-Caveat Lector-

 <A HREF="http://www.cofc.edu/~flaherty/audit.html">Myth #6: The Federal
Reserve has never been audited.</A> Myth #6:  The Federal Reserve has never
been audited.

An often repeated Federal Reserve conspiracy theory is that the Fed has never
been audited.  "Every year Congress introduces legislation to audit the FED,"
wrote Thomas Schauf, "and every year it is defeated."7  Why?  Conspiracy
theorists such as Schauf, Gary Kah (1991), and Pat Robertson (1994) say the
reason is that the Fed is involved in an international plot to subvert U.S.
sovereignty and create a one-world government.  Naturally, the Fed will not
permit Congress to audit its activities, lest it discover this treasonous
plan and shut it down.
How much truth is there to this claim?  Has the Fed ever been audited by
Congress or anyone else?  The Fed controls U.S. monetary policy and can act
with a great deal of independence from Congress and the executive branch.
Clearly, such awesome power requires some sort of regular public oversight at
the very least to insure that the Fed is doing its job efficiently and
effectively, and to detect any abuses of power or fraud. This essay explores
the claim that the Fed has never been audited and finds that it is completely
false.

A Brief History of Federal Reserve Audits

Since its inception in 1913 the Federal Reserve System has been subjected to
a variety of financial and performance audits by Congress, the executive
branch, and private accounting firms, although responsibility for this task
has shifted from time to time. From 1913 to 1921 the Board of Governors, then
known as the Federal Reserve Board which sets monetary policy and regulates
the activities of the Federal Reserve Banks, was audited annually by the U.S.
Treasury Department.  In 1921 Congress created the Government Accounting
Office (GAO) and assigned it to audit the Board until 1933.  In the Banking
Act of 1933, Congress voted specifically to remove the Board from the GAO's
jurisdiction.  From 1933 to 1952 audit teams from the twelve Federal Reserve
Banks performed the annual examination of the BOG's books.  From 1952 to
1978, the Board, under authorization from Congress, decided to employ
nationally recognize accounting firms to conduct the audits of itself to
insure independent oversight.  This provided an external evaluation of the
adequacy and effectiveness of the examination procedures.1

In 1978 Congress passed the Federal Banking Agency Audit Act (31 USCA 714).
It placed the Federal Reserve System back under the auditing authority of the
GAO.  The Act significantly increased the access of the GAO to the Federal
Reserve Banks, the Board, and the Federal Open Market Committee (the FOMC).
Since then, the GAO has conducted over 100 financial audits and performance
audits of the three Federal Reserve bodies.3

Scope of GAO Audits

Some of the more important GAO performance audits of the Fed have been in the
areas of bank supervision, payment systems activities, and government
securities activities.  In the first area, the GAO examined how well the Fed
was enforcing its regulatory powers over its member banks.  In 1992 it drew
attention to the Fed's sluggish compliance with regulatory reforms mandated
by the Foreign Bank Supervision Act of 1991.  In examining the Fed's payment
system activities, the GAO made the Fed aware of how its pricing policies for
such services as check-clearing affected private suppliers of check-clearing
services, and also suggested ways to speed up the process of check
collections.  Security markets for government debt is a crucial market, and
GAO performance audits of the Fed have lead to more openness in the primary
dealer system, particularly concerning the disclosure of price information.
The GAO is also involved in several ongoing performance audits of the Fed
such as analysis of risks and benefits of interstate banking, regulation of
derivatives, and the budget of the Federal Reserve system.2

Audits By Private Accounting Firms

Financial audits of the Fed are also conducted regularly. Each Reserve Bank
is audited every year by independent General Auditors who report directly to
the Board of Governors.  These examinations involve financial statement
audits and reviews on the effectiveness of financial controls.  Each Reserve
Bank also has its own internal audit mechanisms.  The Board contracts each
year with an outside accounting firm to evaluate the audit program's
effectiveness.  Price Waterhouse conducted an audit of the Board's 1994,
1995, 1996, 1997, and 1998 financial statements and filed this report in the
Board's 1996 Annual Report (nearly identical ones appear in other Annual
Reports):

We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System (the Board) as of December  31, 1995 and 1994, and
the related statements of revenues and  expenses for the years then ended.
These financial statements are  the responsibility of the Board's management.
 Our responsibility is  to express an opinion on these financial statements
based on our  audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted accounting
standards and Government Accounting Standards issued by the Comptroller
General of the United States.  Those standards require that we plan and
perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining,
on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the
financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estmates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  We believe that our
audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of the Board as of December 31,
1995 and 1994, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the
years then ended in conformity with   generally accepted accounting
principles.

As discussed in Notes 1 and 3 to the financial statements, the Board
implemented Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 112,  Employers'
Accounting for Postemployment Benefits, effective January 1, 1994.  In
accordance with Government Accounting Standards, we have also issued a report
dated March 25, 1996 on our consideration of the Board's internal control
structure and a report dated March 25, 1996 on its compliance with laws and
regulations.4

The Board has also contracted with Coopers & Lybrand to conduct annual
financial audits of the Board and the individual Federal Reserve Banks.
Exemptions to the Scope of GAO Audits
The Government Accounting Office does not have complete access to all aspects
of the Federal Reserve System.  The Federal Banking Agency Audit Act
stipulates the following areas are to be excluded from GAO inspections:

                                 (1) transactions for or with a foreign
central bank, government of a
                                 foreign country, or nonprivate international
financing organization;
                                 (2) deliberations, decisions, or actions on
monetary policy matters,
                                 including discount window operations,
reserves of member banks,
                                 securities credit, interest on deposits,
open market operations;

                                 (3) transactions made under the direction of
the Federal Open
                                 Market Committee; or

                                 (4) a part of a discussion or communication
among or between
                                 members of the Board of Governors and
officers and employees of
                                 the Federal Reserve System related to items.


In 1993 Wayne D. Angell, then a member of the Board of Governors, submitted
testimony before a House subcommittee on the reasons for the restrictions on
GAO access.  He commented,
By excluding these areas, the Act attempts to balance the need for public
accountability of the Federal Reserve through GAO audits against the need to
insulate the central bank's monetary policy functions from short-term
political pressures and to ensure that foreign central banks and governmental
entities can transact business in the U.S. financial markets through the
Federal Reserve on a confidential basis.2
In reference to a bill that would lift the constraints placed on the GAO's
audit authority over the Federal Reserve, Angell stated,
The benefits, if any, of broadening the GAO's authority into the areas of
monetary policy and transactions with foreign official entities would be
small.  With regard to purely financial audits, the Federal Reserve Act
already requires that the Board conduct an annual financial examination of
each Reserve Bank...The process of conducting financial audits is reviewed by
a public accounting firm to confirm that the methods and techniques being
employed are effective and that the program follows generally accepted
auditing standards...Further, a private accounting firm audits the Board's
balance sheet...Finally, and more broadly, the Congress has, in effect,
mandated its own review of monetary policy by requiring semiannual reports to
Congress on monetary policy under the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act
of 1978...In addition, there is a vast and continuously updated body of
literature and expert evaluation of U.S. monetary policy.  In this
environment, the contribution that a GAO audit would make to the active
public discussion of the conduct of monetary policy is not likely to outweigh
the disadvantages of expanding GAO audit authority in this area.2
For more on GAO restrictions, you can search the Government Printing Office
website for GAO report T-GGD-94-44, entitled "Federal Reserve System Audits:
Restrictions on GAO's Access."

The Budget of the Federal Reserve and Other Oversight


The budget of the Federal Reserve system is determined by each Bank and the
Board of Governors.  Stephen L. Neal, the Chair of the House Subcommittee on
Domestic Monetary Policy in 1991, stated that "Congress plays no direct role
in setting or authorizing the Fed's budget.  Control of its own budget is an
essential component of the independence the Fed must enjoy."1  Additional
oversight of the Federal Reserve System derives from the ability of Congress
to expand or to contract the Fed's powers.  On numerous occasions Congress
has seen fit to change the Fed's structure, alter its mission, and grant it
new or different powers.  In 1935 Congress changed the composition of the
Board of Governors to give it more independence, and it allowed the Board to
determine the discount rate for all Federal Reserve Banks rather than allow
each Bank to set its own rate.  In1978 Congress mandated the Fed's new goal
to be full employment and price stability.  In 1980 Congress granted the Fed
new regulatory powers over non-member banks.
Many other government reports on the audits of the Federal Reserve system are
available on-line through the Government Printing Office website.  Three
interesting GAO reports on Federal Reserve finances and performance are:

Federal Reserve Banks: Innaccurate Reporting of Currency at the Los Angeles
Branch, (9/30/96, GAO report AMID-96-146).
Federal Reserve Banks: Internal Control, Accounting, and Auditing Issues,
(2/9/96, GAO report AMID-96-5).

Federal Reserve System: Current and Future Challenges Require Systemwide
Attention, (6/17/96, GGD-96-128).

Conclusion
It is obvious that the Federal Reserve System is and has always been audited.
 It is difficult to imagine how Kah, Schauf, and other conspiracy theorists
could not have come across this evidence in the course of their research.
Perhaps they are merely poor researchers.  Or maybe they are reluctant to
acknowledge facts which contradict their basic thesis.  Either way, their
credibility among skeptical readers takes a sharp hit by making such obvious
factual errors.

For more on how the Federal Reserve system is audited, see the New York
Federal Reserve's FedPoints.

References

1. "The Budget of the Federal Reserve System," Hearing before the
Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy...[House], July 18, 1991, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Serial no. 102-59.

2.  H.R. 28: "Federal Reserve Accountability Act of 1993," Hearing before the
Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy...[House], October 27, 1993, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Serial no. 103-86.

3.  Public Law 95-320, "Federal Banking Agency Audit Act," July 21, 1978.

4. Annual Report, 1996, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

5.  Kah, Gary (1991), En Route to Global Occupation.  Layfayette, La.:
Huntington House.

6.  Robertson, Pat (1994). The Turning Tide. Dallas: Word Publishing.

7. Schauf, Thomas (1992). The Federal Reserve. Streamwood, IL: FED-UP, Inc.

8.  United States Code Annotated,  U.S. Government Printing Office.



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