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The CFPB's Funding Mechanism: Misguided But Constitutional
analysis from Professor Zach Price
Last week the Fifth Circuit held that the CFPB is unconstitutional because, by statute, it derives its revenue from the federal reserve rather than congressional appropriations. Professor Zach Price argues that the Fifth Circuit was mistaken:
The Fifth Circuit held last week that the Consumer Financial Protection Board (CFPB) cannot promulgate or enforce its regulations because, by law, it receives its operating funds each year from the Federal Reserve Board rather than time-limited appropriations statutes. The Fifth Circuit's decision is incorrect, and especially so if one embraces the formalist approach to separation of powers that the Supreme Court currently favors.
The Constitution's Appropriations Clause states: "No money shall be drawn from the treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law." As I argued in a 2018 article, this clause properly means that Congress may control any resource-dependent authority of the government—any power that requires government resources beyond what constitutional officers like the President or Supreme Court could perform on their own.
Accordingly, it is not enough for an agency like the CFPB to have legal authority to take action. Because the power to promulgate and enforce rules is resource-dependent, Congress also must provide resources by law to carry out these functions. It likewise makes no difference whether the funds in question came from the "treasury" in some technical accounting sense. As long as the funds were under government control, and thus part of the public treasury in a more abstract sense, they can be spent only if Congress has approved doing so by statute.
Congress normally amplifies its power under the Appropriations Clause by limiting the amount and duration of agency funding, typically for periods of one year. The British Parliament developed this practice as a means of controlling the royal fiscal-military state, and the U.S. Congress wisely adopted the same approach, beginning with the first Congress, as a way to maintain an ongoing check on government operations.
The key question in the CFPB case is whether this practice of annual appropriations is not only desirable, but also constitutionally required. When it established the CFPB in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Congress provided that the agency would not require annual appropriations, but could instead claim up to twelve percent of the Federal Reserve System's funds, even though the Fed itself is funded primarily through fees and interest income rather than annual statutory appropriations. In a particular thumb in the eye of future Congresses, the CFPB statute even exempted the agency's Fed-derived funds from "review by the Committees on Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate."
What should we make of this choice? Congress's unusual arrangements seem to have been motivated by concerns that powerful financial actors would seek to capture and undermine the CFPB's functions. The choice to exempt such a powerful and important agency from the political constraints of ongoing appropriations was nevertheless unfortunate and short-sighted, but it was not unconstitutional.
Congress has provided authority by statute for the CFPB's expenditures. That is all the text of the Constitution requires. Annual appropriations are generally a good idea, but there is no constitutional requirement that Congress employ them for this or any other civil agency. On the contrary, the Constitution negatively implies the opposite by specifying that "no appropriation of money to [raise and support armies] shall be for a longer term than two years." In practice, furthermore, Congress has previously provided permanent appropriations for some programs like Social Security benefits and government debt service; it has allowed entire agencies, like the Federal Reserve itself, to fund themselves with fees rather than annual appropriations; and it has authorized various other forms of "backdoor spending" that take place outside the normal annual appropriations process.
Concluding that the CFPB's funding through the Federal Reserve is unconstitutional, as the Fifth Circuit did, requires reading into the text some amorphous, functional limit on how Congress exercises its power over government expenditure. It requires, in other words, inferring that a law counts as an "appropriation" for constitutional purposes only if it carries features such as time limits that the Constitution itself does not require and that have not always been reflected in past practice.
In an important 1988 article cited by the Fifth Circuit, Kate Stith advocated such a limit, arguing that "[w]here Congress fails to provide a clear statement of the activity or object being funded and fails to impose effective limitations on the amount and the duration of the appropriation, it has abdicated one of its principal constitutional responsibilities." But Stith characterized this principle as a "constitutional norm" with hazy outer boundaries, and she acknowledged that it might not be appropriately enforced by courts. "There are strong prudential considerations," she wrote, "for abstaining from addressing the adequacy of appropriations legislation absent conflict between the President and Congress."
In fact, the Fifth Circuit's opinion all but demonstrates the absence of judicially manageable standards for enforcing a functional limit on how Congress exercises its appropriations power. Rather than articulate any administrable rule for when Congress goes too far, the court simply characterized the CFPB's funding arrangement as "so egregious that it clearly runs afoul of the Appropriations Clause's requirements."
Although much of the CFPB's work strikes me as important, exempting the agency from the political constraint of ongoing appropriations was misguided. But the remedy is for Congress to change the law and claw back its power. It is not for courts to invent new, judicially unmanageable limits that are absent from the constitutional text.
Seems right to me.
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There used to be a canon that one Congress cannot tie the hands of of a future Congress. By this argument, it's permitted not only to do that, but also to blind future Congresses to misuse of the delegated powers of the purse.
". . . the CFPB statute. . . ."
Future Congresses can easily amend/rescind the statute.
They (Future Cong.), are only limited by their willingness and are in no way restricted by a previous Congress.
They (Future Cong.), are only limited by their willingness and are in no way restricted by a previous Congress.
This is yet another example, as if we needed more, of how conservative jurisprudence has taken on the activist role they have long accused liberals of desiring. We have seen so many constitutional principles invented by conservative legal scholars and judges so that they can apply them subjectively to policies that they don’t like. That is both easier and more desirable than having to do it through Congress when Representatives and Senators might have to answer questions about why they are voting to favor the businesses that fund their campaigns.
When is it a “major” question that only Congress can address directly rather than an agency, or when has Congress delegated too much authority to an agency? When it would be inconvenient and potentially difficult for members of Congress to be seen making a law allowing more pollution or telling payday lenders that they can try and withdraw funds several times when it comes back as insufficient, causing fees to be racked up each time.
When has declaring these kinds of agency arrangements or actions unconstitutional ever worked out in favor of consumers or the general public over corporate interests?
I need to read the opinion, and understand this provision more clearly. At first blush, I'm not sure it's that simple. The actions of the Appropriations Committee seem to me a matter of the Rules of the House. These are determined by the House; they aren't legislation requiring bicameralism and presentment. Just as I don't think a statute outlawing the filibuster would be constitutional - or binding on the Senate - this attempt to reach into the procedural innards of the House seems to underscore the shaky commitment to separation of powers here.
I think Congress could've set a permanent funding formula for the CFPB, but leaving it entirely to the Executive Branch is hard to square with Congress's role. I wonder what Louis Fisher's opinion is; if you read the fascinating Presidential Spending Power, you will find a lot of long-venerating Spending practices that conform not at all the the conventional-wisdom model. Maybe the CFPB funding mechanism can be squared with this history, maybe not.
More generally, the Fifth Circuit, in cahoots with right-wing state attorneys general, has established a pattern of illegitimate episodes of partisan policy interference with the federal government. What the constitution does not empower state governments to do directly under constitutional authority can hardly gain legitimacy by turning the federal judiciary into a cat's paw to perform tasks outside proper judicial bounds.
Legitimate constitutional ends are for Congress to choose (note, "choose," from among enumerated powers, not create out of whole cloth), by its own findings of necessity. There is not legitimacy for courts to thwart that constitutional separation of powers by pretextually awarding to states powers of interference the constitution did not confer upon them.
The present case regarding funding for the CFPB could not be more clearly outside of any state's authority to review. At its first opportunity, Congress should correct that kind of judicial malpractice by invoking its own constitutionally prescribed authority to regulate the judicial branch. In so doing, the laws required should be broadly enough drafted to preclude future like instances of state-via-court policy interference with legitimate congressional authority.
There can be no general argument that attorneys general of a minority of states, acting through a single judicial circuit, can somehow legitimately thwart action by a branch of the federal government which was elected nationally. State governments enjoy powers, not rights. No matter how much right-wing ideology may insist otherwise, the courts have no anti-majoritarian role to play on behalf of state governance of the nation.
In news that shocks turgid leftists, federal courts actually have the power to address injuries cause by the federal government, even when the victim is another sovereign.
It says a lot that Lathrop wants to immunize two branches of the federal government from any real accountability.
There are many instances where states sued Republican administrations to get them to move to the left. Masssachussetts v EPA is a notable example. Were these cases also illegitimate?
ReaderY — You conflate partisan valence with substantive legal questions. Massachusetts v EPA had both. Only the substantive legal questions justified the Court's intervention.
Tracking partisan valence case-by-case may over time expose a need for reform of an overly-partisan court. But it does not empower partisan-motivated pretexts used to retaliate for perceived counter-partisan victories won on the legal merits. The Court did not hand Massachusetts its victory based on partisan reasoning.
The Trump administration saw an uptick in efforts by states to sue to curb federal conduct perceived as illegitimate. It’s understandable that some of the practices done then would be continued with the tables. What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
The Constitution itself, in Article III, explicitly recognizes states’ capacity to aue. The only questions then are standing and the merits.
The issue is not whether states have the right to sue. It's whether the decision is correct.
Plainly, it's not. Just more RW bullshit from a lawless, radical, court.
"More generally, the Fifth Circuit, in cahoots with right-wing state attorneys general, has established a pattern of illegitimate episodes of partisan policy interference with the federal government. "
Smells like a conspiracy theory to me.
Nico, to the extent that political parties are indeed conspiracies, inherently, it is unsurprising that describing what they do sounds like conspiracy theory.
I think "in cahoots" is the wrong phrase.
I think the 5th is a radical RW court and is open to whatever theories the AG's come up with.
It's not that they are actively conspiring with the AG's, but that both groups are committed members of the same political movement.
On the merits, the Constitution (Article I, Section 8) explicitly says that approproations for Armies cannot be for more than two years. If it was inherent in the structure of the Constitution that all appropriations have to be annual, why would the Framers have thought it necessary to say this?
Like “penumbra and emanation” arguments, structural arguments sound weighty and wonky. But when they contradict the constitution’s explicit text, their weighty- and wonky-sounding veneer can only go so far.
"If it was inherent in the structure of the Constitution that all appropriations have to be annual, why would the Framers have thought it necessary to say this?"
To allow longer appropriations for the army while still time limiting them?
One could make a similar structural argument that allowing popular elections for the House of Representatives was a minor and grudging exception to a Constitution whose structure otherwise clearly eschewed and opposed democratic forms of government.
The Framers wanted time-limited appropriations for the military because they didn’t want the Executive to have a blank check. They thought time limits needed because of the unique power controlling a standing army gives the Executive. See e.g. Federalist 26. They didn’t otherwise provide for them. The exception proves the rule.
One could make a similar structural argument that allowing popular elections for the House of Representatives was a minor and grudging exception to a Constitution whose structure otherwise clearly eschewed and opposed democratic forms of government.
Sure. One could do that. It would have nothing to do with history, but one could do it.
What you seem to be missing is that the funding mechanism subverts the idea that an appropriation is an affirmative act--thus requiring consent of the then-Congress--the CFPB legislation put the appropriations on auto-pilot, thus requiring Congress to undo what was done before.
That seems like it's a distraction from the more serious flaws in the CFPB's funding arrangement. The law that established the CFPB purports to give the single head of an executive agency the authority to appropriate money from another entity without meaningful appropriations oversight by Congress. For example, the Federal Reserve itself is accountable to Congress through the GAO on how it spends money; the CFPB lacks such supervision.
The funding mechanism may be unwise, but that doesn't make it unconstitutional.
Interesting. Does this mean that Agencies who seize funds through asset forfeiture to fund their operations are breaking the law? Congress has no oversight on how those funds are spent. Shouldn't they go into the General Fund?
This is so stupid. The learned profs don't seem to understand that because the Framers built in resistance to changes in the law--bicameralism, presentment etc., the idea that "Congress can change it, so we don't worry about Appropriations" is just nonsense.
"Each year, the Bureau simply requests an amount
“determined by the Director to be reasonably necessary to carry out the”
agency’s functions. Id. § 5497(a)(1). The Federal Reserve must then
transfer that amount so long as it does not exceed 12% of the Federal
Reserve’s “total operating expenses.” [5th Circuit op.]
This is not an "appropriation", its an "authorization" because it does not designate a specific sum. The Director is making the "appropriation" so its a violation of the Appropriation Clause.
Right. We are appropriating . . . however much money our bureaucrats later decide to grab.
“It likewise makes no difference whether the funds in question came from the "treasury" in some technical accounting sense. As long as the funds were under government control, and thus part of the public treasury in a more abstract sense, they can be spent only if Congress has approved doing so by statute.”
On what basis does Prof. Price make the assertion that the word “treasury” is a mere technicality of accounting?
Furthermore, this leads into the debate about the nature of the Federal Reserve itself. To assert money from the Federal Reserve is money under “government control” is to operate under the belief that the Fed is strictly a body of the government. If anything, the best one can say is the Fed is a public-private corporate entity that operates totally independent of government oversight. See for example the failed attempts by Congress to audit the Fed as proof of this assertion.
This argument fails on the basis that the Federal Reserve is the government.
“The Federal Reserve is not funded by congressional appropriations.” (source: https://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/structure-federal-reserve-banks.htm)
If that is the case, then the Federal Reserve is unconstitutional.
Bingo..End the Fed. It is an illegal, immoral and bad at economics institution. Kill the bank as Andy Jackson once said.
Exactly!!
See for example the failed attempts by Congress to audit the Fed as proof of this assertion.
What are you talking about?
Note, among other items:
The financial statements of the Reserve Banks are also audited annually by an independent outside auditor.
"The Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2015 (S. 2232), which was also known as the “Audit the Fed” bill, was defeated in the Senate on Jan. 12 after failing to obtain the 60 votes needed to invoke cloture, the final vote had been 53-44."
https://www.doddfrankupdate.com/DFU/ArticlesDFU/Audit-the-Fed-fails-but-backed-by-presidential-can-65903.aspx
In addition to the legal questions, there is the question of the ability of the Fed to provide funding to the CFPB
Historically, the Fed earns money from the assets on its balance sheet. It pays its expenses and remits the remainder to the Treasury. The remittance peaked at $190B in 2019.
Currently the Fed has negative earnings of $5B per month. This is because its assets have a low yield and it is paying relatively high interest to banks (3%) as interest on reserves.
The Fed covers this monthly deficit by creating a new “deferred asset” on its balance sheet. This is essentially an IOU to the Treasury to be paid when the Fed’s earnings again turn positive.
So if the Fed has negative earnings, where does the money come from to fund the CFPB?
The Fed could simply create the $600M (CFPB 2021 budget) and offset that by creating a “deferred asset”. But would that be an illegal appropriation?
These are good questions to ask Chairman Powell at the next Humphrey-Hawkins testimony.
This could get messy
My three favorite comments in this thread come from ReaderY ("allowing popular elections for the House of Representatives was a minor and grudging exception to a Constitution whose structure otherwise clearly eschewed and opposed democratic forms of government."), Michael P ("The law that established the CFPB purports to give the single head of an executive agency the authority to appropriate money from another entity without meaningful appropriations oversight by Congress."), and Ken from Ohio ("So if the Fed has negative earnings, where does the money come from to fund the CFPB? The Fed could simply create the $600M (CFPB 2021 budget) and offset that by creating a “deferred asset”. But would that be an illegal appropriation?").
The CFPB statute purports to impose a perpetual tax on a specific Congressionally-chartered corporation. In the statute, change "Federal Reserve Bank" to, say, "Boy Scouts of America" or "Little League Baseball" or "Disabled American Veterans" (or perhaps the "First Bank of the United States", for giggles) to highlight the potential difficulties.
Only statist bootlickers think Congress should be allowed to delegate its powers to "independent" Executive agencies and insulate them from virtually any accountability.
Organizations like the CPFB and every other "independent" agency with lawmaking powers should be struck down and every Federal tyrant working there kicked to the curb.
Reminded me of this book I read to my kids the other day.
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1943521026/reasonmagazinea-20/
If you have young kids I would recommend checking out the Tuttle Twins.