http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-11-17/what-wall-street-s-return-to-central-banking-may-mean-for-policy
Wall Street is again leading to the corridors of central banks.
From
Minneapolis to Paris, investors and financiers are increasingly being
hired to help set monetary policy less than a decade since the banking
crisis roiled the world economy and chilled their public-sector
employment prospects.
Academic studies of historical voting
records at central banks suggest the new trend may mean an increased
bias towards tighter monetary policy.
Last
week’s appointment of Neel Kashkari to run the Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis as of January means a third of the Fed’s 12 district banks
will soon be run by officials with past ties to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
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