| Working
Paper 96-11
by Geoffrey M. B. Tootell
Revised article published in Southern Economic
Journal 66, no. 4 (March 2000): 957-975.
The
boards of directors of the 12 District Reserve Banks
are the rare private citizens who play a role in
government decisionmaking. Although the nine business,
labor, financial~ and community leaders on each local
board do not directly set policy, they do recommend
changes in the discount rate to the Board of Governors.
On the surface their role in monetary policy deliberations
is only advisory; however, their influence could,
in fact, be substantially more significant if they
actually affect the FOMC votes of their respective
Reserve Bank presidents. This paper examines this
more significant link to monetary policy by testing
the relationShip betweer the discount rate recommendation
of the Reserve Bank’s board and the vote of that
District’s Bank president at the FOMC. It is shown
that the FOMC votes of Reserve Bank presidents are
significantly correlated with their board of directors’ current
discount rate recommendation.
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