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These Are the People Who Do Not Want the Fed’s Veil of Criminal Activity LiftedJ. P. Morgan and the bankster elite want Federal Reserve opacity, not transparency. The following individuals whose primary goal in life is getting tenure and publishing a textbook, yet believe they have a voice in deciding whether over 300 million American people should know just whose interests the Fed so staunchly protects, have issued an open letter to Congress and The Executive Branch, demanding that no one ever dare tinker or have audit powers over the private institution that is the Federal Reserve. Those who run hedge funds, operate semi-failed companies, work for an Investment Bank, especially taxpayer bailed out ones, or are otherwise conflicted, are numbered. It makes sense to recall that the recent grassroots campaign to enforce the opposite – i.e., more transparency at the Fed, has been supported by over 5,000 individuals at this point. Zero Hedge recommends all who believe in transparency in this time when we have anything but, sign the petition to demonstrate their disagreement with the individuals below. “Fed Independence” Petition Signatories: Ricardo Caballero MIT Kenneth French Dartmouth College Robert Hall Stanford Anil Kashyap Chicago Booth Pete Klenow Stanford Frederic Mishkin Columbia Thomas Sargent NYU Michael Woodford Columbia Andrew Abel Wharton School,University of Pennsylvania Daron Acemoglu MIT Michael Adler Columiba University Yacine Ait-Sahalia Princeton University Fernando Alvarez University of Chicago 1. Scott Anderson Wells Fargo & Co. 2. Cliff Asness Managing and Founding Principal, AQR Capital Management LLC Paul Asquith Massachusetts Institute of Technology David Backus NYU Dean Baim Pepperdine University/UCLA Ravi Bansal Duke University David Bates University of Iowa Andrew Bernard Dartmouth College 3. Richard Berner Morgan Stanley George Borts Brown University 4. Scott Brown Raymond James & Associates Markus K. Brunnermeier Princeton University Ralph C. Bryant Brookings Institution 5. Michael Carey Calyon Securities (USA) Inc. Credit Agricole Group Christopher Carroll Johns Hopkins University Martin Cherkes Columbia University Diego Comin Harvard University Jernej Copic UCLA Dora Costa UCLA Steven Davis University of Chicago Booth School of Business Angus Deaton Princeton University Davide Debortoli University of California, San Diego Eddie Dekel Northwestern University Harold Demsetz UCLA Scott Desposato University of California, San Diego Douglas Diamond University of Chicago Booth School of Business Peter Diamond MIT Francis X. Diebold University of Pennsylvania Avinash Dixit Princeton University Matthias Doepke Northwestern University Darrell Duffie Stanford Pierre Collin Dufresne Columbia Martin Eichenbaum Northwestern University Andrea Eisfeldt Northwestern UniversityKellogg School of Management Jeffrey Ely Northwestern University Eduardo Engel Yale University Eugene Fama University of Chicago Booth School of Business Henry Farber Princeton University Roger Farmer UCLA Jon Faust Center for Financial Economics, Johns Hopkins U. 6. Michael Feroli J.P.Morgan Wayne Ferson U.S.C. Kristin Forbes MIT-Sloan School of Management Mark Gertler New York Univiersity Marc Giannoni Columbia University Simon Gilchrist Boston University Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University Roger Gordon UCSD 7. David Greenlaw Morgan Stanley Gene Grossman Princeton University Steffen Habermalz Northwestern University James Hamilton University of California, San Diego Gary Hansen UCLA Robert Hansen Tuck School, Dartmouth College Gordon Hanson UC San Diego Milton Harris University of Chicago Booth School of Business Tarek Hassan University of Chicago Booth School of Business Zhiguo He Chicago Booth John Heaton University of Chicago D. Lee Heavner Analysis Group, Inc. Christian Hellwig UCLA Gailen Hite Columbia Business School Yael Hochberg Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University 8. Stuart Hoffman PNC Financial ServicesGroup Bengt Holmstrom MIT Bo Honore Princeton University 9. Peter Hooper Deutsche Bank Takeo Hoshi University of California, San Diego Christopher House University of Michigan Peter Howitt Brown University Chang-tai Hsieh University of Chicago 10. Ellen Hughes-Cromwick Chief Economist, Ford Motor Company John Huizinga University of Chicago Booth School of Business Erik Hurst University of Chicago Booth School of Business Ravi Jagannathan Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University 11. Dana Johnson Comerica Bank Karen Johnson Federal Reserve Board of Governors (retired) Charles I. Jones Stanford University, Graduate School of Business Paul Joskow MIT Matthew Kahn UCLA Juno Kang The Bank of Korea Steven Kaplan University of Chicago Booth School of Business 12. Bruce Kasman J.P. Morgan Chase Peter Kenen Princeton Uniiversity Ralph Koijen University of Chicago Booth School of Business David Kotok Chariman, Central Banking Series, Global Interdependence Center, Philadelphia, PA. Arvind Krishnamurthy Northwestern University Rafael La Porta Dartmouth College David Lake University of California, San Diego Bruce Lehman UCSD Nan Li Ohio State University Hilarie Lieb Northwestern University 13. John Liew AQR Capital Management Juhani Linnainmaa University of Chicago Booth School of Business Andrew Lo MIT 14. Kevin Logan Dresdner Kleinwort Guido Lorenzoni MIT Hanno Lustig UCLA Anderson Louis Maccini Johns Hopkins University Burton Malkiel Princeton University Eric Maskin The Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University Robert McDonald Kellogg School, Northwestern University Daniel McFadden University of California, Berkeley Doug McMillin Louisiana State University Rajnish Mehra UC Santa Barbara 15. Robert Mellman J.P. Morgan Robert Merton Harvard University 16. Laurence Meyer Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC Atif Mian University of Chicago Gregory Miller Suntrust Banks, Inc. Robert Moffitt Johns Hopkins University Stephen Morris Princeton University Dale Mortensen Northwestern University Giuseppe Moscarini Yale University Tobias Moskowitz University of Chicago, Booth School of Business Stefan Nagel Stanford Maurice Obstfeld University of California, Berkeley Lee Ohanian UCLA Maureen O’Hara Cornell University Stavros Panageas University of Chicago BoothSchool of Business Dimitris Papanikolaou Northwestern University Robert Parry President & CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Retired Lubos Pastor University of Chicago BoothSchool of Business Lasse H. Pedersen NYU Monika Piazzesi Stanford Keith Poole University of California, San Diego Giorgio Primiceri Northwestern University Valerie Ramey University of California, San Diego Enrichetta Ravina Columbia University Esteban Rossi-Hansberg Princeton University Michael Rothschild Princeton University Tano Santos Columbia Business School Ulrike Schaede University of California, San Diego Richard Schmalensee MIT Martin Schneider Stanford Kermit Schoenholtz NYU Stern School of Business Jay Shanken Emory Robert Shiller Yale University Hyun Shin Princeton University Stephen Shore Johns Hopkins University Costis Skiadas Northwestern University Matthew Slaughter Dartmouth College James F. Smith Kenan-Flagler Business School, UNC-Chapel Hill Chester Spatt Carnegie Mellon University James H. Stock Harvard Rene Stulz The Ohio State University Amir Sufi University of Chicago Booth School of Business Joseph Swanson Northwestern University Vefa Tarhan Loyola University Chicago Edwin M. Truman Peterson Institute for International Economics Harald Uhlig University of Chicago Andrey Ukhov Northwestern University Sergio Urzua Northwestern University Chris Varvares Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC Pietro Veronesi University of Chicago Paul Wachtel New York University, Stern School of Business Richard Walker Northwestern University Mark Watson Princeton Shang-jin Wei Columbia David Weil Brown University Pierre-Olivier Weill UCLA Economics Burton Weisbrod Northwestern University William Wheaton MIT Michael Whinston Northwestern University Mirko Wiederholt Northwestern University Mark Witte Northwestern University Tiemen Wouteren Johns Hopkins University Jonathan Wright Johns Hopkins University Wei Xiong Princeton University Stanley Zin New York University And here is the text of the endorsed letter: Open Letter to Congress and the Executive Branch Amidst the debate over systemic regulation, the independence of U.S. monetary policy is at risk. We urge Congress and the Executive Branch to reaffirm their support for and defend the independence of the Federal Reserve System as a foundation of U.S. economic stability. There are three specific risks that must be contained. First, central bank independence has been shown to be essential for controlling inflation. Sooner or later, the Fed will have to scale back its current unprecedented monetary accommodation. When the Federal Reserve judges it time to begin tightening monetary conditions, it must be allowed to do so without interference. Second, lender of last resort decisions should not be politicized. Finally, calls to alter the structure or personnel selection of the Federal Reserve System easily could backfire by raising inflation expectations and borrowing costs and dimming prospects for recovery. The democratic legitimacy of the Federal Reserve System is well established by its legal mandate and by the existing appointments process. Frequent communication with the public and testimony before Congress ensure Fed accountability. If the Federal Reserve is given new responsibilities every effort must be made to avoid compromising its ability to manage monetary policy as it sees fit. DarthDubious's blog | login to post comments |