Ron Paul is author of the best-selling book “End the Fed.” He has  denounced the Fed as a cause of inflation.                            
By 
FLOYD NORRIS
A congressman from Texas, long a dissident critic of the 
Federal Reserve, is scheduled to become the  chairman of a House panel with jurisdiction over the central bank. It  promises to be a miserable time for the Fed chairman as he is peppered  with hostile questions at oversight hearings and with legislation to  force complete audits of Fed operations.        
So it is now, with Representative 
Ron Paul   about to take over as chairman of the Domestic Monetary Policy  Subcommittee of the House Financial Services Committee. Mr. Paul  campaigned against big banks, arguing that concentrated financial power  goes hand in hand with concentrated political power.
If the Fed were abolished, he wrote last year, “the national wealth  would no longer be hostage to the whims of a handful of appointed  bureaucrats whose interests are equally divided between serving the  banking cartel and serving the most powerful politicians in Washington.”
It is not hard to imagine Mr. Paul lecturing the president of the 
Federal Reserve Bank of New York in a committee  room: “You can absolutely veto everything the president does. You have  the power to veto what the Congress does, and the fact is that you have  done it. You are going too far.”
And so  it was back in 1964, when that lecture was actually given by the  then-new chairman of the House Banking Committee, a Texas congressman  named Wright Patman. As 
Time magazine  then 
wrote: “For three decades, Wright Patman has  fumed and fussed that the Federal Reserve system is too secretive, too  independent, too insensitive to the hopes of small borrowers. A  sharecropper’s son, he often charges that it is a tool of Wall Street  bankers.”
A joke during Mr. Patman’s tenure was that the reason he chose a bright  red carpet for his office was to hide the blood stains after William  McChesney Martin Jr., then the Fed chairman, emerged from private  meetings.        
Mr. Paul is well aware of the precedent. His 2009 best-selling book,  “End the Fed,” quotes Patman’s lecture and then adds, “I actually  consider this an understatement, because in the past year or so during  this bailout process, the Federal Reserve has garnered an unbelievable  amount of power, making it much more influential around the world than  the Congress or the president has ever been.”
Among the bills Patman pushed was one to audit the central bank. The  Dodd-Frank Act passed this year allows for limited audits, and extending  them is a centerpiece of Mr. Paul’s agenda. Patman bitterly fought big  bank mergers, while Mr. Paul condemns allowing banks to become too big  to fail.
There are major differences between them, aside from the fact one is a  Republican, while the other was a Democrat. Mr. Paul is a sound-money  man who longs for the gold standard and thinks the collapse of paper  money is inevitable. Patman was far more sympathetic to printing money,  even voicing outrage during the Depression at the idea that government  would pay interest to borrow money. Why not just print it, he asked?         
Mr. Paul denounces the Fed for causing inflation, saying that producing  inflation is the major reason for its existence. In 1937, Patman  proposed legislation to require the Fed to stabilize the purchasing  power of money, but he had something different in mind. He wanted to  restore price levels to what they had been in 1926. To do that would  have required inflation of about 25 percent to reverse the 
deflation  of the Depression.        
Another difference is the role a landslide played in regard to both men.  In 1974, the Watergate wipe out produced a flood of liberal Democrats  who were determined to put aside seniority as a strict determinant of  chairmanships. Patman, who had been in the House since 1929, was ousted  in a move that no doubt pleased the Fed. He died in 1976, just before  Mr. Paul entered Congress.
The Republican landslide this year elected several representatives  sympathetic to Mr. Paul’s views, and weakened the party establishment  that had previously kept Mr. Paul from being chairman of a subcommittee.  This week Representative Spencer T. Bachus of Alabama, the incoming  chairman of the Financial Services Committee, announced that Mr. Paul  would have the job.
Mr. Bachus has endorsed Fed audits that go beyond the limited review  called for by the Dodd-Frank Act, but he is anything but hostile to  banks. He told The 
Birmingham News last week that “my view is  that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks.” The  News said he “later clarified his comment to say that regulators should  set the parameters in which banks operate but not micromanage them.” His  press secretary said he was too busy for an interview.
Mr. Paul takes on the subcommittee post at a time when the Fed is far  better known than it was in the 1960s, and after its reputation has  alternately soared and plunged. It was given credit for the long booms  of the 1990s and earlier this decade, and for steering the economy out  of the mild 2001 
recession.  There was criticism of its role in the technology stock bubble that  preceded that downturn, but it was mild compared with the excoriation  the Fed received for its failure to counteract the housing bubble that  led to the recession that began in 2007.
In the end, neither Patman nor a later Fed-doubting Texas chairman of  the committee, Henry Gonzalez, had much impact on the Fed. “We did not  achieve a whole lot,” Mr. Paul said in an interview this week, recalling  his work with Gonzalez. “But I think things are changing.” 
In the past, the majority in Congress, whether Republican or Democrat,  was generally supportive of the financial establishment. That is still  true, but the support has frayed amid resentment over big bonuses going  to bankers whose jobs might have vanished had the government not bailed  them out. Many Republicans embrace Mr. Paul’s criticism of the Fed’s   role in the bailout and in the current monetary easing, which involves  buying $600 billion in longer-term 
Treasury securities.
Fortunately, for both the Fed and the economy, the signs seem  encouraging. The retail sales report this week was stunningly good,  signaling a strong economy in the current quarter and into next year.  The tax deal worked out between 
President  Obama and  Republican lawmakers will provide economic stimulus, even  if it is not particularly efficient.
One sign of economic optimism is surging interest rates on long-term  Treasuries. During the first 10 trading days of December, the yield on  10-year Treasuries rose from 2.8 percent to almost 3.5 percent. It has  been nine years since yields rose that much over so short a time. Then  markets were beginning to suspect the 2001 recession was ending, as it  was. Markets now seem to expect a much better recovery next year than we  saw this year.
There is another available interpretation. “Did these rates move higher  because the economy is getting stronger,” asked Bernard Baumohl of the  Economic Outlook Group, “or because bond investors fear the Fed is about  to err by continuing to pump too much money into an economy that is in  the midst of accelerating? Our concern, after talking to clients, is  that it’s the latter.”
So far, however, you can’t find much evidence of that in the markets.  The breakeven inflation rate on Treasury securities — the rate investors  seem to expect based on the relative yields of regular five-year  Treasuries and inflation-indexed bonds — has risen only a little, to 1.7  percent a year. As the Fed said this week in announcing no change in  policy, “longer term inflation expectations have remained stable.”
Mr. Paul was careful not to predict legislative success. “I’m not making  any rash promises,” he told me. “I’m up against a lot of influential  and very powerful people. They’ve been able to work in secrecy since  1913,” the year the Fed was established.
The idea of hostile Congressional hearings making a Fed chairman  miserable may seem surprising to those with memories that go back only  to the era of 
Alan  Greenspan as oracle. But there is a rich precedent. 
Paul  Volcker took his share of lumps when he was driving up interest  rates to stop inflation, and bringing on a severe recession in the  process. Now he is revered, in large part because he was successful.
If the economy fails to revive and inflation surges — in other words, if  
Ben  Bernanke’s term as chairman looks like a failure — pressures for  fundamental changes at the Fed could become irresistible. But for the  time being, it is likely that Mr. Paul’s new post will provide more  entertaining hearings than actual legislation.