Federal Reserve holding conferences at luxury resorts -- is that wrong?


Remember when the Federal Reserve and general public were blasting companies like AIG for going on retreats and holding conferences at luxury resorts? Well, on October 29, it was reported that the Fed has held its conferences at "exotic high-prices locales."

The Washington Post reported on October 28, that the San Francisco Fed hosted a conference at the "spectacular Bacara Resort and Spa" in Santa Barbara, where it paid $300 a night for the rooms -- an off-season price. Perhaps we should be praising the frugal nature of the Fed, as suites can run $2,000 during the peak season. Ben Bernanke attended this conference, which has drawn the ire of some. This conference was followed by a conference held by the Boston Fed at an Inn that charges up to $320 a night for regular rooms and nearly two grand a night for suites.

Is this a major misstep? Honestly, no. However, it looks a bit hypocritical for the Fed and government to blast companies that received TARP money for their lavish spending and go to luxury resorts themselves. Of course, the Fed did not use taxpayer money for the conferences, so some may argue no harm, no foul. My argument is that the appearance of impropriety could cause some to assume that there really was something amiss.

The good thing is that attendees actually pay their own way, and more often than not the organizers recover all of the event's costs. Knee-jerk reactions to this news could spark a bit of outrage, when outrage isn't really needed.

Would it have been better to have held these conferences at the Motel 6 in Santa Barbara rather than a luxury resort? Perhaps -- it definitely would have cost the attendees less, but I'm assuming that the San Francisco and Boston Feds felt the lavish surroundings were needed.

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