United States Congressional Joint Economic Committee

The Joint Economic Committee (JEC) is one of four standing joint committees of the U.S. Congress. The committee was established as a part of the Employment Act of 1946, which deemed the committee responsible for reporting the current economic condition of the United States and for making suggestions for improvement to the economy. The JEC is currently chaired by Senator Martin Heinrich of New Mexico.

Joint Economic Committee
Standing committee
Active

United States Congress
118th Congress
History
Formed1946
Leadership
ChairMartin Heinrich (D)
Since April 26, 2023
Vice chairDavid Schweikert (R)
Since April 26, 2023
Structure
Seats20
Political partiesMajority (12)
  •   Democratic (6)
  •   Republican (6)
Minority (8)
Website
jec.senate.gov

    Jurisdiction

    • Study the implications of the Economic Report of the President
    • Seek ways to coordinate programs involved in the Report
    • File an annual report relating to its study of these implications and programs with the Senate, the House of Representatives, and all Congressional committees having legislative duties relating to the Report
    • Make other reports and recommendations to the Senate and the House as the committee members see fit
    • Hold hearings on the report and other economic matters as the committee members see fit.[1]

    Members, 118th Congress

    Majority Minority
    Senate members
    House members

    Source[2]

    Historical committee rosters

    117th Congress

    Majority Minority
    Senate members
    House members

    Source[3]

    116th Congress

    Majority Minority
    Senate members
    House members

    Source[4][5]

    115th Congress

    Majority Minority
    Senate members
    House members

    Source[6][7]

    References


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