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Lijphart, C12

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Lijphart, C12 & C13 Constitutions and Central Banks – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lijphart, C12


1
Lijphart, C12 C13
  • Constitutions and Central Banks

2
Constitutions
  • Rigidity v. Flexibility
  • Formal v. Informal Changes
  • Replacement
  • Judicial Review

3
Amendment Processes
  • Legislative Supremacy
  • Intervening Elections
  • Referendum or Other Requiements

4
Amending the US ConstitutionSource
http//texaspolitics.laits.utexas.edu/html/cons/fe
atures/0405_03/slide1.html
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Central Banks
  • What are they?
  • What do they do?
  • Review Fiscal Policy v. Monetary Policy
  • Setting interest rates/control the money supply
  • Independence v. Dependence
  • On whom?
  • Significance?

9
Independence Central Banks
  • Appointment and Tenure
  • Length of term
  • Dismissal?
  • Policy Formulation (influence on monetary and
    budgeting policy or not?)
  • Central Bank Objectives (degree of focus on price
    controls?)
  • Limitations on Lending (To central government
    only (and with control of terms) or lending to
    various levels of government and to private
    entities?)

10
What is the Federal Open Market Committee, and
what does it do?Source http//www.federalreserve
.gov/generalinfo/faq/faqfomc.htm
  • The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is the
    monetary policymaking body of the Federal Reserve
    System. It is responsible for formulation of a
    monetary policy designed to promote economic
    growth, full employment, stable prices, and a
    sustainable pattern of international trade and
    payments.

11
What is the Federal Open Market Committee, and
what does it do?Source http//www.federalreserve
.gov/generalinfo/faq/faqfomc.htm
  • The FOMC sets monetary policy by specifying the
    short-term objective for open market
    operations--purchases and sales of U.S.
    government and federal agency securities. Open
    market operations, the principal tool of monetary
    policy, affect the provision of reserves to
    depository institutions and, in turn, the cost
    and availability of money and credit in the U.S.
    economy.

12
What is the Federal Open Market Committee, and
what does it do?Source http//www.federalreserve
.gov/generalinfo/faq/faqfomc.htm
  • The FOMC also directs Federal Reserve operations
    in foreign currencies such operations are
    coordinated with the U.S. Treasury, which has
    responsibility for formulating U.S. policies
    regarding the exchange value of the dollar.

13
What is the Federal Open Market Committee, and
what does it do?Source http//www.federalreserve
.gov/generalinfo/faq/faqfomc.htm
  • The Federal Open Market Committee consists of
    twelve voting members the seven members of the
    Board of Governors and five of the twelve Federal
    Reserve Bank presidents. The president of the
    Federal Reserve Bank of New York serves on a
    continuous basis the presidents of the other
    Reserve Banks serve one-year terms on a rotating
    basis beginning on January 1 of each year. The
    rotating seats are filled from the following four
    groups of Banks, one Bank president from each
    group Boston, Philadelphia, and Richmond
    Cleveland and Chicago Atlanta, St. Louis, and
    Dallas and Minneapolis, Kansas City, and San
    Francisco.
  • All of the Reserve Bank presidents, even those
    who are not currently voting members, attend FOMC
    meetings, participate in the discussions, and
    contribute to the assessment of the economy and
    of policy options.

14
The Federal Reserve Board The Board of Governors
  • The seven members of the Board of Governors of
    the Federal Reserve System are nominated by the
    President and confirmed by the Senate. A full
    term is fourteen years. One term begins every two
    years, on February 1 of even-numbered years. A
    member who serves a full term may not be
    reappointed. A member who completes an unexpired
    portion of a term may be reappointed. All terms
    end on their statutory date regardless of the
    date on which the member is sworn into office.
  • The Chairman and the Vice Chairman of the Board
    are named by the President from among the members
    and are confirmed by the Senate. They serve a
    term of four years. A member's term on the Board
    is not affected by his or her status as Chairman
    or Vice Chairman.
  • Source http//www.federalreserve.gov/bios/

15
Who are the Federal Reserve Bank presidents?
  • Under the Federal Reserve Act, the president of a
    Federal Reserve Bank is the chief executive
    officer of the Bank. He or she is appointed by
    the Bank's board of directors, with the approval
    of the Board of Governors, for a term of five
    years.
  • The terms of the presidents of the twelve Reserve
    Banks run concurrently, ending on the last day of
    February in years ending with 1 and 6 (for
    example, 2001, 2006, and 2011). The appointment
    of a president who takes office after a term has
    begun ends with the end of that term. A Reserve
    Bank president may be reappointed after serving a
    full term or a partial term. Reserve Bank
    presidents are subject to mandatory retirement
    upon becoming 65 years of age. However, a
    president initially appointed after age 55 may,
    at the option of the Banks board of directors,
    serve until attaining ten years of service in the
    office or age 70, whichever comes first.

16
Source http//www.chicagofed.org/consumer_inform
ation/the_fed_our_central_bank.cfm
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