Key Points
- The RBA’s board has been split in two: a monetary policy board and a bank governance board.
- The overhaul comes after a review of the central bank’s operations that criticised the RBA’s decision-making.
- Professor Renee Fry-McKibbin and Marnie Baker will join the monetary policy board.
An economics professor and a regional bank chief have been announced as inaugural appointments to the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) new interest rate-setting board.
Australian National University professor Renee Fry-McKibbin and former Bendigo and Adelaide Bank chief executive Marnie Baker will make up RBA’s new monetary policy board alongside four continuing board members, Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced on Monday.
The RBA’s board was split in two, with its rate-setting powers to be assumed by the monetary policy board, while a separate board will be responsible for the bank’s governance, bringing it in line with international counterparts.
Chalmers said the appointments were part of the “biggest set of reforms undertaken at the Reserve Bank in more than three decades”.
“These changes show we can maintain a primary focus on inflation and the cost of living while we keep the reform wheels turning,” he said in a statement.
The overhaul of the RBA comes after an independent review of the central bank’s operations that criticised the current board’s decision-making and ability to hold the governor to account.
Other measures recommended by the review have already been implemented, including regular press conferences by the governor following rate decisions and reducing the number of board meetings per year from 11 to eight.
Fry-McKibbin formed part of the three-person review panel and has held leadership positions in the economic and social sciences community, both in Australia and the United Kingdom.
Baker, who was also formerly deputy chair of the Australian Banking Association, brings a deep understanding of Australia’s financial system and an important regional perspective to the role, the treasurer said.
The Coalition has called for the monetary policy board to be made up entirely of members on the current RBA board to avoid the possibility of the government stacking it with pro-Labor appointees.
After delays in getting the RBA reforms through parliament, Labor finally sealed a deal with the Greens after agreeing to maintain the government’s powers to override the bank’s rate decisions.
Former Business Council of Australia CEO Jennifer Westacott, former Telstra CEO David Thodey, business leader Danny Gilbert and banking executive Swati Dave are the new faces to join the governance board.
All members of the current reserve bank board will continue to serve on one of the two boards.