guardian.co.uk,
Dominic Rushe in New York, Tuesday 12 June 2012
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| Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University, has defended Jamie Dimon, with whom he serves at the New York Fed. Photograph: Rick Bowmer/AP |
Columbia
University is facing accusations of a conflict of interest relating to the role
of its president in cheerleading for the boss of JP Morgan Chase, one of
Columbia's most generous financial backers.
Lee
Bollinger, who has been president of Columbia since 2002, has been a vocal
supporter of Jamie Dimon despite mounting criticism of the JP Morgan chief
executive since the revelation of a $2bn trading loss at the bank's London
office.
But critics
say Bollinger has put Columbia, one of the most prestigious academic
institutions in the United States, in an awkward position because of the
financial support it receives from JP Morgan.
In the wake
of the trading scandal, there have been calls for Dimon to step down from his
role on the board of the New York Federal Reserve, one of the institutions with
regulatory oversight of Wall Street banks.
On Monday,
Bollinger said those making such calls were "foolish". His
intervention was significant because Bollinger is chairman of the New York
Fed's board of directors: he became the first board member to speak in defence
of Dimon.
Dimon's
role on the board of the regulator is likely to be questioned on Wednesday by a
Senate banking committee that has summoned Dimon to talk about the losses. The
NY Fed is charged with supervising JP Morgan Chase and other Wall Street banks,
among other tasks.
Critics
including Democratic senators, former IMF economist Simon Johnson, and Occupy
Wall Street protesters have called for Dimon's removal, claiming a conflict of
interest. Senator Bernie Sanders recently said having Dimon on the NY Fed board
was like having "the fox guarding the hen house."
But in an interview with the Wall Street Journal Bollinger said: "I do not think he
should step down." Bollinger said critics had a false understanding of how
the Fed works. "Jamie, myself [and] the other members of the board do not
get involved in oversight of the supervisory function of the New York
Fed," Bollinger said.
Columbia
declined requests for comment from the Guardian on the issue of the potential
conflict of interest or the size of its ties with the bank. But the
university's website shows that JP Morgan is a generous, long-term donor to the
university. Columbia is in the midst of a campaign that aims to raise $5bn by 2013 to expand its campus, hire more staff and offer financial aid to poorer students.
R Glenn Hubbard, dean of Columbia's graduate business school, has targeted JP
Morgan and other banks as major donors.
The bank
offers a matching gift program to employees, effectively doubling the size of
any gift its employees give to the university. It gives money across the
university, for example endowing over $25,000 to Columbia's school of social work, sponsoring a summer research program for science teachers. The bank's
ties go back to at least 1888 when JP Morgan, the bank's founder, gave a
$100,000 to help establish its Morningside Heights campus.
Akshat
Tewary, one of the founders of Occupy the SEC, said there was "clearly a
conflict of interest" in Bollinger's defence of Dimon. "Anyone who is
opining on that issue should be independent, and shouldn't have a personal
stake," he said.
Tewary said
the constitution of the NY Fed means that bankers must sit on its board and
while he would like to see that change, "being on the board itself isn't
the issue."
He said
Dimon had been a very vocal critic of financial regulation. "That is
something that not all bankers do. And not all bankers have the same influence
over policy as Jamie Dimon has. JP Morgan has spent millions of dollars
lobbying trying to water down financial reforms."
As a NY Fed
board member, Dimon is supposed to have limited influence on regulation, said
Tewary. "Clearly, Dimon has taken a very active role in pushing for a
certain type of regulation," he said. "If he was quietly sitting on
the board, that would be a different matter."
Melanie
Sloan, executive director of lobby group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics
in Washington, said: "You don't want to bite the hand that feeds you.
Every university is protective of its donors. It's not exactly likely you would
expect him to say anything critical of Jamie Dimon but it might have been
smarter to stay quiet."
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