Summary
    Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Henry B. Hogue
Specialist in American National Government
Marc Labonte
Specialist in Macroeconomic Policy
Baird Webel
Specialist in Financial Economics
February 24, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R43391
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Summary
Conventional wisdom regarding regulators is that the structure and design of the organization
 matters for policy outcomes. Financial regulators conduct rulemaking and enforcement to
 implement law and supervise financial institutions. These agencies have been given certain
 characteristics that enhance their day-to-day independence from the President or Congress, which
 may make policymaking more technical and less 
“political” or “"political" or "partisan,
”" for better or worse.
 Independence may also make regulators less accountable to elected officials and can reduce
 congressional influence, at least in the short term.
    Although independent agencies share many characteristics, there are notable differences. Some
 federal financial regulators are relatively more independent in some areas but relatively less so in
 others. Major structural characteristics of federal financial regulators that influence independence
include
•
 includeagency head: the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Federal
 Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Federal Reserve (Fed), National Credit
 Union Association (NCUA), and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
 have multi-member boards or commissions led by a chair, while the Consumer
 Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA),
 and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) are led by single directors.
•
party affiliation: 
    party affiliation: for multi-member boards or commissions, statute sets a party
 balance among members for all except the Fed.
•
    term in office: terms in office are fixed in length, varying among the regulators
 from 5 to 14 years, and do not coincide with the President
’'s term. Terms for Fed
 governors and NCUA board members are not renewable.
•
    grounds for 
removal:removal: although not always specified in statute, it appears that the
 regulator heads can only be removed 
“"for cause
”" (e.g., malfeasance or neglect of
 duty), with the exception of the Comptroller of the Currency.
•
 
    executive oversight: rulemaking, testimony, legislative proposals, and budget
 requests are not subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review.
•
congressional oversight:
    congressional oversight: agencies are statutorily required to submit periodic
 reports to Congress. Agency officials testify before Congress upon request; some
 are also statutorily required to do so periodically. Agencies are subject to
 Government Accountability Office (GAO) audits and investigations. Top
 leadership is subject to Senate confirmation.
•
 
    funding: the SEC
’'s and CFTC
’'s budgets are set through congressional
 authorization and appropriations, while other regulators set their own budgets.
 These budgets are funded through the collection of fees or other revenues, with
 the exception of the CFTC and CFPB.
From time to time, Congress has considered legislation that would alter the structure and design
 of some of the federal financial regulators. For example, in the 
113th113th Congress, bills to increase
 their use of cost-benefit analysis (H.R. 1062
, , H.R. 1003, and H.R. 2804) and bills to change the
 organizational structure of the CFPB (H.R. 3193
) have seen legislative action.
    
    
  Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
  Introduction
    This report discusses institutional features that make federal financial regulators (as well as other independent agencies) relatively independent from the President and Congress. These characteristics are diverse, their relationship to independence sometimes subtle, and they are not always applied uniformly—certain regulators that have been given relatively more independence in one area have been given relatively less independence in other areas. 
    Table 1 lists the federal financial regulators that are discussed in this report, together with their respective responsibilities.1 The financial regulators were created between 1863 (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency [OCC]) and 2010 (CFPB).2 Financial regulators set policy, conduct rulemaking to implement ) have seen legislative action.
Congressional Research Service
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Contents
Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 1
Background and Context ................................................................................................................. 2
What is an Independent Agency? .............................................................................................. 2
Independence and Accountability.............................................................................................. 3
Historical Origin of the Independent Agencies ......................................................................... 4
Rationale for Independence ....................................................................................................... 5
Characteristics of Independent Financial Regulators ...................................................................... 6
Located Outside an Executive Department ............................................................................... 8
Agency Leadership Structure .................................................................................................... 9
Director vs. Board ............................................................................................................... 9
Chairman’s Responsibilities .............................................................................................. 10
Selection Process ............................................................................................................... 10
Party Affiliation ................................................................................................................. 12
Qualifications .................................................................................................................... 12
Restrictions ........................................................................................................................ 12
Term in Office ................................................................................................................... 15
Holdover Provisions .......................................................................................................... 16
Grounds for Removal ........................................................................................................ 16
OMB/Executive Oversight ...................................................................................................... 20
Rulemaking Authority ............................................................................................................. 21
Cost-Benefit Analysis........................................................................................................ 22
Congressional Oversight and Influence ................................................................................... 24
Testimony and Reporting Requirements ........................................................................... 24
Senate Confirmation.......................................................................................................... 24
Audits and Investigations .................................................................................................. 25
Funding ............................................................................................................................. 25
Legislation in the 113th Congress ................................................................................................... 29
Concluding Thoughts ..................................................................................................................... 30
Tables
Table 1. Overview of Federal Financial Regulators Discussed in this Report................................. 1
Table 2. Leadership Structure ........................................................................................................ 11
Table 3. Qualifications and Restrictions ........................................................................................ 13
Table 4. Term of Office .................................................................................................................. 18
Table 5. Financial Regulatory Agency Funding ............................................................................ 28
Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 32
Congressional Research Service
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Introduction
This report discusses institutional features that make federal financial regulators (as well as other
independent agencies) relatively independent from the President and Congress. These characteristics are
diverse, their relationship to independence sometimes subtle, and they are not always applied uniformly—
certain regulators that have been given relatively more independence in one area have been given
relatively less independence in other areas.
Table 1 lists the federal financial regulators that are discussed in this report, together with their respective
responsibilities.1 The financial regulators were created between 1863 (Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency [OCC]) and 2010 (CFPB).2 Financial regulators set policy, conduct rulemaking to implement
law, and supervise financial institutions. A companion CRS Report R43087, Who Regulates Whom and
 How? An Overview of U.S. Financial Regulatory Policy for Banking and Securities Markets, discusses
 and analyzes in detail the roles, duties, and responsibilities of these regulators. Some of these agencies
 have other responsibilities in addition to their regulatory responsibilities, and some features influencing
 their independence may have been motivated by those other responsibilities. For example, the Federal
 Reserve System (Fed) is responsible for monetary policy and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 (FDIC) and National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) provide deposit insurance.
    
      
        Table 1. Overview of Federal Financial Regulators Discussed in this Report
Name/Acronym
General Responsibilities
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulation of derivatives markets
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
Regulation of financial products for consumer protection
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
Provision of deposit insurance, regulation of banks, receiver
for failing banks
Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)
Regulation of housing government sponsored enterprises
Federal Reserve System (Fed)
Monetary policy; regulation of banks, systemically important
financial institutions, and the payment system
National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)
Provision of deposit insurance, regulation of credit unions,
receiver for failing credit unions
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)
Regulation of banks
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Regulation of securities markets
Source: Table compiled by the Congressional Research Service (CRS).
Notes: For more information on the roles, duties, and responsibilities of the federal financial regulators, see CRS Report
R43087, 
      
      
        
          | Name/Acronym | General Responsibilities | 
        
          | Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) | Regulation of derivatives markets | 
        
          | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) | Regulation of financial products for consumer protection | 
        
          | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) | Provision of deposit insurance, regulation of banks, receiver for failing banks | 
        
          | Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) | Regulation of housing government sponsored enterprises | 
        
          | Federal Reserve System (Fed) | Monetary policy; regulation of banks, systemically important financial institutions, and the payment system | 
        
          | National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) | Provision of deposit insurance, regulation of credit unions, receiver for failing credit unions | 
        
          | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) | Regulation of banks | 
        
          | Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) | Regulation of securities markets | 
      
      
        Source: Table compiled by the Congressional Research Service (CRS).
        Notes: For more information on the roles, duties, and responsibilities of the federal financial regulators, see CRS Report R43087, Who Regulates Whom and How? An Overview of U.S. Financial Regulatory Policy for Banking and Securities Markets
, by [author name scrubbed].
      
    
    , by
Edward V. Murphy.
1
This report covers all regulatory agencies that are part of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), an inter-agency
council. Hereafter, the report will refer to this group as the “federal financial regulators,” unless otherwise noted. State financial
regulators and federal independent agencies unrelated to financial regulation are beyond the scope of this report.
2
The CFPB was created by the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203).
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Recent Congresses have considered legislation that would alter the structure and design of some of the
 federal financial regulators.
33 For example, in the 
113th113th Congress, there has been legislative action on bills
 to increase the use of cost-benefit analysis in the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (
H.R. 1062H.R.
1062), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) (H.R. 1003), and all independent financial
 regulators (H.R. 
2122). The House Rules Committee has scheduled a hearing on H.R. 2804 for February
25, 2014. The hearing announcement indicated that the underlying special rule may provide for H.R. 2804
to be the legislative vehicle for several related measures, including H.R. 2122 as reported by the
Committee on the Judiciary. There has also been legislative action on bills to change the organizational
structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). On February 11, 2014, the House agreed
to H.Res. 475, a resolution reported by the House Rules Committee, which made in order for
consideration an amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 3193, consisting of the legislative text of
five bills previously reported by the House Financial Services Committee.4 In addition, Congress is
2804).The House passed H.R. 2804 on February 27, 2014.4 On February 27, 2014, the House also passed H.R. 3193, which would change the organizational structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).5 In addition, Congress is considering legislation that would create new entities with regulatory jurisdiction over certain financial
 markets, such as H.R. 2767 and S. 1217
.5
.6 The issues raised in this report highlight the importance of how those agencies would be structured.
    This report provides a history and overview of the rationale for making financial regulators independent, a
 discussion of what structural characteristics contribute toward independence and how those characteristics
 vary among regulators, and an overview of recent legislation.
    Background and Context
    Public administration scholars and observers of federal government functioning have long studied
 structural characteristics that endow certain agencies with greater independence from the President and
 Congress than is typical for such organizations.
    What is an Independent Agency?
    In a broad sense, the term 
“"independent agency
”" refers to a freestanding executive branch organization
 that is not part of any department or other agency. However, the term is also used to denote a federal
 organization with greater autonomy from the President
’'s leadership and insulation from partisan politics
 than is typical of executive branch agencies. These two uses of this term can sometimes lead to confusion.
 Some agencies within departments, such as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in the
 Department of Energy, have considerable independence from the direction and control of the President. At
 the same time, some so-called independent agencies outside the departments, such as the Small Business
 Administration (SBA), generally adhere to the President
’'s policies and priorities. Congress has sometimes
 given agencies greater autonomy from its own direction and influence, as well, thereby expanding the
 meaning of independence.
67 In the context of this report, 
“independence”"independence" refers to greater autonomy from
 presidential or congressional direction and insulation from partisan politics, unless otherwise noted.
3
For more detail, see the section entitled “Legislation in the 113th Congress.”
The five bills are H.R. 2385, H.R. 2446, H.R. 2571, H.R. 3193, and H.R. 3519.
5
For more information, see CRS Report R43219, Selected Legislative Proposals to Reform the Housing Finance System, by Sean
M. Hoskins, N. Eric Weiss, and Katie Jones.
6
Many of these structural elements may also influence the agency’s independence from the regulated industry—a topic beyond
the scope of this report. For more information, see Rachel Barkow, “Insulating Agencies: Avoiding Capture Through Institutional
Design,” Texas Law Review, vol. 89, no. 1 (November 2010), p. 15.
4
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
    Where agencies have been structured to have greater independence from presidential or congressional
 direction, their actions are typically constrained by a statutory framework, beginning with the terms of the
 statutes that empower them to take action. Such statutes vary in their specificity, and independent
 agencies consequently have varying levels of discretion when promulgating more specific rules and
 otherwise implementing the law. In a well-known example, the Federal Reserve
’'s mandate to achieve full
 employment and stable prices is set in statute, but it independently determines which policies and tools
 will best achieve its mandate.
78 Generally, such agencies also are constrained by the Administrative
 Procedure Act and administrative law;
89 institutionalized oversight mechanisms, such as inspectors general
 and the Government Accountability Office; and judicial review.
9
10 
    Independence and Accountability
    The basic policymaking relationship between Congress and the independent agencies is similar to the
 relationship between Congress and the other agencies. Goals, principles, missions, and mandates are laid
 out by Congress for independent agencies in statute, just as they are for other agencies. Furthermore,
 Congress has granted the independent agencies and other agencies some discretion over how best to
 implement and conduct these policies, including the limited ability to initiate new policies under broad
 authority in an area where Congress has not weighed in. Likewise, congressional oversight of
 policymaking at the independent agencies is similar to how it oversees the Administration—it may require
 an agency to testify, prepare reports, and turn over records for investigatory purposes. In this sense,
 independent agencies are independent from the President because the President does not lead or directly
 influence the implementation and conduct of policy at independent agencies. This arrangement raises a
 normative question (which this report does not answer)—does the removal of presidential direction from
 agency policymaking lead to better policy outcomes?
 
    Although independent, the federal financial regulators often work together with the President when their
 policy priorities are aligned with the Administration
’'s priorities, perhaps because the agency heads and
 the President share similar views or because the President still retains some influence over these agencies,
 for the reasons that will be discussed in subsequent sections. At other times, when a regulator
’'s priorities
 are in opposition to the Administration, a regulator might advocate against the Administration
’'s policy
 position.
    Agency independence is traditionally viewed relative to the Administration, but the structural features
 discussed in this report can also increase or decrease independence from Congress. Agencies that are
 more independent from the Administration can sometimes become more congressionally dependent for
 resources and power. On the other hand, where Congress is successful in limiting the President
’'s authority
 over an agency, this might indirectly reduce the influence of Members over that agency. Inasmuch as
 Members sometimes raise issues about agency actions through the Administration, a decrease in the
President’s ability to direct agency action could weaken this channel of congressional influence.
7
For more information on central bank independence, see CRS Report RL31056, Economics of Federal Reserve Independence,
by Marc Labonte, and CRS Report RL31955, Central Bank Independence and Economic Performance: What Does the Evidence
Show?, by Marc Labonte and Gail E. Makinen. For more information on the Fed’s statutory mandate, see CRS Report R41656,
Changing the Federal Reserve’s Mandate: An Economic Analysis, by Marc Labonte.
8
For more information on the Administrative Procedures Act and the rulemaking process, see CRS Report RL32240, The
Federal Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey.
9
See CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview of Rulemaking and Judicial Review, by Todd Garvey and Daniel T. Shedd, and
CRS Report R43203, Chevron Deference: Court Treatment of Agency Interpretations of Ambiguous Statutes, by Daniel T. Shedd
and Todd Garvey.
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 President's ability to direct agency action could weaken this channel of congressional influence. 
    Some agency characteristics that more directly shield an agency from congressional control as well as
 presidential direction, such as funding the agency outside of the appropriations process, might further
 insulate the agency from partisan political influence. Although the agency would be constrained by a
 statutory framework and institutionalized oversight mechanisms, such insulation from partisan influence
 might lead to more limited accountability by the agency to, as well as less control of agency activities by,
 elected officials. In addition, other stakeholders, such as the parties regulated by the agency, might exert
 greater influence over the agency
’'s activities than would otherwise be the case. Where accountability is a
 concern, curbing agency discretion is one solution. However, less responsiveness to constituents and other
 political actors may be inevitable—or even desirable—when the goal is to insulate an agency from
 political pressures. In short, decisions about the degree of independence to accord an agency involve
 tradeoffs among various values and goals.
    Historical Origin of the Independent Agencies
    The development of the independent agency model in American national government began in 1887 with
 the establishment of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), created to regulate the railroad
 industry.
1011 Although the ICC is generally viewed as the first independent regulatory commission at the
 national level, it was not initially created with the level of authority and independence that it later
 achieved. Rather, the ICC
’'s creation in 1887 was the first of a series of congressional actions that aimed
 to regulate a complex industry fairly and with a minimum of political influence. The regulatory authority
 of the agency initially included quasi-judicial functions, and later included quasi-legislative functions.
 These functions were seen to differ from the executive functions that were more characteristic of the work
 of the executive departments, within which fell nearly all national governmental activity at that time.
 
    As first created, the ICC was located in the Department of the Interior (DOI). Many administrative
 matters of the commission required approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
1112 The commission was
 moved out of the department and became a freestanding agency in 1889.
 
    During its first two decades, the ICC was considered to be relatively weak and ineffective.
1213 Congress
 greatly enhanced its powers with the Hepburn Act of 1906.
1314 Thus strengthened, the ICC became a model
 for the collegial federal regulatory bodies established by Congress in the following decades.
1415 These
 included the Federal Reserve System (1913), Federal Trade Commission (1914), Federal Power
 Commission (1930), Securities and Exchange Commission (1934), Federal Communications Commission
 (1934), National Labor Relations Board (1935), United States Maritime Commission (1936), and Civil
 Aeronautics Board (1938), among others.
 
    Congress has continued to establish independent financial regulatory agencies into the 
21st21st century. For
example, the FHFA was established in 2008, and the CFPB was established in 2010.15
10
Related agency models had been under development in the preceding decades in Great Britain and a number of American
states. See Marshall J. Breger and Gary J. Edles, “Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal
Agencies,” Administrative Law Review, vol. 52 (2000), pp. 1119-1128; and Robert E. Cushman, The Independent Regulatory
Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 19-36.
11
For example, decisions regarding staff hires, salaries, and expenditures required the Secretary’s approval. (Act of February 4,
1887, §18; 24 Stat. 379 at 386.)
12
Robert E. Cushman, The Independent Regulatory Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 65-68.
13
34 Stat. 584.
14
The ICC, itself, was abolished by the ICC Termination Act of 1995 (P.L. 104-88; 109 Stat. 803).
15
The FHFA is a successor agency to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and the Federal Housing Finance
(continued...)
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 example, the FHFA was established in 2008, and the CFPB was established in 2010.16
    Rationale for Independence
    Over the course of the development of the independent agency model, several different rationales for
 constructing federal organizations this way have emerged.
 
    First, agencies have sometimes been given greater independence because they have been vested with
 quasi-legislative (rulemaking) or quasi-judicial (adjudicatory), as well as executive (supervisory),
 functions regulating some aspects of the national economy. Structural independence, together with the
 administrative law framework, can support the principle of separation of powers by insulating the
 exercise of quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial powers from executive direction
.16.17 In most cases, the
 independence extends to all functions of the agency, even those that are executive in nature.
    Second, agencies have sometimes been given greater independence with the assumption that this will
 facilitate better decision-making. It is argued that an independent agency structure and the administrative
 law framework might provide a context within which subject matter experts could have more leeway to
 use their technical knowledge to address complex issues, because they would be partially insulated from
 political concerns.
1718 This could be desirable if there is a presumption that the agency
’'s work is relatively
 more technical and less political in nature.
18
19 
    Such independence does not guarantee complete insulation from all political considerations, however.
19
20 Research on bureaucratic functioning indicates that it is virtually impossible to remove all political
 considerations from administrative activity.
2021 This is due, in part, to the level of discretion that necessarily
 accompanies any activity that is delegated by Congress to another governmental entity. Independent
 regulatory commission members and agency administrators, like the leaders of other federal
 organizations, exercise judgment and make decisions about how to proceed, and these discretionary
 judgments and decisions are likely to involve subjective, as well as objective, considerations. The
 independent regulatory agency model attempts to ensure that such subjective decision making draws on a
 range of views and is, in this sense, nonpartisan.
2122 Nevertheless, a specific appointee might choose to
 adhere closely to the President
’'s wishes or to approach the job in a partisan manner for other political or
policy reasons.
(...continued)
Board, which also had a significant degree of independence from the President. When establishing the FHFA in 2008, Congress
elected to maintain independence under the new organizational arrangements.
16
The merger of legislative, judicial, and executive powers in one agency has sometimes been a source of controversy and debate
in Congress, particularly as this model grew in use during the early 20th century. See Robert E. Cushman, The Independent
Regulatory Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 420-427.
17
Neal Devins and David Lewis, “Not-So Independent Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional Design,”
Boston University Law Review, vol. 88 (2008), p. 463.
18
Insulation from political concerns could be advantageous in cases where it is desirable for agencies to make decisions that are
unpopular in the short run but beneficial in the long run. For example, this dynamic is often said to apply to the Fed’s monetary
policy decisions.
19
See Susan Bartlett Foote, “Independent Agencies under Attack: A Skeptical View of the Importance of the Debate,” 1988
Duke Law Journal, April 1988, p. 223.
20
See, for example, Norton E. Long, “Power and Administration,” in The Polity (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1962), pp. 50-63; and
Harold Seidman, Politics, Position, and Power: The Dynamics of Federal Organization, 5th ed. (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1998).
21
The degree to which this is so, in practice, might depend, in part, the polarization of the parties more generally and the
dynamics of the appointment process during a given presidency. See Neal Devins and David E. Lewis, “Not-so Independent
Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional Design,” Boston University Law Review, vol. 88 (2008), pp. 459-498.
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 policy reasons.
    Third, agencies have sometimes been given greater independence from the executive in order to give
 them 
“"[f]reedom from Presidential domination
.”22."23 This may be, as noted above, because regulatory
 agencies exercise primarily quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial functions that arguably should not be
 under the control and direction of the executive. Some proponents of this rationale have suggested that, at
 least with regard to the quasi-legislative functions, these agencies are arms of Congress.
2324 A reduction of
 presidential influence also constricts one path by which partisan politics might interfere with apolitical
 technical- and analytical-based decision making by experts, thus speaking to the second rationale noted
 above.
 
    At times, however, the decision to give an agency greater independence from the President might be a
 reflection of interbranch rivalries over control of the federal bureaucracy and national policies. As one
 observer put it:
    Congressional attempts to deviate from the bureau model [where the agency is directly under the
 President] generally arise from disagreements between members of Congress and the president. Some
 of these disagreements naturally arise from the 
institutionalinstitutional differences in the two branches. ... The
 president and members of Congress view the administrative state from entirely different vantage
 points, and these vantage points, along with their policy preferences, lead to disagreements about how
 the administrative state should be organized.
24
25
    Characteristics of Independent Financial Regulators
    Existing typologies of independent federal agencies and their characteristics are idealized models that
 describe such organizations in general terms. In reality, although independent agencies share many
 characteristics, individual independent agencies often have features that might be considered atypical for
 the category. As one scholar observed with regard to governmental organization more generally:
    There are no general laws defining the structure, powers, and immunities of the various institutional
 types. Each possesses only those powers enumerated in its enabling act, or in the case of organizations
 created by executive action, set forth by Executive Order or in a contract. Whatever special attributes
 may have been acquired by the various organizational types are entirely the product of precedent, as
 reflected in successive enactments by the Congress; judicial interpretations; and public, agency, and
 congressional attitudes.
25
26
    According to one law review article, 
“"There is no general, all-purpose statutory or judicial definition of
‘ 'independent agency
’.' ... notions of what constitutes independence expand easily.... 
”26"27 A list of
 independent regulatory agencies is provided in the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA),
2728 but only for
 purposes of that act; the act does not provide a definition of independent. The literature identifies a few
22
U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, Study on Federal Regulation, committee print, 95th Cong., 1st sess.
(Washington: GPO, 2007), p. 28. [Italics added.]
23
Ibid.
24
David E. Lewis, Presidents and the Politics of Agency Design: Political Insulation in the United States Government
Bureaucracy, 1946-1997 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003), pp. 23-24. [Italics from the original.]
25
Harold Seidman, “A Typology of Government,” in Federal Reorganization: What Have We Learned?, ed. Peter Szanton
(Chatham, NJ: Chatham House, 1981), p. 34.
26
Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, “Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies,”
Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1136.
27
44 U.S.C. §3502(5).
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 key traits that distinguish independent agencies from executive agencies, however.
2829 Organizational
 features that might affect the functional independence of a federal agency include those related to agency
 location; selection, appointment, and tenure of its leadership; presidential oversight; the authority to issue
 rules and collect information; and congressional oversight and funding.
 
    Leadership characteristics include leadership structure (collegial, e.g., board, or singular, e.g., director),
 the term of office, level of protection from at-will removal by the President, holdover provisions, and
 qualifications for office-holding.
 
    Characteristics related to presidential oversight include the ability of the organization to submit reports,
 testimony, and budget requests to relevant congressional committees independently and without review
 from the Administration. With regard to rulemaking and information collection, many rules developed by
 most agencies and departments are reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget
’'s (OMB
’'s) Office
 of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA).
2930 Rules developed by regulatory agencies specified as
 independent in the PRA, however, are not reviewed by OIRA and not subject to executive order
 requirements that their 
“"economically significant
”" rules be subject to cost-benefit analysis. In contrast, the
PRA30 PRA31 requires that OIRA review the information collection activities of all agencies, including
 independent regulatory agencies.
 
    Congressional oversight of independent agencies takes the form of statutory requirements to submit 
semiannualsemi-annual or annual reports to Congress; testimony before Congress by agency officials (some are statutorily
 required to do so periodically); GAO audits and investigations, subject to some statutory limitations; and
 Senate confirmation of presidential nominees for top agency leadership. An agency
’'s functional
 independence may also be influenced by whether it is funded through the appropriations process or
 through dedicated funding or fees.
 
    The following sections discuss these traits in more detail with regard to financial regulators, noting
variation among regulators where it exists.31
28
See, for example, Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, “Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent
Federal Agencies,” Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4, 2000; Administrative Conference of the United States, MultiMember Independent Regulatory Agencies, May 1992. For an international comparison and effects of independence on
regulation, see Steve Donzé, “Bank Supervisor Independence and the Health of Banking Systems: Evidence from OECD
Countries,” paper presented at International Political Economy Society Inaugural Conference, Princeton University, May 2006, at
http://www.princeton.edu/~pcglobal/conferences/IPES/papers/donze_S130_1.pdf.
29
Executive Order 12866, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993. For an electronic
copy of this executive order, see http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/eo12866.pdf. For more information on OIRA, see CRS
Report RL32397, Federal Rulemaking: The Role of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, coordinated by Maeve P.
Carey.
30
44 U.S.C. §§3501-3520.
31
The characteristics examined in detail are not the only ones that influence independence. For example, various general
management laws are likely to influence the nature of a federal organization. These laws pertain to, among other things,
information and regulatory management; strategic planning, performance measurement, and program evaluation; financial
management, budgeting, and accounting; organization and reorganization; procurement and real property management;
intergovernmental relations management; and human resource management. Some of these laws would automatically apply to an
agency unless it were statutorily exempt. In other cases, amendments to an existing statute might be necessary in order to include
an agency under its provisions. In addition, some agencies have independent litigation authority, which refers to the level of
authority a federal agency has to initiate and implement its own legal proceedings, and to defend its administrative actions. For
more on general management laws, see CRS Report RL30795, General Management Laws: A Compendium, by Clinton T. Brass
et al.
Congressional Research Service
7
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 variation among regulators where it exists.32
    Located Outside an Executive Department
    The President is able to exert authority over most agencies in part because the agency head answers
 directly to the President or the Secretary of the department in which the agency is located. With one
 exception (the OCC), financial regulators are not part of an executive department and do not report to a
 member of the President
’'s Cabinet.
3233 This arrangement is not necessary or sufficient to ensure agency
“ "independence,
”" in the sense used in this report, however. For example, some so-called independent
 agencies located outside the departments, such as the SBA, generally adhere to the President
’'s policies
 and priorities and are sometimes accorded the status of Cabinet rank.
 
    
      
        
          
            Financial Stability Oversight Council: Fostering Inter-Agency Cooperation or Reducing
 Regulator Independence?
            The Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203) created the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), which is composed of the heads
 of the federal financial regulators and representatives of other financial regulatory interests and headed by the Treasury
 Secretary.
3334 Its purposes are to identify risks and respond to emerging threats to financial stability and promote market
 discipline regarding failing financial firms. Among the duties of the FSOC, it is responsible for recommending supervision
 priorities to agencies, facilitating coordination among agencies, offering non-binding resolutions to jurisdictional disputes, and
 reviewing accounting standards made by standard-setting organizations. The Council can also provide agencies non-binding
 recommendations to adopt new, or modify existing, prudential policies to reduce risk. This gives the Treasury Secretary (or
 other regulators) a forum to urge regulators to adopt Administration (or other regulators
’') priorities. Previously, the
 statutory role for Treasury in the policymaking of the financial regulators had been rare and minor.
34
35
            One possible outcome of the creation of the FSOC is to give the Treasury Secretary greater influence over the independent
 financial regulators. As chair, the Treasury Secretary is able to call meetings and set FSOC
’'s agenda, according to the FSOC
’s
's bylaws. Certain decisions cannot be made without the Treasury Secretary
’'s assent, such as the designation of systemically
 important non-banks and utilities, and whether to provide a stay for a CFPB regulation that another agency has requested to
 be set aside. Alternatively, FSOC may give the regulators a forum for influencing—or coalescing to thwart—Administration
 policy. The limited history of FSOC and limited public access to its deliberations make it difficult to evaluate its effects, if any,
 on regulator independence thus far.
          
        
      
    
    Conversely, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is considered independent from the
 Administration despite being the only financial regulator located within a department (the Treasury). One
 might say that the OCC is the exception that proves the rule.
3536 Although it is part of the U.S. Treasury
 Department, 12 U.S.C. Section 1 reads as follows:
    The Comptroller of the Currency shall perform the duties of the Comptroller of the Currency under
 the general direction of the Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of the Treasury may not delay or
prevent the issuance of any rule or the promulgation of any regulation by the Comptroller of the
32
The Federal Reserve is further removed from the executive branch because its 12 regional banks are privately owned. Private
shareholders do not exercise management control and the Board, which sets policy centrally for the entire system, is a
governmental entity, however.
33
For more information, see CRS Report R42083, Financial Stability Oversight Council: A Framework to Mitigate Systemic
Risk, by Edward V. Murphy.
34
As another example, under 12 U.S.C. §4513a, the FHFA director is advised “with respect to overall strategies and policies” by
the Federal Housing Finance Oversight Board, which is composed of four members, including the Secretary of Treasury and the
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. The Board may not exercise executive authority or powers of the director,
however. Other inter-agency councils involving financial regulators, such as the Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council, do not include any Treasury official.
35
The CFPB is a bureau of the Fed, but is granted significant statutory autonomy from the Fed in terms of budget, personnel
matters, rulemaking, supervision, and so on. Since the Fed is outside an executive department, so is the CFPB.
Congressional Research Service
8
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 prevent the issuance of any rule or the promulgation of any regulation by the Comptroller of the Currency, and may not intervene in any matter or proceeding before the Comptroller of the Currency
 (including agency enforcement actions), unless otherwise specifically provided by law.
 
    As explained below, despite its location within Treasury, the OCC has many of the same characteristics as
 other independent regulators. For example, its budget is determined separately from the rest of the
Treasury’ Treasury's budget. One former official described the relationship as follows: 
“"It is said that the OCC is
 part of the Treasury, but that is a real estate statement since the OCC in policy-making is, by statute,
 independent of the Treasury.
”36
"37
    Agency Leadership Structure
    Among federal financial regulators, the leadership structure varies from agency to agency. Table 2
 identifies whether each agency head is collegial (board or commission) or unitary (director) and how the
 leadership is chosen. For those agencies with a collegial leadership structure, Table 2 also includes the
 size of the board, and the division of power between the chair and the board. Table 3 details statutory
 requirements for leadership
’'s party affiliations, pre-requisite qualifications, and restrictions on related
 activities. Table 4 specifies lengths of terms, holdover provisions, and limitations on the President
’s
's power to remove incumbents. Many of these structural elements influence the agency
’'s independence
 from the President and Congress. The provisions, and their effects on independence, are discussed in
 more detail below.
37
38
    Director vs. Board
    Leadership powers can be vested in one individual (a director) or a collegially headed board/commission.
 Many of the independent regulatory agencies are collegially headed, like the SEC or FDIC. However, a
 number of independent agencies headed by a single administrator, such as the FHFA and the CFPB, have
 other similar structural characteristics to the collegially headed financial regulators. Vesting power in a
 board arguably encourages a diversity of views to be represented. In contrast, vesting power in one
 individual might arguably create stronger, more unified leadership and a single point of accountability.
 The collegial structure itself is thought to increase the independence of an agency from the President.
38
39 Where an agency is headed by a single individual, the appointee
’'s views are more likely to reflect the
 views of the appointing President and his or her party; the leadership is unitary and no consensus is
 necessary.
3940 In each case where there is a board structure, the board has a chairman. In agencies without
 boards, the directors are supported by deputy directors, but those deputies do not necessarily have
leadership authority analogous to board members.
36
Kenneth Dam, “The US Government’s Approach to Financial Decisions,” in Globalization and Systemic Risk, World
Scientific, 2009, p. 403.
37
For a GAO analysis of NCUA’s leadership structure, see U.S. Government Accountability Office, Corporate Governance:
NCUA’s Controls and Related Procedures for Board Independence and Objectivity, GAO-07-72R, November 30, 2006, at
http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/94552.pdf.
38
For a discussion, see Rachel Barkow, “Insulating Agencies: Avoiding Capture Through Institutional Design,” Texas Law
Review, vol. 89, no. 1 (November 2010), p. 15.
39
Such an appointee’s term might exceed the appointing President’s, however, and his or her policy preferences might not match
those of the incoming President.
Congressional Research Service
9
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Chairman’s Responsibilities
 leadership authority analogous to board members. 
    Chairman's Responsibilities
    On boards, the chairman may or may not have greater powers than the other board members.
4041 Chairmen
 are typically vested with administrative authority while policymaking powers are vested in the board as a
 whole. In cases where a chairman is popularly perceived as dominant relative to the board, that
 dominance does not necessarily derive from statutory powers. Table 2 includes the chairman
’'s statutory
 powers, but the chairman may also have greater powers that are not of a statutory nature (e.g., power of
 the 
“"bully pulpit
”).
Selection Process
"). 
    Selection Process
    For all of the agencies covered in this report, as well as other free-standing executive branch agencies
 with significant legal authority, Senate confirmation is required for the agency
’'s head (whether there is a
 director or multiple commissioners of a board). Subordinate officers (e.g., deputy directors) could be
 appointed by the President or agency head. If appointed by the President, the position may or may not be
 subject to Senate confirmation. The implications of Senate confirmation for congressional oversight are
 discussed in the section below entitled 
“Congressional Oversight and Influence.”
40
One empirical study of the power of independent regulatory commission governance found that “[a]ll in all, the influence of
chairmen in regulatory processes may be characterized as extraordinary, placing them in a leadership position. Consequently the
commissions are not true plural executive systems.” (David M. Welborn, Governance of Federal Regulatory Agencies
[Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1977], pp. 131-132.) This study, of seven commissions, included only one financial
regulator, however: the SEC.
Congressional Research Service
10
 Table 2. Leadership Structure
Regulator
Type of Agency Head
Responsibilities of Director/Chairman
Selection of Officers
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission
Five commissioners, one of whom is
selected to be chairman.
Chairman is vested with executive and
administrative functions, including budgeting.
Commissioners and chairman are
presidentially appointed with Senate
confirmation.
Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau
Director, deputy director, and four
assistant directors.
The Director heads, and is responsible for
delegating powers vested in, the CFPB. Each
assistant director heads an office with specific
responsibilities prescribed by statute.
The Director is presidentially
appointed with Senate confirmation.
The deputy director and four assistant
directors are selected by the director.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
Five-person board composed of three
presidential appointees (one of whom is
chair and one of whom is vice-chair), the
Comptroller of the Currency, and the
director of the CFPB.
Management is vested in the board.
The three appointees and the positions
of chair and vice-chair are
presidentially appointed with Senate
confirmation.
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Director and three deputy directors.
All statutory duties are vested in the Director.
Each deputy director heads an office with
specific responsibilities prescribed by statute.
The Director is presidentially
appointed with Senate confirmation.
The deputy directors are chosen by
the Director.
Federal Reserve Board of
Governors
Seven-member board. From the board, a
chairman and two vice chairmen are
chosen.
Chairman is the active executive officer, subject
to the board’s oversight. All board members
have one vote on the Federal Open Market
Committee. One vice chair is responsible for
supervision.
Governors, chair, and vice-chairs are
presidentially appointed with Senate
confirmation.
National Credit Union
Administration
Three-member board with chairman.
Management of the NCUA is vested in the
board. The chairman is responsible for directing
the implementation of policies and regulations.
Presidentially appointed with Senate
confirmation. Among the members, the
President appoints the chairman.
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
Headed by the Comptroller, with up to
four Deputy Comptrollers.
The Comptroller is responsible for selecting staff
and delegating duties to the staff. One deputy is
First Deputy and one is responsible for federal
savings associations.
The Comptroller is appointed by
President with Senate confirmation.
Deputy Comptrollers are selected by
the Treasury Secretary.
Securities and Exchange
Commission
Five commissioners, one of whom is the
chairman.
Executive and administrative functions of the
SEC are assigned to the chairman. The heads of
the administrative units are chosen by the
chairman, subject to the commissioners’
approval.
Presidentially appointed with Senate
confirmation.
Source: "Congressional Oversight and Influence."
    
      
        Table 2. Leadership Structure
      
      
        
          | Regulator | Type of Agency Head | Responsibilities of Director/Chairman | Selection of Officers | 
        
          | Commodity Futures Trading Commission  | Five commissioners, one of whom is selected to be chairman.  | Chairman is vested with executive and administrative functions, including budgeting. | Commissioners and chairman are presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation.  | 
        
          | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau  | Director, deputy director, and four assistant directors.  | The Director heads, and is responsible for delegating powers vested in, the CFPB. Each assistant director heads an office with specific responsibilities prescribed by statute. | The Director is presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation. The deputy director and four assistant directors are selected by the director. | 
        
          | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  | Five-person board composed of three presidential appointees (one of whom is chair and one of whom is vice-chair), the Comptroller of the Currency, and the director of the CFPB.  | Management is vested in the board. | The three appointees and the positions of chair and vice-chair are presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation.  | 
        
          | Federal Housing Finance Agency | Director and three deputy directors. | All statutory duties are vested in the Director. Each deputy director heads an office with specific responsibilities prescribed by statute. | The Director is presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation. The deputy directors are chosen by the Director. | 
        
          | Federal Reserve Board of Governors  | Seven-member board. From the board, a chairman and two vice chairmen are chosen.  | Chairman is the active executive officer, subject to the board's oversight. All board members have one vote on the Federal Open Market Committee. One vice chair is responsible for supervision. | Governors, chair, and vice-chairs are presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation.  | 
        
          | National Credit Union Administration  | Three-member board with chairman.  | Management of the NCUA is vested in the board. The chairman is responsible for directing the implementation of policies and regulations. | Presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation. Among the members, the President appoints the chairman.  | 
        
          | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency  | Headed by the Comptroller, with up to four Deputy Comptrollers.  | The Comptroller is responsible for selecting staff and delegating duties to the staff. One deputy is First Deputy and one is responsible for federal savings associations. | The Comptroller is appointed by President with Senate confirmation. Deputy Comptrollers are selected by the Treasury Secretary.  | 
        
          | Securities and Exchange Commission  | Five commissioners, one of whom is the chairman.  | Executive and administrative functions of the SEC are assigned to the chairman. The heads of the administrative units are chosen by the chairman, subject to the commissioners' approval. | Presidentially appointed with Senate confirmation.  | 
      
      
        Source: CRS. U.S. code accessed through http://www.uscode.house.gov
.
CRS-11
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Party Affiliation
.
      
    
    
    Party Affiliation
    Collegial bodies are usually, but not always, structured so as to require that their membership
 include representatives from more than one political party, and often members who are not of the
President’ President's party are selected with the advice of their party
’'s congressional leadership. It could be
 argued that such requirements introduce partisan considerations into a selection process for a
 body that is intended to exercise expert judgment and be relatively independent of such political
 influences. As discussed below, however, public administration research suggests that it is
 virtually impossible to remove all political considerations from administrative activity. Arguably,
 political balance requirements attempt to ensure that, to the extent that such considerations
 influence agency decision making, a broader array of opinions will be introduced into the
 consensus-building process. Party balance requirements can enhance independence when that
 term is used synonymously with non-partisanship (or at least bipartisanship).
Qualifications
    Qualifications
    The statutory qualifications required of a nominee are often general or imprecise. In some cases,
 such as the CFTC, qualifications require the nominee to possess specialized knowledge of, or
 experience in, the industry of jurisdiction. In other cases, qualifications encourage a nominee with
 some outside perspective or, in the case of a commission structure, a diversity of experience and
 expertise. For example, 12 U.S.C. Section 241 states, 
“"In selecting the members of the (Federal
 Reserve) Board, not more than one of whom shall be selected from any one Federal Reserve
 district, the President shall have due regard to a fair representation of the financial, agricultural,
 industrial, and commercial interests, and geographical divisions of the country.
”" These kinds of
 qualifications might result in the appointment of officials who bring added expertise to its work.
 Qualifications that limit the pool of candidates unreasonably might diminish the quality of the
 resulting appointment, however, if otherwise worthy candidates were to be eliminated
 prematurely from consideration. In addition, constitutional issues might be raised if qualifications
 are drawn so specifically that only one or two individuals would qualify.
4142 Conflicts concerning
 statutory qualifications have typically been resolved through the political process. Whether
 statutory qualifications legally bind the appointment process actions of the President or the Senate
 remains an open question. It is not clear what, if any, legal consequences might follow if either
 the President or Senate were to ignore such provisions.
Restrictions
    Restrictions
    Agency heads
’' activities are sometimes restricted. Restrictions can apply to activities or
 employment pursued during or after time of service, often regarding the industry that the agency
 is regulating. Typically, post-service restrictions are temporary (i.e., require a 
“"cooling off
”
" period). Sometimes, post-service restrictions do not apply to individuals whose term has expired,
as is the case for the FDIC.
41
For more, see CRS Report RL33886, Statutory Qualifications for Executive Branch Positions, by Henry B. Hogue.
Congressional Research Service
12
 Table 3. Qualifications and Restrictions
Regulator
Party Affiliations
Qualifications
Restrictions
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission
Not more than three
commissioners may be from
the same political party.
Commissioners should have demonstrated,
balanced knowledge of futures trading or its
regulation, or in the areas of business overseen
by the CFTC.
None.
Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau
No requirements related to
party affiliations.
The director must be a citizen of the United
States.
Director or deputies may not hold any position in any
Federal Reserve bank, Federal Home Loan Bank, or
business overseen by CFPB.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
No more than three members
of the board may be from the
same political party.
Presidential appointees must be U.S. citizens.
One of the presidential appointees must have
state bank supervisory experience.
A board member may not hold an office or stock in any
depository institution or holding company, Federal
Reserve bank, or Federal Home Loan Bank. Two-year
ban on post-service employment in a depository
institution if a board member does not fulfill a full term.
Federal Housing Finance
Agency
No requirements related to
party affiliations.
Director and deputies must be U.S. citizens
with demonstrated understanding and
expertise related to their areas of
responsibility.
Director and deputies may not have a financial interest
or employment in a regulated entity while at FHFA, or
serve as an executive officer or director of any
regulated entity three years prior to appointment.
Federal Reserve Board of
Governors
No requirements related to
party affiliations.
No more than one member from each Fed
district. Members should represent the
geographical and economic diversity of
country.
Board members cannot have outside employment and
cannot hold stock in banks. Two-year restriction on
bank employment after leaving the Fed, unless the
governor has served a full term.
National Credit Union
Administration
No more than two members
from the same party.
Board members must be “broadly
representative of the public interest.” The
President “shall give consideration to
individuals” with financial services education,
training, or experience. (12 U.S.C. §1752a)
Not more than one member of the Board may have
recently been a credit union director or employee.
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency
No requirements related to
party affiliations.
None specified.
None.
CRS-13
 Regulator
Securities and Exchange
Commission
Party Affiliations
No more than three
commissioners from the same
political party, alternating
appointments by party “as
nearly as may be practicable.”
(15 U.S.C. §78d)
Qualifications
None specified.
Source: CRS. U.S. code accessed through http://www.uscode.house.gov.
CRS-14
Restrictions
Commissioners may not engage in other business or
employment, nor participate in “transactions of a
character subject to regulation by the Commission.”
(15 U.S.C. §78d)
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Term in Office
Statutes specify term length, succession, and renewability. In some cases, terms are staggered
with those of other members of a board or the President. All of the positions covered in this report
have fixed terms, of varying length. Five-year terms are the most common among the agencies in
Table 4, but some positions have longer terms. In some cases where the chair is chosen from the
board, the chair’s term is shorter than the board members’ terms. For example, Fed governors
have the longest terms (14 years), but leadership roles have four-year terms subject to renewal.
Fixed terms may promote independence from political influence because the expectation is that
an appointee will serve out the term. In fact, in many instances, fixed terms are accompanied by
statutory limits on the President’s ability to remove an incumbent during his or her term (see
“Grounds for Removal,” below.) The length of the term may also influence the independence of
the appointee. An official serving a short term may be more susceptible to presidential direction,
especially if he or she might be reappointed by that President. On the other hand, an official
whose term of office is longer than that of the President who appointed him or her may be less
likely to feel a sense of allegiance or commitment to a new President. It might be questioned,
however, if fixed terms that exceed the duration of one presidency meet that expectation in
practice, because incumbents might not serve the full length of the term. For example, most Fed
governors step down before their term has expired, sometimes after only a couple of years of
service. One study found that Presidents were able to appoint a majority of commissioners on
independent commissions 90% of the time, and were able to obtain a party majority (between
new appointees and holdovers) in all but one case.42
A fixed term, even without a restriction on grounds for removal, might lead to longer than
average tenure and, in the context of a single-headed agency, greater continuity in a position.
Also, by itself, such a fixed term might inhibit, but not prevent, the removal of an incumbent by
the President, because it establishes the given period of time as the normal or expected tenure of
an appointee. Even with a fixed term, incumbents in these positions may remain subject to close
guidance and direction of the President, as well as to removal at the time of a presidential
transition in the absence of “for cause” removal limitations (see “Grounds for Removal”).43
Statute typically does not rule out the reappointment of incumbents for financial regulators, with
the exception of Fed governors and NCUA board members (for both, members are allowed one
full term and can be reappointed only if initially appointed to an expiring term). Some consider
non-renewable terms to provide greater independence, reasoning that without the ability to
reappoint, the President and Senate lose a tool of leverage over an appointee. On the other hand,
an appointee with a renewable term might chart an independent path in order to remain
42
Neal Devins and David Lewis, “Not-So Independent Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional
Design,” Boston University Law Review, vol. 88, 2008, p. 460.
43
In the case of a commission, the longer the duration of the terms of its members, the lower the probability that one
President will have the opportunity to appoint all of its members. If the terms are staggered so that different members
leave the commission at different times, the commission might have more continuity and autonomy than if the entire
membership turned over at the same time. In some agencies, such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC), the term of each position runs continuously, regardless of whether or not it is occupied (42 U.S.C. §2000e-4).
This arrangement leads to the staggered term expirations discussed above. In other agencies, such as the Chemical
Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB), the term runs for a fixed period from the time a member is appointed (42
U.S.C. §7412(r)(6)). Under this arrangement the terms of the various members might or might not be staggered,
depending on the date of appointment for the incumbents.
Congressional Research Service
15
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
acceptable to a future President and Senate, who may hold views different from the President and
Senate who first installed the appointee.
For many agencies, the members’ terms are staggered, which helps to promote continuity and
may also promote diversity of opinion. In the case of an agency with a single head, the term
might or might not coincide with the President’s term.
Holdover Provisions
Statutes specifying fixed terms may also have “holdover provisions” that allow members to stay
on past the expiration of their terms while awaiting the appointment of a successor. If such a
provision allows for an indefinite holdover, it might be used by the President or other appointing
authority to circumvent the need for a new appointment, particularly if Senate confirmation is
required. Given this possibility, Congress sometimes places a time limit on a holdover provision.
Some agencies, such as the National Labor Relations Board, have organic acts with no holdover
provision; when a term expires, the member must leave office. Others, such as the Fed, have
statutory authorities that permit a member whose term has expired to continue to serve until a
successor takes office. Still other agencies have holdover provisions where an incumbent member
may remain in office for a specified period, and where the duration of the post-term period is
linked to the date the term ends. A commissioner for the Consumer Product Safety Commission,
for example, “may continue to serve after the expiration of his term until his successor has taken
office, except that he may not so continue to serve more than one year after the date on which his
term would otherwise expire.”44 A final type of holdover provision allows incumbent members to
remain in office for a specified period, where the duration of the post-term period is linked to
congressional sessions. For example, a commissioner for the CFTC may serve past the end of his
or her term “until his successor is appointed and has qualified, except that he shall not so continue
to serve beyond the expiration of the next session of Congress subsequent to the expiration of said
fixed term of office.”45
Grounds for Removal
Although not always specified in statute, it appears that the heads of financial regulators, in
contrast with Cabinet Secretaries, typically do not serve at the pleasure of the President (“at
will”). Instead, most regulators may be removed only if a higher “for cause” threshold is met. The
one clear statutory exception is the OCC’s Comptroller of the Currency, who “shall hold his
office for a term of five years unless sooner removed by the President, upon reasons to be
communicated by him to the Senate.”46
“For cause” removal limits the ability of a President to remove, or threaten to remove, an
appointee solely for political reasons. According to one law review article, “The distinguishing
feature of [independent] agencies is that their principal officers are protected against presidential
removal at will.”47 According to another,
44
15 U.S.C. §2053(b)(2).
7 U.S.C. §2(2).
46
12 U.S.C. §2. For example, the Comptroller resigned at the request of President Kennedy in 1961. See “PostEmployment Restriction of 12 U.S.C. §1812(e),” 25 Op. O.L.C. 184 (2001).
47
Geoffrey P. Miller, “Introduction: The Debate over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence,” Duke
(continued...)
45
Congressional Research Service
16
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
A requirement that members serve a fixed term of years is an essential element of
independence, but alone is not sufficient. The critical element of independence is the
protection—conferred explicitly by statute or reasonably implied—against removal except
“for cause.”48
Where the President is limited to removing an agency head only for cause, the agency head may
have greater independence from the President and the President may have limited influence over
the agency’s agenda. Regulators may disagree with Administration policy and pursue initiatives
that are not part of, or are at odds with, the Administration’s agenda without fearing removal.
For some financial regulators, their enabling statute details the acceptable grounds for removal
(see Table 4). For example, the President may remove the director of the CFPB only for
“inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.” In other cases, the for cause removal
standard for independent agency heads was not explicitly set out by Congress, but is understood
to exist under legal precedent.49 As a result, for cause does not have a precise meaning, but is
understood to include factors such as malfeasance or neglect of duty.50 Although the SEC
enabling legislation is silent as to the removal of commissioners, reviewing courts have held that
commissioners may not be summarily removed from office.51 Tradition may also influence a
President to allow a full term where there is no statutory for cause protection, as seems to
typically be the case for the Comptroller of the Currency.
Even where board members of financial regulators are subject to a for cause removal standard,
however, it is possible for the chairman to serve in that capacity at the pleasure of the President,
perhaps increasing presidential influence. In the case of the CFTC, for example, the President
may replace the chairman at any time with another commissioner, with the advice and consent of
the Senate, in which case the former chairman would remain a commissioner. For other
collegially headed financial regulators, statute is silent on this issue.52 This distinction between
removal of commissioner and chairman is possible because the two roles are defined separately in
statute, and the President fills them through separate appointments or designations. In practice, if
a commissioner loses the chairmanship, he or she may choose to resign from the commission.
(...continued)
Law Journal, April 1988, p. 217.
48
Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, “Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal
Agencies,” Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1138.
49
To the degree that a particular independent regulatory commission exercises quasi-judicial functions, it could be
argued, based on a 1958 Supreme Court ruling, that its members would be protected from presidential removal even
absent a specific provision to that effect. Wiener v. United States, 357 U.S. 349 (1958). For more information, see
Reginald Parker, “Removal Power of the President and Independent Administrative Agencies,” Indiana Law Journal,
vol. 36, no. 1 (fall 1960), p. 63.
50
For a discussion, see Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, “Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of
Independent Federal Agencies,” Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1144; Congressional Research
Service, Constitution Annotated, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2.
51
See SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co., Inc., 855 F.2d 677, 681 (10th Cir. 1988). In Blinder, while the court noted that
the chairman of the SEC served at pleasure of the President and therefore may be removed at will, it determined that
commissioners may be removed only for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office. For more information,
see Peter Williams, “Securities and Exchange Commission and the Separation of Powers: SEC v. Blinder, Robinson &
Co.,” Delaware Journal of Corporate Law, vol. 14, no. 1 (1989), p. 149.
52
As noted above, the court determined that the SEC chairman serves at will. See SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co.,
Inc., 855 F.2d 677, 681 (10th Cir. 1988).
Congressional Research Service
17
 Table 4. Term of Office
Regulator
Term of Office
Holdover Provisions
Grounds for Removala
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission
Five-year staggered terms.
Commissioners may continue to serve after
their term ends until a replacement takes
office, but not past the end of the next
session of Congress.
Statute not explicit for commissioners. The
President may appoint a different
commissioner as Chairman at any time, with
the advice and consent of the Senate.
Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau
The director has a five-year term.
The director may continue to serve after the
term expires until a replacement is selected.
The President may remove the director “for
inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance
in office.” (12 U.S.C. §5491)
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
The appointed members have six-year terms.
The Chairman and vice chairman have fiveyear terms.
Members may continue to serve after their
term expires until a successor is appointed.
None specified.
Federal Housing Finance
Agency
The director has a five-year term.
The director may serve until a successor is
appointed.
The President may remove the director “for
cause.” (12 U.S.C. §4511)
Federal Reserve Board of
Governors
Governors are appointed for 14-year,
staggered terms; non-renewable unless
appointed to a partial term. The chairman
and vice-chairmen are appointed for fouryear, renewable terms.
Governors may continue to serve until a
successor is appointed.
The President may remove board members
“for cause.” (12 U.S.C. §241)
National Credit Union
Administration
Six-year staggered terms; non-renewable
unless appointed to a partial term.
A board member may continue to serve until
a successor is appointed.
None specified.
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency
The Comptroller has a five-year term.
None specified.
The President may remove a Comptroller
“upon reasons to be communicated by him
to the Senate.” (12 U.S.C. §2)
Securities and Exchange
Commission
Staggered five-year terms.
Commissioners may continue to serve after
the end of their term until a replacement
takes office, but not past the end of the next
session of Congress.
None specified.b
Source:  as is the case for the FDIC.
    
      
        Table 3. Qualifications and Restrictions
      
      
        
          | Regulator | Party Affiliations | Qualifications | Restrictions | 
        
          | Commodity Futures Trading Commission  | Not more than three commissioners may be from the same political party.  | Commissioners should have demonstrated, balanced knowledge of futures trading or its regulation, or in the areas of business overseen by the CFTC.  | None. | 
        
          | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau  | No requirements related to party affiliations. | The director must be a citizen of the United States.  | Director or deputies may not hold any position in any Federal Reserve bank, Federal Home Loan Bank, or business overseen by CFPB. | 
        
          | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  | No more than three members of the board may be from the same political party. | Presidential appointees must be U.S. citizens. One of the presidential appointees must have state bank supervisory experience.  | A board member may not hold an office or stock in any depository institution or holding company, Federal Reserve bank, or Federal Home Loan Bank. Two-year ban on post-service employment in a depository institution if a board member does not fulfill a full term. | 
        
          | Federal Housing Finance Agency | No requirements related to party affiliations. | Director and deputies must be U.S. citizens with demonstrated understanding and expertise related to their areas of responsibility.  | Director and deputies may not have a financial interest or employment in a regulated entity while at FHFA, or serve as an executive officer or director of any regulated entity three years prior to appointment. | 
        
          | Federal Reserve Board of Governors  | No requirements related to party affiliations. | No more than one member from each Fed district. Members should represent the geographical and economic diversity of country.  | Board members cannot have outside employment and cannot hold stock in banks. Two-year restriction on bank employment after leaving the Fed, unless the governor has served a full term. | 
        
          | National Credit Union Administration  | No more than two members from the same party.  | Board members must be "broadly representative of the public interest." The President "shall give consideration to individuals" with financial services education, training, or experience. (12 U.S.C. §1752a) | Not more than one member of the Board may have recently been a credit union director or employee. | 
        
          | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency  | No requirements related to party affiliations. | None specified. | None. | 
        
          | Securities and Exchange Commission  | No more than three commissioners from the same political party, alternating appointments by party "as nearly as may be practicable." (15 U.S.C. §78d) | None specified. | Commissioners may not engage in other business or employment, nor participate in "transactions of a character subject to regulation by the Commission." (15 U.S.C. §78d) | 
      
      
    
    
    
    Term in Office
    Statutes specify term length, succession, and renewability. In some cases, terms are staggered with those of other members of a board or the President. All of the positions covered in this report have fixed terms, of varying length. Five-year terms are the most common among the agencies in Table 4, but some positions have longer terms. In some cases where the chair is chosen from the board, the chair's term is shorter than the board members' terms. For example, Fed governors have the longest terms (14 years), but leadership roles have four-year terms subject to renewal. 
    Fixed terms may promote independence from political influence because the expectation is that an appointee will serve out the term. In fact, in many instances, fixed terms are accompanied by statutory limits on the President's ability to remove an incumbent during his or her term (see "Grounds for Removal," below.) The length of the term may also influence the independence of the appointee. An official serving a short term may be more susceptible to presidential direction, especially if he or she might be reappointed by that President. On the other hand, an official whose term of office is longer than that of the President who appointed him or her may be less likely to feel a sense of allegiance or commitment to a new President. It might be questioned, however, if fixed terms that exceed the duration of one presidency meet that expectation in practice, because incumbents might not serve the full length of the term. For example, most Fed governors step down before their term has expired, sometimes after only a couple of years of service. One study found that Presidents were able to appoint a majority of commissioners on independent commissions 90% of the time, and were able to obtain a party majority (between new appointees and holdovers) in all but one case.43
    A fixed term, even without a restriction on grounds for removal, might lead to longer than average tenure and, in the context of a single-headed agency, greater continuity in a position. Also, by itself, such a fixed term might inhibit, but not prevent, the removal of an incumbent by the President, because it establishes the given period of time as the normal or expected tenure of an appointee. Even with a fixed term, incumbents in these positions may remain subject to close guidance and direction of the President, as well as to removal at the time of a presidential transition in the absence of "for cause" removal limitations (see "Grounds for Removal").44 
    Statute typically does not rule out the reappointment of incumbents for financial regulators, with the exception of Fed governors and NCUA board members (for both, members are allowed one full term and can be reappointed only if initially appointed to an expiring term). Some consider non-renewable terms to provide greater independence, reasoning that without the ability to reappoint, the President and Senate lose a tool of leverage over an appointee. On the other hand, an appointee with a renewable term might chart an independent path in order to remain acceptable to a future President and Senate, who may hold views different from the President and Senate who first installed the appointee.
    For many agencies, the members' terms are staggered, which helps to promote continuity and may also promote diversity of opinion. In the case of an agency with a single head, the term might or might not coincide with the President's term. 
    Holdover Provisions
    Statutes specifying fixed terms may also have "holdover provisions" that allow members to stay on past the expiration of their terms while awaiting the appointment of a successor. If such a provision allows for an indefinite holdover, it might be used by the President or other appointing authority to circumvent the need for a new appointment, particularly if Senate confirmation is required. Given this possibility, Congress sometimes places a time limit on a holdover provision. Some agencies, such as the National Labor Relations Board, have organic acts with no holdover provision; when a term expires, the member must leave office. Others, such as the Fed, have statutory authorities that permit a member whose term has expired to continue to serve until a successor takes office. Still other agencies have holdover provisions where an incumbent member may remain in office for a specified period, and where the duration of the post-term period is linked to the date the term ends. A commissioner for the Consumer Product Safety Commission, for example, "may continue to serve after the expiration of his term until his successor has taken office, except that he may not so continue to serve more than one year after the date on which his term would otherwise expire."45 A final type of holdover provision allows incumbent members to remain in office for a specified period, where the duration of the post-term period is linked to congressional sessions. For example, a commissioner for the CFTC may serve past the end of his or her term "until his successor is appointed and has qualified, except that he shall not so continue to serve beyond the expiration of the next session of Congress subsequent to the expiration of said fixed term of office."46 
    Grounds for Removal
    Although not always specified in statute, it appears that the heads of financial regulators, in contrast with Cabinet Secretaries, typically do not serve at the pleasure of the President ("at will"). Instead, most regulators may be removed only if a higher "for cause" threshold is met. The one clear statutory exception is the OCC's Comptroller of the Currency, who "shall hold his office for a term of five years unless sooner removed by the President, upon reasons to be communicated by him to the Senate."47
    "For cause" removal limits the ability of a President to remove, or threaten to remove, an appointee solely for political reasons. According to one law review article, "The distinguishing feature of [independent] agencies is that their principal officers are protected against presidential removal at will."48 According to another,
    A requirement that members serve a fixed term of years is an essential element of independence, but alone is not sufficient. The critical element of independence is the protection—conferred explicitly by statute or reasonably implied—against removal except "for cause."49 
    Where the President is limited to removing an agency head only for cause, the agency head may have greater independence from the President and the President may have limited influence over the agency's agenda. Regulators may disagree with Administration policy and pursue initiatives that are not part of, or are at odds with, the Administration's agenda without fearing removal. 
    For some financial regulators, their enabling statute details the acceptable grounds for removal (see Table 4). For example, the President may remove the director of the CFPB only for "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office." In other cases, the for cause removal standard for independent agency heads was not explicitly set out by Congress, but is understood to exist under legal precedent.50 As a result, for cause does not have a precise meaning, but is understood to include factors such as malfeasance or neglect of duty.51 Although the SEC enabling legislation is silent as to the removal of commissioners, reviewing courts have held that commissioners may not be summarily removed from office.52 Tradition may also influence a President to allow a full term where there is no statutory for cause protection, as seems to typically be the case for the Comptroller of the Currency.
    Even where board members of financial regulators are subject to a for cause removal standard, however, it is possible for the chairman to serve in that capacity at the pleasure of the President, perhaps increasing presidential influence. In the case of the CFTC, for example, the President may replace the chairman at any time with another commissioner, with the advice and consent of the Senate, in which case the former chairman would remain a commissioner. For other collegially headed financial regulators, statute is silent on this issue.53 This distinction between removal of commissioner and chairman is possible because the two roles are defined separately in statute, and the President fills them through separate appointments or designations. In practice, if a commissioner loses the chairmanship, he or she may choose to resign from the commission.
    
      
        Table 4. Term of Office
      
      
        
          Regulator | Term of Office | Grounds for RemovalaHoldover Provisions | 
          | Commodity Futures Trading Commission | Five-year staggered terms. | Commissioners may continue to serve after their term ends until a replacement takes office, but not past the end of the next session of Congress.  | Statute not explicit for commissioners. The President may appoint a different commissioner as Chairman at any time, with the advice and consent of the Senate. | 
        
          | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau | The director has a five-year term.  | The director may continue to serve after the term expires until a replacement is selected. | The President may remove the director "for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office." (12 U.S.C. §5491) | 
        
          | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | The appointed members have six-year terms. The Chairman and vice chairman have five-year terms.  | Members may continue to serve after their term expires until a successor is appointed. | None specified. | 
        
          | Federal Housing Finance Agency | The director has a five-year term.  | The director may serve until a successor is appointed.  | The President may remove the director "for cause." (12 U.S.C. §4511) | 
        
          | Federal Reserve Board of Governors  | Governors are appointed for 14-year, staggered terms; non-renewable unless appointed to a partial term. The chairman and vice-chairmen are appointed for four-year, renewable terms.  | Governors may continue to serve until a successor is appointed. | The President may remove board members "for cause." (12 U.S.C. §241) | 
        
          | National Credit Union Administration  | Six-year staggered terms; non-renewable unless appointed to a partial term. | A board member may continue to serve until a successor is appointed. | None specified. | 
        
          | Office of the Comptroller of the Currency  | The Comptroller has a five-year term.  | None specified. | The President may remove a Comptroller "upon reasons to be communicated by him to the Senate." (12 U.S.C. §2) | 
        
          Securities and Exchange Commission  | Staggered five-year terms. | None specified.b
          
        
      
      
        Source:Commissioners may continue to serve after the end of their term until a replacement takes office, but not past the end of the next session of Congress. | CRS. U.S. code accessed through http://www.uscode.house.gov
.
.
        Notes: Where quotes are used, exact wording of statute is provided.
  Leadership of the Federal Reserve regional banks has different terms of office not shown in the
table.
CRS-18
 a.
 table.
        a. To the degree that a particular independent regulatory commission exercises quasi-judicial functions, it could be argued, based on a 1958 Supreme Court ruling, that
 its members would be protected from 
“"at will
”" presidential removal, absent a specific provision to that effect. Wiener v. United States, 357 U.S. 349 (1958).
b.
 
        b. Although the SEC enabling legislation is silent as to the removal of commissioners, reviewing courts have held that commissioners may not be summarily removed
 from office. See SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co., Inc., 855 F.2d 677, 681 (
10th10th Cir. 1988). In Blinder, while the court noted that the chairman of the SEC served at
 pleasure of the President and therefore may be removed at will, it determined that commissioners may be removed only for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or
 malfeasance in office.
CRS-19
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 
      
    
    
    
    OMB/Executive Oversight
    Legislative proposals and congressional testimony by executive agencies are typically subject to
 the approval of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which is part of the Executive
 Office of the President.
5354 In addition, many agencies are funded in such a way that gives the
 Administration significant input into the agency
’'s size, scope, and activities. Agency budget
 requests are vetted and approved by OMB, where they are then integrated with the President
’s
's annual budget request. The President
’'s budget request includes proposals for programs or
 activities within an agency to be created, expanded, reduced, or abolished.
 
    In some agencies
’' enabling legislation, Congress has prohibited OMB from requiring these kinds
 of submissions from the agency or provided for simultaneous submission to OMB and Congress.
 Arguably, to the extent that the Administration is prevented from influencing an agency
’s
's appropriations requests or formal communications with Congress, an unmediated relationship
 between the agency and Congress might be facilitated, with Congress consequently having
 greater influence over the agency
’'s actions.
Since  
    Since 1974, the Administration or any agency has been prohibited from requiring the SEC, Fed,
 FDIC, FHFA,
5455 and NCUA 
“"to submit legislative recommendations, or testimony, or comments
 on legislation, to any officer or agency of the United States for approval, comments, or review,
 prior to the submission ... to the Congress ...
 ”" if those documents include a statement that the
 views expressed within are the regulator
’'s own.
5556 The scope of the act includes budget
 submissions.
5657 In 1994, the OCC was added to the statute. The Dodd-Frank Act includes parallel
 language for the CFPB.
57
58 
    The CFTC is the only financial regulator that is covered by different statutory language. It is
 required to submit budget estimates and requests concurrently to congressional committees of
 jurisdiction and the President or OMB. Similarly, it must simultaneously submit legislative
 recommendations, testimony, and comments on legislation to the Administration and Congress.
 Furthermore, it may not be compelled to seek pre-submission comment on, or review of, these
 latter materials from any officer or agency, and it must report any such voluntary solicitations to
 Congress. Although the CFTC may not forgo OMB and presidential review of its
 communications with Congress entirely, as may other financial regulators, these statutory
 arrangements arguably provide the agency with greater freedom to express to Congress the point
of view of the agency than is the case for most executive branch agencies.58
53
With regard to legislative coordination and clearance, see U.S. Office of Management and Budget, OMB Circular A19, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a019/#agency; and, with regard to provisions pertaining to the
executive branch budget submission process, in U.S. Office of Management and Budget, OMB CircularA-11, Sec. 22,
“Communications with the Congress and the public and clearance requirements,” at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
default/files/omb/assets/a11_current_year/s22.pdf.
54
The original act referenced one of the FHFA’s predecessors, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board.
55
Section 111 of P.L. 93-945 (12 U.S.C. §250).
56
As discussed in the section below entitled “Funding,” many federal financial regulators are not subject to the
congressional budget process.
57
12 U.S.C. §5493(c)(4).
58
7 U.S.C. §2(a)(10).
Congressional Research Service
20
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 of view of the agency than is the case for most executive branch agencies.59
    There is additional relevant statutory language for the FDIC. It is required to regularly provide
 financial reports to Treasury and OMB, but according to statute, the reporting requirements 
“may
"may not be construed as implying any obligation on the part of the (FDIC) to obtain the consent or
approval” approval" of Treasury or OMB, respectively.
59
Rulemaking Authority60
60
    Rulemaking Authority61
    Federal rulemaking is one of the basic tools that federal agencies use to implement public policy.
 In enacting legislation, Congress often grants agencies rulemaking authority under which they are
 required or permitted to set standards and prescribe the details of certain federal policies and
 programs. When they issue those regulations, agencies are generally required to follow a certain
 set of procedures established by Congress. The most long-standing and broadly applicable federal
 rulemaking requirements are in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) of 1946,
6162 which applies
 to all executive agencies, including independent regulatory agencies. The APA contains
 rulemaking requirements and procedures for agency adjudications.
6263 The APA also provides for
 judicial review of rulemaking and agency actions, under which courts can 
“"set aside
”" an agency
 action if it is found to be unreasonable.
63
64 
    In addition to these statutory and judicial constraints on agency rulemaking, an additional set of
 procedures has been added by Presidents in various executive orders.
6465 The requirements include,
 among other things, that agencies submit their rules to OMB
’'s Office of Information and
 Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) for review.
6566 OIRA review of rules was established in 1981 by
 President Ronald W. Reagan in Executive Order (E.O.) 12291,
66 and it was continued by
59
12 U.S.C. §1827.
This section includes significant contributions from Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in Government Organization and
Management.
61
5 U.S.C. §551 et seq.
62
The APA’s requirements for issuing rules generally include (with some exceptions) publication of a notice of
proposed rulemaking, a comment period, publication of a final rule, and a minimum 30-day period from the rule’s
publication to its effective date.
63
Specifically, a court may invalidate an agency action if it is found to be “(A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; (B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity;
(C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right; (D) without observance of
procedure required by law; (E) unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to sections 556 and 557 of this
title or otherwise reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or (F) unwarranted by the facts to
the extent that the facts are subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court.” See CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview
of Rulemaking and Judicial Review, by Todd Garvey and Daniel T. Shedd, for more information on judicial review of
rulemaking.
64
The most significant of these requirements is Executive Order 12866, which was issued by President William Clinton
in 1993 and is currently still in effect. See Executive Order 12866, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal
Register 51735, October 4, 1993, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/eo12866.pdf.
65
For more information on rulemaking by independent regulatory agencies, see Dominique Custos, “The Rulemaking
Power of Independent Regulatory Agencies,” American Journal of Comparative Law, vol. 54 (2006), p. 615. For
background, see CRS Report R42821, Independent Regulatory Agencies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Presidential
Review of Regulations, by Maeve P. Carey and Michelle D. Christensen., and CRS Report RL32240, The Federal
Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey. For a legal analysis of whether Presidents could
impose requirements for OIRA review of rules on independent regulatory agencies, see CRS Report R42720,
Presidential Review of Independent Regulatory Commission Rulemaking: Legal Issues, by Vivian S. Chu and Daniel T.
Shedd.
66
Executive Order 12291, “Federal Regulation,” 46 Federal Register 13193, February 19, 1981.
60
Congressional Research Service
21
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
67 and it was continued by President William J. Clinton under E.O. 12866.
6768 OIRA review of draft rules gives the President
 more input into, and control over, the content of rules promulgated by federal agencies during the
 implementation of federal statutes.
 
    Notably, however, the requirement for OIRA review does not apply to the independent regulatory
 agencies—Presidents have chosen to respect the independence of those agencies while imposing
 requirements on the executive agencies. This independence from presidential review of
 rulemaking is considered to be one of the hallmarks of agency independence. The independent
 regulatory agencies, as a group, are exempted from OIRA review under the terms of E.O. 12866
 (as they were under E.O. 12291). E.O. 12866 specifically exempts agencies 
“"considered to be
 independent regulatory agencies,
”" under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).
6869 This list includes
 all of the agencies discussed in this report except for the NCUA.
6970 The OCC and CFPB (upon
 creation) were added to the statutory list of independent regulatory agencies by the Dodd-Frank
 Act in 2010.
7071 However, the Dodd-Frank Act creates a process by which FSOC may nullify CFPB
 regulations that they believe put the banking or financial system at risk. Under this process,
 another agency may request that a CFPB regulation be set aside. The Treasury Secretary then
 decides whether to issue a temporary stay delaying implementation of a CFPB regulation. After
 deliberation, the regulation may be set aside by a vote of at least two-thirds of the members of
 FSOC.
71
72
    The PRA also contains special requirements for OIRA review of independent regulatory agencies
’
' information collections. Generally, if an agency is collecting 
“information”"information" from 10 or more
 nonfederal 
“"persons,
”" the agency must seek approval from OIRA before it can proceed with the
 information collection. The act requires independent regulatory agencies, like other agencies, to
 submit to OIRA their proposed information collections. Collegially headed independent
 regulatory agencies can, by majority vote, void any OIRA disapproval of a proposed information
 collection.
72
73 
    Cost-Benefit Analysis
    Independent agencies that are not subject to E.O. 12866
’'s requirements for OIRA review of rules
 are also not subject to its requirement that agencies perform cost-benefit analysis, also subject to
 OIRA review, for 
“"economically significant
” rules. Recently, policy makers have debated the
67
Executive Order 12866, “Regulatory Planning and Review,” 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993. Executive
Order 12866 repealed Executive Order 12291, although it contained many of the same basic requirements.
68
See 44 U.S.C. §3502(5) for a list of these agencies.
69
Besides the agencies listed, 44 U.S.C. §3502(5) exempts “any other similar agency.... ” The NCUA identifies itself as
an exempt independent agency for purposes of this requirement. See, for example, National Credit Union
Administration, “Filing Financial and Other Reports,” 78 Federal Register 64885, October 30, 2013.
70
Section 315 of P.L. 111-203. OCC exemption is relevant to other banking regulators because many banking
regulations are prescribed jointly by all banking regulators. In addition, the Treasury Secretary may not delay or
prevent the issuance of OCC regulations or intervene in an OCC proceeding, including enforcement actions under 12
U.S.C. §1.
71
Section 1023 of P.L. 111-203.
72
44 U.S.C. §3507(f). The statute does not specify whether a single-headed agency may void an OIRA disapproval.
For more information about the Paperwork Reduction Act, see CRS Report R40636, Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA):
OMB and Agency Responsibilities and Burden Estimates, by Curtis W. Copeland and Vanessa K. Burrows. The authors
of this report have since left CRS. Questions about its content should be directed to Maeve P. Carey, Analyst in
Government Organization and Management.
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
" rules. Recently, policy makers have debated the extent to which cost-benefit analysis should be mandated as part of the independent agency
 rulemaking process. Proponents of cost-benefit analysis consider it to be a reasonable check on
 arbitrary and capricious rulemaking; opponents of cost-benefit analysis requirements consider it
 to be too onerous, time-consuming, superfluous (when Congress has already required the agency
 to prescribe rules), and vulnerable to legal challenge. Of particular relevance to the issue of
 agency independence, cost-benefit requirements allow for greater executive influence (if OIRA
 review is required) or judiciary influence over the rulemaking process (for example, there have
 been recent court challenges to overturn certain rulemaking on cost-benefit grounds).
73
74
    A recent CRS analysis found that while six financial regulators currently provide some
 information about the costs or benefits of major rules, none provides quantitative estimates of
 monetized costs and benefits.
7475 Although not subject to E.O. 12866, requirements in current law
 related to cost-benefit analysis that apply to all the federal financial regulators include the
 Paperwork Reduction Act (described above) and a requirement to estimate the impact of proposed
 regulations on 
“"small entities,
”" such as small businesses or small financial institutions.
7576 The
 banking regulators must also consider the benefits and administrative burdens of new regulations
 on banks and their customers, 
“"consistent with the principles of safety and soundness and the
 public interest.
”76"77 In addition, certain statutory provisions related to cost-benefit analysis apply to
 individual financial regulators. According to 7 U.S.C. Section 15(a), 
“"Before promulgating a
 regulation ... the (CFTC) shall consider the costs and benefits
”" based on four considerations listed
 in statute. The SEC must consider 
“"in addition to the protection of investors, whether the
 [regulation] will promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation
”77"78 and 
“"the impact any
 [regulation] would have on competition,
”" forbidding rules 
“"which would impose a burden on
 competition not necessary or appropriate.
”78"79 When prescribing a regulation, the CFPB 
“shall
"shall consider the potential costs and benefits to consumers and (consumer credit providers),
”
" including the potential for reduced access to consumer financial products, and the impact on
 small depository institutions and rural consumers.
79
80 
    Some have proposed extending cost-benefit requirements to additional agencies. Variations on
 this proposal that would place a greater restriction on autonomy include enumerating the factors
 that must be considered in performing the analysis, allowing rules to be implemented only if an
 agency finds that the benefits are likely to outweigh the costs, 
“monetizing”"monetizing" (i.e., providing
 quantitative estimates of) costs and benefits, and subjecting the agency
’'s cost-benefit analysis to
OIRA review.
73
Better Markets, an interest group, has identified three recent rules issued by financial regulators that have been
challenged in court on cost-benefit grounds—the SEC’s proxy access rule, the CFTC’s position limit rule, and the
CFTC’s rule on registration of commodity trading advisors and commodity pool operators. See Dennis Kelleher, CostBenefit Analysis and Financial Reform: Overview, available at http://ourfinancialsecurity.org/blogs/wp-content/
ourfinancialsecurity.org/uploads/2012/05/DENNIS-KELLEHER-PPT.pdf.
74
For more information, see CRS Report R42821, Independent Regulatory Agencies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and
Presidential Review of Regulations, by Maeve P. Carey and Michelle D. Christensen.
75
5 U.S.C. §§601-612.
76
12 U.S.C. §4802(a).
77
15 U.S.C. §77b(b).
78
15 U.S.C. §78w(a).
79
12 U.S.C. §5512(b).
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 OIRA review.
    Congressional Oversight and Influence
    Each of the federal financial regulators discussed in this report have statutorily established
 characteristics that give them a greater level of independence from the direction of the President
 compared to most executive branch agencies. Some of the financial regulators also have a greater
 level of independence from congressional influence than is typical. Such reduced influence might
 result where Congress does not appropriate agency funds, where agency leaders serve for long
 periods without reconfirmation, or, indirectly, where the Administration is unable to influence
 agency action on behalf of Members.
    Even where congressional influence arguably has been reduced, the regulators are still subject to
 the major forms of normal congressional oversight. These include requirements to testify and
 report, Senate confirmation, audits and investigation by GAO and inspectors general, and in some
 cases, congressional authorization and appropriation of funds.
    Testimony and Reporting Requirements
    Congress can request that agency heads testify before congressional committees, require that they
 submit reports to Congress on general or specific topics, and investigate their activities (including
 through subpoena). Typically, testimony and reports are submitted to the committees of
 jurisdiction. All of the federal financial regulators are required to submit annual or semi-annual
 written reports to Congress. Topics covered by the reports can include a summary of the agency
’s
's finances and activities. For some agencies, such as the Fed and the CFPB, the agency head is also
 required to regularly appear before the committees of jurisdiction. For those regulators, such as
 the SEC and the CFTC, whose funding is subject, in part or in total, to congressional
 appropriations, the appropriation process provides another regular forum for testimony and
 congressional oversight by House and Senate appropriations committees. In addition, ad hoc
 testimony or reports on specific topics can be requested or mandated, and agencies can also
 provide information to Congress on an informal basis.
 
    On the basis of such reviews, Congress might enact new legislation that would alter, reverse, or
 supersede policies that these agencies had made independently. Notably, the Congressional
 Review Act of 
199680 requires 199681 requires agencies to submit their rules to GAO and Congress before they
 can take effect. Upon receipt of the rules, Congress can pass a joint resolution of disapproval
 under expedited procedures to overturn an agency
’'s rule, subject to presidential veto. These
 procedures are used infrequently, however—since 1996, only one rule has been successfully
 overturned.
81
Senate Confirmation
82
    Senate Confirmation
    In addition to the tools of influence available to both houses of Congress, the Senate may also
 influence agencies that have greater independence through its constitutional advice and consent
 role in the appointment of top agency leaders. This power might afford Senators the opportunity
 to influence the selection of a nominee, evaluate his or her qualifications and experience, solicit a
 policy commitment from the nominee, and assess his or her view of the relationship between the
80
81
5 U.S.C. §§801 et seq.
See CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by Maeve P. Carey.
Congressional Research Service
24
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 agency and the President or Congress. Senate confirmation can provide an outside judgment on
 the suitability of a nominee, although that judgment is not necessarily limited to whether the
 nominee meets the statutory qualifications. Sometimes the President
’'s nominee is not confirmed
 because of opposition by Senators from either party. A Senate confirmation process may require
 the President to choose candidates acceptable to the other party, especially when political party
 affiliations are required. For that reason, appointees confirmed by the Senate might be more likely
 to represent views that are acceptable to a broad range of policy makers.
 
    Audits and Investigations
    As is true for oversight of most executive agencies, Congress also employs the assistance of GAO
 and inspectors general to enhance its oversight of agencies that have greater independence. All of
 the federal financial regulators have inspectors general that conduct investigations and report
 findings.
8283 All of the federal financial regulators are required to be audited, and are regularly
 audited, by GAO.
 
    GAO audits and investigations can be required by statute (on a one-time or repeated basis) or ad
 hoc at the request of a member or committee of Congress. Congress may request that GAO
 investigate a topic based on a desire to raise awareness of a regulator
’'s decision or activity that
 Congress supports or opposes. Typically, statutes lay out the terms and conditions under which
 GAO may access the agency
’'s records, report findings, and so on. Reflecting the sensitive nature
 of financial supervisory authorities, statutes are more restrictive for the auditing of the banking
 regulators to ensure that confidential information about the financial condition of private banks
 remains private.
8384 There are additional statutory restrictions for the Federal Reserve, in
 recognition of the unique insulation of its monetary policymaking from congressional influence.
84
85 Until 2010, GAO could not audit the Fed
’'s monetary policy or lender of last resort functions.
 Since the Dodd-Frank Act, it can audit those functions for waste, fraud, and abuse, but it cannot
 evaluate the merits of the Fed
’'s decisions on policy grounds.
Funding
    Funding
    Where an agency has been designed to have greater independence from the President and
 insulation from partisan politics, the annual appropriation processes and periodic reauthorization
 legislation provide Congress with opportunities to influence the size, scope, priorities, and
activities of an agency (for background, see the text box below).
82
The Fed’s inspector general is also responsible for the CFPB. For more information on the role of inspectors general,
see CRS Report 98-379, Statutory Offices of Inspector General: Past and Present, by Frederick M. Kaiser. For
information on GAO, see CRS Report RL30349, GAO: Government Accountability Office and General Accounting
Office, by Frederick M. Kaiser.
83
31 U.S.C. §714.
84
Congress has recently considered changing these restrictions. For example, H.R. 459 passed the House on July 25,
2012. This bill would have removed all existing restrictions on GAO audits of the Fed from statute, including
confidentiality restrictions, and, as passed, called for an audit within 12 months of enactment. Similar bills have been
introduced in the 113th Congress. For more information, see CRS Report R42079, Federal Reserve: Oversight and
Disclosure Issues, by Marc Labonte.
Congressional Research Service
25
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 activities of an agency (for background, see the text box below).
    The two financial regulators whose funding is primarily determined through the appropriations
 process are the CFTC and the SEC.
8586 The CFTC
’'s funding is provided directly from the
Treasury’ Treasury's general fund. In contrast, the SEC is funded by fees it collects. The SEC
’'s overall
 budget level, however, is largely set through the congressional appropriations process, with the
 SEC then setting the fees to approximately meet the funding level determined by Congress.
86
This means that, for example, an
Background on Congressional Budgeting
amendment to an appropriations bill
87
    
      
        
          
            Background on Congressional Budgeting
            Congressional budgeting is generally a two-step process. First,
lowering the funding to the CFTC
 Congress authorizes (permits) funding through authorizing
 legislation; this authorization can be permanent or temporary
would be able to redirect this funding to
 and subject to reauthorization. Then, in the case of discretionary
another agency without changing the
 spending, Congress appropriates (provides) funds, typically
overall cost of the bill. Changing the
 annually, for an agency to spend, subject to the terms of its
funding for the SEC during the
 authorization. In the case of mandatory spending, those funds
appropriations process, however, would
 are provided automatically once authorized, and appropriations
 are not necessary. The authorization process gives the
not affect the resources available for
 committees of jurisdiction an opportunity to weigh in, while the
other agencies. Thus, there may be
appropriation process is guided by the appropriations
slightly more pressure on the CFTC
committees.
budget since it is effectively in
 appropriation process is guided by the appropriations committees.
          
        
      
    
    This means that, for example, an amendment to an appropriations bill lowering the funding to the CFTC would be able to redirect this funding to another agency without changing the overall cost of the bill. Changing the funding for the SEC during the appropriations process, however, would not affect the resources available for other agencies. Thus, there may be slightly more pressure on the CFTC budget since it is effectively in competition for funding with the other agencies within an appropriations bill in a way that the
 SEC is not.
 
    The appropriation and authorization process provides Congress a regular opportunity to evaluate
 an agency
’'s performance. During this process, Congress also might influence the activities of
 these agencies by legislating provisions that reallocate resources or place limitations on the use of
 appropriated funds to better reflect congressional priorities. Through line-item funding, bill text,
 or accompanying committee report text, Congress can encourage, discourage, require, or forbid
 specific activities at the agency, including rulemaking. Alternatively, it can adjust an agency
’s
's overall funding level if it is supportive or unsupportive of the agency
’'s mission or conduct. Thus,
 control over funding reduces independence from (and increases accountability to) Congress.
    Other financial regulators have more autonomy to determine their own budgets, typically subject
 to some general language regarding proportionality of budget and mission. For example, the
 OCC: 
“"may collect an assessment, fee, or other charge ... as the Comptroller determines is
 necessary or appropriate to carry out the responsibilities of the Office,
”87"88 while the CFPB is
 allowed funding in 
“"the amount determined by the Director to be reasonably necessary to carry
 out the authorities of the Bureau under Federal consumer financial law.
”88"89 Even for such
 agencies, however, Congress may limit the size of the overall budget. The CFPB
’'s funding is
 capped at a fixed amount (adjusted for inflation); if the CFPB wishes to further increase its
85
The SEC is funded through the Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) appropriations bill. The CFTC
funding is split, appearing in the FSGG bill in the Senate and the Agriculture appropriations bill in the House. The
FDIC (for its inspector general) and NCUA (for the Community Development Revolving Loan Fund Program) also
receive minor funding through the FSGG bill.
86
The SEC was given some budgetary autonomy by Section 991 of the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203), which created
a Reserve Fund funded through agency fees. It grants the SEC the authority to spend up to $100 million a year “as the
Commission determines is necessary to carry out the functions of the Commission.”
87
12 U.S.C. §16.
88
12 U.S.C. §5497.
Congressional Research Service
26
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 budget, supplemental appropriations are authorized through 2014 (the CFPB has not yet
 requested such appropriations).
89
90 
    Another aspect of funding is whether an agency collects fees or own-source revenues, and
 whether the agency has the ability to spend those revenues without congressional approval. Most
 financial regulators generate income from various sources, particularly fees or assessments on
 entities that they oversee. For example, the OCC and FHFA primarily generate income from fees
 levied on regulated entities, while the FDIC and NCUA primarily generate income from deposit
 insurance premiums.
  The Federal Reserve is unique in that its income is primarily derived from
 securities (including Treasury securities) that it purchased in the conduct of monetary policy; it
 also earns interest on loans and charges market prices for market services it offers (e.g., check
 clearing). Even when an agency
’'s funding comes primarily from fees or assessments, however,
 the spending of these fees may be subject to congressional approval, as is the case for the SEC.
 The two financial regulators that do not largely raise their own revenues are the CFTC and the
 CFPB. As noted above, the CFTC
’'s funding comes from Treasury
’'s general revenues and CFPB
 funding is transferred from the Federal Reserve
’'s revenues.
    Because of uncertainty about regulators
’' costs and income, an issue arises of what happens when
 a regulator collects more revenue than it spends. SEC revenues are added to Treasury
’'s general
 revenues, except for revenues added to its reserve fund. The OCC, NCUA, FDIC, and FHFA are
 allowed to invest surpluses in Treasury bonds, available for use to cover any future budgetary
 shortfalls (caused by the resolution of failing financial institutions, for example).
9091 The Fed
’s
's investment income regularly generates surpluses an order of magnitude larger than its expenses,
 and so it periodically remits the vast majority of these surpluses
  to Treasury (where they are
added to the general fund), adding the rest to its surplus account.
89
Supplemental appropriations were authorized by Section 1017 of the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203).
Some agencies, such as OCC and FHFA, invest in Treasury securities through on-budget federal trust funds, while
others, such as NCUA and FDIC, invest in Treasury securities outside of the federal budget. In addition, some
agencies, such as the NCUA and FDIC, maintain a standing right to draw on the Treasury up to a statutory limit (in
order to strengthen the “full faith and credit” backing of their insurance, for example).
90
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Table 5. Financial Regulatory Agency Funding
Agency
Spending,
$mil/yr
Subject to Annual
Appropriations/Periodic
Reauthorization
Primary Revenue Source
Commodity Futures
Trading Commission
$200
(FY2012)
Yes/Yes, latest authorization
expired Sept. 30, 2013.
Treasury general fund per congressional
appropriation.
Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau
$541
(FY2013)
No/No
Transfer from Federal Reserve System
limited to 12% of the Fed’s operating
expenses. Authorized to request
additional appropriations until FY2014,
but has not done so.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
$1,778
(CY2012)
No/No
Deposit insurance premiums determined
by FDIC in order to meet a reserve ratio
set by FDIC (with a statutory minimum
of 1.35% of insured deposits).
Federal Housing Finance
Agency
$262
(FY2012)
No/No
Fees and assessments on regulated
institutions. Amounts determined by
FHFA.
Federal Reserve
$4,696
(CY2012)
No/No
Income on securities and loans held by
Fed. The Fed also charges fees to cover
the costs of business services it offers.
National Credit Union
Administration
$251
(CY2013)
No/No
Deposit insurance premiums determined
by NCUA in order to meet a reserve
ratio set by NCUA (with a statutory
minimum of 1.2% of insured deposits).
Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency
$1,044
(FY2012)
No/No
Fees on regulated institutions. Amounts
determined by OCC.
Securities and Exchange
Commission
$1,331
(FY2013)
Yes, except for $100 million
reserve fund/Yes, current
authorization runs until the
end of 2015.
Fees and assessments on regulated
entities. Amounts set to meet
congressional appropriation.
Regulator
Source: added to the general fund), adding the rest to its surplus account.
    
      
        Table 5. Financial Regulatory Agency Funding
      
      
        
          | Regulator | Agency Spending, $mil/yr | Subject to Annual Appropriations/Periodic Reauthorization | Primary Revenue Source | 
        
          $200(FY2012)Commodity Futures Trading Commission  | Yes/Yes, latest authorization expired Sept. 30, 2013. | Treasury general fund per congressional appropriation. | $541(FY2013)Consumer Financial Protection Bureau  | No/No | Transfer from Federal Reserve System limited to 12% of the Fed's operating expenses. Authorized to request additional appropriations until FY2014, but has not done so. | $1,778(CY2012)Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  | No/No | Deposit insurance premiums determined by FDIC in order to meet a reserve ratio set by FDIC (with a statutory minimum of 1.35% of insured deposits).  | $262(FY2012)Federal Housing Finance Agency  | No/No | Fees and assessments on regulated institutions. Amounts determined by FHFA. | $4,696(CY2012)Federal Reserve  | No/No | Income on securities and loans held by Fed. The Fed also charges fees to cover the costs of business services it offers. | $251(CY2013)National Credit Union Administration  | No/No | Deposit insurance premiums determined by NCUA in order to meet a reserve ratio set by NCUA (with a statutory minimum of 1.2% of insured deposits).  | $1,044(FY2012)Office of the Comptroller of the Currency  | No/No | Fees on regulated institutions. Amounts determined by OCC. | $1,331(FY2013)Securities and Exchange Commission  | Yes, except for $100 million reserve fund/Yes, current authorization runs until the end of 2015. | Source:Fees and assessments on regulated entities. Amounts set to meet congressional appropriation. |  CFTC FY2014 Budget and Performance Plan, p. 9 at http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/
@newsroom/documents/file/cftcbudget2014.pdf; CFPB FY2014 Strategic Plan, p. 11 at
 http://www.consumerfinance.gov/
f/f/strategic-plan-budget-and-performance-plan-and-report.pdf; FDIC 2012
 Annual Report, p. 65 at http://www.fdic.gov/about/strategic/report/2012annualreport/AR12final.pdf; FHFA 2012
 Annual report, p. 71 at http://www.fhfa.gov/webfiles/25320/FHFA2012_AnnualReport-508.pdf; Federal Reserve
 Annual Report: Budget Review 2013, p. 2 at http://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/budget-review/files/
2013budget2013-budget-review.pdf; NCUA 2014 Budget Action Memorandum, p. 1 at http://www.ncua.gov/about/Documents/
Agenda%20Items/AG20131121Item4.pdf; OCC Annual Report FY2012, p. 45 at http://occ.gov/publications/
publications-by-type/annual-reports/2012/2012-OCC-Annual-Report-Final.pdf; SEC FY2013 Financial Report, p.
 65 at http://www.sec.gov/about/secpar/secafr2013.pdf; U.S. code accessed through http://www.uscode.house.gov
.
.
        Notes: FY = fiscal year. CY = calendar year.
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
Legislation in the 113th Congress
      
    
    
    Legislation in the 113th Congress
    This section describes only portions of bills regarding the independence of federal financial
 regulators. It covers bills that saw committee or floor action. There are other bills regarding
 independence that have not seen committee or floor action, including S. 1173
, , S. 450, and S. 205
,
in the 113th Congress.
, in the 113th Congress.
    H.R. 1003 was ordered to be reported by the House Agriculture Committee on March 20, 2013.
 H.R. 1003 would require the CFTC to assess on qualitative and quantitative grounds specified in
 the bill whether the benefits of its regulations would outweigh their costs before they are
 promulgated. CBO estimated that complying with H.R. 1003 as ordered reported would require
 $28 million in appropriations over five years.
91
92
    H.R. 1062 was passed by the House on May 17, 2013. H.R. 1062 would require the SEC to
 assess on qualitative and quantitative grounds specified in the bill whether the benefits of
 regulations would outweigh their costs before they are promulgated. It would require the SEC to
 address public comments on costs and benefits in its final rule. Not later than one year after
 enactment and every five years thereafter, it would require the SEC to review all of its regulations
 and modify or repeal those that it finds are 
“"outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively
 burdensome.
”" The bill would also apply to national securities associations and the Municipal
 Securities Rulemaking Board. CBO estimated that complying with H.R. 1062 as ordered reported
 would require $23 million in appropriations over five years.
92
93
    H.R. 2122 was reported by the House Judiciary Committee on September 28, 2013. It would,
 among other things, change the current rulemaking requirements for independent regulatory
 agencies by requiring them to consult with OIRA before issuing proposed and final rules and
 requiring them to conduct cost-benefit analysis of their rules.
9394 CBO estimates that H.R. 2122 as
 reported would increase discretionary outlays by $67 million over five years.
94 The House Rules
Committee has scheduled a hearing on H.R. 2804 for February 25, 2014. The hearing
announcement indicated that the underlying special rule may provide for H.R. 2804 to be the
legislative vehicle for several related measures, including H.R. 2122 as reported.
95 The text of H.R. 2122 was included in H.R. 2804, which passed the House on February 27, 2014. 
    H.R. 2786, the FY2014 Financial Services and General Government Appropriations bill, was
 reported on July 23, 2013. It includes language that would prohibit any transfer of funds from the
 Federal Reserve to the CFPB as of October 1, 2014, instead authorizing regular appropriations for
 the CFBP. The bill would also require regular notification and reports by the CFPB to the
 congressional committees through FY2014. With regard to the SEC, H.R. 2786 would prohibit
 the SEC from making outlays using its budgetary reserve fund in FY2014. H.R. 2786 was not
 enacted, instead the FY2014 Financial Services appropriations were included in an omnibus
 appropriations bill, H.R. 3547
 (see below for more details). 
    H.R. 3193 was passed by the House on February 27, 2013. Originally a narrower bill, H.R. 3193 was modified prior to floor consideration by H.Res. 475. H.Res. 475, a resolution reported  (see below for more details).
91
Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 1003, April 1, 2013.
Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 1062, May 13, 2013.
93
Similar legislation, H.R. 3010, passed the House in the 112th Congress. For more information, see CRS Report
R42104, An Overview and Analysis of H.R. 3010, the Regulatory Accountability Act of 2011, by Maeve P. Carey.
94
This cost is the combined cost for all agencies, assuming appropriations are provided. As noted earlier in the report,
most federal financial regulators do not receive appropriations. Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R.
2122, August 1, 2013.
92
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
H.Res. 475 was agreed to by the House on February 11, 2014. H.Res. 475, a resolution reported
by the House Rules Committee, made in order for consideration an amendment in the nature of a
 substitute to H.R. 3193, consisting of the legislative text of five bills previously reported by the
 House Financial Services Committee. The five bills 
are were H.R. 2385
, , which was reported by the
 House Financial Services Committee on February 10, 2014; H.R. 2446
, , which was reported by
 the House Financial Services Committee on February 6, 2014; H.R. 2571
, , which was reported by
 the House Financial Services Committee on February 6, 2014; H.R. 3193
,, which was reported by
 the House Financial Services Committee on February 6, 2014; and H.R. 3519
, , which was
reported by the House Financial Services Committee on February 6, 2014. 
    H.R. 3193
, as
modified by H.Res. 475, as passed would reduce the majority required to set aside or delay a regulation
 promulgated by the CFPB from two-thirds of the FSOC to one-half excluding the CFPB Director.
 H.R. 3193 would 
also change the grounds for a member of FSOC to bring a petition to set aside
 or delay the regulation from posing a risk to the safety and soundness of the banking or financial
 system to being 
“"inconsistent with the safe and sound operations of United States financial
 institutions.
”" It would also require the CFPB to consider the impact of its rules on the safety and
 soundness of depository institutions.
9596 It would replace the CFPB
’'s director and deputy directors
 with a five-person commission to head the agency. Commissioners could only be removed for
 cause and would serve a five-year term. Commissioners would be appointed by the President
 subject to Senate confirmation, and not more than three commissioners could be members of the
 same political party. A chairperson would be selected by the President from among the
 commissioners and would exercise the executive and administrative functions of the bureau.
96
97 Under the bill as modified, the CFPB would become an independent agency and would no longer
 be an autonomous bureau of the Federal Reserve. It would eliminate the statutorily required
 revenue transfers from the Fed to finance the CFPB
’'s budget, and subject the CFPB
’'s budget to
 the congressional appropriation process. It would authorize 
“"such sums as may be necessary
”" to
 be appropriated through FY2015. It would place CFPB employee pay on the federal
government’ government's general schedule. It would also govern the CFPB
’'s use of confidential information.
 CBO projects that H.R. 3193 as amended would reduce mandatory spending by $6 billion over 10
 years; assuming future appropriations were provided, that would be offset by a roughly equal
 increase in discretionary spending.
97
98
    H.R. 3547, an omnibus appropriations bill, was signed into law as P.L. 113-76 on January 17,
 2014. The Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2014 was included as
 Division E of this bill. H.R. 3547 did not include language bringing the CFPB under the
 appropriations process as was included in H.R. 2786. With regard to the SEC, however, 
H.R. 3547H.R.
3547 did rescind $25 million from the SEC
’'s reserve fund for FY2014.
Concluding Thoughts
In the late 19th
    Concluding Thoughts
    In the late 19th century, Congress began to establish certain federal agencies with organizational
 characteristics that gave them a greater degree of independence from presidential direction than
 would otherwise have been the case. Some of the earliest agencies structured in this way were
 those with financial regulatory responsibilities, including the Fed (1913), the FDIC (1933), and
95
Similar provisions were included in legislation (H.R. 1315) that was passed by the House in the 112th Congress.
96
Similar provisions were included in legislation (H.R. 1315) that was passed by the House in the 112th Congress.
97
Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 3193, February 7, 2014.
Congressional Research Service
30
 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
 the SEC (1934). Over time, Congress has, in certain cases, given agencies organizational
 characteristics that resulted in a greater degree of independence from Congress, as well. Several
 rationales for doing so have been identified, and these include the perceived need to insulate
 officials carrying out quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial functions from the direction of the
 President; the perception that insulation from partisan politics might yield better decision making
 and policymaking based on technical expertise; and institutional rivalries between Congress and
 the President over control of the federal bureaucracy.
    Congress has continued to establish independent financial regulatory agencies into the 
21st
21st century. For example, FHFA was established in 2008, and CFPB was established in 2010. The
 continuing use of the independent regulatory agency model, in one form or another, suggests that
 Congress continues to find agency independence to be appropriate under certain circumstances.
 Legislative action in the 
113th113th Congress indicates that Congress is still deliberating over the right
 regulatory structure to balance independence and accountability.
    In view of the use of the independent regulatory model for the design of federal financial
 regulatory agencies, several questions might arise. First, what is the relative level of
 independence among these agencies? Second, what is the effect of independence on the
 functioning of these agencies? Relatedly, what are the positive and negative consequences, in
 practice, of giving these agencies greater independence from the President and from Congress?
    Congress has granted federal financial regulators independence in ways obvious (
“"for cause
”
" removal, self-financing) and subtle (exemption of agency testimony and budget requests from
 OMB review). It might be impractical to assess the relative levels of independence among
 agencies on the basis of the number or type of characteristics of independence an agency has. As
 Congress has established additional agencies with these kinds of independence, it has used
 various combinations of organizational features to address a variety of policy contexts and
 preferences, and this makes comparisons difficult. These differences could reflect the differences
 in the roles and responsibilities of the various regulators, or simply reflect historical accident.
 Federal financial regulators that are relatively more independent in some areas are relatively less
 independent in others. For example, the OCC is located within the Treasury Department and the
 comptroller does not have 
“"for cause
”" protection, but has greater budgetary independence than
 the SEC or CFTC. That said, the Fed has been given the most independence of any financial
 regulator on all the measures considered in this report (where differences exist), presumably in
 deference to its monetary policy responsibilities. Besides structural characteristics, the culture and
 traditions of an agency and the relationships between its leadership and the President can also
 influence the relative independence of the agency during a particular period.
    Arguably, a more relevant assessment might evaluate the degree to which specific features of
 independence at particular agencies serve current policy contexts and preferences. Congress
 might, as part of its oversight of federal regulators, choose to investigate the impact of these
 features on the relationships between the agency and the President, the agency and Congress, and
 the agency and the regulated industry. It might also assess the character of the policymaking that
 such independence allows.
9899 Finally, Congress could elect to assess the degree to which the
agency’ agency's operations are subject to governmental checks and balances.
98
An appraisal of whether independence improves regulator performance is beyond the scope of this report. For the
case in favor of the proposition, provided there is adequate accountability, see Marc Quintyn and Michael W. Taylor,
“Regulatory and Supervisory Independence and Financial Stability,” International Monetary Fund, Working Paper
(continued...)
Congressional Research Service
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 Independence of Federal Financial Regulators
    An assessment of a financial regulator, like that of any independent regulatory agency, might
 examine not only the level of independence accorded to that organization, but also the
 responsibilities and authorities that have been vested in its leadership. Arguably, the degree of
 autonomy and power together might have the greatest impact on the integrity of the policymaking
 process and policy outcomes, as well as the preservation of democratic accountability.
 
    Agency independence is traditionally viewed relative to the President, but the structural features
 discussed in this report can also increase or decrease independence from Congress. Agencies that
 are more independent from the President can sometimes become more congressionally dependent
 for resources and power. On the other hand, where Congress is successful in limiting the
President’ President's authority over an agency, this might indirectly reduce the influence of Members over
 that agency. Some agency characteristics which more directly shield an agency from
 congressional control as well as presidential direction, such as funding the agency outside of the
 appropriations process, might further insulate the agency from partisan political influence.
 Although the agency would be constrained by a statutory framework and institutionalized
 oversight mechanisms, such insulation from partisan influence might lead to more limited
 accountability by the agency to, as well as less control of agency activities by, elected officials. In
 short, decisions about the degree of independence to accord an agency might involve tradeoffs
among various values and goals.
Author Contact Information
Henry B. Hogue
Specialist in American National Government
hhogue@crs.loc.gov, 7-0642
Baird Webel
Specialist in Financial Economics
bwebel@crs.loc.gov, 7-0652
Marc Labonte
Specialist in Macroeconomic Policy
mlabonte@crs.loc.gov, 7-0640
(...continued)
WP/02/46, March 2002,  among various values and goals.
    
  
  
    
  
  
    Footnotes
    
      
        | 1. |  This report covers all regulatory agencies that are part of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), an inter-agency council. Hereafter, the report will refer to this group as the "federal financial regulators," unless otherwise noted. State financial regulators and federal independent agencies unrelated to financial regulation are beyond the scope of this report. | 
      
        | 2. |  The CFPB was created by the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203). | 
      
        | 3. |  For more detail, see the section entitled "Legislation in the 113th Congress." | 
      
        | 4. |  The section of H.R. 2804 pertaining to cost-benefit analysis was reported by the House Judiciary Committee as H.R. 2122 on September 28. 2013. | 
      
        | 5. |  H.R. 3193 consisted of the legislative text of five bills previously reported by the House Financial Services Committee – H.R. 2385, H.R. 2446, H.R. 2571, H.R. 3193, and H.R. 3519. | 
      
        | 6. |  For more information, see CRS Report R43219, Selected Legislative Proposals to Reform the Housing Finance System, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 7. |  Many of these structural elements may also influence the agency's independence from the regulated industry—a topic beyond the scope of this report. For more information, see Rachel Barkow, "Insulating Agencies: Avoiding Capture Through Institutional Design," Texas Law Review, vol. 89, no. 1 (November 2010), p. 15. | 
      
        | 8. |  For more information on central bank independence, see CRS Report RL31056, Economics of Federal Reserve Independence, by [author name scrubbed], and CRS Report RL31955, Central Bank Independence and Economic Performance: What Does the Evidence Show?, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. For more information on the Fed's statutory mandate, see CRS Report R41656, Changing the Federal Reserve's Mandate: An Economic Analysis, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 9. |  For more information on the Administrative Procedures Act and the rulemaking process, see CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 10. |  See CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview of Rulemaking and Judicial Review, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], and CRS Report R43203, Chevron Deference: Court Treatment of Agency Interpretations of Ambiguous Statutes, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 11. |  Related agency models had been under development in the preceding decades in Great Britain and a number of American states. See Marshall J. Breger and Gary J. Edles, "Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies," Administrative Law Review, vol. 52 (2000), pp. 1119-1128; and Robert E. Cushman, The Independent Regulatory Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 19-36.  | 
      
        | 12. |  For example, decisions regarding staff hires, salaries, and expenditures required the Secretary's approval. (Act of February 4, 1887, §18; 24 Stat. 379 at 386.) | 
      
        | 13. |  Robert E. Cushman, The Independent Regulatory Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 65-68. | 
      
        | 14. |  34 Stat. 584. | 
      
        | 15. |  The ICC, itself, was abolished by the ICC Termination Act of 1995 (P.L. 104-88; 109 Stat. 803). | 
      
        | 16. |  The FHFA is a successor agency to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and the Federal Housing Finance Board, which also had a significant degree of independence from the President. When establishing the FHFA in 2008, Congress elected to maintain independence under the new organizational arrangements. | 
      
        | 17. |  The merger of legislative, judicial, and executive powers in one agency has sometimes been a source of controversy and debate in Congress, particularly as this model grew in use during the early 20th century. See Robert E. Cushman, The Independent Regulatory Commissions (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 420-427. | 
      
        | 18. |  Neal Devins and David Lewis, "Not-So Independent Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional Design," Boston University Law Review, vol. 88 (2008), p. 463. | 
      
        | 19. |  Insulation from political concerns could be advantageous in cases where it is desirable for agencies to make decisions that are unpopular in the short run but beneficial in the long run. For example, this dynamic is often said to apply to the Fed's monetary policy decisions. | 
      
        | 20. |  See Susan Bartlett Foote, "Independent Agencies under Attack: A Skeptical View of the Importance of the Debate," 1988 Duke Law Journal, April 1988, p. 223. | 
      
        | 21. |  See, for example, Norton E. Long, "Power and Administration," in The Polity (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1962), pp. 50-63; and Harold Seidman, Politics, Position, and Power: The Dynamics of Federal Organization, 5th ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998). | 
      
        | 22. |  The degree to which this is so, in practice, might depend, in part, on the polarization of the parties more generally and the dynamics of the appointment process during a given presidency. See Neal Devins and David E. Lewis, "Not-so Independent Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional Design," Boston University Law Review, vol. 88 (2008), pp. 459-498.  | 
      
        | 23. |  U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, Study on Federal Regulation, committee print, 95th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1977), p. 28. [Italics added.] | 
      
        | 24. |  Ibid. | 
      
        | 25. |  David E. Lewis, Presidents and the Politics of Agency Design: Political Insulation in the United States Government Bureaucracy, 1946-1997 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003), pp. 23-24. [Italics from the original.] | 
      
        | 26. |  Harold Seidman, "A Typology of Government," in Federal Reorganization: What Have We Learned?, ed. Peter Szanton (Chatham, NJ: Chatham House, 1981), p. 34. | 
      
        | 27. |  Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, "Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies," Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1136. | 
      
        | 28. | 44 U.S.C. §3502(5). | 
      
        | 29. |  See, for example, Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, "Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies," Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4, 2000; Administrative Conference of the United States, Multi-Member Independent Regulatory Agencies, May 1992. For an international comparison and effects of independence on regulation, see Steve Donzé, "Bank Supervisor Independence and the Health of Banking Systems: Evidence from OECD Countries," paper presented at International Political Economy Society Inaugural Conference, Princeton University, May 2006, at http://www.princeton.edu/~pcglobal/conferences/IPES/papers/donze_S130_1.pdf. | 
      
        | 30. |  Executive Order 12866, "Regulatory Planning and Review," 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993. For an electronic copy of this executive order, see http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/eo12866.pdf. For more information on OIRA, see CRS Report RL32397, Federal Rulemaking: The Role of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 31. |  44 U.S.C. §§3501-3520. | 
      
        | 32. |  The characteristics examined in detail are not the only ones that influence independence. For example, various general management laws are likely to influence the nature of a federal organization. These laws pertain to, among other things, information and regulatory management; strategic planning, performance measurement, and program evaluation; financial management, budgeting, and accounting; organization and reorganization; procurement and real property management; intergovernmental relations management; and human resource management. Some of these laws would automatically apply to an agency unless it were statutorily exempt. In other cases, amendments to an existing statute might be necessary in order to include an agency under its provisions. In addition, some agencies have independent litigation authority, which refers to the level of authority a federal agency has to initiate and implement its own legal proceedings, and to defend its administrative actions. For more on general management laws, see CRS Report RL30795, General Management Laws: A Compendium (pdf), by [author name scrubbed] et al. | 
      
        | 33. |  The Federal Reserve is further removed from the executive branch because its 12 regional banks are privately owned. Private shareholders do not exercise management control and the Board, which sets policy centrally for the entire system, is a governmental entity, however. | 
      
        | 34. |  For more information, see CRS Report R42083, Financial Stability Oversight Council: A Framework to Mitigate Systemic Risk, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 35. |  As another example, under 12 U.S.C. §4513a, the FHFA director is advised "with respect to overall strategies and policies" by the Federal Housing Finance Oversight Board, which is composed of four members, including the Secretary of Treasury and the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. The Board may not exercise executive authority or powers of the director, however. Other inter-agency councils involving financial regulators, such as the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, do not include any Treasury official. | 
      
        | 36. |  The CFPB is a bureau of the Fed, but is granted significant statutory autonomy from the Fed in terms of budget, personnel matters, rulemaking, supervision, and so on. Since the Fed is outside an executive department, so is the CFPB. | 
      
        | 37. |  Kenneth Dam, "The US Government's Approach to Financial Decisions," in Globalization and Systemic Risk, World Scientific, 2009, p. 403. | 
      
        | 38. |  For a GAO analysis of NCUA's leadership structure, see U.S. Government Accountability Office, Corporate Governance: NCUA's Controls and Related Procedures for Board Independence and Objectivity, GAO-07-72R, November 30, 2006, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/94552.pdf. | 
      
        | 39. |  For a discussion, see Rachel Barkow, "Insulating Agencies: Avoiding Capture Through Institutional Design," Texas Law Review, vol. 89, no. 1 (November 2010), p. 15. | 
      
        | 40. |  Such an appointee's term might exceed the appointing President's, however, and his or her policy preferences might not match those of the incoming President. | 
      
        | 41. |  One empirical study of the power of independent regulatory commission governance found that "[a]ll in all, the influence of chairmen in regulatory processes may be characterized as extraordinary, placing them in a leadership position. Consequently the commissions are not true plural executive systems." (David M. Welborn, Governance of Federal Regulatory Agencies [Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1977], pp. 131-132.) This study, of seven commissions, included only one financial regulator, however: the SEC. | 
      
        | 42. |  For more, see CRS Report RL33886, Statutory Qualifications for Executive Branch Positions, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 43. |  Neal Devins and David Lewis, "Not-So Independent Agencies: Party Polarization and the Limits of Institutional Design," Boston University Law Review, vol. 88, 2008, p. 460. | 
      
        | 44. |  In the case of a commission, the longer the duration of the terms of its members, the lower the probability that one President will have the opportunity to appoint all of its members. If the terms are staggered so that different members leave the commission at different times, the commission might have more continuity and autonomy than if the entire membership turned over at the same time. In some agencies, such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the term of each position runs continuously, regardless of whether or not it is occupied (42 U.S.C. §2000e-4). This arrangement leads to the staggered term expirations discussed above. In other agencies, such as the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB), the term runs for a fixed period from the time a member is appointed (42 U.S.C. §7412(r)(6)). Under this arrangement the terms of the various members might or might not be staggered, depending on the date of appointment for the incumbents. | 
      
        | 45. |  15 U.S.C. §2053(b)(2). | 
      
        | 46. |  7 U.S.C. §2(2). | 
      
        | 47. |  12 U.S.C. §2. For example, the Comptroller resigned at the request of President Kennedy in 1961. See "Post-Employment Restriction of 12 U.S.C. §1812(e)," 25 Op. O.L.C. 184 (2001). | 
      
        | 48. |  Geoffrey P. Miller, "Introduction: The Debate over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence," Duke Law Journal, April 1988, p. 217. | 
      
        | 49. |  Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, "Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies," Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1138. | 
      
        | 50. |  To the degree that a particular independent regulatory commission exercises quasi-judicial functions, it could be argued, based on a 1958 Supreme Court ruling, that its members would be protected from presidential removal even absent a specific provision to that effect. Wiener v. United States, 357 U.S. 349 (1958). For more information, see Reginald Parker, "Removal Power of the President and Independent Administrative Agencies," Indiana Law Journal, vol. 36, no. 1 (fall 1960), p. 63. | 
      
        | 51. |  For a discussion, see Marshall Breger and Gary Edles, "Established by Practice: The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies," Administrative Law Review, vol. 52, no. 4 (2000), p. 1144; Congressional Research Service, Constitution Annotated, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2. | 
      
        | 52. |  See SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co., Inc., 855 F.2d 677, 681 (10th Cir. 1988). In Blinder, while the court noted that the chairman of the SEC served at pleasure of the President and therefore may be removed at will, it determined that commissioners may be removed only for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office. For more information, see Peter Williams, "Securities and Exchange Commission and the Separation of Powers: SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co.," Delaware Journal of Corporate Law, vol. 14, no. 1 (1989), p. 149. | 
      
        | 53. |  As noted above, the court determined that the SEC chairman serves at will. See SEC v. Blinder, Robinson & Co., Inc., 855 F.2d 677, 681 (10th Cir. 1988). | 
      
        | 54. |  With regard to legislative coordination and clearance, see U.S. Office of Management and Budget, OMB Circular A-19, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a019/#agency; and, with regard to provisions pertaining to the executive branch budget submission process, in U.S. Office of Management and Budget, OMB CircularA-11, Sec. 22, "Communications with the Congress and the public and clearance requirements," at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/a11_current_year/s22.pdf.  | 
      
        | 55. |  The original act referenced one of the FHFA's predecessors, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. | 
      
        | 56. |  Section 111 of P.L. 93-945 (12 U.S.C. §250). | 
      
        | 57. |  As discussed in the section below entitled "Funding," many federal financial regulators are not subject to the congressional budget process. | 
      
        | 58. |  12 U.S.C. §5493(c)(4). | 
      
        | 59. |  7 U.S.C. §2(a)(10). | 
      
        | 60. |  12 U.S.C. §1827. | 
      
        | 61. |  This section includes significant contributions from [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Government Organization and Management. | 
      
        | 62. |  5 U.S.C. §551 et seq. | 
      
        | 63. |  The APA's requirements for issuing rules generally include (with some exceptions) publication of a notice of proposed rulemaking, a comment period, publication of a final rule, and a minimum 30-day period from the rule's publication to its effective date. | 
      
        | 64. |  Specifically, a court may invalidate an agency action if it is found to be "(A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; (B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity; (C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right; (D) without observance of procedure required by law; (E) unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to sections 556 and 557 of this title or otherwise reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or (F) unwarranted by the facts to the extent that the facts are subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court." See CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview of Rulemaking and Judicial Review, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], for more information on judicial review of rulemaking. | 
      
        | 65. |  The most significant of these requirements is Executive Order 12866, which was issued by President William Clinton in 1993 and is currently still in effect. See Executive Order 12866, "Regulatory Planning and Review," 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/eo12866.pdf. | 
      
        | 66. |  For more information on rulemaking by independent regulatory agencies, see Dominique Custos, "The Rulemaking Power of Independent Regulatory Agencies," American Journal of Comparative Law, vol. 54 (2006), p. 615. For background, see CRS Report R42821, Independent Regulatory Agencies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Presidential Review of Regulations, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]., and CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. For a legal analysis of whether Presidents could impose requirements for OIRA review of rules on independent regulatory agencies, see CRS Report R42720, Presidential Review of Independent Regulatory Commission Rulemaking: Legal Issues, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 67. |  Executive Order 12291, "Federal Regulation," 46 Federal Register 13193, February 19, 1981. | 
      
        | 68. |  Executive Order 12866, "Regulatory Planning and Review," 58 Federal Register 51735, October 4, 1993. Executive Order 12866 repealed Executive Order 12291, although it contained many of the same basic requirements. | 
      
        | 69. |  See 44 U.S.C. §3502(5) for a list of these agencies. | 
      
        | 70. |  Besides the agencies listed, 44 U.S.C. §3502(5) exempts "any other similar agency.... " The NCUA identifies itself as an exempt independent agency for purposes of this requirement. See, for example, National Credit Union Administration, "Filing Financial and Other Reports," 78 Federal Register 64885, October 30, 2013. | 
      
        | 71. |  Section 315 of P.L. 111-203. OCC exemption is relevant to other banking regulators because many banking regulations are prescribed jointly by all banking regulators. In addition, the Treasury Secretary may not delay or prevent the issuance of OCC regulations or intervene in an OCC proceeding, including enforcement actions under 12 U.S.C. §1. | 
      
        | 72. |  Section 1023 of P.L. 111-203. | 
      
        | 73. |  44 U.S.C. §3507(f). The statute does not specify whether a single-headed agency may void an OIRA disapproval. For more information about the Paperwork Reduction Act, see CRS Report R40636, Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA): OMB and Agency Responsibilities and Burden Estimates, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. The authors of this report have since left CRS. Questions about its content should be directed to [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Government Organization and Management. | 
      
        | 74. |  Better Markets, an interest group, has identified three recent rules issued by financial regulators that have been challenged in court on cost-benefit grounds—the SEC's proxy access rule, the CFTC's position limit rule, and the CFTC's rule on registration of commodity trading advisors and commodity pool operators. See Dennis Kelleher, Cost-Benefit Analysis and Financial Reform: Overview, available at http://ourfinancialsecurity.org/blogs/wp-content/ourfinancialsecurity.org/uploads/2012/05/DENNIS-KELLEHER-PPT.pdf. | 
      
        | 75. |  For more information, see CRS Report R42821, Independent Regulatory Agencies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Presidential Review of Regulations, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 76. |  5 U.S.C. §§601-612. | 
      
        | 77. |  12 U.S.C. §4802(a). | 
      
        | 78. |  15 U.S.C. §77b(b). | 
      
        | 79. |  15 U.S.C. §78w(a). | 
      
        | 80. |  12 U.S.C. §5512(b). | 
      
        | 81. |  5 U.S.C. §§801 et seq. | 
      
        | 82. |  See CRS Report RL32240, The Federal Rulemaking Process: An Overview, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 83. |  The Fed's inspector general is also responsible for the CFPB. For more information on the role of inspectors general, see CRS Report 98-379, Statutory Offices of Inspector General: Past and Present, by [author name scrubbed]. For information on GAO, see CRS Report RL30349, GAO: Government Accountability Office and General Accounting Office, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 84. |  31 U.S.C. §714. | 
      
        | 85. |  Congress has recently considered changing these restrictions. For example, H.R. 459 passed the House on July 25, 2012. This bill would have removed all existing restrictions on GAO audits of the Fed from statute, including confidentiality restrictions, and, as passed, called for an audit within 12 months of enactment. Similar bills have been introduced in the 113th Congress. For more information, see CRS Report R42079, Federal Reserve: Oversight and Disclosure Issues, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 86. |  The SEC is funded through the Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) appropriations bill. The CFTC funding is split, appearing in the FSGG bill in the Senate and the Agriculture appropriations bill in the House. The FDIC (for its inspector general) and NCUA (for the Community Development Revolving Loan Fund Program) also receive minor funding through the FSGG bill. | 
      
        | 87. |  The SEC was given some budgetary autonomy by Section 991 of the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203), which created a Reserve Fund funded through agency fees. It grants the SEC the authority to spend up to $100 million a year "as the Commission determines is necessary to carry out the functions of the Commission." | 
      
        | 88. |  12 U.S.C. §16. | 
      
        | 89. |  12 U.S.C. §5497. | 
      
        | 90. |  Supplemental appropriations were authorized by Section 1017 of the Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203). | 
      
        | 91. |  Some agencies, such as OCC and FHFA, invest in Treasury securities through on-budget federal trust funds, while others, such as NCUA and FDIC, invest in Treasury securities outside of the federal budget. In addition, some agencies, such as the NCUA and FDIC, maintain a standing right to draw on the Treasury up to a statutory limit (in order to strengthen the "full faith and credit" backing of their insurance, for example). | 
      
        | 92. |  Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 1003, April 1, 2013. | 
      
        | 93. |  Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 1062, May 13, 2013. | 
      
        | 94. |  Similar legislation, H.R. 3010, passed the House in the 112th Congress. For more information, see CRS Report R42104, An Overview and Analysis of H.R. 3010, the Regulatory Accountability Act of 2011, by [author name scrubbed]. | 
      
        | 95. |  This cost is the combined cost for all agencies, assuming appropriations are provided. As noted earlier in the report, most federal financial regulators do not receive appropriations. Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 2122, August 1, 2013. | 
      
        | 96. |  Similar provisions were included in legislation (H.R. 1315) that was passed by the House in the 112th Congress. | 
      
        | 97. |  Similar provisions were included in legislation (H.R. 1315) that was passed by the House in the 112th Congress. | 
      
        | 98. |  Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate for H.R. 3193, February 7, 2014. | 
      
        99.An appraisal of whether independence improves regulator performance is beyond the scope of this report. For the case in favor of the proposition, provided there is adequate accountability, see Marc Quintyn and Michael W. Taylor, "Regulatory and Supervisory Independence and Financial Stability," International Monetary Fund, Working Paper WP/02/46, March 2002, | http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2002/wp0246.pdf. One cross-country empirical study
 claims that 
“"independent bank supervisors have a higher credibility in banking markets, and market reaction to higher
 independence is reflected in higher ratings of banking system soundness.
”" See Steve Donzé, 
“"Bank Supervisor
 Independence and the Health of Banking Systems: Evidence from OECD Countries,
”" paper presented at International
 Political Economy Society Inaugural Conference, Princeton University, May 2006, available at
 http://www.princeton.edu/~pcglobal/conferences/IPES/papers/donze_S130_1.pdf
.
Congressional Research Service
32
 .