Senate Confirms Fed Economist Christopher Waller to Board Seat
December 03 2020 - 12:40PM
Dow Jones News
By Nick Timiraos
The Senate confirmed one of President Trump's picks Thursday to
a vacancy on the Federal Reserve's board of governors.
Christopher Waller, the research director at the Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis, was confirmed to a term that runs through
January 2030. He has attended meetings of the rate-setting Federal
Open Market Committee this year in his capacity at the St. Louis
Fed. He headed the University of Notre Dame's economics department
before joining the regional Fed bank in 2009.
The confirmation marked the first time the Senate had seated a
governor in a lame-duck period that follows the November election
before the president's term ends in January, according to Peter
Conti-Brown, a Fed historian at the University of Pennsylvania.
The Trump administration had struggled to secure support for
five earlier selections, three of which were formally submitted for
Senate confirmation, to fill two vacancies. The nomination of Judy
Shelton, an economic commentator who previously served as U.S.
envoy to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
failed to advance during a procedural vote two weeks ago.
Mr. Trump announced his intention to nominate Mr. Waller and Ms.
Shelton in July 2019, a period in which he was upset that the Fed
wasn't moving faster to cut interest rates. The White House had
discussed a possible appointment with St. Louis Fed President James
Bullard, who in June 2019 had dissented from the Fed's decision to
hold rates steady, preferring a cut.
Mr. Bullard recommended the White House consider for the job his
research director, Mr. Waller, according to people familiar with
the discussions.
Mr. Waller's nomination received relatively little attention
because it was paired with the selection of Ms. Shelton. All
Democrats and some Republicans voiced concerns about her heterodox
policy views -- she has been a longtime advocate for returning to a
gold standard. Some also expressed concern that she had abandoned
her staunch support for tighter monetary policy to secure Mr.
Trump's nomination.
Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 03, 2020 12:25 ET (17:25 GMT)
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