Christina Parajon Skinner
91 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 164
Contemporary presidents possess a significant array of powers to intervene in the economy unilaterally, via executive order or the Treasury Department’s tools. But the Constitution does not vest the Executive Branch with monetary or fiscal power. Rather, the President has accumulated vast monetary power gradually, over time, through successive delegations from Congress. This Article traces the development of a constitutional oxymoron—the “Monetary Executive”—through the lens of statutory delegations. Ultimately, the Article urges that the consequence of this migration of monetary power from Congress to the Executive will be corrosive to our democratic institutions and contribute to inflation—undermining the central bank’s independence, eroding fiscal discipline, and perpetuating policy error.