Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Can the Fed Fund the CFPB?
Can the Fed Fund the CFPB?
Feb 11, 2026 5:12 PM

  The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has been a source of controversy since its creation. Critics of the agency have long argued that its independent status is unconstitutional. In a recent decision, however, the Supreme Court affirmed the constitutionality of the CFPB’s funding scheme, even though it circumvents the normal Congressional appropriation process by “allowing the Bureau to draw money from the earnings of the Federal Reserve System.”

  This decision belies the Fed’s current financial condition and conflicts with provisions in the Federal Reserve Act. The fact of the matter is that the Fed no longer has any earnings. It currently has huge cash operating losses and must borrow to fund both the Fed’s and the CFPB’s operations. When it is not literally printing dollars to pay these bills, the Fed is borrowing on behalf of the system’s 12 privately owned Federal Reserve district banks—not the federal government. These borrowings are not federally guaranteed. More problematic still is that nine of the 12 Federal Reserve district banks (FRBs) are technically insolvent, as is the Fed System as a whole.

  The CFPB’s unique funding structure comes from provisions in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. Essentially, it requires that the Fed transfers funds to the CFPB without oversight from the congressional Appropriations Committees. In its 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court upheld these provisions and found that the funding apparatus “constitutes an ‘Appropriatio[n] made by Law’” because it is “drawn from the Treasury.”

  One unfortunate bug in the Court’s opinion is that, since the Federal Reserve is currently making losses, there are no Federal Reserve System earnings for the CFPB to draw upon. The system has lost a staggering sum of $170 billion since September 2022, and continues to accumulate more than $1 billion in operating losses each week. Under standard accounting rules, it has negative capital and is technically insolvent. The Fed stopped sending distributions of its earnings to the US Treasury in September 2022 because there were no earnings to distribute. It should have stopped sending payments to the CFPB at the same time for the same reason.

  The second problem with the Court’s decision is that, unless the CFPB draws all its expenses from the Federal Reserve in the form of Federal Reserve Notes, the transferred monies are neither “public money” nor “drawn from the Treasury.” This is the law of the land as codified in the Federal Reserve Act.

  When the Federal Reserve posts an operating loss, it must rebalance its accounts. It can do this by (1) selling assets or using the proceeds from maturing assets to cover the loss; (2) reducing its retained earnings, or if there are no retained earnings, reducing its paid in equity capital; or (3) issuing new liabilities. Regardless of how it chooses to rebalance its books, each new dollar of Fed operating loss or dollar spent funding the CFPB causes the Fed’s liabilities to increase relative to its assets, and, under standard accounting rules, the Fed’s liabilities are already greater than its assets.

  Because of interest rate increases, the true market value of the Fed’s assets is far less than their book value—a shortfall of about $1 trillion. The Fed has stated that it will hold these assets to maturity to avoid realizing these mark-value losses. Meanwhile, the Fed’s $170 billion in accumulated cash operating losses have already fully exhausted the Fed’s retained earnings and paid in equity capital, so now the Fed must borrow to balance its accounts.

  The Fed has three ways it can borrow to pay for the CFPB or new Fed operating losses. It can: (1) issue new Federal Reserve Notes; (2) borrow by increasing deposits at Federal Reserve district banks; or, (3) borrow from financial markets using reverse repurchase agreements. Of these three ways the Fed borrows, only Federal Reserve Notes are explicitly guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the US government and can be considered “public money drawn from the Treasury.”

  According to the Federal Reserve system’s 2023 audited financial statements:

  Federal Reserve notes are the circulating currency of the United States. These notes, which are identified as issued to a specific Reserve Bank, must be fully collateralized. …The Board of Governors may, at any time, call upon a Reserve Bank for additional security to adequately collateralize outstanding Federal Reserve notes. … In the event that this collateral is insufficient, the FRA provides that Federal Reserve notes become a first and paramount lien on all the assets of the Reserve Banks. Finally, Federal Reserve notes are obligations of the United States government.

  The Federal Reserve Act does not grant the Fed unlimited authority to print new paper currency to cover its losses or fund CFPB operations. As of May 22, the Fed’s H.4.1 report shows that it owned less than $7.3 trillion in assets but had more than $7.4 trillion in liabilities issued to external creditors, including $2.3 trillion in Federal Reserve Notes. After collateralizing its outstanding currency, the system has $5 trillion in remaining assets, but more than $5.1 trillion in outstanding liabilities other than Federal Reserve Notes. The system as a whole has more than $127 billion in external liabilities that cannot be legally turned into Federal Reserve Notes.

  To the extent that the CFPB is not being fully funded with newly issued Federal Reserve Notes, the CFPB is not being funded by “public money drawn from the Treasury.

  Under the Federal Reserve Act, about $5 trillion of Federal Reserve System’s current external liabilities are not backed by the federal government but only by the creditworthiness of the 12 FRBs. But nine, including all of the largest FRBs, have negative capital when measured using generally accepted accounting standards. With about $1 trillion in unrecognized market value losses on their securities, the true financial condition of the 12 FRBs is far weaker than their accounting capital suggests. And to make matters worse, only three of the 12 FRBs have enough collateral to redeem all of their external liabilities by printing new paper currency, which is the only federally guaranteed liability FRBs issue.

  In addition, the largest funding source for the Fed, deposits in FRBs, are not explicitly collateralized or guaranteed by the federal government. FRB deposits are only protected by the value of FRB assets that are not otherwise pledged.Although the Fed’s depositors may believe they have an “implicit Treasury guarantee” in the same way that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae bondholders believed that their bonds were guaranteed by the US Treasury, the Federal Reserve Act does not include a federal government guarantee for FRB deposits.

  Fed deposits are meant to be protected by FRB paid-in capital and surplus, but that has been fully consumed by the operating losses in nine of 12 FRBs; and also protected in law (but not in practice)by acallable capital commitment and a “double liability” call on member bank resources that is an explicit FRB shareholder responsibility under the Federal Reserve Act.In other words, member banks as FRB shareholders, are legally responsible for some part of any loss incurred by the FRB’s unsecured liability holders, most importantly FRB depositors.

  But notwithstanding large operating losses that have completely consumed the capital of most FRBs, the Federal Reserve Board has never utilized its powers under the Federal Reserve Act to increase the capital contributions of member banks or invoke member bank loss-sharing obligations. Indeed, all FRBs, even the most technically insolvent FRB, New York, continue to pay member banks dividends on their FRB shares, as well as make payments to the CFPB from nonexistent earnings.

  If, in the highly unlikely event that FRB member banks were called upon to inject additional capital into their FRB to cover Fed operating losses and CFPB expenses, these monies would clearly not be public monies drawn from the Treasury. Yet, under the Supreme Court’s ruling, the cash proceeds of the call on FRB member banks would be shipped over to pay the expenses of the CFPB. This fact alone seems to contradict the logic of the Supreme Court’s majority decision.

  In sum, the Supreme Court’s recent ruling notwithstanding, the CFPB’s funding mechanism currently conflicts with the clear language of both the Dodd-Frank Act and Federal Reserve Act. As long as the Fed continues to suffer operating losses, the CFPB is not being funded with Federal Reserve earnings, and to the extent that the CFPB is not being fully funded with newly issued Federal Reserve Notes—and it is not—the CFPB is not being funded by “public money drawn from the Treasury.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
How to Recapitalize the Federal Reserve
  The Federal Reserve starts the new year with capital, properly accounted for, of negative 92 billion. How can that be? How can the world’s greatest central bank, the issuer of the world’s dominant reserve currency, be technically insolvent—and by such a huge number?   The answer is that the Fed has accumulated immense operating losses, which by January 3, 2024, totaled...
An Arthurian Brit in the Land of the Free
  In a scene from his one-man-play, An Evening With C. S. Lewis, actor David Payne performs a curious limerick while impersonating the famous Christian apologist. An English author, the pseudo-Lewis opines, can produce beautiful works of literature, bathing in ink and wine. Unfortunately, none of these works are well received by critics or academics. Close to despondency, he mails his...
The New Deals Dark Underbelly
  When I arrived at the University of Alabama almost a decade ago to begin graduate school and met the historian David Beito who would become the co-advisor on my dissertation, he was just beginning a project on Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s disregard for Americans’ civil liberties. Most critics of FDR point to Executive Order 9066 which forced 120,000 people of Japanese...
A Stoic American Founding?
  In The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America, Jeffrey Rosen undertakes to examine how leading American Founders learned from ancient writers on moral philosophy, especially the Stoics, to cultivate virtue as the means to attaining happiness. Rosen, the president of the National Constitution Center, reports that the project was...
How Self
  On December 22, as New York’s LaGuardia Airport was filled with holiday travelers, Tommy Dorfman, an actor who played a gay male on the Netflix teen drama “Thirteen Reasons Why” but then “came out” as a transgender female in 2021, held up the Delta line as “she” denounced an airplane employee for having intentionally “misgendered” her. The employee did so,...
The Fear, Falsehoods, and Force of Pandemic Failure
  In the fall of 2023, Americans heard unwelcome news that a mutation of the Omicron virus—JN.1—was now accounting for as many as 50 percent of the new COVID-19 cases in the United States. By mid-December, hospitals across the country had reintroduced protective mask mandates for patients, staff, and visitors. For many, it was a reminder of the more than two-year...
Spock versus the Social Justice Warriors
  Thomas Sowell’s current reputation as many conservatives’ favorite curmudgeonly economist and cultural critic may underplay his brilliance. His Basic Economics should be required reading in every survey econ course, and many consider his sociological work on race in America to be some of the best in that discipline although sociology is the furthest left of any academic discipline and therefore...
The Conservative Feminist Revolution
  Feminism is continually being redefined, and agroup ofconservative and not so traditionally conservative men and womenare now piloting another new approach. Fairer Disputations, part of the Wollstonecraft Project at the Abigail Adams Institute, publishes and compiles work by individuals that do not always agree but defend “a vision of female and male as embodied expressions of human personhood,” and affirm...
Archetype of Illiberalism
  The ideas of the political theorist Carl Schmitt are enjoying a revival—an unusual point of agreement between elements of the left and right. Schmitt made three striking claims. First, he argued that politics was defined by the dichotomy between friend and enemy. Second, he thought that politics interpenetrated and dominated all spheres of life from aesthetics to religion. Third, he...
Chile’s Constitutional Woes
  The call for new or improved constitutions has become a fashionable and enthusiastic rallying cry for politicians, ideologues, and intellectuals throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The emergence of new states, revolutions, political upheavals, aspirations for salvation, crises, or defeated states seeking a fresh start are among the reasons that our modern world is increasingly populated with modern constitutions. The...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved