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Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization Advance Access originally published online on June 12, 2008
Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 2009 25(2):472-498; doi:10.1093/jleo/ewn010
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Yale University. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Political Compromise and Bureaucratic Structure: The Political Origins of the Federal Reserve System

Gyung-Ho Jeong*

Claremont Graduate University

Gary J. Miller

Washington University in St. Louis

Andrew C. Sobel

Washington University in St. Louis

* Email: gyung-ho.jeong{at}cgu.edu.

What is the origin of the structural independence of the Federal Reserve System? Unlike existing explanations on central bank independence, we show that the structural independence of the Fed is not the result of intentional design but a product of compromise among disparate groups. Using agenda-constrained ideal point estimation techniques to estimate both the preferences of senators on key questions of Fed structure and the locations of alternative forms of the bill with respect to those preferences, we show that the structural features of the Fed in the final bill differed markedly from the original preferences of legislators representing competing groups. The result was a compromise that offered the prospect of significant independence for the new agency. The Fed case shows that political compromise can provide useful bureaucratic insulation when the short-term incentives of political principals promote unstable, self-seeking policy choices (JEL N41, N21).


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