For all the talk of how President-elect Biden’s
However, inequality doesn’t pause — there was already disastrous U.S. data before the coronavirus pandemic widened the income and wealth
In fact, the Treasury’s Office of Financial Research recently said
The office of economic equality I envision would do more than conduct research, also providing an array of policy analytical and advice services to FSOC and all its member agencies.To give it the stature it needs given the critical importance of economic inequality, the economic equality office should ideally be established by statute and run by a presidential appointee, like the OFR’s structure. But any way to get an economic equality office is a good way to begin.
To ensure policy effectiveness, the proposed office’s mandate should be focused on financial policy. If it is deputized also to look at fiscal policy or broader social-welfare challenges, it will stray quickly from the immediate contributions it can and should make to more equitable U.S. monetary and regulatory policy.
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Secondly and as importantly, the office of economic equality should ensure that new financial services do not just claim to be inclusive; but effectively demonstrate based on rigorous analytics that they are inclusive by ensuring sustainable, sound, wealth-enhancing financial products for vulnerable consumers through the economic cycle in an accessible, transparent and unconflicted way. If inclusion is only promised, but not likely, then FSOC should ensure that rules make the inclusive word equivalent to the including deed.
Next, the office needs to identify financial products and services that could be genuinely inclusive, and work with regulators to eliminate barriers to offering them. What about new charters such as the “Equality Bank”
A new look at
Of course, looking forward will not cure the inequality wrought by policy actions that brought us to this unhappy juncture. So, while the office should prioritize ensuring that future actions do no equality harm, it must also undertake extensive, policy-focused research to understand which financial policies did so much harm to so many for so long without securing either the growth or stability for which they were intended.
This analytical ammunition will give the agencies — none of which wishes to exacerbate inequality — the insights needed to mend their ways.
In 1964, the Great Society included an Office of Economic Opportunity that made significant contributions in a remarkably short period of time. Over time, much of what the OEO created ended up institutionalized as programs in other federal agencies like the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Department of Education. These have made meaningful equality contributions to this day.
An office of economic equality could help us do the same through the all-important channel of monetary and regulatory policy. After all, these are first and foremost about money, and money is the fuel that drives the inequality engine.
Editor's note: This article originally appeared, in slightly different form, in an email to Federal Financial Analytics’ clients.