Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
L. Menand, The Legality of Central Bank Independence in the United States

July 5, 2022
Central bank independence faces heightened scrutiny today, with scholars and policy experts—including several in this roundtable—questioning its desirability and legitimacy. But even its critics tend to take its legality for granted.
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
L. Menand, The Legality of Central Bank Independence in the United States

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Lastra and S. Dietz, Communication in Monetary Policy

May 25, 2022
Accountability is a critical corollary of central bank independence. And communication is a necessary component of accountability. A central bank that does not communicate sufficiently with political leaders, markets and the public will not be able to justify its independence from political institutions over time.
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Lastra and S. Dietz, Communication in Monetary Policy

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 2)

August 17, 2021

Gerald Epstein, University of Massachusetts Amherst

As I argued in Part One, with both its monetary and regulatory policy, the Federal Reserve has often been biased toward helping the financial sector.
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 2)

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 1)

August 10, 2021

Gerald Epstein, University of Massachusetts Amherst

The US Constitution calls for three branches of government that are independent from one another and that can act as “checks and balances” on each other: The Executive, Congress and the Judiciary.
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 1)

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Hockett, Two Blades, One Scissors: Central Bank Independence with (Some) Central Bank Allocation

July 14, 2021

Robert Hockett, Cornell Law School

Just Money has arranged yet another timely and well-framed symposium. I could not be more delighted to take part. I’d like here to highlight the bearing on this season’s symposium topic
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Hockett, Two Blades, One Scissors: Central Bank Independence with (Some) Central Bank Allocation

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Carrillo, Boots on the Rails: The National Security State, Racial Subordination, & the Myth of “Instrument Independence”

July 6, 2021

Raul Carillo, LPE Project & Yale Law School

Since at least the early 1990s, when discussing the administrative, operational, and technical properties of central bank independence (CBI), many economists, including former Federal Reserve Board (Board) Governor and MIT economist Laurence Mayer,
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Carrillo, Boots on the Rails: The National Security State, Racial Subordination, & the Myth of “Instrument Independence”