Minneapolis bank in '84, '85, at the Richmond bank in '97, and at the board itself in '87. She was an advisor to the president of the New York bank from '02-'05.
Tim Geithner, now the Treasury Secretary, became president of the New York bank in '03.
The senior associate editors:
And then there are the associate editors.
Here is the complete response from King, the journal's editor in chief:
Auerbach, shown King's e-mail, says it's just this simple: