• 5 months ago
Fed Chair Jerome Powell testified in front of the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday.

Fuel your success with Forbes. Gain unlimited access to premium journalism, including breaking news, groundbreaking in-depth reported stories, daily digests and more. Plus, members get a front-row seat at members-only events with leading thinkers and doers, access to premium video that can help you get ahead, an ad-light experience, early access to select products including NFT drops and more:

https://account.forbes.com/membership/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=growth_non-sub_paid_subscribe_ytdescript


Stay Connected
Forbes on Facebook: http://fb.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Instagram: http://instagram.com/forbes
More From Forbes: http://forbes.com
Transcript
00:00:00The committee will come to order.
00:00:03Without objection, the Chair is authorized
00:00:04to declare a recess of the committee at any time.
00:00:07The hearing is titled,
00:00:08The Federal Reserve's Semiannual Monetary Policy Report.
00:00:12We like creative titles here,
00:00:13and that is our traditional title for Humphrey Hawkins.
00:00:15Without objection, all members will have five legislative days
00:00:18within which to submit extraneous material
00:00:20to the Chair for inclusion in the record.
00:00:23I'll note at the outset this hearing has a hard stop
00:00:25at 1 p.m., which we will strictly observe,
00:00:28which seems only humane.
00:00:31I'll now recognize myself for four minutes
00:00:34for an opening statement.
00:00:36Thank you, Chair Powell, for being back with us today.
00:00:39With prices increasing more than 20 percent
00:00:44since President Biden took office,
00:00:45inflation remains top of mind for American families.
00:00:49In fact, only a quarter
00:00:50of Americans describe current economic conditions as good
00:00:54or excellent, according to the most recent data
00:00:58from Gallup's Economic Confidence Index.
00:01:01Despite President Biden's gaslighting,
00:01:03inflation was not 9 percent when he took office.
00:01:07It was out of control.
00:01:08The out-of-control inflation we're experiencing now is
00:01:11something that this administration did not inherit,
00:01:15but is a product of their policies and their overspending.
00:01:19The nearly $2 trillion partisan
00:01:21and fiscally reckless spending as a part
00:01:25of the American Rescue Plan poured fuel
00:01:29on a smoldering inflationary fire.
00:01:32After a delayed response to runaway inflation,
00:01:35the FOMC has acted with a historic pace
00:01:38of interest rate hikes to ease the pain caused
00:01:42by Democrats' failed economic policies.
00:01:45It is a response, not the actual disease,
00:01:47but the response the Fed is trying to tame these flames.
00:01:52But it's a response to Democrat policies here on Capitol Hill
00:01:56and the administration.
00:01:58So far this year, inflation has been more persistent
00:02:01than many, including the Fed, previously expected.
00:02:03There's still work to be done to reach the Fed's 2 percent target.
00:02:07As I've repeatedly said, the Fed's-I think
00:02:13as I've repeatedly said, the commitment to independence
00:02:17of the Federal Reserve is of utmost importance,
00:02:20and it is critical especially in a political year like this.
00:02:25Just as-Chair Powell, just as you did
00:02:27in previous administrations, you must not allow politics
00:02:30to cloud the Fed's monetary policy.
00:02:33However, despite your best efforts,
00:02:35the Fed independence remains at risk.
00:02:38And unfortunately, calls are coming from inside the building.
00:02:42Under Vice Chair Barr, the Fed's regulatory
00:02:45and supervisory agenda has become politicized.
00:02:50Most notably, the development
00:02:51of the Basel III endgame proposal has been a mess.
00:02:55This process has been cloaked in opaque standards
00:02:58and timelines set at meetings
00:03:00of unaccountable global governance bodies.
00:03:04The Fed has promised to process 410 almost universally negative
00:03:09comments, public comments, regarding the unjustified
00:03:12and underutilized initial proposal,
00:03:15or an underanalyzed initial proposal.
00:03:19Recent press reports, which seem
00:03:21to be the only way Congress gets details
00:03:23on the Basel III endgame progress,
00:03:26and your comments yesterday indicate the Fed will finally
00:03:29conduct a long overdue quantitative impact study.
00:03:33That is welcome.
00:03:34And if true, this is a promising, promising development.
00:03:38Chair Powell, the last time you testified before this committee,
00:03:41you stated that the initial Basel III endgame proposal will
00:03:44undergo, quote, broad and material changes
00:03:49end quote.
00:03:50Yesterday in the Senate,
00:03:51you said the Board supports reissuing the updated proposal
00:03:54for public comment.
00:03:56I'm concerned that press reports also claim the Fed will tuck any
00:04:00changes to the proposal into this quantitative impact study.
00:04:04That study, including the substantial changes
00:04:07to the proposal, would then be issued for public feedback
00:04:10with relatively paltry comment period.
00:04:14I'll reiterate to you here what I've said to you in private.
00:04:18Broad and material changes
00:04:21to the Basel III endgame necessitate a full
00:04:24re-proposal, full stop, full stop.
00:04:27Failure to do so will result
00:04:30in an immediate Congressional Review Act vote
00:04:34out of this House of Representatives as quickly
00:04:36as we can possibly process it.
00:04:38Now, it doesn't have to be this way,
00:04:41and I think the Fed adhering
00:04:43to its longstanding principles here is highly important,
00:04:46especially with this interagency process.
00:04:48I'll close with this.
00:04:50Your steady and capable apolitical leadership
00:04:53of the Federal Reserve has shepherded our economy
00:04:55through extreme uncertainty.
00:04:58We now find ourselves in the midst of a new type
00:05:00of uncertainty surrounding the leadership of our nation.
00:05:03Doubts, fears, and panic often lead
00:05:05to bad decision-making and even worse policy.
00:05:08I urge you to reject outside political pressure
00:05:11in this volatile time and stay the course for the good
00:05:15of the American people and our economy as a whole.
00:05:18Thank you for your service, and I yield back.
00:05:20I'll now recognize the Ranking Member
00:05:21of the full Committee, Ms. Waters.
00:05:23Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
00:05:26Welcome back to the Honorable Jerome H. Powell, Chairman,
00:05:31Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
00:05:36Chair Powell, as we saw with the latest jobs report,
00:05:41the labor market remains strong and the economy is surging.
00:05:45Despite inheriting an economy from the prior administration
00:05:50that had the worst jobs record since the Great Depression,
00:05:54President Biden has now overseen a record 15.7 million jobs
00:06:00created since he took office,
00:06:02with 206,000 new jobs created just last month.
00:06:08Not only that, but under the Biden administration,
00:06:12we're witnessing low unemployment rates,
00:06:15rising wages, and stabilizing prices for goods and services.
00:06:20This is not only because of President Biden's strong
00:06:23leadership, but also because of the historic legislation signed
00:06:28into law by President Biden, which has resulted
00:06:32in lower costs, created more jobs,
00:06:34rebuilt our infrastructure, supported small businesses,
00:06:39eliminated mostly junk fees,
00:06:41wiped out more than $144 billion in federal student loan debt
00:06:48for 14 million bars, and cut child poverty in half.
00:06:53President Biden is and will continue to advance policies
00:06:58that are providing good-paying jobs and an economy
00:07:01that works for everyone.
00:07:02Now, while I'm pleased to see
00:07:05that inflation is declining, the latest data makes clear
00:07:11that housing remains the number one driver of core inflation.
00:07:16Since 2020, house prices have increased by nearly 50%,
00:07:21with Americans now spending, on average,
00:07:24over 30% of their income on housing.
00:07:28This is a top priority for Democrats,
00:07:31but remains an afterthought for Republicans.
00:07:34Earlier this Congress,
00:07:36I reintroduced my comprehensive legislation housing package,
00:07:41including the Housing Crisis Response Act.
00:07:45This bill provides more than $150 billion in fair
00:07:51and affordable housing investments,
00:07:54representing the single largest investment
00:07:56in affordable housing in our nation's history.
00:08:00These funds would create nearly 1.4 million affordable
00:08:04and accessible homes, bring down housing costs for all,
00:08:09and revive the American dream of home ownership.
00:08:12Committee Democrats are committed
00:08:14to getting this bill across the finish line, and continue
00:08:17to hold out hope that our Republican colleagues will
00:08:21finally join us in this effort.
00:08:23Unfortunately, extreme MAGA Republicans are not just
00:08:27ignoring housing inflation.
00:08:29They're advancing their Project 2025 manifesto
00:08:34that would dismantle U.S. democracy
00:08:36and the economy as we know it today.
00:08:39Project 2025 is authored by almost two dozen former Trump
00:08:44White House staffers and Trump administration officials.
00:08:48It was compiled and published
00:08:50by the ultra-far-right Heritage Foundation,
00:08:53whose CEO recently declared that they are, quote,
00:08:57in the process of a second American revolution,
00:09:00which will be bloodless if the left allows it to be,
00:09:04quote, unquote.
00:09:05And if that kind of talk reminds anyone of the rhetoric we heard
00:09:09in the lead-up to, and on January 6, 2020, it should.
00:09:14Project 2025 promotes radical ideas
00:09:19to materially undermine the Federal Reserve,
00:09:22if not effectively abolish.
00:09:24MAGA wants to put you out of a job, Chairman Powell,
00:09:29so I look forward to your testimony and hearing
00:09:32from you, a Republican who was first nominated
00:09:35by President Trump, about your thoughts on the importance
00:09:39of the Federal Reserve and the work you have done
00:09:42to help our economy.
00:09:44And I yield back.
00:09:47Gentlelady yields back.
00:09:48A note for the record, Jerome Powell was initially nominated
00:09:53by President Obama to the Board of Governors
00:09:55of the Federal Reserve before being nominated
00:09:58by President Trump to Chair.
00:10:00So here we are.
00:10:02We'll recognize the Chair
00:10:04of the Financial Institutions Subcommittee, Mr. Barr,
00:10:07Andy Barr, variety, for one minute.
00:10:11Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:10:13Welcome, Chairman Powell.
00:10:15Runaway inflation and increased interest rates necessary
00:10:18to confront it continue to hammer Americans,
00:10:21and especially those living paycheck to paycheck.
00:10:23Workers and families feel the pain making everyday purchases
00:10:26at high prices in the grocery aisles and at the pump.
00:10:29They have suffered years of eroding purchasing power
00:10:31in their paychecks
00:10:32under the Biden administration's economic mismanagement.
00:10:35Heightened mortgage rates make it prohibitive
00:10:37for new homebuyers to reach the American dream
00:10:39of a starter home for their family.
00:10:41I am pleased that the Fed is resolute
00:10:44in getting inflation under control.
00:10:46I am pleased that you have committed
00:10:49to an apolitical approach to this.
00:10:51I am not pleased by the Fed's opaque, unjustified,
00:10:53politicized, and underanalyzed regulatory proposals
00:10:56which will ultimately hurt all Americans.
00:10:58We need to know where the Fed is going
00:11:00on its fundamentally flawed Basel III endgame proposal
00:11:03and its opaque regulatory approach.
00:11:05I yield.
00:11:07Well, Chair now recognizes the ranking member
00:11:11of the Financial Institutions and Monetary Policy Subcommittee,
00:11:13Mr. Foster, for one minute.
00:11:15Thank you, Chair McHenry and Ranking Member Waters.
00:11:18I'd like to also thank you, Chair Powell, for joining us today
00:11:21and for the role you have played in combating inflation
00:11:23and supporting a stable economic recovery.
00:11:26While the presidency is often the focus
00:11:28of political pronouncements about macroeconomic conditions,
00:11:31there's no question that that undersells the importance
00:11:34and the independence of the work of the Federal Reserve Board.
00:11:37While actions taken by the President
00:11:39and Congress certainly play a significant role,
00:11:41monetary policy decisions made
00:11:43by an independent Federal Reserve are the big dog
00:11:46in shaping macroeconomic conditions
00:11:48that shape economic outcomes for millions of Americans.
00:11:52And work continues on inflation,
00:11:53but significant progress has been made
00:11:55to bring the country in line with the Fed's 2% target.
00:11:58The good news is that macroeconomic policy is working
00:12:01as designed.
00:12:02Well-calibrated monetary policy with fiscal support
00:12:05from the American Rescue Plan, the Infrastructure and Jobs Act,
00:12:08and the Chips and Science Act has powered strong job creation
00:12:12and low unemployment while staving off a recession
00:12:14that many thought inevitable.
00:12:16And far better, I should point out, than our peer countries.
00:12:20While Democrats are committed to supporting our efforts
00:12:23to cut costs for American families, I yield back.
00:12:27We'll now welcome the testimony of Jerome Powell,
00:12:30the 16th Chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
00:12:33Chair Powell, you'll be recognized for five minutes
00:12:35to give an oral presentation or testimony without objection
00:12:38or written statement will be made a part of the record.
00:12:41You're now recognized for five minutes.
00:12:45Chairman McHenry, Ranking Member Waters, and other members
00:12:48of the Committee, I appreciate the opportunity
00:12:50to present the Federal Reserve's Semi-Annual Monetary
00:12:53Policy Report.
00:12:55The Federal Reserve remains squarely focused
00:12:57on our dual mandate to promote maximum employment
00:13:00and stable prices for the benefit of the American people.
00:13:03Over the past two years,
00:13:05the economy has made considerable progress toward
00:13:08the Federal Reserve's 2% inflation goal
00:13:10and labor market conditions have cooled while remaining strong.
00:13:14Reflecting these developments,
00:13:16the risks to achieving our employment
00:13:17and inflation goals are coming into better balance.
00:13:21I will review the current economic situation before
00:13:24turning to monetary policy.
00:13:27Recent indicators suggest that the U.S. economy continues
00:13:30to expand at a solid pace.
00:13:32Gross domestic product growth appears to have moderated
00:13:35in the first half of this year, following impressive strength
00:13:38in the second half of last year.
00:13:40Private domestic demand remains robust, however, with slower
00:13:44but still solid increases in consumer spending.
00:13:47We've also seen moderate growth in capital spending and a pickup
00:13:52in residential investment so far this year.
00:13:55Improving supply conditions have supported resilient demand
00:13:58and the strong performance
00:13:59of the U.S. economy over the past year.
00:14:03In the labor market, a broad set of indicators suggests
00:14:06that conditions have returned to about where they stood
00:14:08on the eve of the pandemic, strong but not overheated.
00:14:12The unemployment rate has moved higher but was still
00:14:15at a low level of 4.1 percent in June.
00:14:19Payroll job gains averaged 222,000 jobs per month
00:14:23in the first half of the year.
00:14:25Strong job creation over the past couple
00:14:27of years has been accompanied by an increase in the supply
00:14:30of workers, reflecting increases
00:14:32in labor force participation among individuals aged 25 to 54
00:14:37and a strong pace of immigration.
00:14:40As a result, the jobs to workers gap is well down from its peak
00:14:44and now stands just a bit above its 2019 level.
00:14:49Nominal wage growth has eased over the past year.
00:14:51The strong labor market has helped narrow long-standing
00:14:55disparities in employment and earnings
00:14:56across demographic groups.
00:15:00Inflation has eased notably over the past couple of years
00:15:03but remains above the committee's longer-run goal
00:15:05of 2 percent.
00:15:07Total PCE prices rose 2.6 percent
00:15:10over the 12 months ending in May.
00:15:12Core PCE prices, which exclude the volatile food
00:15:15and energy categories, also increased 2.6 percent.
00:15:20After a lack of progress toward our 2 percent inflation
00:15:23objective in the early part of this year,
00:15:26the most recent monthly readings have shown modest
00:15:28further progress.
00:15:30Longer-term inflation expectations appear
00:15:32to remain well-anchored, as reflected in a broad range
00:15:36of surveys of households, businesses, and forecasters,
00:15:39as well as measures from financial markets.
00:15:42Our monetary policy actions are guided by our dual mandate
00:15:47to promote maximum employment and stable prices
00:15:49for the American people.
00:15:51In support of these goals,
00:15:52the committee has maintained the target range
00:15:54for the federal funds rate at 5.25 to 5.5 percent
00:15:58since last July, after having tightened the stance
00:16:01of monetary policy significantly
00:16:02over the previous year and a half.
00:16:06We have also continued to reduce our securities holdings.
00:16:08At our May meeting, we decided to slow the pace
00:16:11of balance sheet runoff starting in June,
00:16:13consistent with the plans released previously.
00:16:17Our restrictive monetary policy stance is helping
00:16:19to bring demand and supply into better balance
00:16:22and to put downward pressure on inflation.
00:16:26The committee has stated
00:16:27that we do not expect it will be appropriate
00:16:29to reduce the target range for the federal funds rate
00:16:31until we have gained greater confidence
00:16:34that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent.
00:16:38Incoming data for the first quarter
00:16:39of this year did not support such greater confidence.
00:16:43The most recent inflation readings, however,
00:16:45have shown some modest further progress,
00:16:47and more good data would strengthen our confidence
00:16:50that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent.
00:16:54We continue to make decisions meeting by meeting.
00:16:57We know that reducing policy restraint too soon
00:16:59or too much could stall or even reverse the progress
00:17:02that we've seen on inflation.
00:17:04At the same time, in light of the progress made both
00:17:08in lowering inflation and cooling the labor market
00:17:10over the past two years,
00:17:12elevated inflation is not the only risk we face.
00:17:15Reducing policy restraint too late
00:17:17or too little could unduly weaken economic activity
00:17:21and employment.
00:17:23In considering adjustments to the target range
00:17:25for the federal funds rate,
00:17:26the committee will continue its practice
00:17:28of carefully assessing incoming data and their implications
00:17:31for the evolving outlook, the balance of risks,
00:17:34and the appropriate path of monetary policy.
00:17:36Congress has entrusted the Fed
00:17:38with the operational independence that is needed
00:17:40to take a longer-term perspective in the pursuit
00:17:43of our dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability.
00:17:47We remain committed to bringing inflation back
00:17:49down to our 2 percent goal
00:17:50and to keeping longer-term inflation expectations
00:17:53well anchored.
00:17:55Restoring price stability is essential
00:17:56to achieving maximum employment
00:17:58and stable prices over the long run.
00:18:00Our success in delivering on those goals matters
00:18:03to all Americans.
00:18:04I'll conclude by emphasizing that we understand
00:18:06that our actions affect communities, families,
00:18:09and businesses across the country.
00:18:11Everything we do is in service to our public mission.
00:18:14Thank you.
00:18:15I look forward to your questions.
00:18:17CHAIR POWELL.
00:18:17Well, thank you, Chair Powell.
00:18:18I will now recognize myself for five minutes.
00:18:22Chair Powell, let's begin with this question
00:18:25of the Basel III endgame.
00:18:27I know you had questions about it yesterday,
00:18:29but I think we need further clarity.
00:18:31Your testimony about Vice Chair Barr's discussions
00:18:36with the FDIC and with the OCC on the next steps
00:18:41for the Basel III endgame.
00:18:43You mentioned potential changes have been made
00:18:45to the original Basel III endgame, that a lot
00:18:47of progress has been made, and that the Board is very close
00:18:50to agreeing on the substance of those changes.
00:18:53But the next steps, that's really what I want to get into.
00:18:56Let's get through the mechanics of what happens next.
00:18:59If the Fed, the OCC, and the FDIC agree on the substance
00:19:03of whatever changes you're going to make, what happens then?
00:19:09Walk through the mechanics as you anticipated.
00:19:13CHAIR POWELL.
00:19:13Okay. So we're very close to having exactly that agreement
00:19:17on the substance of the proposed changes, pursuant to those talks.
00:19:21The next question, then, is how to proceed.
00:19:24And, you know, it is my view and the strong view
00:19:28of a number of Board members that the appropriate thing
00:19:30to do is to take that new proposal
00:19:34and publish it along with the effects
00:19:37of the Quantitative Impact Survey and put
00:19:40that out for comment again, and receive comment on that,
00:19:43and then take some time
00:19:44to review those comments before finalizing the regulation.
00:19:49And that's a discussion we're having
00:19:51with the other two agencies now.
00:19:53We have not been able to reach agreement on a path to do that,
00:19:56but that's something that we're, you know,
00:19:58we think is the right way to do.
00:19:59That's what we've done in similar situations.
00:20:03There aren't that many similar situations,
00:20:04but when we see broad and material changes
00:20:06to an important regulation, we think, let's go out again
00:20:09and give all the commenters another chance to comment.
00:20:12Yeah, and that also avoids serious lawsuit risk
00:20:16and the risk that Congress step in
00:20:19and overturn this rulemaking using the Congressional
00:20:22Review Act.
00:20:24I think the other agencies here,
00:20:25if they're not agreeing with the Fed, they're running
00:20:28against the independence of the Federal Reserve here.
00:20:31This is not a trifling matter of policy.
00:20:33This is a matter of real substance for the independence
00:20:36of the Fed and rulemaking of the Federal Reserve,
00:20:39which I think we should be able to keep these,
00:20:42keep the independence of the Fed separate,
00:20:44especially in this political environment.
00:20:47But opening up to a new comment period,
00:20:50so that means you have to get consensus for the Board
00:20:54of Governors on the policy.
00:20:56You have to get the agreement of the scandal-plagued chair
00:21:01of the FDIC or the five-member board of the FDIC.
00:21:05You have to get agreement
00:21:08by the acting comptroller of the currency.
00:21:11These people should not have real standing against,
00:21:13with the Fed, on a matter of serious policy,
00:21:16especially with a chair of the FDIC that is being ousted
00:21:20by his own party as soon
00:21:21as they can get a replacement confirmed.
00:21:23It's an absurd thing that the Fed has to go
00:21:26to an acting comptroller of the currency and a guy who's going
00:21:29to be out of a job very soon at the FDIC and get agreement.
00:21:34But thank you for listening.
00:21:36That was more of a, to convey this.
00:21:39So the quantitative impact analysis, is this going
00:21:43to include the interplay with the stress tests,
00:21:46G-SIB surcharge, all the other capital charges here?
00:21:51Will that be a part of the quantitative impact analysis?
00:21:56It'll be this proposal, which does include changes
00:21:58to the G-SIB surcharge,
00:22:00but does not include the stress tests.
00:22:02Okay. But the goal here with the quantitative impact is
00:22:07to actually measure the impact of these rules as enacted, right,
00:22:12based upon what is existing regulatory structures.
00:22:16Okay. That's right.
00:22:17All right.
00:22:17So let's get into the question of balance sheet as quickly
00:22:20as we can.
00:22:21Two and a half years ago, you know, you stated, quote,
00:22:26the committee stand, the committee intends to slow
00:22:29and then stop the decline in the size of the balance sheet
00:22:31when reserve balances are somewhat above the level it
00:22:33judges to be consistent with ample reserves.
00:22:36That's two and a half years ago.
00:22:38Where are we in this question of what are ample reserves?
00:22:42Well, so the balance sheet, the runoff
00:22:44in the portfolio is now, I think, $1.7 trillion so far.
00:22:50So we've made quite a lot of progress.
00:22:52We think we have a good ways to go.
00:22:53And as I mentioned and as you just mentioned,
00:22:57we've now slowed the pace really with a view to getting as far
00:23:02as we can without creating frictions and disruption
00:23:04that might cause us to prematurely stop shrinking.
00:23:07Going a little bit slower might actually enable us
00:23:09to go further.
00:23:10We think we have quite a ways to go.
00:23:11It's very hard to be precise about it.
00:23:13It's really a question of supply and demand.
00:23:15And we'll find that level with a little bit of a buffer on top
00:23:19of it, and that's where we'll stop.
00:23:20All right.
00:23:20Thank you for your testimony.
00:23:22The Ranking Member, Ms. Waters, recognized for five minutes.
00:23:24Thank you very much.
00:23:27Chairman Powell, are you familiar with Project 2025?
00:23:32Not really, no.
00:23:35You've heard about it?
00:23:37I really don't focus on these things at all.
00:23:40You don't focus, but you know there's something known
00:23:43as Project 2025?
00:23:46The reason I'm asking you is because one proposal is
00:23:50to get rid of the Fed's dual mandate
00:23:52to promote only stable prices, but also maximum employment.
00:23:57This is your mandate.
00:24:00These are mandates, right?
00:24:02This is what you do.
00:24:04Is that right?
00:24:04We do serve a dual mandate.
00:24:06That's right.
00:24:06And so if there was anything that would get rid
00:24:11of the mandate, what would it do to our economy?
00:24:15What would it do to our country?
00:24:17So the question of which mandate we serve is very much a question
00:24:20for Congress.
00:24:22My own view has been that the dual mandate has served us well.
00:24:25This is something Congress can change and change back
00:24:27to a single mandate.
00:24:29What do you do to get maximum employment?
00:24:34What do you do?
00:24:36Well, basically we have one tool on the economy,
00:24:40and that is we raise and lower interest rates.
00:24:42You'll find, though, that, anyway, we certainly
00:24:45at the Fed do believe that the dual mandate has been a
00:24:48good thing, and it's enabled us to, it has not stopped us
00:24:52from controlling inflation when that was the thing
00:24:55that needed to be done.
00:24:56And so while, of course I understand you may not have seen,
00:25:01heard, or read Project 2025, are you familiar with an effort
00:25:07in the country to get rid of diversity and inclusion?
00:25:11I see these things mentioned, but honestly, we're, you know,
00:25:17we're pretty focused on our task,
00:25:18which is maximum employment price stability.
00:25:21We're strong supporters of diversity
00:25:24at the Fed, as you know.
00:25:25Are you aware that I created a subcommittee on diversity
00:25:29and employment in this committee?
00:25:32Yes, I remember that.
00:25:33And do you think that getting rid of diversity
00:25:39and inclusion interferes with your ability
00:25:42to really realize the mandate of maximum employment?
00:25:48I, so I've, you know, I was, spent most of my career
00:25:51in the private sector,
00:25:52and what I observed was really successful institutions
00:25:55in the United States, companies, organizations generally,
00:25:58are those that do a really good job on diversity
00:26:01and get the best out of people
00:26:03and attract a broad diverse range of talents to the table
00:26:06and people feel comfortable speaking.
00:26:09So that's the way we feel about it at the Fed,
00:26:11and that's what we've been doing and will continue to do.
00:26:15And do you think it's important not only to have diversity
00:26:20and inclusion in the public sector,
00:26:24but in the private sector also?
00:26:26Yes, and as I mentioned,
00:26:27if you look at very successful American companies,
00:26:29you will very often see that they're good at that.
00:26:33They're good at hiring, attracting, investing in,
00:26:36and keeping diverse talent.
00:26:38That's one of the things
00:26:39that our really good U.S. public companies do well.
00:26:43Have you seen improvement during your tenure where diversity
00:26:46and inclusion has created opportunities for more jobs
00:26:51and helped to reduce the unemployment rate?
00:26:54Certainly seen, I think you see over the course
00:26:58of my long career a big change in diversity and inclusion,
00:27:03and you see that in the private sector and the public sector,
00:27:06and I think that's generally progress.
00:27:08I do. Under the work of this committee
00:27:11and the subcommittee is chaired by Ms. Beatty.
00:27:13She was able to gather important data about what was going
00:27:18on in the private sector, and what she discovered was
00:27:24that many of the CEOs and others welcomed the opportunity
00:27:29to learn more and to do better and to get assistance,
00:27:32and we saw improvement with diversity and inclusion.
00:27:37Have you seen that?
00:27:39There's no question if you talk to CEOs, they get this.
00:27:42If you want to attract the best talent in our country now,
00:27:46you need to be committed to these things.
00:27:50And so I would like to compliment you
00:27:54on the job that you have been doing.
00:27:57I'd like to compliment you on keeping us informed
00:28:01about inflation, and not only do I welcome you here today,
00:28:05I look forward to working with you for years to come.
00:28:10I yield back.
00:28:11Thank you.
00:28:11Thank you.
00:28:12The gentleman from Arkansas, the vice chair of the full committee,
00:28:15Mr. Hill, is now recognized for five minutes.
00:28:18Thank you, Chair.
00:28:19Chair Powell, thanks so much, and welcome back to the committee.
00:28:22I want to pick up where Senator Tim Scott
00:28:24and Chair McHenry left off, and reiterate my strong support
00:28:28for your comment yesterday in the Senate about the need
00:28:32to re-propose the Basel III endgame.
00:28:35The Supreme Court's precedent, I think, makes clear
00:28:38that if a rule undergoes broad and material changes
00:28:42from the proposal to final rule,
00:28:44the public must be given a meaningful opportunity to review
00:28:47and comment on those changes.
00:28:49You generally share that view, I think.
00:28:51Is that right?
00:28:52Yes. And I'm looking forward to seeing the results
00:28:55of the quantitative impact study and the separate comment period,
00:28:59as well as an interagency agreement you referenced
00:29:02yesterday, because of Dodd-Frank's role
00:29:05and the vice chair for supervision,
00:29:07Vice Chairman Barr's role, and the Fed's role,
00:29:10would it be fair to say the Fed is a first among equals
00:29:14on proposing a rule like this?
00:29:16In other words, does the Fed have a supremacy position
00:29:20on determining whether it should be fully re-proposed or not,
00:29:23or do you view it strictly as a collaborative basis?
00:29:26Just curious in your view on that.
00:29:28I would say it's strictly collaborative, and I would say
00:29:30that our discussions with the FDIC,
00:29:32which Vice Chair Barr has actually been conducting,
00:29:35and the OCC, they've been very productive so far.
00:29:38So I want to make sure to say that we continue to work our way
00:29:42through this, and I believe we will get fairly soon
00:29:44to a resolution of the remaining process issue.
00:29:48Good. Well, let me turn from that subject
00:29:50to the court's recent decision
00:29:53to overturn the so-called Chevron Doctrine.
00:29:57Many of us believe this was the first step to reining
00:29:59in decades, literally, of an unprecedented,
00:30:02uncontrolled growth in the administrative state.
00:30:07And so I think all of us on at least this side
00:30:09of the aisle are certainly saying to the Federal Reserve
00:30:12and other federal agencies in our jurisdiction
00:30:14that we want to reassert Article I authority over the direction
00:30:18that independent agencies work.
00:30:21Would it be fair to ask you to certify that because
00:30:24of this change in Chevron that the Fed would commit
00:30:27to promulgating new rules only if they're at the direction
00:30:30of an explicit congressional authorization?
00:30:34So I think, first of all, we're studying that
00:30:37and several other decisions that have just come
00:30:39down in the last week or two.
00:30:40So I haven't got anything definitive for you on that.
00:30:44I think you know us to be an organization.
00:30:46I know us to be an organization that is strongly committed
00:30:49to the rule of law.
00:30:50Supreme Court says what the law is.
00:30:52We'll always do what we believe the law is.
00:30:55Well, I'll submit that question maybe in more detail in writing
00:30:58and maybe you'll have a chance to reflect on that.
00:31:01Back in February, you were on 60 Minutes
00:31:04and you said the U.S. budget deficit,
00:31:05the national debt are unsustainable.
00:31:08Do you still view that the U.S. is
00:31:10on an unsustainable fiscal path?
00:31:13I do.
00:31:13So I think I tried to be clear that the level
00:31:16of the U.S. debt is not itself unsustainable, but the path
00:31:19that we're on is unsustainable
00:31:20and I think that is not controversial.
00:31:24I think many of us certainly agree with that and we know
00:31:27that when the deficit's at three times the economic growth rate
00:31:31and growing, it's of concern and it's contributed to inflation.
00:31:37Just three years ago in Jackson Hole, Wyoming,
00:31:40you gave a speech where you were confident
00:31:41that inflation was transitory, which I think we've come
00:31:44to realize it's not the case.
00:31:47This hearing is sort of a can't miss opportunity for the Fed
00:31:51to demonstrate some humility on the monetary policy decisions,
00:31:55which some on this side
00:31:56of the aisle particularly think have made inflation worse.
00:31:59Your August 2020 Jackson Hole speech,
00:32:01you said the flexible average inflation targeting framework
00:32:05regarding 2% that you would let it run above 2%,
00:32:09was the Fed blinded by the previous 20 years
00:32:13of global change that was deflationary and not
00:32:18or you were not alert enough in 2020 to be more cautious
00:32:23about that change in policy?
00:32:25So we were certainly mindful of a long period of time
00:32:29in which there have been very low interest rates,
00:32:31but also very low inflation,
00:32:33suggesting that the neutral interest rate must have fallen
00:32:35quite substantially.
00:32:36That was the standard view.
00:32:38The thing we didn't see coming was the pandemic.
00:32:41It's not like everything went off the rails.
00:32:43It's like we had this pandemic
00:32:45and it really changed the way the economy is working.
00:32:47We had a big crisis.
00:32:48We did a lot of things.
00:32:49So the concerns that led us to, those concerns that we were
00:32:53in a world of very low interest rates all the time.
00:32:55But now wouldn't you say we're in a very opposite situation
00:32:58where because of reshoring and tariffs
00:33:01and other policies that are quite inflationary?
00:33:04Well, I would say this.
00:33:05Those concerns are, right now we have the policy rate
00:33:10in the mid-fives, right?
00:33:12And we don't see, we see the policy is restrictive,
00:33:15but clearly interest rates,
00:33:17the neutral interest rate must have moved up,
00:33:19at least in the short term.
00:33:21So I think that's the question we'll be asking ourselves
00:33:23in our review, which begins at the end of this year.
00:33:26We look forward to that and I'll go back to the chair.
00:33:28How much of what we did in that time period is relevant
00:33:32to the new world order?
00:33:33Is it relevant to the new world
00:33:34where rates appear to be higher?
00:33:36The gentleman from Georgia, Mr. Scott,
00:33:38is recognized for five minutes.
00:33:40Thank you, Chairman, and welcome, Chair Powell.
00:33:43It's great seeing you.
00:33:45Last time I saw you, you had, we had the gracious pleasure
00:33:51of you visiting with me in my office
00:33:54and we discussed a great variety of things.
00:33:57Thank you for that visit.
00:33:59Now, Chair Powell, this year the Fed tested 31 banks
00:34:06up from 23 last year, is that correct?
00:34:09I believe that's right, yes.
00:34:11And by estimating losses, revenues, expenses,
00:34:16and capital level under hypothetical stress scenarios,
00:34:21we did that, correct?
00:34:23Yes. And all 31 banks remained above their minimum common
00:34:29equity tariff, one capital requirements,
00:34:34after observing losses of nearly $685 billion, is that correct?
00:34:44Yes, that is correct.
00:34:46Yeah, I wanted to get those figures out and provide you
00:34:52with, you may have heard this, but I want to share
00:34:55with the nation because your Vice Chair Barr made this
00:35:01statement, and I wanted to put this in the record,
00:35:05his exact quote from this great achievement.
00:35:09He said, our goal of our stress test is to help ensure
00:35:16that we have enough capital to observe losses
00:35:21in a highly stressful scenario.
00:35:25And this test shows that we do.
00:35:29I thought that was a great statement of your record.
00:35:34Now, let me ask you my question.
00:35:36It's simple.
00:35:37Will the 2024 Fed stress test results have an impact
00:35:45on how prudential regulators roll out a new
00:35:50and updated capital proposal?
00:35:55So, the two are really two different things.
00:35:59There's the Basel III capital proposal,
00:36:02and then there's the stress test.
00:36:04So, and really the Basel III, as I mentioned, we've discussed,
00:36:09we're almost ready to put forward
00:36:11for further comment a revised proposal with material
00:36:16and broad changes to it.
00:36:17The stress tests are a different thing, and of course,
00:36:19we realize we have to adapt those over time and be open
00:36:24to changes, and we, you know,
00:36:26we have, it has evolved significantly over time.
00:36:28But it's really a separate thing from the Basel III endgame.
00:36:30Give us a little bit more information on the Basel III,
00:36:35because I work with you with this.
00:36:39Our work goes all the way back to the Obama administration
00:36:43when we responded to that crisis with our banks.
00:36:51And you and I worked that up where we came
00:36:55up with the hardest hit program to help those
00:36:59who were suffering with, those states that were suffering
00:37:03with high unemployment and at the same time,
00:37:07high home foreclosures.
00:37:10And we were successful.
00:37:12And we've established that program, and it's still going
00:37:16on and helping many of our states.
00:37:19But, you know, I want to also share what is happening
00:37:25around the world as a result of our activities.
00:37:30The European Union is now set to delay key parts
00:37:35of its bank capital rules by more than a year
00:37:39so that their leaders,
00:37:41lenders will not be at a disadvantage.
00:37:44Over in Canada, it's important to know
00:37:47that their banking regulators have also delayed
00:37:51for another year, imposing high capital rules
00:37:55on countries' banks at the risk of making them uncompetitive.
00:38:00And the Swiss National Bank is highly unlikely now
00:38:05to adopt a proposed 15 percent capital requirement for UPS
00:38:11and other Swiss banks.
00:38:13And the Bank of England has issued a near-final proposal
00:38:17to increase UK bank capital by three-two percent.
00:38:23And I think this is all a measure of your great work
00:38:29and that of your vice chair.
00:38:32And I just wanted to let you have a comment on that, please.
00:38:38Sure. So we're committed to finalizing this proposal.
00:38:43Our banks are going to live with these rules
00:38:44for a long, long time.
00:38:45The main thing is to get it right,
00:38:47and that's what we're doing.
00:38:49What we do in the end will be consistent
00:38:51with the Basel Agreement, and it will also be consistent
00:38:55with what other comparable large jurisdictions are doing.
00:38:58You're doing a great job.
00:39:00Keep up the good work.
00:39:02We'll recognize the gentleman from Pennsylvania,
00:39:03Mr. Muser, for five minutes.
00:39:06Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
00:39:07Thank you very much, Chairman Powell.
00:39:09And also, thank you for continuing to indicate
00:39:12that you will look at the entirety of the economy,
00:39:15the whole economy.
00:39:16We appreciate that.
00:39:17So one of the nation's largest banks recently warned in a memo
00:39:21and has also been voiced by smaller banks
00:39:23that the current pace of regulation, such as changes
00:39:25to capital requirements and lowering debit card
00:39:28interchange caps, could lead to a new fees associated
00:39:32with checking accounts and other increased costs
00:39:35for small businesses.
00:39:37This does come amid expiring tax provisions
00:39:40that are sunsetting as we speak that are critical
00:39:44for small business, such as the R&D tax credit,
00:39:46interest deductibility, and bonus depreciation.
00:39:49This does raise the question,
00:39:51are you considering how these regulations
00:39:54and tax increases will directly work against your mandate
00:39:58to achieve 2 percent inflation?
00:40:00Moreover, with the proposed changes to Basel III,
00:40:03it is crucial to ensure that all stakeholders have a voice
00:40:06in this process, which you are stating will occur,
00:40:10and a Basel re-proposal
00:40:12and adequate comment period are certainly very welcome.
00:40:16So, Chairman Powell, yesterday in the Senate you mentioned
00:40:18that the majority view of the board is
00:40:20to re-propose Basel III for comment period.
00:40:24Could you clarify if this means the proposal will be re-proposed
00:40:28from scratch and any other specifics you can provide?
00:40:32Sure. So we haven't reached agreement on this.
00:40:34As I mentioned, we're working through this with our colleagues
00:40:37at the FDIC and the OCC,
00:40:40and I can't tell you exactly what the form will be.
00:40:44The sense of it would be, though,
00:40:45that we're making material changes
00:40:47and that we would want the public to have a chance to look
00:40:51at those changes in the light of the way they play off
00:40:54against the quantitative impact survey
00:40:56and should have a reasonable time to comment on those.
00:40:59In addition, you know, we're focused on one big area,
00:41:04but there are institutions that have made comments all
00:41:08across the spectrum, and we're reading all of those carefully.
00:41:11And we're not going to republish all of those.
00:41:15Some of those we can just make changes and move forward on.
00:41:19So it's going to be a very labor-intensive,
00:41:23time-consuming process.
00:41:25Writing these things up takes a long time, and, you know,
00:41:27we're going to get it right.
00:41:28Good. That's great.
00:41:29Obviously, you know, Canada recently postponed,
00:41:32as did the EU and UK,
00:41:34for international competition standpoint.
00:41:36It seems to make sense, and so that's appreciated.
00:41:40Chairman, would you agree that excessive spending,
00:41:44increased taxes, limits on domestic energy production
00:41:50in principle are a cause for higher costs for business,
00:41:55contributes to inflation, and as well tightens the labor markets,
00:41:59kind of running contrary to your two mandates?
00:42:03You know, you're asking me kind of a political question there.
00:42:06I'm not going to, I don't want to criticize a platform
00:42:09of economic fiscal policies
00:42:11that are not really ours to decide.
00:42:13That's really, it's more of an economic question,
00:42:15but I appreciate your answer, sir.
00:42:17So when you mentioned recalibrate policy yesterday
00:42:21in the Senate hearing, was part
00:42:24of your thinking taking a more holistic view
00:42:26of economic conditions?
00:42:29Yes, very much so.
00:42:30Okay. Yeah.
00:42:32Chairman, is there any data
00:42:35to support the so-called greedflation,
00:42:40this term greedflation somehow has caused inflation?
00:42:44Is there any data to support those comments?
00:42:46So we look at it that inflation, disinflation has been caused
00:42:50by a combination of, you know,
00:42:52very strong demand and constrained supply.
00:42:56So it was really a high-speed collision
00:42:59between an economy that was reopening, and by the way,
00:43:02this was, there was inflation all
00:43:03over the world at the same time,
00:43:05so these are some common factors.
00:43:06But at the same time, you had tremendous demand, for example,
00:43:09for automobiles, you had constrained supply
00:43:12because there weren't enough semiconductors.
00:43:14Long story short, but, you know,
00:43:17so that to us is what inflation, disinflation is all about.
00:43:21So we've observed, you know, the sort of healing
00:43:24of the supply side at the same time,
00:43:26restrictive monetary policies weighing on demand,
00:43:28and we've seen inflation coming down.
00:43:29Right, so there's no data that supports that gouging
00:43:32of consumers is part of the inflation.
00:43:34It's been very hard to track a connection with, you know,
00:43:39earnings and things.
00:43:40Secretary Yellen mentioned that she didn't feel
00:43:42that there was grocery price shock and that sort of thing.
00:43:47Groceries and gasoline are the two driving problems
00:43:50for American families and certainly my constituents.
00:43:53Do you believe your policies are helping
00:43:55to alleviate in those two areas?
00:43:59So a lot of things affect, let's take energy first.
00:44:03You know, the energy prices are generally set
00:44:05at the global level.
00:44:07We do have some effect on that.
00:44:08Sorry, Chairman, I've run out of time.
00:44:09Thank you.
00:44:10I yield back, Mr. Chairman.
00:44:11Sorry, we can continue.
00:44:12Great, thank you.
00:44:14The gentleman from Missouri,
00:44:15Mr. Cleaver is now recognized for five minutes.
00:44:17Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:44:18Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for being here.
00:44:21And in some ways I want to follow up or at least respond
00:44:27to the very civil but I think reason
00:44:33of why we need an independent central bank.
00:44:38And your response was, you know, the question you raised would,
00:44:46if I answered it, it would be along some kind
00:44:49of a political avenue and you didn't want
00:44:54to drive on that avenue.
00:44:56So I'm also very much concerned about a lot of the discussion.
00:45:01I've been on this committee a while
00:45:03and so it comes up quite often.
00:45:06When the Federal Reserve was birthed around the turn
00:45:13of the century, I think, 1913, 1918, somewhere like that,
00:45:21prior to the establishment of the central bank, did we,
00:45:24was our country experiencing a lot of recessions
00:45:29because of no security, people felt no security,
00:45:36particularly the business community,
00:45:39and making big investments because nobody was in control.
00:45:44You just kind of think what went on just went on.
00:45:47Is that relevant?
00:45:48Yes, I think the lack of a central bank between 1836
00:45:53and the founding of the Fed was a period of lots and lots
00:45:56of depressions and a lot of it had to do with the crop cycle
00:46:00and the banks not being able
00:46:02to handle the very large seasonal swings
00:46:05and there was no central bank to provide liquidity.
00:46:08So that's really what gave rise to the founding of the Fed
00:46:11in the early part of the last century.
00:46:13Do you think that it is dangerous
00:46:16to blend monetary policy and fiscal policy?
00:46:23To blend them?
00:46:24Yes.
00:46:26So we try to keep them very separate and, you know,
00:46:29we try not to express views on fiscal policy.
00:46:34That's for elected people who have, you know,
00:46:36undergone elections and won
00:46:39and make those very difficult decisions.
00:46:41We have a really specific, narrow, but important mandate
00:46:44that we do that you've given us and we try to stick to that.
00:46:48And so we take your policies as given
00:46:53and then we conduct monetary policy with that.
00:46:59I don't want to draw you into any kind
00:47:04of a political response, but, and I have not read all
00:47:09of this Project 2025 document.
00:47:12I read some of it online a couple of nights ago,
00:47:17but even whether it comes out of a 2025 or a 3089, whatever,
00:47:22that one of the things that I'm concerned about reading this,
00:47:29from this little, this document, that the document argues
00:47:35that the Federal Reserve is the inflation problem
00:47:40and eliminating the Federal Reserve,
00:47:44imposing economic policy on the Fed that does not come
00:47:47from within the Fed.
00:47:49So I'm wondering here, would you agree with any of that?
00:48:00I just stated, whether it came from me
00:48:03or Chairman McHenry or anybody else?
00:48:08So I'll just say, first of all, you know,
00:48:10we're certainly a fair game for any criticism people have.
00:48:14I think we've, what we've learned and what we know is
00:48:17that having an independent central bank is really
00:48:20essential.
00:48:20If you want to have high and volatile inflation,
00:48:23then the quickest road to that would be
00:48:25to undermine the independence of the central bank,
00:48:27of the Fed in our case.
00:48:29So I frankly think that that view is very widely held,
00:48:32I find up here on Capitol Hill in both political parties, so.
00:48:36So eliminating the Federal Reserve is best
00:48:41for promoting economic stability.
00:48:43Yes.
00:48:43Thank you.
00:48:45I knew that our Chair, that our Ranking Member was going to come
00:48:52in and deal with the issue of housing.
00:48:53She always does, and we all appreciate the fact
00:48:57that she's obsessed with it, and I like that obsession.
00:49:01But I'm wondering, as we try to figure out how to deal
00:49:08with this issue, oh my goodness, my time's running out.
00:49:13Was that a question?
00:49:16I didn't finish it, but I sure, yes,
00:49:18if you knew where I was going, please.
00:49:22Gentleman's time has expired.
00:49:24We'll now recognize the gentleman from New York,
00:49:25Mr. Garbarino, for five minutes.
00:49:29Thank you, Chairman.
00:49:29Chair Powell, thank you very much for being here today.
00:49:32Based on some comments you made today and yesterday,
00:49:34it appears you've made quite a bit of progress on changes
00:49:37to the Basel III endgame proposal, and you're very close
00:49:40to hearing some of those, the substance of those changes.
00:49:43I know you won't get into specifics, you said that.
00:49:45I just don't know how deep you won't get into them,
00:49:48but I just want to confirm what you said
00:49:51to my colleague, Mr. Musi.
00:49:53There will be, you're not reproposing some things,
00:49:56it's just going to be a partial reproposal?
00:49:58That's what we're looking at doing, is major things
00:50:02that we've been working on, and there will be additional changes
00:50:06that will be made that won't be reproposed.
00:50:08That's what we're working on, rather than a full,
00:50:10wide proposal.
00:50:12So it's not a complete reproposal, it's just partial.
00:50:14Can you get at least, can you tell me which components you're?
00:50:20You know, it's not, until it's all agreed and ready to go
00:50:24and vetted, I'm reluctant to try to get into too many specifics,
00:50:27just because, you know, when you're doing these things,
00:50:29nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.
00:50:31No, I understand.
00:50:32I just might ask him for what specifically your changes,
00:50:34which, if you're willing to say which.
00:50:37I hope to be able to come to you with a really clear answer
00:50:41on that soon.
00:50:42I mean, I think we're ready to go at the Fed.
00:50:45So that's my next question.
00:50:47So it's been said several times that you and many of your members
00:50:50of the board are at odds with your counterparts at the FDIC
00:50:52and OCC over how to proceed with putting
00:50:54out a revised proposal for comment.
00:50:56So if the FDIC and the OCC are not yet on board with allowing
00:50:59for a new comment period, who is holding up this consensus?
00:51:03Is it Chair Grunberg?
00:51:04Is it Director Chopra?
00:51:05I don't want to say that we're at odds.
00:51:08I just want to say we're working
00:51:09through this issue together and...
00:51:12Someone's got to be holding it up.
00:51:15Well, you know, it's a discussion that we're having
00:51:18and I think it's been constructive
00:51:20and I think we'll try to keep it that way.
00:51:22Can you at least answer whether or not the five-member FDIC board
00:51:26needs to sign off or can you just go to the Chair?
00:51:30No, I think it's the board and, of course,
00:51:32the comptroller is one person.
00:51:34But I think it's, I mean, the FDIC can speak for themselves,
00:51:36but I do think their board would be the question.
00:51:40Okay. One final question,
00:51:42timeline question before I move on.
00:51:44You mentioned yesterday that a reasonable prediction would be
00:51:46that Basel would not be finalized
00:51:47until the first quarter of 2025.
00:51:50Under this timeline, would it be safe to say
00:51:51that implementation would then not occur
00:51:53until at least the beginning of 2026?
00:51:56Again, I can't be that specific.
00:51:58And, you know, that's, someone asked me, does it sound
00:52:02like the first quarter of next year might be, and it might be.
00:52:04I mean, there's a range of times it would take.
00:52:06The thing is, as I mentioned, U.S. banks are going to be living
00:52:10with these rules for many years.
00:52:11The point of it is to get it right, not to do it quickly.
00:52:14You know, we want to get it right, listen to the comments,
00:52:16make sound decisions, and move ahead in a way that is, you know,
00:52:21gives us a sustainable set of rules that we won't have
00:52:23to come back and fix all the mistakes in.
00:52:27Thank you.
00:52:27I want to move on to another topic, long-term debt.
00:52:31You mentioned yesterday that you would most likely not move
00:52:33forward with other rules until people reach a place
00:52:35of understanding and acceptance of a revised Basel proposal.
00:52:38I hope that's the truth, as banks need
00:52:41to fully understand the implications
00:52:43of a Basel proposal before any action is taken
00:52:46on long-term debt.
00:52:48Finally, Chair Powell, I'd like to emphasize the need
00:52:51for the Fed to conduct a comprehensive, data-driven,
00:52:54and most importantly, transparent assessment
00:52:57of the current liquidity framework.
00:53:00So very quickly, will you commit
00:53:02to conducting a public quantitative impact study
00:53:05and a full notice and comment rulemaking before imposing any
00:53:08new liquidity requirements?
00:53:10I didn't catch the first part of that,
00:53:11the first part of your ask.
00:53:13Will you commit to conducting a public quantitative impact study
00:53:17and a full notice and comment rulemaking before imposing any
00:53:19new liquidity requirements?
00:53:20On the liquidity thing.
00:53:21I'm not exactly sure what we're contemplating there.
00:53:25We certainly contemplate getting a full range of input
00:53:28from the public on that, because these are,
00:53:30some of these are novel ideas, and we understand that.
00:53:32All right.
00:53:32As the Chairman said before,
00:53:33these impact studies are very important,
00:53:35because they're to show what impact these rules will have.
00:53:38So I think that is very important that we have that,
00:53:40because we had a mucked up process with Basel 2.0,
00:53:44and I don't think there's, we don't want to repeat that.
00:53:48And I have a little time left.
00:53:49I'm going to yield to my colleague from Pennsylvania,
00:53:51Mr. Musa, because I know we had another question.
00:53:53I thank my colleague.
00:53:55Chair Powell, just back to what we were talking about,
00:53:57the price instability of groceries and gasoline,
00:54:00where we do have somewhat
00:54:01of an affordability crisis has been termed.
00:54:04So would lowering rates in the near future be a pro-growth
00:54:09initiative, perhaps?
00:54:10Is that something that's being considered
00:54:12that would actually drive investment
00:54:14and give a clearer picture for investment, and perhaps help
00:54:19in these two categories, and in the end, increase in supply,
00:54:22so as we lower those prices?
00:54:24Honestly, when we think about our near-term rate moves,
00:54:28we're thinking about a couple things.
00:54:29And the first of which is we want to be more confident
00:54:31about inflation.
00:54:32My apologies, Chairman.
00:54:33I went over.
00:54:34Sorry. Chairman, I yield back to my colleague.
00:54:36The gentleman from California, Mr. Vargas,
00:54:38is recognized for five minutes.
00:54:40Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
00:54:42Thank you again for this hearing, and the Ranking Member.
00:54:44Thank you very much.
00:54:45Chairman Powell, thank you very much for being here.
00:54:48We appreciate it.
00:54:48In fact, I was looking at your history
00:54:50when they were saying who nominated you
00:54:52when you got here and all that.
00:54:53In fact, you had had public service even prior
00:54:56to that time, right?
00:54:57That's right.
00:54:58So I thank you for your long public service to the nation.
00:55:01I think you've been outstanding.
00:55:02I think we all respect you deeply here.
00:55:04You're pretty boring here today, to be frank.
00:55:09Sorry? You're pretty boring here, to be frank.
00:55:12Thank you.
00:55:12That's a high compliment.
00:55:14Yes, it is, because sometimes when you're here,
00:55:18there's all sorts of cameras here,
00:55:20and they're watching your every step and all.
00:55:22And I think there's a reason for that, right?
00:55:24And that's because the economy's doing all right.
00:55:27Am I wrong about that?
00:55:29You know, take a look at our economy.
00:55:31We're growing at around 2%, it feels like.
00:55:34Inflation is down to 2.5, 2.6%.
00:55:37Unemployment's at 4.1.
00:55:39These are good numbers.
00:55:40Yeah. I mean, I hear the parade of horribles
00:55:43on the other side, how the sky's falling.
00:55:46But I don't see the media here to attest to that.
00:55:51In fact, it's just the opposite.
00:55:53Did you read some of the headlines
00:55:55of the new government in Britain?
00:55:57Some of the headlines?
00:55:58If not, let me read one.
00:56:00It says, New British Government Inherits Worst Economic Plight
00:56:05Since World War II.
00:56:06And in fact, there's a number of headlines like that saying
00:56:09that England's in trouble.
00:56:12I imagine if you were running, you know, their central bank,
00:56:17it'd be a whole bunch of media here beating you up to find
00:56:20out, you know, what the hell you're doing
00:56:21or what you aren't doing.
00:56:22And I think the reason for that, again,
00:56:24is I think the government here has done a pretty darn good job.
00:56:28One of the things you said you didn't see coming was
00:56:30the pandemic, right?
00:56:32I'm not putting words in your mouth.
00:56:33Right. In fact, I was here and I heard the parade of horribles
00:56:37that we were going to have a recession, maybe a depression.
00:56:40In fact, the country was going to fall apart.
00:56:42Did it?
00:56:45No. We went through a period of high inflation
00:56:47as the other countries did.
00:56:50And, you know, that's very challenging for the people.
00:56:53Isn't it the case that most of those countries had higher
00:56:55inflation than we did in Europe?
00:56:59Over time, there were times when their inflation was higher.
00:57:01I think overall, it was broadly comparable.
00:57:04Yeah. In fact, I brought it up a number of times here
00:57:06because there was a whole bunch of those countries
00:57:07that had much higher inflation than we did.
00:57:09Well, Europe was much harder hit with the energy issues coming
00:57:12out of the Ukraine war than we were.
00:57:14Sure. I mean, there's a whole bunch of other issues
00:57:16to instability they had, political instability,
00:57:18a whole bunch of other things, obviously.
00:57:20But, I mean, it is interesting today that, you know,
00:57:24the parade of horribles that we hear doesn't seem
00:57:26to manifest itself with the media or the attention
00:57:29that you normally get.
00:57:30And that's good.
00:57:31I mean, I think it's a great thing.
00:57:32Now, I do want to ask a couple of questions.
00:57:34I do have concerns, Basel III on housing.
00:57:36I think I've made those concerns known to your office
00:57:39and I won't rehash them.
00:57:42But I do have issues that I want to talk to you
00:57:45about with regard to climate.
00:57:47Obviously, you said you don't read too much of the news.
00:57:50You didn't hear about Project 25.
00:57:51I don't think that's what you meant to say.
00:57:52And I don't want to put words in your mouth.
00:57:54I think when the ranking member asked you
00:57:58if you had heard about it, I think you said no.
00:58:00I think you've probably heard about it,
00:58:02but you haven't read it.
00:58:04I've seen nothing more than headlines on it.
00:58:06I mean, I've devoted zero energy into it.
00:58:11Yeah, I don't read that wacky stuff myself either,
00:58:14but I certainly read the headlines.
00:58:17But the reason I ask about the headlines is
00:58:19that you obviously have seen what has happened in Texas.
00:58:22You've seen what has happened with climate change.
00:58:25In fact, you've testified, I think,
00:58:27before that you believe in climate change.
00:58:29Is that correct?
00:58:30Sure. Yeah.
00:58:32And so what are we doing?
00:58:33You've taken a number of steps,
00:58:35I think they've been very positive, to make sure
00:58:37that we look at the risks of climate change.
00:58:39Could you go over some of those?
00:58:40Because that does concern me.
00:58:41I think that's a change that we also didn't seek.
00:58:44Well, we saw it coming.
00:58:45I saw it coming.
00:58:45I've been saying it for a long time,
00:58:46but a lot of people didn't believe.
00:58:48So, you know, if you're looking at financial regulators,
00:58:51you're looking at people who have a very,
00:58:52very limited role in climate, and that is just to look
00:58:57at the institutions that we supervise and make sure
00:58:59that they understand and can manage the risks
00:59:02that they're running.
00:59:03That, we are not climate policy makers.
00:59:05Right, right, and I'm not asking that.
00:59:06It has to be elected people who do that.
00:59:08Right, but you have to take a look at the risks.
00:59:10I mean, look at the risks
00:59:11that the insurance companies are taking, and the banks,
00:59:13of course, are financing these homes,
00:59:16and now you can't get insurance on them.
00:59:18So, all of a sudden, you can't rebuild.
00:59:19I mean, these are risks that the banks are looking at.
00:59:22So, we don't regulate insurance companies.
00:59:25No, right, but you regulate the banks.
00:59:26Banks, yeah.
00:59:27And these banks have mortgages on those houses, do they not?
00:59:32Many of them.
00:59:33Well, in many cases, they're not writing mortgages anymore.
00:59:36So, that's the result we're getting is
00:59:38that banks are saying, you know, they see these risks.
00:59:42They do.
00:59:43My time's up, but thank you again.
00:59:45I appreciate you.
00:59:45Thank you.
00:59:47The gentlelady from California, Mrs. Kim,
00:59:50is recognized for five minutes.
00:59:52Thank you, Chairman.
00:59:54Chairman Powell, thank you for being with us today.
00:59:58Gosh, you're under a lot of pressure from all sides
01:00:01to divert from our monetary policy goals,
01:00:05and I commend you for your leadership and staying focused
01:00:08on the core missions of the Fed, which are price, stability,
01:00:12and maximum employment.
01:00:13So, thanks again for your leadership.
01:00:16And you have stated that it is the Fed's strong view
01:00:20that you will have to reopen the Basel III end-game proposal
01:00:23for common again, and I really urge FDIC
01:00:27and OCC moving forward with reopening the common period.
01:00:34Chairman Powell, would broad support mean abandonment
01:00:41of any modified proposal
01:00:43that garners mostly negative public comments
01:00:46in a public common period for the modified proposal?
01:00:50Sorry, I didn't follow your question.
01:00:51Would broad support mean abandonment
01:00:55of any modified proposal
01:00:57that garners mostly negative public comments
01:01:00in a public common period for the modified proposal?
01:01:04I mean, broad support empirically would mean,
01:01:08you know, a good solid vote on the Fed board.
01:01:11And I've tried not to be specific about what that means,
01:01:14but it also means broad support among the broader community
01:01:19of commenters on all sides.
01:01:21That's what I meant by broad support.
01:01:23Got it. Yeah, that's what I meant by it.
01:01:26Thank you.
01:01:27And as the Fed looks to enacting several changes to the proposal,
01:01:32I would also urge you not to overlook how the Basel
01:01:35and endgame proposal would disproportionately impact FBOs
01:01:41and regional banks and U.S. domestic jobs
01:01:43because of the way the outside operational risk is,
01:01:47you know, weighted.
01:01:49So can we get your commitment to that?
01:01:52So let me just say we're, I'm not going to get
01:01:55into specifics, we're well aware of those concerns.
01:01:58You know, we've obviously carefully digested all
01:02:02of the comments we've gotten from all different sectors,
01:02:04and those are concerns that we're well aware of.
01:02:07Thank you.
01:02:08Let's switch gears to another matter.
01:02:11You have spoken for the need of transparency.
01:02:15Are there any conversations at the Fed
01:02:18to have more transparency and better engagement
01:02:21and consistency with stress tests?
01:02:25So we, you know, we have increased transparency
01:02:28in the stress tests over time.
01:02:31And I would say, you know, we do, if people want
01:02:34to write articles and make comments that are critical
01:02:37of the stress tests, we're going to read those
01:02:39and we're going to think about that.
01:02:40We're open to improving it.
01:02:42We know that we, the stress test has to evolve over time
01:02:44if it's to remain relevant, and I think transparency is one
01:02:47of those subjects where we're, you know, we're prepared
01:02:50to listen and think about ideas.
01:02:52Definitely.
01:02:53I would like to see more stress test regime
01:02:56that is more transparent and adapted,
01:02:59identifying unforeseen risks so we can achieve
01:03:03that by being more collaborative, I believe, yes.
01:03:06So I'm also interested to hear from you whether you
01:03:10and your fellow banking regulators have considered the
01:03:13cumulative impact of any new liquidity standards
01:03:17with the Basel III framework
01:03:19and the existing post-crisis liquidity requirements.
01:03:24So what industry engagement has the board staff held
01:03:28with respect to changes to the liquidity framework?
01:03:33So we haven't actually made any proposals on it yet.
01:03:36We have had significant industry interaction on the proposals
01:03:40and I mean, we will move, I think, at some time this year.
01:03:45What about the board staff?
01:03:47Have they conducted any industry-wide data collection
01:03:51to study the necessity for and the impact of any changes
01:03:56to the existing liquidity framework?
01:03:58I think we've done a lot of investigation on that front,
01:04:02but I think that this is the beginning
01:04:03of the process, not the end.
01:04:04You know, we'll, we haven't published proposals yet.
01:04:07We're, you know, working on them,
01:04:10and it's a pretty early stage.
01:04:11Thank you.
01:04:12Let me quickly talk about the inflation issue.
01:04:15We had a peak inflation rate of 9.1% in June 2022,
01:04:22and a lot has been talked about being a supply-side issue
01:04:25and the demand shock from the opening economy.
01:04:29So can you elaborate how the expansion in the money supply
01:04:32and fiscal stimulus played a role in persistent inflation,
01:04:35and why is it so important to get
01:04:37to the 2% inflation rate goal right now?
01:04:41So the inflation that arose here was a collision
01:04:45between very strong demand as the economy reopened.
01:04:49Remember that there had been fiscal transfers.
01:04:51We had rates very low.
01:04:53You know, those things were done because we thought we could be
01:04:56looking at a very, very bad economic time.
01:04:58As it turns out, the economy reopened,
01:05:00and demand spiked very high.
01:05:03People had saved a lot of money because they couldn't spend,
01:05:06and so there was tremendous demand,
01:05:07and there was constrained supply.
01:05:09What you got was inflation.
01:05:10And you got that everywhere in the world.
01:05:12That's what happened.
01:05:13So what's happened, to bring inflation down,
01:05:15we've made quite a lot of progress on inflation.
01:05:17To bring inflation down, the Fed has been working
01:05:20on with restrictive policy on cooling demand.
01:05:22That has been working, and the supply side has been healing.
01:05:25And, you know, the negative labor participation shock has
01:05:29essentially reversed, adjusted for.
01:05:32So it's kind of working out as we had expected.
01:05:35Thank you very much, Chairman.
01:05:36General Warren from Georgia.
01:05:37Mrs. Williams is now recognized for five minutes.
01:05:41Thank you, Chairman McHenry, and thank you, Chair Powell,
01:05:43for joining us today.
01:05:44As the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta,
01:05:48Rafael Bostic has so rightly pointed
01:05:50out that combating economic inequality is a critical part
01:05:54of the Fed's dual mandate.
01:05:56When everyone in our community doesn't have the opportunity
01:05:59to contribute to their fullest potential,
01:06:01the economy is not firing on all cylinders.
01:06:04Nowhere is this more apparent than in my home city of Atlanta,
01:06:08which has more black-owned businesses
01:06:10than any other city in the country,
01:06:13but is still among our nation's leaders
01:06:15in the racial wealth gap.
01:06:16I applaud you and your staff at the Federal Reserve
01:06:19for the work that you're doing to make sure that the economy
01:06:22works as well for the hardworking people
01:06:24of Georgia's fighting 5th District as it does
01:06:27for those in the top 1%.
01:06:29This includes helping to make sure
01:06:31that financial services are affordable
01:06:33and accessible to everyone.
01:06:35As the Fed moves forward with the proposed changes
01:06:38to Regulation 2, I know that protecting access to affordable
01:06:41and accessible banking is at the top of your mind.
01:06:45That is why I was concerned when I started receiving outreach
01:06:48about the unintentional effects
01:06:49that Reg 2 proposed rule would have on marginalized communities,
01:06:53including my constituents in Atlanta.
01:06:56Specifically, I heard about the impact that the reduction
01:06:59in interchange fees proposed by this rule could have
01:07:02on bank-on certified accounts in my district
01:07:05and across the country.
01:07:06The bank-on initiative is a partnership
01:07:08between financial institutions
01:07:10and trusted community-based organizations to offer low
01:07:13or no-cost bank accounts to unbanked
01:07:16and underbanked individuals.
01:07:18Access and affordability are at the heart of the changes
01:07:22that you're proposing, and I couldn't agree more
01:07:24with those goals, but we have to make sure that programs designed
01:07:28to serve unbanked and underbanked individuals
01:07:31in marginalized communities continue to flourish.
01:07:35In response to these concerns, my colleague across the aisle,
01:07:38Mr. Luckemeyer, and I sent a bipartisan comment letter
01:07:41in March to you highlighting those very concerns and urging
01:07:45that the final rule not negatively impact low
01:07:48and moderate income communities.
01:07:50Chair Powell, how does the Fed take
01:07:52into account how regulations impact constituents
01:07:55who don't have an attorney or an interest group
01:07:58to submit a comment on their behalf?
01:08:00Well, let me say first, we have heard those concerns
01:08:04that you raised and others have raised about aspects
01:08:07of the proposed rule, and we very much understand the
01:08:12concerns that are being raised.
01:08:13In terms of people where we don't have comment letters,
01:08:17we try to be thoughtful about the impact of our regulations,
01:08:22but principally we're looking for public comment on things.
01:08:25Thank you.
01:08:27The FDIC's most recent data shows that the rate
01:08:29of unbanked households is at an all-time low.
01:08:32The Bank On initiative has certainly played an important
01:08:34role in this progress.
01:08:35Bank On certified accounts are available to more than 95 percent
01:08:39of low and moderate income households across all 50 states.
01:08:43Access to low or no-cost banking services is a door
01:08:47to financial inclusion and wealth generation
01:08:50for marginalized families.
01:08:51As written, Reg 2 could undo some of the costs
01:08:55As written, Reg 2 could undo some
01:08:57of the enormous progress made in the past several years.
01:09:01Chair Powell, how can regulators work with members
01:09:03of this committee to ensure
01:09:05that future proposed rules do not hinder Americans' access
01:09:09to tools that enhance the Federal Reserve's financial
01:09:11inclusion efforts?
01:09:13So we're very focused on things like Bank On, as you pointed out,
01:09:16and on, you know, access to the financial system
01:09:19for marginalized communities, and we wouldn't want
01:09:21to do anything to weigh on that.
01:09:24And we're happy to work with you and your office on those issues.
01:09:30So, you know, as I mentioned, we're hearing the comments,
01:09:34and we're reading them, and we're, you know,
01:09:36we're taking those into account as we think
01:09:37about appropriate changes to the proposal.
01:09:40So we will definitely follow up on that,
01:09:42because as we're writing these regulations,
01:09:44I want to make sure that we're thinking
01:09:46about the real-world impact and what it means to consumers
01:09:49when they're accessing financial institutions.
01:09:52I look forward to working with you
01:09:53to further the Fed's financial inclusion efforts.
01:09:56Like earlier this week,
01:09:57I sent you another bipartisan letter related
01:10:00to the Federal Reserve's April proposal
01:10:02to extend the operating hours of FedWire fund service
01:10:06to 22 hours per day, seven days per week,
01:10:09and every day of the year.
01:10:10That was news that I was eager to hear.
01:10:13This may sound like a small technical change,
01:10:15but it can have a big impact on our constituents,
01:10:18especially for those living in marginalized communities
01:10:21who live paycheck to paycheck.
01:10:23Growing up in the booming metropolis
01:10:25of Smith Station, Alabama,
01:10:26probably never heard of a Cheer Pal.
01:10:29But there are limited options for loans and short-term loans.
01:10:33In an area where everyone needs a car to get to work,
01:10:35and they have to work to eat, when money is short,
01:10:38any delay in accessing a paycheck
01:10:41or paying a bill can disrupt your entire household.
01:10:44Extending operating hours for FedWire fund service
01:10:47and national settlement service will allow people continual
01:10:50access to their funds outside
01:10:52of what we deem normal operating hours.
01:10:54And I hear the gavel.
01:10:55I'm out of time, but we will be following
01:10:57up for more conversation.
01:10:59Thank you.
01:10:59Thank you.
01:11:02The gentleman from Nebraska, Mr. Floods,
01:11:04recognized for five minutes.
01:11:05Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01:11:07Chairman Powell, after a year with very high inflation
01:11:10that battered American paychecks,
01:11:11inflation rates have moderated some.
01:11:14However, inflation continues to linger
01:11:16above the 2% target rate set by the Federal Reserve.
01:11:19In fact, the PCE inflation index has remained above 2%
01:11:24for the last three years.
01:11:26The Federal Open Market Committee's statement
01:11:28on longer-run goals and monetary policy strategy issued
01:11:31at the beginning of the year stated, and I quote,
01:11:34the committee seeks to achieve inflation
01:11:36that averages 2% over time, and therefore judges
01:11:40that following periods
01:11:41when inflation has been running persistently below 2%,
01:11:45appropriate monetary policy will likely aim
01:11:47to achieve inflation moderately above 2% for some time, end quote.
01:11:53Chairman Powell, does the commitment
01:11:55to achieve a 2% average over time apply
01:11:59in the other direction as well,
01:12:01meaning that if inflation remains above 2%
01:12:03for a protracted period, would the committee instead aim
01:12:06for inflation moderately below 2% for some time in order
01:12:10to achieve an inflation average of 2%?
01:12:13No, it doesn't.
01:12:15Is it fair to say that you would need
01:12:16to see the PCE index dip below 2% at least once
01:12:20in the coming months in order to contemplate a rate cut?
01:12:23No, that's not fair to say.
01:12:25We've said that you don't want to wait
01:12:27until inflation gets all the way down to 2%
01:12:30because inflation has a certain momentum.
01:12:32You wouldn't wait that long.
01:12:33If you waited that long, you probably waited too long
01:12:35because inflation will be moving downward and will go well below 2%,
01:12:39which we don't want.
01:12:41What combination factors would you need to see in order
01:12:43to support a rate cut this month or in September?
01:12:46So once again, I'll say I'm not sending any signals
01:12:50on any particular date of any meeting whatsoever on policy.
01:12:53I said that yesterday, and I'm saying it again today,
01:12:55but I will answer your question.
01:12:56So what we've said is that we want to be more confident.
01:12:59We want to have greater confidence,
01:13:01and that means more good inflation readings.
01:13:03That inflation is moving sustainably down to 2%,
01:13:08greater confidence that that is the case.
01:13:10Remember, we have a dual mandate, too.
01:13:12We're not just an inflation-targeting central bank.
01:13:14We also have an employment mandate.
01:13:16So I could also see us cutting, and we've said this,
01:13:19I've said this, if we saw unexpected weakening
01:13:22in the labor market.
01:13:23And we do now see, I'll speak for myself, I now see the risks
01:13:28to the two mandates as much closer to being in balance.
01:13:32I think for a long time, we've had to focus heavily
01:13:35on the inflation mandate, but I think now we're getting
01:13:38to the place where the labor market is getting pretty much
01:13:44in balance to where it needs to be.
01:13:46And so we're looking at both sides.
01:13:49I know that the media and others have continued to talk
01:13:51about the prospect of political interference
01:13:53with the Federal Reserve.
01:13:55With an election coming up, I know you are very aware
01:13:57of the heightened scrutiny awaiting the Open Market
01:13:59Committee meetings in July and September.
01:14:02Can you use this opportunity
01:14:03to speak regarding the Federal Reserve's political
01:14:05independence going into this election?
01:14:08Sure. I'd be glad to.
01:14:09So, you know, our political independence is critical
01:14:14to our ability to do our jobs and to sustain the faith
01:14:19of people across the political spectrum.
01:14:21And it comes down to we make our decisions based
01:14:24on economic data, the evolving outlook, the balance of risks,
01:14:28and we don't take into consideration any other factors,
01:14:32including political factors.
01:14:34We have a long history of doing that,
01:14:37and I think the public believes we will do that.
01:14:39Any decision that we make, you know, on rates,
01:14:43on any of our policy tools, it's going to be very well-grounded
01:14:46in the data, and it will represent our best thinking
01:14:50about what is best for the American public
01:14:53in the near and medium term.
01:14:55And that's the promise that I will give
01:14:57and that all my colleagues will give.
01:14:59And that means we're not looking at things like election cycles.
01:15:02We're not looking at any of those things.
01:15:04We're looking at the data.
01:15:06What does it tell us is the right thing to do
01:15:07when we figure that out?
01:15:08When we think it's time to move, we go ahead and move,
01:15:11but not until then.
01:15:12I appreciate that.
01:15:14Finally, I'd like to raise concerns with housing costs.
01:15:16While shelter is one component of the broader PCE calculation,
01:15:19housing often makes up one of the largest,
01:15:21if not the largest, expense for many consumers.
01:15:24Inflation for housing remains persistently high.
01:15:27One of the characteristics of this economy is
01:15:30that consumer sentiment is remarkably low.
01:15:33Do you think high housing costs could be contributing
01:15:35to the persistently low consumer sentiment?
01:15:39I think prices, high prices generally,
01:15:41I think nobody really has, can be super highly confident
01:15:45of their answer on this.
01:15:46But I do think it's the fact that while inflation has come
01:15:49down, prices are high, if you know what I mean.
01:15:51And people are paying more for things, more for housing,
01:15:54more for the essentials of life, food, energy.
01:15:58And, you know, that to me is how I would explain surveys.
01:16:02We say that the economy is growing.
01:16:04Inflation has come down.
01:16:05Unemployment is low.
01:16:06And all that's true.
01:16:07But prices are high.
01:16:08Thank you, Chairman Powell, for your answer
01:16:09and your testimony, and I yield back.
01:16:13General from New York, Mr. Torres is recognized
01:16:16for five minutes.
01:16:18Thank you.
01:16:18Chair Powell, the Fed has an inflation rate target of 2%.
01:16:22Are you waiting for both PCE inflation and CPI inflation
01:16:26of all the 2% or only one of those metrics?
01:16:29So we look at different measures, but for a quarter
01:16:32of a century, the PCE inflation has been the Fed's goal.
01:16:36We've defined our goal in terms of that
01:16:38because we think it's the better measure of the costs
01:16:42and inflation that the public actually faces.
01:16:45And now you've said that you're willing
01:16:46to cut interest rates before reaching the 2% target.
01:16:50Is the decision to cut interest rates going to be driven
01:16:53by reaching a particular target en route to 2% or is it driven
01:16:58by the overall trajectory of the inflation rate?
01:17:00It's going to be driven by the totality of the data.
01:17:03There isn't a particular number that we have in mind
01:17:06that we have to get to.
01:17:07It's more, you look at all of the data
01:17:09and the question we're asking ourselves is,
01:17:12are we sufficiently confident
01:17:13that inflation really is moving down toward 2%?
01:17:16So what's the underlying inflation rate,
01:17:18looking through the volatility?
01:17:19We're also looking, though, as I mentioned, at the labor market
01:17:22and we're asking ourselves, you know, we have to take
01:17:25into account now maximum employment, that mandate.
01:17:28So we're looking at both of those
01:17:29in the decisions that we make.
01:17:31I mean, are you confident that the inflation rate is
01:17:33on a downward trajectory?
01:17:37I do have some confidence of that.
01:17:39I think we've seen that over the past several years.
01:17:41The question is, are we sufficiently confident
01:17:43that it is moving sustainably down to 2%?
01:17:45And I'm not prepared to say that yet.
01:17:48Chair Powell, you announced a re-proposal
01:17:50of Basel III rather than a mere revision.
01:17:53Do you believe that the U.S. banking system is sufficiently
01:17:56capitalized in the absence of Basel III?
01:17:59I've long been of the view that U.S. banks are well capitalized
01:18:04and at the level of capital
01:18:05in the U.S. banking system is about right.
01:18:08Okay. So if the banking system is sufficiently capitalized
01:18:11in the absence of Basel III,
01:18:13then what exactly is the need for Basel III?
01:18:15First of all, there's no precise answer
01:18:19as to the appropriate level of capital.
01:18:20I think we've been part of developing the Basel Standards.
01:18:24They create international broad parity.
01:18:27It's important that we have that.
01:18:29And it's important that we do something that is comparable
01:18:33to what the other large jurisdictions are doing.
01:18:35And it's consistent with Basel.
01:18:37And I think that's what our banks want.
01:18:39That's what we want.
01:18:39And that will be best serving the public.
01:18:42But you agree we should conform without gold plating?
01:18:47You know, some things we've gold plated
01:18:50and some things we haven't.
01:18:51And but I think we should make,
01:18:54I think our end game proposal should be, at the end,
01:18:57should be consistent with the requirements of Basel
01:18:59and consistent with what the other large jurisdictions
01:19:02are doing.
01:19:03Are you confident that there's no legal conflict
01:19:05between the standardization recommended by Basel III
01:19:09and the regulatory tailoring mandated by Congress?
01:19:12I think we can work through all that.
01:19:14Yeah. Okay.
01:19:14But if there were a conflict.
01:19:16Basel doesn't impose any requirements on anyone.
01:19:19There's no enforceable requirements.
01:19:21Every jurisdiction does what it's going to do.
01:19:23Basel is, doesn't bind anybody.
01:19:26Right. But the regulatory framework you're adopting would
01:19:28codify those recommendations.
01:19:30Yes. Which would have the force of law, right?
01:19:32Yes. That's right.
01:19:32And so if there were a conflict
01:19:34between the codified recommendations and an act
01:19:36of Congress, would you agree that an act
01:19:38of Congress would supersede those recommendations?
01:19:41Sure. Does the loss
01:19:43of Chevron deference have any implications for Basel III?
01:19:45You know, it's very early days to assess.
01:19:51There's several decisions that are about administrative law,
01:19:54and I think it's too early for us to say.
01:19:56I mean, ultimately, the question is,
01:19:59are the actions we're taking in compliance with the law?
01:20:02And that decision says that there will be less deference
01:20:06or no deference, maybe, to the opinions of the agency.
01:20:10But that just means a court will be answering the same question,
01:20:12which is, are those actions consistent with the law?
01:20:16The Fed has a target rate when it comes to inflation.
01:20:19Does the Fed have a target when it comes
01:20:21to quantitative tightening, like when it comes
01:20:23to what should be the size of the Fed's balance sheet?
01:20:27Well, we have a, we don't have a specific target, no.
01:20:31What would you consider to be a healthy size
01:20:34for the Fed's balance sheet?
01:20:35We define it, you know, not with numbers, but with words.
01:20:39And, you know, we want an ample reserves regime
01:20:42with a buffer so that reserves are not scarce.
01:20:47And we think plentiful reserves,
01:20:49ample reserves is the right place to be.
01:20:51And, you know, we'll find that empirically.
01:20:53Can you put a number on that?
01:20:55No, I can't really.
01:20:57For four decades, we've had the best
01:20:58of both worlds, low unemployment and low inflation.
01:21:02Can the U.S. economy return to the golden age
01:21:04of low unemployment and low inflation, or are we doomed
01:21:06to live with a new normal of higher interest rates?
01:21:09Well, you know, I think we have low inflation.
01:21:11We've got a period here of very low, I'm sorry,
01:21:14of low unemployment.
01:21:15We have high inflation, so can we have the best
01:21:17of both worlds?
01:21:17We certainly can, and that's the plan.
01:21:20We will, we're going to return to 2% inflation,
01:21:22I'm reasonably confident.
01:21:24Some people argue that we're entering into a world of a lot
01:21:27of upward inflation shocks.
01:21:29That would be a challenging world, but, you know,
01:21:30that remains to be seen.
01:21:31Thank you.
01:21:33Gentleman from Iowa, Mr. Nunn is recognized for five minutes.
01:21:37Thank you, Mr. Chair.
01:21:38And thank you, Chairman Powell, for being with us today.
01:21:40Your office has done a very diligent job in working
01:21:44with this body on both sides of the aisle.
01:21:46I chalked some of that up to the fact
01:21:47that you've got some very good folks from Iowa
01:21:49on your staff there helping keep the trains running on time,
01:21:52so that's excellent.
01:21:53I will note that, you know,
01:21:54in Iowa the average family has experienced, you know,
01:21:57annual inflation of about $925 per month just
01:22:02in the last three years.
01:22:03I've got six kids.
01:22:04We're the number one egg-producing state
01:22:06in the country, but yet eggs for each one
01:22:09of my kids goes up 40% this past year, and take that times six.
01:22:12I'm no economist, but that adds up real quick,
01:22:15and I think I'm reflective of a lot of families
01:22:17across the country right now.
01:22:19So, Mr. Chair, one of the things I'd like to talk
01:22:21about is, you know, what we are focused on
01:22:24and what your department's working on at the Fed.
01:22:27The U.S. Federal Reserve, in my opinion, should be more focused
01:22:30on folks like my hometown of Bondurant, Iowa,
01:22:33versus what's coming out of elected bureaucrats
01:22:36in Brussels, Belgium, for example, which is one
01:22:38of the reasons I'm so grateful that you have talked
01:22:40about reopening Basel III for a conversation on what's
01:22:44in the best interest of the American people.
01:22:46I applaud you and your team for this.
01:22:48While I would like to see Basel III candidly scrapped
01:22:51altogether, I think that there are three things
01:22:52in this proposal that we've got to look at immediately.
01:22:54One, the impact of credit availability,
01:22:57especially to ensure that it won't be tighter credit
01:23:00conditions on small businesses back home in places like Iowa.
01:23:04The ability for farmers across the country to be able
01:23:07to hedge their grain, corn, soybean,
01:23:09livestock in a new Basel III conversation.
01:23:13And ultimately, eliminate the downstream effects
01:23:15on American banks being held to higher standards and very clear
01:23:19in Basel III than what's being held in Europe.
01:23:22So with that, I want to readdress your team's attention
01:23:25to the letter I sent in a bipartisan way
01:23:27with Senator Jerry Moran,
01:23:28specifically emphasizing the negative impact
01:23:30of increased bank capital requirements on the economy,
01:23:34our constituents, and ultimately our ag producers
01:23:37across the country.
01:23:38So what I'll first say is, can you confirm
01:23:41that the next Basel III proposal
01:23:43as outlined will address concerns
01:23:45from our ag growers, including our farmers?
01:23:48Let me just say that we're well aware
01:23:50of the concerns you're raising about hedging.
01:23:52And I'm not going to be too specific about things,
01:23:56but we're quite aware of those concerns.
01:23:59I certainly hope your team gets the opportunity to hear that
01:24:01because it's one of the most painful things I'm hearing back
01:24:03in my home district.
01:24:05Would you agree that the end user's concerns could have been
01:24:09mitigated maybe at the front end of this if, you know, Congress
01:24:15or say a farmer in my district had been included
01:24:17in those opening conversations?
01:24:19You know, in hindsight, perhaps that's right.
01:24:25But in any case, this is what the comment period is for.
01:24:28Well, I'll note that 84% of the comments coming
01:24:31from this proposal concern entities outside
01:24:34of banks, as you know.
01:24:36A lot of those were from the ag industry who felt
01:24:38that they had no voice in this and were a recipient of things
01:24:41that really harm their businesses.
01:24:44With that, I want to read quickly,
01:24:45former Treasurer Secretary Larry Summers was asked about Basel,
01:24:49and he said, quote, we're going to need to prepare
01:24:51for consolidation in banking in the future, quite possibly some
01:24:55even further evolution of lending away from banks.
01:24:57Now, I'm going to note here that Iowa has
01:24:59over 250 community banks with assets under $7 billion.
01:25:03His comments are of great concern on this consolidation.
01:25:07Do you share concerns
01:25:09about a consolidation amongst banks across America?
01:25:12So, you know, we all, I speak for myself, you know,
01:25:15I realize that community banks are tremendously important
01:25:18in their communities, and it's not a better world
01:25:22when community banks go out of business.
01:25:24At the same time, if there needs to be consolidation,
01:25:28I don't think we should be standing in the way of that,
01:25:30but we shouldn't, we don't want to be part
01:25:32of the reason why community banks are going out of business
01:25:36or being forced to merge because of, for example, high fixed costs
01:25:40because of regulation or other things.
01:25:42I would agree with you, Mr. Chairman.
01:25:43We don't want to be the instigator for a small bank
01:25:45to have to go out and stop serving a local community.
01:25:48You know, as we look at Basel III,
01:25:50if it's finalized in early 2025,
01:25:53does that mean we will push implementation back to 2026?
01:25:56I don't know exactly what it would be,
01:25:59but something like that is right.
01:26:00You know, we'd have a typical phase-in process at the end
01:26:04of the, you know, quite a lot of work to do to get
01:26:06to a final rule, and then there'll be a phase-in process.
01:26:09I don't know exactly what the date would be.
01:26:11Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01:26:12I just want to know kind of a timeline for my folks.
01:26:14I mean, there's obviously 2026, or take my advice,
01:26:17scrap it all together, and we can start over,
01:26:19if we even need to do that.
01:26:20Let me ask very quickly, with Chevron overturn,
01:26:22is there anything you're, the Fed is doing to identify areas
01:26:26where maybe we have over-regulated
01:26:27at the federal side, and you're self-policing right now?
01:26:30Under the Chevron decision?
01:26:31I mean, again, our view is we're very focused on obeying the law
01:26:37and reading the actual words of the law and interpreting it
01:26:40according to the words that are in the law.
01:26:41This is the way we approach things,
01:26:42and I'm not sure how much will change.
01:26:45You know, basically a court will be doing
01:26:47that with a little bit less deference to the agency,
01:26:50but you know, we think we're already interpreting the law
01:26:54pretty carefully.
01:26:55So, and again, these are brand-new decisions.
01:26:57There are several of them, and it's way early.
01:26:59We're just studying them now.
01:27:01Thank you, Chairman Powell.
01:27:02Thank you, Chair, and I hope you continue to self-police.
01:27:04It's much appreciated to you and your team.
01:27:05We'll now recognize the gentleman from North Carolina,
01:27:07my friend, Mr. Nickel, for five minutes.
01:27:09Thank you so much, Mr. Chairman.
01:27:11Welcome back, Chair Powell.
01:27:13I represent a Republican-leading,
01:27:16very purple district, so my constituents sent me here
01:27:18to get things done.
01:27:20It's been disappointing that we're on track
01:27:22for what I believe could be the least productive Congress
01:27:25in our nation's history, but this committee has done some
01:27:27good bipartisan work on the Digital Assets Market Structure
01:27:32Bill and stable coins.
01:27:33It's a place where I have hope that we're going
01:27:35to see some action in this Congress.
01:27:38I know you and I have privately spoken about stable coins,
01:27:42and you know, here in the House, in a bipartisan way,
01:27:46we've been working diligently to pass a bill
01:27:49to regulate payment stable coins.
01:27:52This committee voted in favor of the legislation
01:27:54in a bipartisan way last year,
01:27:56and there have been numerous calls from this committee
01:27:59to you and to the Fed, asking that you prioritize working
01:28:04with Congress to help push this legislation forward.
01:28:07We've enjoyed our conversations with staff as well.
01:28:10Can you commit to directing your staff to finalize
01:28:13and support passage of stable coin legislation this year?
01:28:17So we've been, you know, really pleased to take part
01:28:20in this process and, you know,
01:28:23very much appreciate being included in it,
01:28:26and we'll stay with it.
01:28:28You know, we think it's really important
01:28:30that we have a federal framework for stable coins, and again,
01:28:35we'll be all in on working with you to get that done.
01:28:38Thank you very much.
01:28:40A big issue for the folks that I represent, housing.
01:28:43The rising cost of housing hits my constituents especially hard
01:28:47in North Carolina.
01:28:48Our ranking member, Maxine Waters,
01:28:50has made this a big priority for the work
01:28:53that we do in the committee.
01:28:55In North Carolina, we've got 343,000 households that spend
01:28:59over half of their monthly income on rent,
01:29:01leaving little money for other expenses
01:29:05like health care, transportation, and food.
01:29:08Access to safe and affordable housing is essential
01:29:10to the well-being of working families and individuals
01:29:13in North Carolina and around the country.
01:29:15Chair Powell, despite the strong economic trends you mentioned
01:29:18in your testimony, housing prices
01:29:20and median rents have increased by nearly 50
01:29:24and 41 percent respectively since May of 2020,
01:29:27and they continue to rise.
01:29:28In fact, housing costs continue to outpace modest wage gains.
01:29:32High interest rates continue to add to those costs.
01:29:35For example, high interest rates make it more expensive
01:29:39for home builders to finance new housing.
01:29:41High interest rates also cause landlords
01:29:43to change higher rents and lead
01:29:45to higher mortgage costs for would-be homebuyers.
01:29:48I know that you and your colleagues
01:29:49at the Fed are correctly focused on bringing
01:29:52down inflation, an important goal, but have you considered
01:29:55that at this point, with housing cost increases being the primary
01:29:59driver of inflation, keeping interest rates high only
01:30:03towards that stated goal?
01:30:06So a couple things are happening with housing.
01:30:10Before the pandemic, there was, you know,
01:30:12pretty serious housing shortage,
01:30:15and we can't do anything about that.
01:30:17Then the pandemic comes along, and, you know,
01:30:20we really think the best thing, the most important thing we can
01:30:22do for the housing market in the medium and longer term is
01:30:26to get inflation under control so that interest rates can come
01:30:29down, so that we can get back to a more normal interest rate.
01:30:34No one knows exactly where interest rates will go,
01:30:36but they'll be lower than they are now,
01:30:38and the housing market supply and demand will work their way
01:30:42out, and you'll have supply of housing.
01:30:44There's still going to be a housing shortage at the end
01:30:47of that, though, and it's true that our policies work
01:30:54through interest-sensitive spending.
01:30:57Housing is maybe the most interest-sensitive form
01:31:00of spending, buying houses with a mortgage.
01:31:04We know that we have really significant effects
01:31:06in that market, and it's tough on people,
01:31:08but this is the path to getting inflation down,
01:31:10which will bear fruit for many, many years.
01:31:13Thanks so much.
01:31:14I don't think I'm going to be able to get
01:31:15in my next question in the limited time I have,
01:31:19but I wanted to give you this opportunity if you'd like it.
01:31:21I've talked to you privately about this,
01:31:23and I have a pretty good idea what you'll say,
01:31:25but if you would like to say that the economy is heading
01:31:28for a soft landing, you're welcome to say soft landing
01:31:30as much as you'd like right now.
01:31:33I'll say, for some time, I've thought there is a path
01:31:37to getting back to full price stability without,
01:31:41well, keeping the inflation, sorry,
01:31:43the unemployment rate low.
01:31:45There is that path.
01:31:46We've been on it.
01:31:47We're very, very focused on staying on that path.
01:31:49I would say we're at a place now where the risks
01:31:52to the two mandates are much more imbalanced than they were,
01:31:55and that means it's not just about getting inflation down.
01:31:59The job is not done on inflation.
01:32:01We have more work to do there, but at the same time,
01:32:03we need to be mindful of where the labor market is,
01:32:06and we have seen considerable softening in the labor market.
01:32:09We still have a strong labor market
01:32:10with low unemployment, by all means,
01:32:13but so this is what we are very focused
01:32:16on continuing to work toward.
01:32:19Thank you very much, and I yield back.
01:32:20Thank you.
01:32:21The gentlewoman from Texas, Ms. Dela Cruz, is now recognized.
01:32:25Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, Chair Powell,
01:32:28for being here today.
01:32:30I appreciate that.
01:32:31I represent a working class in South Texas.
01:32:35In fact, my district is mostly Hispanic,
01:32:39one of the most Hispanic districts
01:32:41in the entire nation, over 80 percent,
01:32:45and my district is also a rural community,
01:32:49so the topic today greatly affects my constituents
01:32:54and is something personal for me.
01:32:57That being said, the population that I represent is a population
01:33:03that the Federal Reserve research has shown
01:33:08disproportionately will be the hardest hit in inflation.
01:33:14That being said, higher prices due
01:33:17to Biden's induced inflation is something not only the nation is
01:33:23feeling, but my constituents are feeling.
01:33:27They're feeling it at the grocery store.
01:33:29They're feeling it at the gas pump.
01:33:31Small businesses are feeling this, and we know
01:33:37that cutting back on their spending,
01:33:41people who are living paycheck to paycheck,
01:33:44they still can't get away from these increasing costs
01:33:47at the grocery store or the gas station.
01:33:50So even small changes have a big impact
01:33:54in rural communities like mine.
01:33:56In fact, the Farm Bureau recently said
01:34:00that the cost of the 4th of July prices,
01:34:04the 4th of July celebration had high, high increases.
01:34:10The headline reads, Record High 4th of July Cookout Costs,
01:34:14Inflation Hits the Backyard.
01:34:17This report says that costs were up 5 percent from last year
01:34:22and up 30 percent from just a few years ago,
01:34:26all during the Biden administration time.
01:34:29Now, the Biden administration wants us to simply forget
01:34:33about the last three years
01:34:35and the pain it has caused families in my district.
01:34:39They don't understand why people are unhappy
01:34:42about their current economic situation, and quite frankly,
01:34:46it is angering and it's simply out of touch
01:34:50with the everyday American.
01:34:52It seems obvious that until we grapple
01:34:55with the runaway government spending,
01:34:58that unfortunately, we are going to continue
01:35:02to have runaway inflation.
01:35:05Chairman Powell, can you explain
01:35:07to us how the excessive government spending not only
01:35:11increases the national debt but also affects inflation as well?
01:35:18Sure. So let me say, first of all,
01:35:20we completely understand that inflation hurts people, you know,
01:35:25low- and moderate-income people, directly and immediately
01:35:29in a way that it doesn't affect even middle-class people
01:35:32because, you know, paying more for the necessities of life
01:35:36when you don't have much of a financial safety net,
01:35:38the pain starts right away.
01:35:39We get that, and so it is for those people, among others,
01:35:43that we are doing everything we can to get inflation
01:35:46under control and stay at the job until it's done.
01:35:50In terms of the causes of inflation, you know,
01:35:53the inflation that we're having is not that different
01:35:56from what other advanced economies
01:35:58around the world are having, and it really results from, you know,
01:36:02the pandemic comes along.
01:36:03Inflation is low.
01:36:04The pandemic comes along.
01:36:05We shut down the economy.
01:36:07People are sent checks to replace their income.
01:36:10They can't spend that money because they can't go
01:36:12to the movie theater or to a football game
01:36:14because everything is closed.
01:36:16So savings go up, and so people are spending a lot.
01:36:19Meanwhile- Chair Powell, I have only a minute left,
01:36:21so I yield my time back.
01:36:23I want to shift gears real quickly.
01:36:26I continue to believe that the federal banking agencies,
01:36:30including the Fed, should scrap the flawed Basel III endgame
01:36:36proposal and start over.
01:36:39At this point, the last thing, a first-time home buyer,
01:36:43a small business owner, and constituents, as you said,
01:36:48low-income people who are rule people, for example,
01:36:53in my community, the last thing they need is harder access
01:36:56to capital, which is exactly what that proposal does.
01:37:00The public knows it and doesn't want it either,
01:37:04with a whopping 97% of public comments being negative
01:37:09for this proposal.
01:37:11Chair Powell, don't you agree
01:37:13that with the overwhelming negative reception
01:37:16of this proposal that it shows a lack of public support?
01:37:20I do think that's fair to say.
01:37:24Thank you.
01:37:25I yield back.
01:37:26The gentlewoman from Colorado,
01:37:28Ms. Pedersen, is now recognized.
01:37:31Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you for your service
01:37:34in such difficult times.
01:37:35We sign up to serve, and we don't know what's going
01:37:38to come our way when I think about what we've been
01:37:40through as a country, with a global pandemic,
01:37:43the economy in collapse, and what this Congress was able
01:37:48to do to infuse money, to keep our small businesses afloat,
01:37:53critical services available, and making sure that we were
01:37:56in a position for the quickest, strongest recovery in the world.
01:38:01And while we have a lot to feel proud of, we recognize
01:38:05and have had many conversations throughout this committee
01:38:07about the pain points that people are continuing
01:38:10to feel with rising costs, and you touched on this.
01:38:14I really appreciate the discussion around housing
01:38:17in an earlier question,
01:38:18because this is the greatest inflationary cost,
01:38:22especially in Colorado,
01:38:24where we have seen significant home price increases,
01:38:28a lack of supply, people are unable to move,
01:38:32because they would go to a much higher interest rate,
01:38:36and then people are unable to buy
01:38:37because they can't afford those mortgage payments.
01:38:40And so while you've talked about recognizing
01:38:43that lowering the interest rates will actually help
01:38:47with addressing the housing crisis,
01:38:49we still have a lack of housing supply.
01:38:52So can you talk a little bit more about what's happening,
01:38:55and that the lower interest rates are only a piece of this?
01:38:58It's a longer-term thing, and a lot of it is it's harder
01:39:02to get lots and zoning and materials and workers,
01:39:07and in many, many metropolitan areas,
01:39:10the near-in areas are all built up.
01:39:14If you look around Washington,
01:39:15I grew up near Washington, D.C., and, you know,
01:39:18it was countryside just a couple of miles outside the Beltway.
01:39:21There was no Beltway when I was born,
01:39:22but ultimately it's just we have not enough housing.
01:39:29And that was true before the pandemic,
01:39:31and certainly the pandemic did slow down housing construction.
01:39:35I think we'll get back to a more normal economy
01:39:37with lower interest rates and those sorts of things,
01:39:40but we're still going to have, you know, a housing shortage.
01:39:45Absolutely.
01:39:46When I think about the other pieces of the fallout
01:39:49from the global pandemic and the changes that we saw
01:39:51in our economy was in commercial real estate, and I've continued
01:39:56to read about regional bank failures and the risk
01:40:00that the commercial real estate poses in the long-term
01:40:04for those assets being on the books for our banks.
01:40:07What is your insight on the risk that it poses
01:40:12for financial stability and what we should be thinking
01:40:15about here in Congress?
01:40:17So the commercial real estate situation, which is, you know,
01:40:20it's significantly downtown office and related retail
01:40:23and things like that, this is something the banks have been
01:40:26working their way through for the last couple of years.
01:40:29I think it'll take more time,
01:40:31more years to work all the way through it.
01:40:34We know from the stress tests and from our own work
01:40:37that the large banks, they're going to be okay here.
01:40:42Some of the regional banks
01:40:44and smaller banks have what you would expect,
01:40:45which is high concentrations
01:40:47in their local community in real estate.
01:40:49We are aware of those.
01:40:50The banks are aware of it.
01:40:51I think the supervisors have been
01:40:53around those banks making sure they have capital,
01:40:56they have liquidity, they have a reasonably, you know,
01:41:00not too optimistic assessment of how much capital they'll need,
01:41:02how big the losses will be.
01:41:04So I think we'll be working through this.
01:41:06And, you know, it doesn't seem to be a systemic problem or one
01:41:11that threatens broader financial stability.
01:41:13It does threaten bank profitability
01:41:15and those sorts of things.
01:41:17But it'll be with us a while.
01:41:18We'll just keep working our way through it.
01:41:21And the ability to continue to loan to small businesses
01:41:24because you're being locked up.
01:41:25You are not going to have enough time to answer this question,
01:41:29but my remaining outstanding question is
01:41:32around the recent Chevron ruling and, you know,
01:41:35how you anticipate that impacting the Fed's ability
01:41:41to adjust to the needs of the country
01:41:43and ensure financial stability without being sued at every turn?
01:41:48You know, we're just looking at all these new decisions.
01:41:51So it's early to stay on.
01:41:52I speak under the control of my general counsel.
01:41:54I don't want to cause him to strike me.
01:41:57That's how I feel about my staff.
01:41:59I mean, not striking me.
01:42:01No, but I mean, look, ultimately, we're already doing,
01:42:06we're already very careful at the Fed
01:42:08about keeping within the law.
01:42:10We're really committed to that value.
01:42:12And, you know, this ruling doesn't change that.
01:42:16And I think we'll continue
01:42:18to be an institution that's strongly committed
01:42:21to the rule of law.
01:42:23Great. Thank you so much.
01:42:24I yield back.
01:42:24Thank you.
01:42:25General, I yield to the gentleman from Wisconsin.
01:42:27Mr. Fitzgerald is recognized.
01:42:28Chairman, thanks for being here.
01:42:30There has been a lot of talk about Basel III.
01:42:33I wanted to just change that subject a little bit.
01:42:36Long-term debt proposal, I think, should be rewritten
01:42:40and re-proposed as well, but at the very least,
01:42:44the rule needs to be tailored, as law requires,
01:42:47so that regional banks aren't treated more harshly
01:42:50than the largest banks, of course.
01:42:53In particular, the requirement for regional banks
01:42:55to hold long-term debt at both the holding company
01:42:59and insured depository institution, that seems
01:43:02to be a burden is what we're hearing, I think.
01:43:05I just wanted to mention that I would hope
01:43:09that there would be some flexibility for smaller regional
01:43:12banks to pre-position resources,
01:43:15because there are obviously some resources that are loss,
01:43:20I don't know, loss-absorbing,
01:43:22I guess is the way you would consider them in the re-proposal.
01:43:25Do you have any thoughts on kind of how this is playing
01:43:28out right now or what this looks like?
01:43:30Yes. So on the long-term debt thing, you know,
01:43:32we put it out for comment.
01:43:35We've received quite a few comments, and we're, you know,
01:43:37we're, staff has been analyzing them, and, you know,
01:43:40we're, that's something we're well aware of,
01:43:43the concerns that have been raised,
01:43:44and we're thinking carefully about how
01:43:45to move forward on that.
01:43:47The other one was pre-positioning,
01:43:49that's more along the lines of the discount window
01:43:51and the liquidity requirements, I take it.
01:43:53So, you know, we haven't made a proposal there yet.
01:43:57We're thinking carefully about that.
01:43:58You know, I think we're trying to learn the right lessons
01:44:01from what happened last spring at Silicon Valley Bank
01:44:04and a couple other banks, and one of them just is,
01:44:07the discount window worked,
01:44:09but we could certainly modernize it and make it more effective.
01:44:12And also, we learned, you know,
01:44:14that bank runs are moving just a whole lot faster,
01:44:17at least in that case, and that the, even bank runs from 10
01:44:21or 15 years ago were nothing like as fast
01:44:25as what happened at Silicon Valley.
01:44:26So we need to, we need to bake that, that new learning
01:44:29into the liquidity requirements in some way or other.
01:44:33We, again, haven't made a proposal.
01:44:35When we do, of course, it'll go out for comment,
01:44:37and we'll very much want to learn from those comments.
01:44:43Very good.
01:44:44There's been a clear trend of banks stepping away
01:44:47from the mortgage market,
01:44:49kind of in the face of increased regulation.
01:44:52That's my interpretation, at least.
01:44:54Non-bank lenders have stepped in to kind of fill that void.
01:44:58Today, banks support the non-bank lenders
01:45:02and the broader housing finance system
01:45:04through the so-called the warehouse lending
01:45:07for home mortgages.
01:45:09But I'm deeply concerned that some of the, as was mentioned
01:45:13by my colleagues earlier, that some
01:45:15of the Basel rules will, could harm both bank
01:45:18and non-bank lenders alike, kind of undermining the liquidity
01:45:22and kind of the raising costs of home buyers.
01:45:26So, let me just ask, in regards to Basel III,
01:45:31the endgame proposal,
01:45:33could it make housing finance less stable,
01:45:37I guess is the question.
01:45:39That's certainly not the intention.
01:45:40And, you know, we're, again, well aware of the concerns
01:45:43that have been raised and, you know,
01:45:45certainly paying careful attention to those.
01:45:48Despite the smaller issuer exemption for the debit,
01:45:51for debit interchange fee cap, insurers with less
01:45:54than $10 billion of assets reportedly lost about 35%
01:45:59of inflation adjusted interchange revenue.
01:46:01Have you considered the impact of further reduction
01:46:04of debt interchange will have on small financial institutions
01:46:08with less than $10 billion of assets?
01:46:10Yes. So, we're, that's another one where we put
01:46:12out a proposal, we got a lot of comments
01:46:14and we're carefully reviewing those.
01:46:16And we're certainly, you're certainly aware
01:46:17of that specific concern that you raised.
01:46:20As you may know, the latest Fed Y14 proposal,
01:46:24which is used to help collect data for Fed stress tests,
01:46:28ask banks for more detailed data on bank lending to non-banks.
01:46:32You know, as a result, there's concern
01:46:35that the Fed may start trying
01:46:37to indirectly regulate non-banks and the financial risk.
01:46:40I just talked to one this morning that's concerned
01:46:43about that.
01:46:44So, given those concerns raised about the lack of transparency
01:46:47in its stress testing models
01:46:49and the potential unintended consequences, is the Fed planning
01:46:52to indirectly regulate non-bank financial institutions
01:46:56through these tests?
01:46:57That's not the idea.
01:46:58The idea is we, you know,
01:47:00we see intermediation growing very quickly in non-banks.
01:47:06And, you know, we don't regulate them, we're not,
01:47:08we don't have a secret plan to regulate them
01:47:10or anything like that.
01:47:11It is, but the question is, what risks are being kept inside the
01:47:16banking system, which we do regulate and supervise,
01:47:19and what are the relationships
01:47:21between these large non-banks and banks?
01:47:23And, you know, we don't have a preconceived answer to that.
01:47:25We just want to understand what are the, you know,
01:47:28what are those business relationships the likes
01:47:30and what kind of risks does that mean the banks are running?
01:47:32That's all it is.
01:47:33Thank you, Chairman.
01:47:34I yield back.
01:47:34The gentleman from New York, Ms. Velasquez, is now recognized.
01:47:40Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01:47:42Thank you, Chairman Powell, for being here this morning, today,
01:47:47almost noon.
01:47:48Once the Fed is reassured that inflation is under control,
01:47:54what does the path back to neutral interest rates look like?
01:48:00We said that we wouldn't reduce rates until we were confident
01:48:04that inflation is moving sustainably down to 2%.
01:48:07I think the question of what is neutral is going
01:48:11to be an empirical question.
01:48:13I think, it seems to me it's unlikely
01:48:17that we'll be going back to the very low interest rates
01:48:21of the pre-crisis period.
01:48:23But we'll know that from, you know, we won't know
01:48:25that until we get there in a way.
01:48:28And the Fed's dual mandate comprises of price stability
01:48:33and maximum sustainable employment.
01:48:37As the Fed is thinking about inflation and the possibility
01:48:40of interest rate cuts, how are you balancing these priorities
01:48:45with the need to maximize employment?
01:48:48So we, over the past couple of years,
01:48:51we've had a very strong labor market
01:48:53and inflation well above target.
01:48:55And that has led us to focus mainly
01:48:56on bringing down inflation.
01:48:59Over the course of two years,
01:49:00inflation has come down pretty significantly.
01:49:03There's more work to do there.
01:49:04We're not at our target.
01:49:05We need to keep on that job.
01:49:06At the same time, the labor market has cooled pretty
01:49:09significantly.
01:49:10And so I would say those two goals are now much closer
01:49:14to being in balance.
01:49:16And that means from a policy standpoint,
01:49:18we need to be paying attention to both of them.
01:49:20Whereas for the last couple of years, really,
01:49:22we had to pay mostly attention to inflation.
01:49:25Chairman Powell, I have told you that I will be asking
01:49:30for a status update on the Section 956 rulemaking
01:49:35at every future hearing.
01:49:38Since your last appearance in March,
01:49:40several of your fellow regulators have issued a
01:49:44proposed rule.
01:49:45Why did the Fed choose not to sign onto this proposal?
01:49:49So what we're doing is we're looking at the current state
01:49:54of affairs as it relates to incentive compensation.
01:49:58As you may know, we've had guidance in place now
01:50:02since 2010 for all banks.
01:50:06And we supervise pretty significantly around that.
01:50:09So it's a very different picture than the one
01:50:11that was there in 2010.
01:50:14So we're asking ourselves, what is the situation today
01:50:17and how do we tailor a proposal to address, you know,
01:50:22the residual risk as opposed to what the situation in 2010 was?
01:50:26Yes. In previous hearings, you said that you need
01:50:31to better understand the problem in order to write the rule.
01:50:36In a speech in June, SEC Commissioner Lizarraga said,
01:50:42and I quote, it has been well documented that in the lead
01:50:46up to the financial crisis,
01:50:48pay structures often encourage big bets
01:50:52that maximize short-term profits
01:50:55but ignore bigger longer-term risk that threaten
01:50:59to take down the entire financial system.
01:51:02Additionally, since your last appearance,
01:51:05several of your fellow regulators have moved
01:51:08to work with a proposed rule.
01:51:11Why have your fellow regulators
01:51:14and Commissioner Lizarraga been able to understand the scope
01:51:20of the problem and the Fed has not?
01:51:22Well, I think the quote absolutely makes my point,
01:51:26which is I think everyone agrees
01:51:28that incentive compensation practices
01:51:30for the global financial crisis were not in a good place.
01:51:34However, we published guidance on incentive compensation,
01:51:39binding on all, well not binding, but guidance
01:51:41for all banks in 2010.
01:51:44After putting it out for comment, very thought,
01:51:46a lot of thought went into that guidance
01:51:48and now we supervise on that guidance.
01:51:50And so the situation with incentive compensation now
01:51:53and banks is completely different
01:51:54than it was before the global financial crisis.
01:51:56It's completely different.
01:51:58Well, you know, the other regulators have been able
01:52:02to figure this out and you haven't.
01:52:04But let me just say, this is not how congressional mandates work.
01:52:10Of all the rulemaking provisions in the Dodd-Frank,
01:52:14only 148 were mandatory.
01:52:18And of those, only 22 had a deadline of less
01:52:22than a year after enactment.
01:52:24Section 956 was one of them.
01:52:27And I hope that you come to the conclusion
01:52:32that it is your duty to issue the regulation.
01:52:38Thank you and I yield back, Mr. Chairman.
01:52:40Section 156 requires either a rule or guidance, by the way.
01:52:44It does not require a rule, a rule or guidance.
01:52:48Thank you.
01:52:49The gentleman from Florida, Mr. Donald, is now recognized.
01:52:52Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01:52:53Secretary Pollack, it's good to see you.
01:52:55Let's cover a lot of different areas of ground.
01:52:59According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis,
01:53:01since President Biden took office,
01:53:03the price of goods has continued to outpace family incomes.
01:53:07With prices increasing now 19.3%,
01:53:10while average weekly earnings have only increased 14.6%.
01:53:15So families have fallen behind with respect
01:53:18to their purchasing power that they're able to go
01:53:22and acquire goods.
01:53:23What role has government spending played
01:53:26in creating this untenable economic crisis?
01:53:30Close that door, please.
01:53:32Sorry, I can't hear very well when the door is open.
01:53:34I'll repeat.
01:53:35That's fine.
01:53:35No, I heard you.
01:53:36Okay. Okay.
01:53:37That needs to be closed.
01:53:38So what role has government spending as part of the story?
01:53:43So government spent, we had our rates really low.
01:53:47The pandemic happened and we closed the economy
01:53:50and then reopened it.
01:53:51And I think you saw a burst of inflation, you know,
01:53:54everywhere in the world.
01:53:55And certainly there were many contributors to that.
01:53:57Do you think that the President in his budget calling
01:54:00for an increase of federal spending,
01:54:03upwards of 5% increase in federal spending
01:54:05across the board, do you think that's going
01:54:08to have further implications
01:54:10on stubborn inflation plaguing the pocketbooks
01:54:12of the American people?
01:54:14It would be inappropriate for me to comment
01:54:17on the President's budget.
01:54:19The only reason why I would ask, Mr. Powell,
01:54:22is because obviously the Federal Reserve is having to respond
01:54:26to various aspects of fiscal policy coming
01:54:29from Capitol Hill.
01:54:30Regardless of the President's budget,
01:54:32would it be appropriate in the current environment
01:54:34for federal spending to increase 5%, 10%, 15%?
01:54:38Honestly, that's a question for elected representatives.
01:54:40We don't play a role in fiscal policy.
01:54:43Oh, fair enough.
01:54:44Is it the view of yourself and the Federal Reserve Board
01:54:50that fiscal policy does create impacts on the Fed's ability
01:54:54to manage monetary policy for the United States?
01:54:57We take fiscal policy as a given.
01:54:59And we're not commentators.
01:55:01We're not the Congressional Budget Office or the Office
01:55:03of Management and Budget.
01:55:04Whatever fiscal policy happens up here,
01:55:09we decline all opportunities to be commentators on it.
01:55:12We take it as a given.
01:55:14And that's because we didn't run for office.
01:55:16We don't have that job.
01:55:17We stick to our knitting.
01:55:18And the fact that we're independent really depends
01:55:20on us sticking to what our assignment is, which is to deal
01:55:24with, you know, things with the economy as it is.
01:55:27I would argue that the fiscal policy
01:55:30of the United States has given you guys a lot more to deal with
01:55:34and whatever the various burdens that come with it.
01:55:36Unfortunately, you have to deal, you have to tangle with it.
01:55:40But the American consumer is the one
01:55:41that truly has to deal with it.
01:55:42I'm going to move on.
01:55:43The Monetary Policy Report cites a pickup
01:55:45in immigration as one of the major factors
01:55:48that has improved the supply of labor.
01:55:50However, labor force participation rate remains below
01:55:53pre-pandemic levels.
01:55:55What percentage of the increased foreign-born labor supply,
01:55:59to your knowledge, comes from illegal immigration?
01:56:03I, what percentage of the, say it again, the question?
01:56:08What percentage of foreign-born labor comes
01:56:11from illegal immigration?
01:56:14I think all foreign-born labor comes from immigration.
01:56:16No, illegal immigration.
01:56:17Illegal.
01:56:18Illegal.
01:56:18Sorry, I didn't get that.
01:56:19Yes, sir.
01:56:20I don't know the answer to that.
01:56:21All right.
01:56:22Well, one of the things that I think will be important
01:56:24to help, I guess, advise Congress on what
01:56:27to do going forward is if the Federal Reserve had some data
01:56:31to that regard to help us make further decisions
01:56:33into the future.
01:56:34Chairman Powell, let me ask you this one overarching question.
01:56:38Obviously, interest rates, if you compare it
01:56:41over the last 15 years of monetary policy,
01:56:45is at an elevated rate.
01:56:47Does the Fed anticipate any possibility
01:56:50of rates being lowered, whether it's 50 basis points,
01:56:55100 basis points, at some point over the next year or two?
01:56:59So, I guess the question really is where are interest rates
01:57:04going to settle out when all of the effects
01:57:06of the pandemic are really done?
01:57:09And no one knows.
01:57:10This is a great discussion to have.
01:57:12But I think my sense, and pretty commonly,
01:57:14people think we probably won't go back to that era
01:57:18between global financial crisis and the pandemic,
01:57:21where rates were very, very low, and inflation was very low.
01:57:25And, you know, like extremely low.
01:57:27There were major European countries
01:57:29that had negative 10-year bond rates.
01:57:32Negative. And that was not the case here.
01:57:34But I don't think we're going back to rates that are
01:57:38that low.
01:57:39We think that things like the neutral rate are driven
01:57:42by slow-moving forces.
01:57:43But ultimately, you can see the effect.
01:57:45We have, you know, our policy rate is over 5% now.
01:57:48And it feels like policy is restrictive, but not, you know,
01:57:51intensely restrictive.
01:57:52So that suggests that the neutral rate of interest,
01:57:56at least as of now, will have risen somewhat,
01:57:58which means rates will be a little higher.
01:58:00Okay. Thank you so much.
01:58:01I yield back.
01:58:01Thank you.
01:58:02The gentleman yields back.
01:58:03We now go to the gentleman from California, Mr. Sherman,
01:58:07who is recognized for five minutes.
01:58:21Would you like us to move on?
01:58:25If it's Josh's turn, it's Josh's turn.
01:58:27Gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for five minutes.
01:58:30Thank you, Mr. Sherman.
01:58:31Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01:58:34Chairman Powell, you have said
01:58:35that custody assets are off balance sheet, always have been.
01:58:39And do you stand by that?
01:58:41Sorry, say that again?
01:58:42You've said that, quote,
01:58:43custody assets are off balance sheet, always have been.
01:58:46Do you stand by that statement, sir?
01:58:49I think as a general matter, yes.
01:58:52The SEC's Staff Accounting Bulletin 121 affects a core
01:58:56banking activity, custody.
01:58:58The specific bulletin requires banks to put digital assets held
01:59:01in custody on their balance sheet,
01:59:03effectively keeping banks out of the market entirely.
01:59:06Have the Fed and the SEC had conversations about the impact
01:59:09of SAB 121, and I just wanted to get a sense
01:59:11of your thoughts on the policy, please.
01:59:13So we, as you know, I think we don't comment
01:59:16on the SEC's policy.
01:59:17They don't comment on our policies either.
01:59:19So I know that, I knew you were going to SAB 121 on that,
01:59:23but honestly, it's the SEC's business, not ours.
01:59:28Thank you.
01:59:29Last month, you said that when evaluating inflation data,
01:59:32you consider whether wage growth is
01:59:34outpacing productivity.
01:59:36From 1979 to 2019, middle-class workers' productivity grew
01:59:39about 60 percent, while their wages grew by about 16 percent.
01:59:43Do you consider this a historical gap
01:59:45when considering whether to hike rates
01:59:47on families obviously struggling to make ends meet?
01:59:50So we, we're looking at inflation, and we're looking
01:59:55at maximum employment.
01:59:56Those are our goals.
01:59:57We don't really have the ability, we don't have a bunch
01:59:59of different tools for things like what you're talking about.
02:00:01So really, it's just those things.
02:00:03Of course, we're very well aware of longer-run trends like that.
02:00:07You have to also include benefits, though,
02:00:09in that analysis, which does close that gap quite a bit.
02:00:12You just mentioned wages.
02:00:13I appreciate that.
02:00:16Thank you.
02:00:17Mr. Chairman, yesterday, the Director
02:00:20of National Intelligence said that, quote,
02:00:22Iranian government actors have sought
02:00:23to opportunistically take advantage
02:00:25of ongoing protests regarding the war in Gaza.
02:00:28End quote.
02:00:29They have observed actors, quote,
02:00:32observed actors tied to Iran's government posing
02:00:34as activists online, seeking to encourage protests,
02:00:37and even providing financial support to protesters.
02:00:40End quote.
02:00:41As a member of the House Select Committee on Intelligence,
02:00:44I'm equally concerned about our adversaries meddling
02:00:46in our financial system.
02:00:48Can I have your commitment, or if you can discuss the,
02:00:51if you're working with other federal agencies to investigate
02:00:54and address foreign interference channeled
02:00:56through our financial institutions?
02:00:59So we do take part in many of those things,
02:01:02especially at the staff level.
02:01:04And as you know, there's a lot of focus
02:01:06in the intelligence community.
02:01:09And it's very helpful to the banks,
02:01:10the commercial banks, and to us.
02:01:13But we're certainly very focused on those issues.
02:01:16We've got a strong team.
02:01:18Of course, you're never able to sleep on cyber risk.
02:01:23But, you know, we just keep, we just keep fighting it.
02:01:26I would like to switch gears to the discount window, please.
02:01:31Chairman, we've heard that the discount window is behind the
02:01:34times in terms of its operations.
02:01:36We also continue to hear that efforts
02:01:38to modernize the discount window
02:01:39and encourage its use will be ineffective
02:01:41without reducing the associated stigma.
02:01:43The usability of the discount window is an important tool
02:01:46for banks that need liquidity.
02:01:47I just wanted to get a sense of efforts underway
02:01:50to make the discount window a more realistic option
02:01:52for banks that need liquidity.
02:01:55So it's a couple things.
02:01:56First, it is we need to modernize our infrastructure.
02:02:00You know, the discount window
02:02:02in our system is not a primary source of credit.
02:02:07It's a source for banks that they can use
02:02:11under certain circumstances.
02:02:12So, but we know that the infrastructure is a little tired
02:02:16and we're investing in that
02:02:17and making it more user-friendly and all that.
02:02:19So that's a big, big project that's going on.
02:02:23Sorry, the second point was stigma.
02:02:27The stigma is, that's tough, that's a tough one.
02:02:30And, you know, it amounts to, there are a lot of ways
02:02:33to get after that.
02:02:34We're studying all of them.
02:02:35You know, in a sense, if you require banks
02:02:38to use the discount window,
02:02:40then that can help with the stigma.
02:02:41I think, I mean, this is a big ask, but, you know,
02:02:45when Congress required us to publish the names
02:02:48of discount window users, that didn't help.
02:02:50It doesn't help at all, because banks basically say,
02:02:54we're not going to use discount window, because it might,
02:02:56you know, people might see us as troubled.
02:02:58And that's not what we want.
02:03:00We want people to be able to freely use the discount window.
02:03:02So we've been focused on this issue for a long time,
02:03:05have not made a lot of progress on it.
02:03:07But right now, I think we're very focused on it.
02:03:10Thank you, sir.
02:03:11I'll yield back.
02:03:12Thank you.
02:03:13Gentleman yields back.
02:03:14We now go to the gentleman from New York, Mr. Lawler,
02:03:16who is recognized for five minutes.
02:03:18Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:03:19Chairman Powell, to the best of my knowledge,
02:03:21the last public meeting between you
02:03:23and President Biden occurred on May 31st, 2022.
02:03:27Does that sound accurate?
02:03:28I'm going to take your word for it.
02:03:31Okay. Have you had any private meetings
02:03:34with the President since that time?
02:03:36No. Any phone calls with the President?
02:03:38No. I don't believe so.
02:03:39Is there any reason why you've not met with
02:03:42or spoken to the President?
02:03:44I mean, I meet with any President calls.
02:03:48You come and you meet, but that hasn't happened, so.
02:03:52So in over two years, with inflation still nagging us,
02:03:57with cost out of control, President Biden has not asked
02:04:01to meet with you in over two years?
02:04:03I haven't had a meeting with him.
02:04:06He hasn't sought a meeting.
02:04:07And, of course, I don't seek meetings.
02:04:08So you have the data.
02:04:10But to your knowledge, in the last two years,
02:04:12you've not spoken with or met with the President at all?
02:04:15He shook his hand in a line once,
02:04:18but that wasn't a conversation.
02:04:19It was just, Mr. President, that was it.
02:04:21That was, it was at a state dinner.
02:04:23I attended a state dinner in, a few months ago,
02:04:27and I shook his hand.
02:04:29Good evening, Mr. President, and that was it.
02:04:31Does that not strike you as odd
02:04:33that the President has not sought to meet with you?
02:04:36Not at all.
02:04:37Not at all.
02:04:38You weren't in an agency and.
02:04:40Mr. Chairman, parliamentary inquiry, please, Mr. Chairman.
02:04:47I'm sorry, I want to answer your, state your inquiry.
02:04:52Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:04:54I make a point of order under Clause 4 of Rule 17
02:05:00that the gentleman's words are disorderly
02:05:03and violate the rules of decorum and debate insofar
02:05:06as they are negatively reflecting upon the personality
02:05:11of a candidate for President of the United States.
02:05:15The Congressman is not engaged in any personality or in any,
02:05:21has questioned anything about anyone at this point.
02:05:25I'm not sure where you're going, Congressman.
02:05:28Congressman.
02:05:28We have.
02:05:29Congressman is recognized.
02:05:31Thank you.
02:05:31Thank you.
02:05:32Happy to answer your question.
02:05:33Mr. Chairman.
02:05:33To answer your question.
02:05:34Thank you.
02:05:34Mr. Chairman, I'd like to continue with the point.
02:05:36Point of order, please.
02:05:39What is your point of order?
02:05:41Mr. Chairman, we have been admonished in this committee
02:05:45that we should not have words that negatively reflect upon
02:05:50persons who are running for President.
02:05:52This would include Mr. Trump as well as the current President.
02:05:56Didn't the ranking member do a whole opening monologue
02:06:00by a tribe about some ridiculous project?
02:06:02Would you please rule my friend out of order, Mr. Chairman,
02:06:05until you rule?
02:06:07Mr. Lawler has not admonished or said anything negative
02:06:10about the President at all.
02:06:13I just listened to his comments.
02:06:15So I'm going to recognize the Congressman again.
02:06:18Mr. Lawler from New York.
02:06:20Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:06:22Mr. Powell, you were trying to answer my question.
02:06:24So we're an independent agency.
02:06:27The administration has been very respectful of the Fed
02:06:32and not wanting to try to influence
02:06:36and things like that.
02:06:37And I don't find it at all unusual.
02:06:40I've been at the Fed for my 13th year, and I think there can go
02:06:44by long periods of time when the Fed chair doesn't meet
02:06:46with the President, and that's totally fine.
02:06:52Since you made mention of the independence of the Fed,
02:06:56and I know you pride yourself in that independence,
02:06:59do you acknowledge or do members of the FOMC acknowledge
02:07:04that a rate cut in September could be viewed
02:07:08as political just 30 to 60 days before an election?
02:07:13So our undertaking is to make decisions when and as they need
02:07:19to be made based on the data, the incoming data,
02:07:22the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks,
02:07:25and not in consideration of other factors.
02:07:27And that would include political factors.
02:07:30We will make those decisions.
02:07:31We have a long history of doing that,
02:07:33including during election years.
02:07:36And that is the undertaking we'll make.
02:07:38Anything we do will be very well grounded.
02:07:41And, you know, it's just not appropriate for us to get
02:07:46into the business of thinking about election cycles at all,
02:07:49one way or the other.
02:07:51So inflation year over year from May 2024 to, from May 2023
02:07:58to May 2024 is up 3.3 percent, overall inflation.
02:08:04Energy inflation is up 3.7 percent.
02:08:07Food inflation up 2.1 percent.
02:08:10With inflation continuing to be a challenge,
02:08:14do you see a rate cut as a possibility at this moment?
02:08:19So you, I think you're quoting the CPI numbers,
02:08:21which are operating at an unusually high gap to the PCE.
02:08:26For 25 years, the Fed has focused
02:08:29on personal consumption expenditures inflation,
02:08:32PCE inflation.
02:08:33And usually the gap to CPI is only 25 or 30 basis points.
02:08:37It's more now.
02:08:38So the PCE numbers, the current PCE numbers are 2.6 percent
02:08:42for headline, 2.6 percent for core.
02:08:46And we've articulated for a good long period our test
02:08:51for being willing to consider beginning to loosen policy.
02:08:55And that test is that we want to be more confident
02:08:59that inflation is moving on a path sustainably down to 2 percent.
02:09:03Not at 2 percent, but on a path sustainably to 2 percent.
02:09:07That's the test we've articulated.
02:09:09I have some confidence, as I said earlier,
02:09:12that we are on a downward path.
02:09:14I think if you look at the data, it's pretty clear that,
02:09:17but we have not said, though, that we have sufficient confidence.
02:09:20And that will be a decision that our committee makes.
02:09:24Yeah. I would just note, obviously, CPI,
02:09:27the price of goods, the price of purchasing a home,
02:09:32the price of a mortgage, the cost
02:09:34of a mortgage has been astronomical.
02:09:37In Westchester County, for instance,
02:09:38where I represent, the average mortgage cost is
02:09:40up $1,000 a month.
02:09:43Over $12,000 a year.
02:09:46In the time I have remaining, quick question.
02:09:49In your meetings with the President,
02:09:51have you noticed any mental or cognitive decline?
02:09:55No. Thank you.
02:09:57I yield back.
02:09:58Point of order.
02:09:59The gentleman's time has expired.
02:10:01Point of order, Mr. Chairman.
02:10:03Point of order.
02:10:04Yes, Mr. Chairman.
02:10:05The gentleman just mentioned the President's cognitive capacity.
02:10:09And I believe this to be a violation of the rules
02:10:13with relationship to decorum.
02:10:16And that this goes into a personality of a President.
02:10:21Gentleman's time has expired.
02:10:22You're recognized now for your five minutes, Mr. Green.
02:10:25My point of order is to be made immediately
02:10:28after the gentleman's statement.
02:10:30And that's what I'm doing.
02:10:31I would remind members not to engage in personalities
02:10:37and comments about the President.
02:10:39Mr. Chairman, if I may, with my point of order,
02:10:41I demand that the gentleman's words be taken down insofar
02:10:45as they negatively reflect upon a candidate
02:10:48for President of the United States.
02:11:01Gentleman from New York, Mr. Lawler, is recognized.
02:11:05I'll happily withdraw my words, though everybody understood them.
02:11:12Mr. Chairman.
02:11:14Gentleman withdraws his comments.
02:11:16Mr. Green, you're recognized.
02:11:18If I may, Mr. Chairman, his final comment was,
02:11:21although everybody understood them, in my opinion,
02:11:25that then brings us right back
02:11:27to where we were before he made his attempt to withdraw.
02:11:31Now, if he's willing to withdraw appropriately,
02:11:34I will not demand, but until he does so,
02:11:37I demand that his words be taken down.
02:11:39The gentleman's time had expired.
02:11:42Mr. Chairman, the time does not expire on the request
02:11:47that I've made, the point of order.
02:11:50The time didn't expire on that.
02:11:54I recognize Mr. Lawler.
02:11:55Let the record reflect, I withdraw my words.
02:11:58Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:12:02Gentleman from Texas, Mr. Green,
02:12:04is now recognized for his five minutes.
02:12:08Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I thank the chair
02:12:11for appearing today.
02:12:12I hope things are going well with you.
02:12:14I know that this is a difficult time for you, and quite frankly,
02:12:18you've been in a difficult time for a number of years,
02:12:21and you've proved to be quite resilient
02:12:23and quite effective at what you do,
02:12:25so I thank you for what you're doing.
02:12:27I do want to ask you about several things, and I hope
02:12:31that I'll get to them, but first,
02:12:34there was a post-failure lessons report after the failure
02:12:40of Silicon Valley and Signature Banks.
02:12:43I thought that report was pretty important.
02:12:45How important is that post-failure lessons report?
02:12:52It's important.
02:12:53We wanted to learn the right lessons
02:12:55and make the right changes to both our rules, but also,
02:12:59really, to our supervisory practices more
02:13:01than anything else, and we're doing that.
02:13:05And is this something that you believe to be important
02:13:08after each incident, such as what happened
02:13:11with Silicon and the other banks?
02:13:14Yes, I think, you know, I think we all have a lot
02:13:16to be humble about, and we try to learn from events.
02:13:21Thank you.
02:13:21Let me go on to the next question, which has to do
02:13:25with the banks that are small.
02:13:30Let's talk about those that are less
02:13:31than $5 billion in total assets, yet they are subject
02:13:35to the special assessments of the FDIC,
02:13:39once there is a systemic risk exception triggered.
02:13:43I'd like to see them exempt from that.
02:13:48Do you have any comments on it?
02:13:51That's really, that's either a statutory matter,
02:13:55or it's a matter of the FDIC's practice,
02:13:57so it's not something the Fed has any input into, really.
02:14:02Okay. Let's do this next, please, as time runs out.
02:14:06Would you kindly finish your commentary?
02:14:09You were giving a comment on the pandemic
02:14:13and how the pandemic helped to generate this inflation,
02:14:18and you stopped in the middle of your comment,
02:14:21so would you go back through that, please,
02:14:23so that the public at large can get a better understanding
02:14:26of what actually happened with the pandemic and inflation?
02:14:30So I'd be glad to, and I think people are now,
02:14:32we have a few years to look back.
02:14:34I think the more years that pass,
02:14:35the clearer we can see what was happening.
02:14:38But I think you look back now, and you're seeing this,
02:14:42broadly what was happening was governments did a lot
02:14:46to support economic activity during the pandemic,
02:14:49and on the theory that, you know,
02:14:51there could be really serious economic bad times ahead.
02:14:55Then the economy reopened, and it reopened very, very strongly,
02:15:01and I think in hindsight, you can see that there was just a lot
02:15:04of support for demand from fiscal policy,
02:15:07from monetary policy, and that supply was constrained.
02:15:10You couldn't make cars.
02:15:13Supply chains were tangled up.
02:15:16There were shortages of so many things.
02:15:18So what happened was we got a burst of inflation,
02:15:21and the United States got a big burst of inflation, really,
02:15:24more from demand than other countries did.
02:15:28Then you have the war in Ukraine, which gave a big burst
02:15:32of inflation, more to Europe than to us, and so you wind
02:15:36up with a situation where you've just got a lot of inflation,
02:15:39and our thinking, my thinking at the time was,
02:15:42it's going to take restrictive monetary policy,
02:15:44and it's going to take time for the supply side
02:15:47and demand side distortions from the pandemic to unwind.
02:15:522023 was the year when that kind of happened.
02:15:55So supply chains were fixed.
02:15:57The labor shortage was greatly alleviated,
02:16:00and unemployment remained very low.
02:16:02Inflation came down by a very large amount last year,
02:16:06while growth remained quite strong.
02:16:08So this was the year that kind of proved that thesis.
02:16:11Now we're in 2024, and it's a question
02:16:14of finishing the job on inflation,
02:16:15which we're committed to do,
02:16:17while also keeping a strong labor market,
02:16:20which we're also committed to doing, and that's a balance
02:16:22that we have to strike in our policy.
02:16:25But I think we know more now about where this came
02:16:28from because we can see what made it go away,
02:16:31and it was a combination of supply and demand,
02:16:34as we had kind of expected.
02:16:36And two of the most significant factors were the pandemic
02:16:41and the war with Ukraine.
02:16:44Is that correct?
02:16:44Yes, and it's also the fact that the pandemic summoned forth a
02:16:48great fiscal and monetary response, and that contributed
02:16:53to really strong activity and to inflation.
02:16:55I have a question.
02:16:56We're going to run out of time, but I have to ask it.
02:16:59But if not for that monetary response,
02:17:02I know that it's a counterfactual,
02:17:04but would we have possibly gone into a depression?
02:17:08That's what we thought at the time,
02:17:10and I think mainstream economists were very concerned
02:17:13that we'd never literally shut the global economy down
02:17:17for a period and then tried to reopen it.
02:17:20We didn't know how long it would take or how well that would go.
02:17:23Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:17:24Gentlemen, time has expired.
02:17:25We now go to the gentleman from Oklahoma, Mr. Lucas,
02:17:28who's recognized for five minutes.
02:17:29Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, Chairman Powell,
02:17:32for testifying today.
02:17:34I realize that my questioning point in the hearing today,
02:17:39probably a lot of material has been covered,
02:17:41but there's never anything ever wrong
02:17:43with asking important questions a second or third time.
02:17:46You've reiterated how members of the board would
02:17:50like to see a revised Boswell proposal put
02:17:54out for public comment, and you're working
02:17:56through the process with FDIC and OCC.
02:17:59From my perspective, the FDIC is in a period of uncertainty.
02:18:04The current chairman announcing he'll resign
02:18:06to restore confidence in his agency, and the replacement
02:18:09is awaiting Senate confirmation hearings.
02:18:13And at the OCC, we have an acting comptroller
02:18:17who has not been yet confirmed by the Senate.
02:18:19At the very least, given the expected broad revisions,
02:18:25I hope the other agencies agree
02:18:27that a complete re-proposal would be appropriate.
02:18:29So, Chairman, could you give me some indication
02:18:33of what the potential timeline
02:18:36around such a decision to re-propose might look like?
02:18:40It's pretty uncertain, but I'll give it a shot.
02:18:43And I'll say again that these discussions we've been having
02:18:46with the other two agencies have been very constructive,
02:18:49and we very much want that to continue.
02:18:52We've got pretty good agreement on the substance,
02:18:55and now it's about to process.
02:18:56So, you know, a baseline might be that we agree on a re-proposal
02:19:04of some kind that, you know, that gives the public a chance
02:19:08to see these changes and react to them
02:19:12and write comment letters.
02:19:14And so that could happen.
02:19:16You know, it would take us a while to write it up,
02:19:18and then we'd put it out for 60 days.
02:19:21I think that couldn't happen probably until part
02:19:25of the way through the fall.
02:19:27Then there would be, let's say, 60 days of comment,
02:19:30and we get the comments.
02:19:31We'd have to then evaluate the comments
02:19:33and think carefully about them.
02:19:35Having done that, we'd have to write up the final version,
02:19:39and that would take some time.
02:19:40So that probably puts you, my guess is it puts you well
02:19:43into next year.
02:19:45As I mentioned, these rules are going to be, these are rules
02:19:48that the banks are going to have to live with for a long time,
02:19:51and we need to get them right.
02:19:53It's not something we should be hurrying on.
02:19:56We need to take our time and get it right and make sure
02:19:59that we hear the comments.
02:20:01This is a very big piece of regulation.
02:20:03A lot of things will need to be changed.
02:20:06There are a lot of good things in there.
02:20:07We want to come out with a good proposal,
02:20:09and that's what it will take.
02:20:10To shift gears on you, Chairman, the 2024 stress test focused
02:20:14on commercial real estate risk,
02:20:17which is an area we've all been paying close attention
02:20:19to here on this committee.
02:20:21Do you agree that the results showed the financial system
02:20:25to be strong?
02:20:26Yes, I do.
02:20:30The folks back home are always very concerned about inflation
02:20:37and the period we've gone through lately,
02:20:39not just the basic necessities that continue to explode,
02:20:42but the cost of doing business and all those other issues.
02:20:45The fact is the inflation is still running
02:20:48above the Fed's 2% target,
02:20:51and we've seen significant price increases in food
02:20:53and energy over recent years.
02:20:55As you and I discussed before, I started
02:20:57out as a young farmer in 1977
02:20:59in that inflationary period during the Carter years.
02:21:03Then when we went through Chairman Volcker's rather,
02:21:05shall we say, dramatic tightening of monetary policy.
02:21:09And I still remember paying 17% to borrow cow feed money
02:21:15when I was a student in college.
02:21:17I was well collateralized, but that was a bargain in the fact
02:21:20that the cow was accessible.
02:21:22So I'm particularly sensitive, being a part of that generation,
02:21:26that if inflation isn't effectively dealt with,
02:21:28it can spiral out of control.
02:21:31Could you expand for a little bit more about your approach
02:21:33in dealing with inflation in a way
02:21:35that doesn't repeat the mistakes of the past?
02:21:38I just want to avoid the mistakes of the past.
02:21:41So I think really one of the big lessons coming
02:21:46out of the high inflation of the 70s, which we both lived through,
02:21:50is that it really is on the central bank to be on the case
02:21:54and do the job and make sure that it is fully well
02:21:57and truly done, and that really that is up to the central bank.
02:22:02And believe it or not, that wasn't fully accepted
02:22:05or that wasn't necessarily the thinking.
02:22:07And also the independence
02:22:09of central banks was much less respected back then.
02:22:12So all the more credit to Paul Volcker
02:22:16for having the courage to do it.
02:22:18So we now, that is an internalized lesson for people
02:22:21in central banking these days.
02:22:23We do understand that.
02:22:25We are committed to bringing inflation sustainably
02:22:27down to 2 percent.
02:22:29One last question in my remaining seconds.
02:22:33You and the leadership of the feds will be there the day
02:22:35before the election this fall, and you'll be there the day
02:22:38after the election, still be the same people carefully watching
02:22:41the feds' responsibilities, correct?
02:22:45This is my fourth presidential election at the fed,
02:22:47and I can tell you we come to the work the next day
02:22:49and we do our jobs.
02:22:50Gentleman's time has expired, and I'll go to the gentleman
02:22:52in California, Mr. Sherman.
02:22:56Coming out of COVID, everyone said a soft landing was
02:23:00impossible and a recession was inevitable.
02:23:03I want to commend you and the administration.
02:23:06It looks like we've seen a soft landing.
02:23:09We've continued to have historically low unemployment
02:23:13rates and historically low unemployment rates
02:23:15for people of color.
02:23:17And in the last 18 months, we've seen a 4.7-point decline
02:23:24in the inflation rate as measured
02:23:26by the Consumer Price Index.
02:23:29Is that the greatest decline or I realize you may not have done
02:23:34the calculations, but I did the calculations.
02:23:36It's the greatest decline that we've seen
02:23:39in an 18-month period this century.
02:23:41Do you have any reason to disagree with that?
02:23:44I hope that's true, and I'm glad you said it
02:23:46because it's certainly a lot.
02:23:48I can't validate the statement, though.
02:23:52I'm sure you have a fine staff that will do the calculation
02:23:55and hopefully we'll see the press release.
02:23:57When Secretary Yellen was here yesterday, I addressed an issue
02:24:01that both you and her should be concerned with.
02:24:04I've always opposed Operation Choke Point,
02:24:06where for political reasons, banks wouldn't provide
02:24:10or might not provide financial services.
02:24:14Florida and Tennessee have passed laws giving anybody
02:24:18who's denied a bank account or even a loan a way to claim
02:24:22that that was for political reasons, and it opens
02:24:25up the possibility that banks would be pressured
02:24:27by those laws to release their suspicious activity reports,
02:24:31which I understand are supposed to be private.
02:24:35And so I hope you'll work with the Secretary in making sure
02:24:40that the laws of Florida
02:24:41and Tennessee do not adversely affect our ability to deal
02:24:45with suspicious financial circumstances.
02:24:49You have a dual mandate.
02:24:52I think you have a third mandate that is implied
02:24:57because the budget deficit poses a great risk to price stability
02:25:02and to keeping unemployment low.
02:25:06And you don't deal with spending.
02:25:08You don't deal with taxation.
02:25:10But in two ways, you dramatically affect the
02:25:12budget deficit.
02:25:14Federal government is the biggest borrower
02:25:16in the history of the world.
02:25:18Interest rates affect the forthcoming budget deficit.
02:25:22And at times, you've turned over to the federal government
02:25:25up to $100 billion in profit.
02:25:28And so I hope that you would consider whether your first two
02:25:31mandates imply that you at least have to look
02:25:34at how your policies affect the budget deficit.
02:25:38I hope that you will go with republication of Basel III
02:25:47and insist on that.
02:25:48I know you're dealing with two other regulators on that.
02:25:51A recent assessment by PricewaterhouseCoopers showed
02:25:55that the original proposal would lead to higher borrowing costs
02:26:01for small and medium-sized businesses.
02:26:04And in every way, Basel III seemed to be slanted
02:26:08toward telling the banks, go and put your money on Wall Street
02:26:11where you just are going to have interest rate risk.
02:26:14And don't loan your money to local Main Street businesses
02:26:18because there's credit risk there.
02:26:20And in fact, if you had a fair system, you would mark
02:26:24to market all bonds, not just those
02:26:27that are quote available for sale.
02:26:30I hope also that as you redo Basel III,
02:26:34you treat energy tax credits, green energy tax credits the
02:26:38same way you currently deal with low-income housing tax credits.
02:26:42That you keep in mind the effect on the securities industry,
02:26:45particularly municipal bonds.
02:26:47That you don't unfairly to local business say
02:26:51that if it's a publicly traded company, it counts only 65%.
02:26:56And that you look at mortgage servicing rights as an asset.
02:27:02And that you fully account for the private mortgage insurance.
02:27:08I know you give some credit for that.
02:27:11But frankly, a 80% loan to value and a 90% loan to value
02:27:17that has private mortgage insurance pretty much expose the
02:27:20bank to the same risk.
02:27:22I'll ask you one question about the debit cards.
02:27:30You're planning to provide only, I believe, a .3 cents,
02:27:36additional charge for dealing with fraud prevention.
02:27:41Fraud has just skyrocketed.
02:27:44Would the Fed consider increasing the fraud prevention
02:27:48adjustment before finalizing its proposal?
02:27:52And that's part of the comments that we've received
02:27:55on the interchange rule.
02:27:56And it's something we're, that's a concern that we're aware of.
02:27:59And we'll take that into consideration.
02:28:01I yield back.
02:28:04Gentleman yields back.
02:28:05And now we, the gentleman from the great state of Missouri,
02:28:08Congressman Luekemeyer is now recognized for five minutes.
02:28:11Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:28:12I certainly appreciate the thoughtful gentleman
02:28:16from California's remarks on some of the stuff.
02:28:19But I'm kind of curious how Chairman Powell,
02:28:23he indicated you've got a third implied duty here
02:28:25to actually work with the budget.
02:28:27I really thought that only the Congress had the ability
02:28:31to impact the budget.
02:28:32We're the ones, not even the legislative,
02:28:34not the executive branch, not the judicial branch.
02:28:37The legislative branch is the one that handles the budget.
02:28:40Am I mistaken on that, Mr. Chairman?
02:28:43I believe that is right.
02:28:44I don't think you want our job on top of what you've got.
02:28:50One of the things that's come across my desk
02:28:54in the last few weeks here is some
02:28:57of the legislatures this last year
02:28:59around the country have started to pass banking laws
02:29:03that infringe on federal banking laws.
02:29:07Have you seen this?
02:29:08Are you aware of it?
02:29:09Do you have thoughts on it?
02:29:11Can you tell me what your thoughts may be?
02:29:12Honestly, I have not seen that.
02:29:15And it wouldn't necessarily come across my desk.
02:29:18It might come across Vice Chair Barr's desk more.
02:29:21Okay. Well, I was just concerned because, I mean,
02:29:23you handle lots of banking rules and regulations.
02:29:26And so we don't want to have the state usurp the duties
02:29:30and responsibilities and the legal ability to.
02:29:35These are preemption issues?
02:29:37Yes, preemption issues is what it's all about.
02:29:38Yeah, that's a big deal for the OCC issue.
02:29:40Yeah. So I'm just curious if you'd run across any of that.
02:29:43Have any thoughts on it?
02:29:44I haven't.
02:29:45Okay. One of the things I just got done coming
02:29:48out of a committee hearing with small business a while ago,
02:29:50and there was a home builder individual there, a contractor.
02:29:55And he was talking about the cost of regulations.
02:29:58You know, basically $1,000 increase in costs,
02:30:00costs about 100,000 homes across the country not being able
02:30:04to be purchased because they're no longer affordable.
02:30:07And so it brings up the point with regards
02:30:09to cost of regulations.
02:30:10You know, do you follow the Administrative Procedures Act?
02:30:14Yes.
02:30:16So part of that act is
02:30:17to determine the cost of a regulation, correct?
02:30:20Or the cost of compliance?
02:30:23I don't actually know the answer to that.
02:30:25But I know we follow carefully the EPA.
02:30:27But I mean, to me, that's a really important point
02:30:30from the standpoint of how you look at rules and regulations
02:30:32to ensure that the cost is not going to be more
02:30:35than the economic benefit of what you're doing.
02:30:37So I mean, this has to be part of your analysis, I would think.
02:30:42Certainly, we try to make our rules as efficient as possible
02:30:47to get the job done.
02:30:50One of the concerns we have is what I think the gentleman
02:30:52talked about, the credit card situation here, REG II.
02:30:56And with regards to the Chevron doctrine basically being
02:30:59rescinded, how is that going to affect your rulemaking
02:31:03with regards to some of the more recent ones like REG II fees
02:31:09and stuff, the Basel rule?
02:31:11Are all those things going to be impacted by this at all?
02:31:14I mean, it doesn't change our assignment
02:31:17under the Durbin Amendment to do the interchange rule.
02:31:20So we're always focused as an institution
02:31:24on compliance with the law.
02:31:26We're a very law-abiding group.
02:31:28But does it narrow your ability to go beyond
02:31:32or reinterpret laws and rules and things like that?
02:31:34It seems to me that's what the rule is.
02:31:35That would be a question for the courts.
02:31:36I mean, the courts will be asking the same question,
02:31:38which is what was Congress's intent for that law.
02:31:42And that's the question we're asking.
02:31:44But what they're saying is courts will give less deference
02:31:46to agencies, I think.
02:31:47Again, these decisions were just passed down.
02:31:51I was actually out of the country last week.
02:31:53This is all happening.
02:31:54I've had no time to be briefed on any of that.
02:31:57So I'm kind of speculating here.
02:31:59Okay. One last question.
02:32:01I asked this question yesterday of Secretary Yellen.
02:32:05What keeps you up at night?
02:32:06What is your biggest concern with regards
02:32:08to your responsibilities, with regards to the economy,
02:32:11regards to the banking system?
02:32:13What is your biggest concern?
02:32:14So for a long time, it's been cyber.
02:32:18And the reason is, you know, we know about credit crises
02:32:22and things like that and financial crises.
02:32:24But we haven't really had something
02:32:25where there's a successful cyber attack
02:32:28on a major financial institution or financial market utility.
02:32:31That's always been my answer.
02:32:33I would actually say now the number one thing
02:32:36that just does keep me awake at night is the balance
02:32:39that I talked about before, which is we're
02:32:41at the critical time of inflation is coming down,
02:32:44the labor market is cooling, and we want to get it right
02:32:47for the benefit of the American people.
02:32:49We want to get inflation down to 2%,
02:32:50but we want to keep a strong labor market, too,
02:32:52and trying to make decisions
02:32:54that give that the best chance to happen.
02:32:57That is the thing that I think about in the wee hours.
02:33:01You know, we've talked about this before, too.
02:33:03You really got a tough job from a standpoint.
02:33:05You're trying to drive down demand in the administration
02:33:07by spending all this money and trying to drive it up.
02:33:09It puts you in a really big box, doesn't it?
02:33:13Thank you, Mr. Chair.
02:33:14I yield back.
02:33:15The gentleman yields back, and now we have the gentleman
02:33:18from the great state of Illinois,
02:33:19Congressman Foster, is now recognized for five minutes.
02:33:22Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Chair Powell.
02:33:24You know, I guess when things are going well,
02:33:26it's as they currently are, it's all of our duty is to look
02:33:29around the curve and see the risks
02:33:31that keep you up at night.
02:33:32So I appreciate Representative Luebkenmeier's question.
02:33:36Now, over the last few years, there have been increasing
02:33:38interest in synthetic risk transfers, SRTs,
02:33:41or credit link notes, which are often used by U.S. banks
02:33:45to shift risk away from the banking system and as a means
02:33:48of managing regulatory capital.
02:33:50So I've been concerned by recent reports that the buyers of some
02:33:53of these SRTs may be investing
02:33:56in them using bank-provided leverage,
02:33:58in which case the risk could just boomerang right back
02:34:01into the banking system.
02:34:02You know, frankly, when I read about this, it triggered my PTSD
02:34:06from the AIT situation
02:34:08with credit default swaps during the financial crisis.
02:34:12Now, I understand the Federal Reserve plays a role
02:34:14in approving SRTs, in fact, issued guidance
02:34:17to U.S. banks regarding their issuance last fall.
02:34:20Could you say a little bit about the ways
02:34:22that these investments can be a safe way for banks
02:34:24to offload risk and in what ways they could become a dangerous
02:34:28source of contagion?
02:34:29Sure. So there could be a breakdown in a couple
02:34:31of places in the chain, as you're obviously aware.
02:34:33One is just that the risk isn't really well
02:34:36and fully transferred to the buyer.
02:34:38And that's the first step is,
02:34:41is that risk going away off the balance sheet
02:34:44in an unconditional kind of a way,
02:34:46in a way that the bank understands?
02:34:47And that's a good thing, if banks are able to do that.
02:34:49Then the question is, is it coming back
02:34:51through the back door with financing?
02:34:54And so we're well aware of that.
02:34:55We're, you know, banks do tend to bring these things to us
02:34:58and we look at them carefully.
02:35:00We understand the ways, some of the ways it can go wrong.
02:35:04And, but at the end of the day, if it works to reduce the risk
02:35:08on a bank's balance sheet, you know,
02:35:10that's something we should be okay with.
02:35:12Yeah. But, you know, there's the, well, if you could just say,
02:35:16what sort of insight and control does the Federal Reserve have
02:35:19into all the connections, particularly
02:35:20when the connection may go through businesses
02:35:24that you do not have direct non-bank entities,
02:35:27that you may not have direct oversight over?
02:35:30My understanding is that this is a very active dialogue
02:35:33that we're having with banks.
02:35:34They want to know how this is going to be treated.
02:35:36They don't want to do something that is going to come back
02:35:39on them or that we will deny the treatment on.
02:35:41So I think there's a pretty transparent set of exchanges
02:35:46around how these things work.
02:35:47We're, you know, we're very clear
02:35:50on what we think our requirements are.
02:35:52This is what I'm told and, you know,
02:35:54so we saw what went wrong the last time.
02:35:57I think no one wants to repeat that, including the banks.
02:36:00So.
02:36:01Well, if you conclude as you're actively studying it
02:36:04that you need more visibility into certain areas
02:36:07of particularly non-bank, things that may be part of the chain
02:36:11of contagion, please let us know because, you know,
02:36:14it's our job to avoid the next crisis.
02:36:16I think it's my personal goal
02:36:18to die before we have another financial crisis
02:36:21and then I'll be doing my job well.
02:36:23Now, I understand also the value of SRTs
02:36:26in the U.S. are relatively small
02:36:27and the bulk of these are offshore.
02:36:29Is the growth of this practice internationally something
02:36:32you're watching closely and is there anything
02:36:35that might provide a sign of early trouble in terms
02:36:39of international contagion that might creep back in?
02:36:42So I haven't heard that flavor of it, but I'll check on that
02:36:45and let you know.
02:36:45Do you remember with AIG, you know, the real problem
02:36:49with AIG falling into bankruptcy is
02:36:51that it would immediately put a bazillion of the European banks
02:36:55into, you know, into violation of their capital requirements
02:36:58which was a major contagion.
02:37:00So do you have a sense of the time scale
02:37:04for the liquidity proposal at this point?
02:37:08I think, you know, the main thing is we have this very large
02:37:13important project on Basel III and I think we're pretty close
02:37:17to being able to move that out into the public view again
02:37:22and I think once we've done that, we can move
02:37:24on to the other things that are there.
02:37:27And one of them is the liquidity proposals and I don't want
02:37:31to put a specific time frame on it, but, you know,
02:37:33we're certainly working toward
02:37:35that sometime later this year I would think.
02:37:38Later this year, we'll have the first view of that.
02:37:39I would think so.
02:37:40Okay. And can you, I understand it's still
02:37:45under negotiation between agencies,
02:37:47but can you say directionally the Basel III,
02:37:51the new amended proposal, is it just going to be
02:37:54in the direction of sort of weakening it, watering things
02:37:57down toward the current capital requirements
02:38:00or will there be areas
02:38:01where it's actually strengthening them?
02:38:03Oh, no. There will be a capital requirement in it
02:38:06that is consistent with Basel III
02:38:09and a capital increase that's consistent with Basel.
02:38:11My question is if you look
02:38:12at what the original proposal was compared to, you know,
02:38:15what you intend to put out, are you moving in the direction
02:38:18of more toward, you know, the current situation?
02:38:22And if so, if you can just interpolate,
02:38:25it seems like if you have comments
02:38:26on the proposal you put out, you understand comments
02:38:29on the status quo and you're somewhere between that,
02:38:33then maybe you don't need another set of comments
02:38:35because everything that can be said has been said.
02:38:38It's a little more complicated than that,
02:38:40but that's essentially right.
02:38:41You know, you have current levels of capital,
02:38:43you have the proposal and you have, which is a lot
02:38:46of gold plating, and then you have where it's shaking out
02:38:49and that's, but it's.
02:38:52So I just was wondering why you need more comments.
02:38:54There are many different pieces.
02:38:56The answer is there are many, many different pieces of that.
02:38:58Thank you, and I'm over time and.
02:38:59And the time is up.
02:39:02Next, the gentlewoman from the great state of Indiana,
02:39:05Congresswoman Houchin, is now recognized for five minutes.
02:39:08Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:39:09Thank you to the Ranking Member, and thank you, Chairman Powell,
02:39:12for coming to speak with us today.
02:39:14It's been a long day, so thank you
02:39:16for being here this entire time.
02:39:18One of the greatest strengths
02:39:19of our financial services industry is the diversity
02:39:22of our banking system.
02:39:24I know firsthand how important it is for us
02:39:26to maintain options and choice for Americans,
02:39:29whether it's somebody looking to open a savings account
02:39:32or take out a loan to start a small business.
02:39:35Increasingly, however, we have seen consolidation
02:39:38in the banking industry and increased difficulty
02:39:41for smaller financial institutions to survive.
02:39:44One of the reasons for this is an excessive regulatory burden
02:39:48that many of the smaller banks face.
02:39:50While this can come in the form of new proposals and adjustments
02:39:53to liquidity requirements or to things like Basel III endgame,
02:39:57it can also be due to outdated technological capabilities
02:40:00at the agencies and inefficiencies in
02:40:03and within the examination process.
02:40:05Chairman Powell, could you just talk
02:40:07about what steps the Fed is taking to upgrade technology
02:40:10and procurement procedures and update training practices
02:40:13to ensure that the banks
02:40:14that you regulate don't face unnecessary burdens?
02:40:18So to your point, the number of banks
02:40:21in the country has been coming down for 40 years.
02:40:24And we, there's consolidation going
02:40:27on for a whole range of reasons.
02:40:29And we're not trying to foster that.
02:40:32We're not trying to push that.
02:40:33And we're aware that, you know, high fixed costs
02:40:36from regulation may be one of the reasons for that.
02:40:38So we do try to keep that in mind,
02:40:41particularly for the smaller institutions.
02:40:44On your question around, you know, IT and specific things,
02:40:49I might take an opportunity to come back to you
02:40:51with somebody who's closer
02:40:53to the specific supervisory practices.
02:40:56That would be great.
02:40:57That would be great.
02:40:57And just for reference, I was proud earlier this year
02:41:00to introduce a bill of fostering the use of technology
02:41:03to uphold regulatory effectiveness
02:41:05in Supervision Act or the Futures Act.
02:41:08It's an important bill that would require our federal bank
02:41:11regulators to conduct an assessment
02:41:13to ensure that the technology
02:41:14and training systems they are using will improve
02:41:17and reduce the burden on our,
02:41:19especially on our smaller financial institutions.
02:41:22At the same time, the bill will strengthen the safety
02:41:24and soundness of our financial system
02:41:26by keeping our regulators up to date
02:41:28on the latest FinTech innovations.
02:41:30So I was glad to see that act, the Futures Act move
02:41:33through the markup earlier this year.
02:41:35I certainly hope to see it come to a floor vote soon.
02:41:37Chairman Powell, in your comments yesterday
02:41:39in the Senate, you said Basel III will need a,
02:41:41quote, meaningful revamp.
02:41:43Before we proceed toward finalization of that rule,
02:41:46I was glad to hear you say that.
02:41:48Considering 97% of public comments
02:41:51on Basel III were negative, with 86%
02:41:54of that negative feedback coming from outside the banking sector.
02:41:58Many of my colleagues here today have highlighted their own
02:42:01concerns with Basel III.
02:42:03Given the pressure that Americans are already facing
02:42:05with inflation and increased interest rates
02:42:08and housing market stalls, I would urge
02:42:10that you take a good, long look at the cumulative effect
02:42:13of this rule in context with the broader economy, our small
02:42:17and mid-sized banks,
02:42:18not just the larger financial institutions.
02:42:21Will a meaningful revamp include consideration of the hardships
02:42:26that overregulations cause for smaller financial institutions
02:42:29like those that are essential to rural communities like mine
02:42:32in southern Indiana?
02:42:34I think it will, yes.
02:42:36And are you concerned about the consolidation
02:42:39that we are seeing in the banking sector?
02:42:41I know you said it's been going on for 40 years.
02:42:44Does consolidation in the banking sector concern you?
02:42:47And are you concerned that the broader effect
02:42:50of cumulative rules is potentially leading
02:42:54to a further consolidation in the banking sector?
02:42:57Again, we don't want to be part of the reason
02:43:00for that consolidation.
02:43:01It seems to be happening, though, organically.
02:43:03We allowed interstate banking, for example.
02:43:06Also, I think for a long time the learning was there weren't
02:43:09a lot of economies of scale in banking.
02:43:11I think with all the technology costs,
02:43:14that old learning is now not really true.
02:43:19And so I do think, in fact, I think a lot of the sort
02:43:22of smaller regionals do feel that they need to grow to be able
02:43:26to compete with the larger regionals and also, you know,
02:43:29the very largest banks are also present, as you well know,
02:43:32in many, many communities where they weren't 30 years ago.
02:43:35So I think people are seeing a need for scale.
02:43:39From a business standpoint, you know,
02:43:41we don't want to push consolidation.
02:43:43I think we also don't want to stand in the way of it
02:43:45if that's what's necessary for banks
02:43:47to compete with the largest banks.
02:43:49I appreciate that.
02:43:49Thank you, Chairman Powell, again, for your testimony.
02:43:51Our financial system is really the envy of the world.
02:43:54We need to make sure that small
02:43:56and growing institutions have the tools they need to innovate
02:43:59without any undue burden.
02:44:00I appreciate your emphasis on that in the meaningful revamp.
02:44:04Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I yield back.
02:44:08Next, the gentleman who set a record mile run this morning
02:44:11in Washington, D.C. from Illinois, Mr. Kasten,
02:44:15is now recognized for five minutes.
02:44:17Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:44:18You looked much better and well-coiffed
02:44:20when I saw you this morning than I was.
02:44:23Nice to see you again, Chair Powell.
02:44:27Just briefly on the Basel III reforms, you and I have talked
02:44:32about the tax equity provisions and the fact
02:44:35that clean energy tax equity got a four times risk weighting
02:44:38relative to other tax equity in the last version.
02:44:41If there is a re-proposal, can you give us any visibility
02:44:44on whether clean energy tax equity will go back
02:44:47to the 100% risk weighting that it's historically had?
02:44:49So I'm trying to, I'm not going to give any specifics
02:44:52out today because, you know,
02:44:53the usual arrangement is nothing's agreed
02:44:55until everything's agreed.
02:44:57So I don't want to get into what the specifics are.
02:44:59I'm hopeful that the three agencies can come out,
02:45:02you know, pretty soon with the whole package.
02:45:05Okay. Well, the sooner even something temporary
02:45:08because there are a lot of banks that want to participate
02:45:10that are, I think, more cautious
02:45:12than they need to be right now.
02:45:13I appreciate that.
02:45:14In 2021, I think you were a part of the FSOC report
02:45:18on climate-related financial risk
02:45:20that for the first time identified climate change
02:45:22as an emerging threat to U.S. financial stability.
02:45:24Do you still agree with that conclusion?
02:45:27The conclusion being what again?
02:45:29That climate change was an emerging threat
02:45:32to U.S. financial stability.
02:45:33Yeah.
02:45:34Okay. I raise that because I'm, I've been troubled, as you know,
02:45:39from some of the letters we've written
02:45:40by this April Bloomberg report that said, number one,
02:45:43that Fed officials were pressuring the Basel Committee
02:45:46to make disclosures of banks' transition plans optional
02:45:48and that succeeded.
02:45:50Number two, that the Fed, OCC, and FDIC were pushing
02:45:54to limit implementation
02:45:56of the Basel Committee's climate risk management principles
02:45:58to remove financed emissions.
02:46:01And number three, that the U.S.,
02:46:02unlike other countries, did not propose that any
02:46:05of its banks be subject to an analysis
02:46:07of how they incorporated climate
02:46:09in their credit risk assessments.
02:46:12Have any representatives from your agency attempted
02:46:15to weaken the Basel Committee's work on climate risk,
02:46:18including by expressing concern
02:46:19about the Basel Committee overstepping its mandate
02:46:22with respect to its climate work?
02:46:24Well, I guess I would say it this way.
02:46:27The Fed does not have a mandate
02:46:30of fostering an energy transition or dealing
02:46:34with climate change.
02:46:36Some of the northern European banks feel that they do.
02:46:39They actually have that, it's in their mandate,
02:46:43either explicitly or implicitly, but we don't.
02:46:45But if we agree that climate change is an emerging threat
02:46:48to the stability of the banking system,
02:46:51are you saying you're not acting on it
02:46:53because you don't have the authority or you're not acting
02:46:54on it because you disagree with what you said in 2012?
02:46:57When you say it's an, and I agree,
02:46:59there's an emerging threat to financial stability,
02:47:01that's over time.
02:47:03We, I think looking to the banking agencies
02:47:06to lead the fight on climate change is a big mistake.
02:47:09I think it's a job for elected people.
02:47:12We don't have that mandate in the United States.
02:47:14We can do a very limited thing, which is make sure
02:47:17that the institutions we supervise are aware of
02:47:21and can manage those risks.
02:47:22We are not going to be the ones who are forcing them
02:47:25to adopt plans to transition and that kind of thing.
02:47:29That's just not going to happen through the banking agencies
02:47:32without a law change.
02:47:34So then if it is the view of the rest of the world
02:47:37that climate change is a financial risk and we're going
02:47:38to regulate our banks, is it the view of the Fed
02:47:40that the USGC should not be required to report?
02:47:45You know, again, we're not going
02:47:47to be climate policy makers at the Fed.
02:47:49We are not going to do that.
02:47:50We don't have that mandate.
02:47:52A key to our independence is that we stick
02:47:55to the job you've given us.
02:47:58And the idea that we should discover climate and say, okay,
02:48:02we're going to lead the fight on climate, it just, we do,
02:48:04if we're going to do things like that, we should be part
02:48:06of the Treasury Department.
02:48:07Well, so to be clear, no one's under the illusions
02:48:12that you're the EPA.
02:48:14But, you know, I spoke with Janet Yellen
02:48:16about this yesterday.
02:48:17We have multiple states
02:48:19where the insurance industry is collapsing.
02:48:22Something like, as you know well, something like a third
02:48:25to 40% of US wealth is tied up in real estate.
02:48:30And, okay, US homeowners are not G-SIBs,
02:48:35but in the 2008 financial crisis, we had risk that moved
02:48:41out of the G-SIBs onto other entities' balance sheets.
02:48:44And we said, well, we're not responsible
02:48:46because it's an insurance company.
02:48:47Well, we've fixed that.
02:48:48You do not have a mandate to,
02:48:50if there's systemic risk in the system.
02:48:52And so the question is, if we know that risk is moving
02:48:55through the system, is the FSOC monitoring that risk
02:48:58or is the FSOC's view that if I'm not allowed to look at it,
02:49:02I'm not going to look at it and it's somebody else's problem?
02:49:04Because somebody else is the person sitting here, right?
02:49:06I mean, we're going to be accountable if that risk comes
02:49:08when those chickens come home to roost.
02:49:10The banks know their risks pretty well.
02:49:12And you'll see the banks
02:49:14and the insurance companies pulling back from lending
02:49:16in coastal areas and things like that.
02:49:18No, I agree.
02:49:19But where are they offloading that risk to?
02:49:22If they're putting, we've seen them putting it
02:49:24onto Fannie and Freddie.
02:49:26We've seen Fannie and Freddie try to put it
02:49:28onto the reinsurance industry.
02:49:29The risk doesn't go away.
02:49:30We don't regulate them.
02:49:31The gentleman's time is up.
02:49:33Yield back.
02:49:35Next, the gentlewoman from the great state of Missouri,
02:49:38Congresswoman Wagner, is now recognized for five minutes.
02:49:41I thank you, Mr. Chairman.
02:49:43And in keeping with baseball analogies here,
02:49:46I think I'm batting cleanup.
02:49:48Chairman Powell, welcome this afternoon to you.
02:49:52Chair Powell, in your testimony, you stated that, and I quote,
02:49:55longer term inflation expectations appear
02:49:59to remain well anchored.
02:50:02Could you please expand on that for us?
02:50:05Sure. So in our thinking and the thinking of economists
02:50:09and central bankers, what the public expects
02:50:11about inflation is really important.
02:50:13Because if you expect there to be low inflation,
02:50:16then it probably will be low.
02:50:17Because you're going to make sure that's true
02:50:19in your daily decisions.
02:50:21So we measure them.
02:50:22You know, we survey individuals and businesses
02:50:26and market participants.
02:50:27And then we look at market-based.
02:50:29You can also derive market estimates
02:50:33of what inflation will be through various instruments
02:50:36of the markets.
02:50:36And all of those suggest that people expect inflation
02:50:40to be right around 2% over the longer term.
02:50:43And that's been very stable right through this episode.
02:50:46When you say longer term, sir,
02:50:48how many years would you be estimating?
02:50:51One year, three year, five year?
02:50:53Is there any?
02:50:53So we look at short and medium term inflation expectations,
02:50:58too, and they tend to be more volatile.
02:50:59Because, you know, when inflation is high,
02:51:01people think that'll last a few years.
02:51:03But one standard thing is to look at five year, five year,
02:51:07which is between year five and year ten.
02:51:09That's a standard way to look.
02:51:10Or longer term than that.
02:51:13If you ask, you just ask people in surveys
02:51:15over the longer term, maybe you don't specify.
02:51:17But they all give you the same answer, which is people kind
02:51:20of have faith that inflation will go back
02:51:22down to its 2% level.
02:51:25Thank you.
02:51:26There has been some reporting lately on shrinkflation.
02:51:30And for our viewers, I'll say this is
02:51:32when you pay the same price for something as yesterday,
02:51:36but get less of it than before.
02:51:38Kind of like my bag of potato chips.
02:51:42Some have sought to direct attention away from the pain
02:51:46of runaway inflation that we've experienced,
02:51:48and instead blame producers
02:51:51who themselves face rising cost pressures.
02:51:55Yet, I haven't seen any mention of shrinkflation
02:51:59as an inflation cause in any recent monetary policy report.
02:52:04Moreover, a Bureau of Labor Statistics article last year
02:52:09looked at shrinkflation and concluded that, and I quote,
02:52:12again, it has a minuscule impact on overall inflation.
02:52:16Chair Powell, from the Fed's perspective and analysis,
02:52:20has shrinkflation been a significant casual
02:52:24or amplifying factor in the runaway inflation
02:52:27of the past several years that has imposed maybe greater pain
02:52:31on American workers and households?
02:52:35I'd have to say no.
02:52:36I mean, I would say it this way.
02:52:38You know, packaging in the U.S. on food products
02:52:42and that kind of thing, you know,
02:52:43it's going to disclose the contents of the thing,
02:52:46and the price will be what it is,
02:52:47and consumers can make their choice to buy it or not.
02:52:49But we don't think that's a major driver of inflation, no.
02:52:54I think from a producer standpoint, it probably is.
02:52:57If the cost of the item is exponentially higher.
02:53:04It may reflect costs on the part of the producer.
02:53:07It probably does, but that doesn't mean it's a cause
02:53:09of inflation as such.
02:53:11Okay. Thank you.
02:53:12So switching topics, the Federal Reserve has produced volumes
02:53:17of research over the last decade highlighting the negative
02:53:20consequences of the debit interchange fee cap.
02:53:25Some of the economists who produced
02:53:27that research have even worked on this proposed rule,
02:53:31the Reg II.
02:53:32Chair Powell, was the previous Federal Reserve research
02:53:36demonstrating Regulation II's detrimental impacts
02:53:41to low-cost checking accounts flawed,
02:53:44or did it have incorrect conclusions?
02:53:48And if not, then why would the Fed propose this rulemaking
02:53:53when all of their research demonstrated
02:53:56detrimental impacts?
02:53:59Please.
02:54:01I am not entirely sure what research you're referring to.
02:54:04I'll be happy to follow up with you on that.
02:54:07Yeah. I hope you are,
02:54:08because I know we're having this discussion
02:54:10about the interchange fee caps and Reg II, and I'm concerned
02:54:16about going forward on that when much of the research
02:54:20that we have seen from the Fed has been pretty steady
02:54:25over the last number of years.
02:54:26It says it has quite detrimental impacts, so please,
02:54:30to low-cost checking accounts.
02:54:32So if you don't mind, I would love to get some answers on that.
02:54:35And also, why hasn't the Fed taken
02:54:38into action the higher fraud costs
02:54:40that debit card issuers will incur as a result
02:54:44of the new dual routing mandate for card,
02:54:47not present transactions?
02:54:50I'm over my time.
02:54:51If you could also answer in writing,
02:54:54I would be ever so grateful.
02:54:55I yield back, sir.
02:54:57Bailey yields back, and I would like to thank Chairman Powell
02:55:00for his testimony today.
02:55:01I know you've got to get out of here, and without objection,
02:55:04all members will have five legislative days
02:55:05to submit additional written questions
02:55:07for the witness to the chair.
02:55:09Questions will be forwarded to the witnesses for his response,
02:55:11and I ask you, Chairman Powell, to please respond no later
02:55:14than August 30th, 2024.
02:55:17With that in mind, this hearing is adjourned.

Recommended