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Guidelines for Ensuring and Maximizing the Quality, Objectivity, Utility, and Integrity of Information Disseminated by the Federal Reserve Board
On February 22, 2002, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued guidelines requiring federal agencies to develop procedures for reviewing and substantiating the quality of their information before it is disseminated to the public.1 The guidelines also require that each agency create a mechanism by which affected persons may seek, and when appropriate obtain, correction of information that the agency disseminates and that does not comply with agency and OMB guidelines. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) provides information to a broad spectrum of individuals and organizations (such as, but not limited to, the Congress, other federal agencies, state and local governments, consumer and community groups, researchers and academics, financial institutions regulated by the Federal Reserve System, the media, and the general public), hereafter referred to as the public. This information covers an array of subjects with varying degrees of importance and impact on monetary and public policy and economic conditions. Following are examples of information disseminated by the Board covered by the guidelines:
Effective date. These quality guidelines become effective October 1, 2002, and cover information disseminated on or after that date, regardless of when the information was first disseminated. Some previously disseminated information continues to be used for decision making or is relied upon by the agency and the public as official, authoritative government data; this information is, in effect, constantly being re-disseminated and is thus subject to the guidelines. Previously released information that does not meet these criteria is considered archived information and thus is not subject to these guidelines. Definitions These definitions are taken directly from the OMB guidelines, published in the Federal Register on February 22, 2002 (67 FR 8451-8460).
The Board will continue to disseminate information that meets the agency's already highly rigorous internal review and approval process. The Board's current policies and procedures ensure that the Board, to the best of its ability, releases to the public information and data that are accurate and timely, appropriate for external consumption, uncompromised, and useful to the public. While covering a broad range of information, these guidelines focus mainly on the statistical and financial data and information that the Board disseminates.
Objectivity Data reported to the Board by regulated entities. The data reported to the Board and used by its staff for various products (for example, statistical releases, reports to the Congress, and consumer pamphlets) are subjected to a variety of microdata and macrodata edit checks specific to each information collection. After the data have been edited and before they are disseminated, they are thoroughly reviewed for accuracy and validity by content experts within the Board. During the review, the staff contacts data providers if there are questions about or inconsistencies in the data provided. As a result of this review, data may be revised. Some data, such as those pertaining to the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and the Community Reinvestment Act, may be revised as a result of questions raised during a compliance exam. To facilitate the receipt of the most accurate and consistent data, the Board includes definitions and examples as part of the instructions for most reporting forms. These help the data providers to better understand the exact information that should be included in certain items and calculations. Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) data. The FFIEC is a formal interagency body empowered to prescribe uniform principles, standards, and report forms for the federal examination of financial institutions by the Board, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) and to make recommendations to promote uniformity in the supervision of financial institutions. The member agencies require their regulated entities to report certain data to the agencies. Although information derived from these data are disseminated under the umbrella of the FFIEC, the agencies are ultimately responsible for their entities' disseminated information. Any complaints about such information should be directed to the appropriate agency. Information obtained from other agencies. The Board receives a variety of structural and financial data from other agencies, including the FDIC, OTS, NCUA, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Census Bureau. Data received from other agencies are reviewed for completeness of the microdata and the universe of reporters. In general, the data are associated with internal identifiers and are stored with data collected by the Federal Reserve System. Data are edited on microdata and macrodata levels at the collecting agency. For some series, Board staff performs some data-quality edits besides those performed at the other agency. Macrodata received from other agencies are edited and reviewed by the originating agencies. Data gathered through surveys. Survey respondents are selected with probability sampling techniques, including stratified random sampling. To construct estimates of the universe, data from respondents are assigned weights based on the inverse of the probability of selection, adjusted by regression on covariates, as appropriate. Some survey data are collected for the Board by commercial survey-research centers. The sampling techniques used by these centers may be slightly different. Information obtained from commenters on a rulemaking. On occasion, the Board has received information from commenters to a rulemaking published in the Federal Register and used the information obtained as the basis for revising the information collection as published. If the Board decided to rely on the submitted information, that information would be verified for accuracy and determined to meet the appropriate quality standards before use or dissemination. Information subject to peer review. Because its staff is relatively small, the Board currently uses its Resident Scholar Program in lieu of a formal peer review to analyze non-scientific staff papers and potential journal articles. This program brings noted professionals and experts to the Board to review staff papers and journal articles, interact with the staff, discuss measurement issues, and ultimately provide feedback to Board staff. The Federal Reserve believes that it does not currently produce or sponsor the distribution of influential scientific information (including highly influential scientific assessments) within the definitions promulgated by OMB. As a result, at this time the Federal Reserve has no agenda of forthcoming influential scientific disseminations to post on this website in accordance with OMB's Information Quality Bulletin for Peer Review, as found on OMB’s website. UtilityIn meeting the requirement of utility, pursuant to the PRA of 1995 and implementing regulations (44 USC ch. 5; 5 CFR 1320, appendix A.1), the Board reviews all collections of information obtained from the public at a minimum of every three years. This review requires the Board to allow for public comment on an information collection under review and justify the ongoing need for the data, including whether the analysis and output from the data are still of value to the Board and the public. If any information collection is outdated (for example, because of changes in the economy or in monetary policy), the Board either discontinues the use of the data or modifies the information requirements. To further help the public understand and use the Board's data products, its public web site (www.federalreserve.gov) has a Contact Us e-mail link by which the public can submit questions to content experts. The Board has editorial, design, and document standards for all information that is released to the public, in whatever medium. To facilitate the use of the information disseminated, standard formats for certain statistical and informational releases have been developed under the aegis of the Publications Committee.
Integrity
Influential Information, Reproducibility Standards, and Transparency Requirements As part of its information-dissemination guidelines, the Board provides the public with all statistical methods employed in the creation of any statistical or analytical financial data. The original and supporting data and the source of the data are available on request, so long as the data are not deemed confidential.2 For information that is confidential and therefore cannot be released to the public, the review procedures and edit verifications are available upon request. Otherwise, the methods and underlying data are available on the Board's public web site (with the document in question) or as an attachment to any influential document distributed in print. |
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Footnote 1. The OMB guidelines were issued pursuant to the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (Public Law 106-554, section 515).Return to text 2. Pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (5 USC 552).Return to text Home Accessibility | Contact Us Last update: December 14, 2007 |