Federal Reserve to Reduce Workforce Following Over a Decade of Expanding Payroll

Federal Reserve to Reduce Workforce Following Over a Decade of Expanding Payroll

WASHINGTON, Sept 22 (Reuters) – ‌The U.S. Federal Reserve system ‍is cutting about 300​ people from its‌ payroll this year, a small but rare reduction ⁤in ⁣headcount across an organization that has grown steadily since 2010 as its reach‌ in the economy and ​regulatory agenda have expanded.
A Fed spokesperson said‍ the cuts are‍ focused on the ‌staff of the U.S. central bank’s 12 regional reserve banks and mainly ‌hit information technology jobs, including some⁤ no longer needed because⁢ of the spread of cloud-based computer software, and positions connected to the Fed’s various systems for processing payments, ‌which are being consolidated.
The spokesperson, who would not speak for direct attribution,⁣ said ‍the ⁤staff cuts represented a ​combination of attrition, including retirements, and layoffs.
According to‍ annual reports ⁣and financial documents prepared by the Fed each year, the number of staff budgeted for the ⁢system, including its regional banks,⁢ the Washington-based Board of Governors, and three smaller units, is due to fall by more than 500 positions from 2022 to 2023, from 24,428 to 23,895.
While small⁢ compared to the⁣ size of the Fed,​ it is the first time budgeted headcount has fallen since 2010.
Reuters Graphics
Since actual employment in 2022 fell below budget – a ‌December Fed memo cites “higher than-budgeted turnover⁢ and extended ​lags in filling open positions,” notably in⁤ the area of bank supervision, as the reason – the number of positions being eliminated this year is somewhat smaller than the​ budgeted decline.
The size of ⁤any drop in actual employment won’t be known until early next ​year ‍when the Fed closes ‍its books on 2023 and releases its latest annual report.
While the December memo from the Board of Governors division ⁢that oversees the regional reserve‌ banks does not‍ explicitly call for staff cuts, ‍it highlights the need ⁢to stick with ​internal budgeting protocols, “with the most important focal points⁢ being ​alignment with long-term strategy and stewardship of public ⁢funds.”
SELF-FUNDED
The⁣ staff ‌reductions are happening ‌at a sensitive time for the Fed. It has booked ​$100 billion in⁣ losses​ in recent months on⁣ operations that currently involve paying more in interest to ⁤banks on reserve ​deposits at the Fed than the central bank⁢ earns from its roughly $7.5 trillion portfolio​ of bonds and mortgage-backed securities.
Unlike federal ⁤agencies that spend tax dollars allocated by Congress, the Fed is self-funding. Its earnings from its asset holdings and fees charged⁤ to banks for a⁣ range of services ⁣are used to⁢ pay the roughly $6.3 billion in‍ annual expenses of a system that employs nearly 24,000 people in Washington and ⁣other cities across ​the country.
In ⁣most years the ⁤Fed generates ⁤a profit that is turned over to the U.S. Treasury. But since the central ‍bank began to increase interest rates to control a⁤ surge in inflation, ⁤it​ has been spending more⁢ than it earns ⁣each year, and‌ in effect gives the Treasury an IOU to be paid later.
Reuters Graphics
While the…

Original from ⁤ www.reuters.com

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