Kevin Warsh was sworn in as the new Federal Reserve Chairman at an interesting time for the United States. While President Donald Trump has publicly stated he wants an independent Fed Board Chairman, he has also declared his desire for lower interest rates as determined by the Fed.
“I want Kevin to be Independent.”
The prior Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, publicly clashed with the President, sticking to his guns as he sought to achieve the Fed’s dual mandate: inflation at 2% and full employment. All of this driven by the data at hand. Trump pressured Powell through legal intimidation and name-calling, such as “Too Late,” Powell.
Geopolitical events and public policy have at times run counter to the Fed’s mandate, making Powell’s job more difficult. At the same time, Powell blew it during the Biden Administration, unfortunately parroting the narrative that inflation was “transitory” when it obviously was not. Much of the inflation was due to the Biden administration’s excessive and unnecessary spending programs, which fueled the economy when no stimulus was needed. It is a truism that Biden’s economic agenda was an abject failure.
While Warsh, in his swearing-in speech, said he would escape static frameworks and models, returning to an institution he cherishes, his job will be a heavy lift. As interest rates trend higher, with some in the punditry calling for rate increases, Warsh will be hard-pressed to pursue a rate cut as the economy struggles to absorb high oil prices and tariff-burdened costs. Perhaps forthcoming events will make his job easier.
Meanwhile, markets and many economists view Warsh as a highly regarded, experienced hand well-suited to guide monetary policy. In the end, markets are truly the culprit in interest rate direction, but Warsh will put all the Fed’s tools to work to hopefully accomplish its stated policy goals and, if he is lucky, please the President.