WHEN PRESIDENT OBAMA takes time out from stonewalling congressional Republicans over the continuing budget resolution and raising the debt ceiling to pick a nominee for the next Federal Reserve chairman, the U.S. Senate should be prepared to ask that candidate hard, critical questions and to reject the person if satisfactory answers aren’t forthcoming.
To “stimulate” the economy our central bank, at the direction of Ben Bernanke, has undertaken unprecedented actions that have immensely harmed credit markets, thereby retarding recovery. They have the potential to inflict even greater damage on us and the world than the 2008–09 crisis. Without congressional authority the Fed has assumed enormous economic powers. Even worse, despite the Fed’s manifest failures before and after the economic crisis, Congress has granted it other powers that threaten our economic…