Trump's attacks on the Fed are worse than you think
ANOTHER VIEW
The
For months, Trump has demanded that the Fed lower interest rates, with no success. Now, the administration's attacks on Chair
If Trump fires Powell - an unlikely outcome - immediate disaster would result: Investors would lose confidence in the Fed's ability to make politically tough but economically necessary decisions.
Investors would abandon
But Trump risks politicizing the Fed even if he lets Powell stay through the end of his term as chair in May. He has signaled that Powell's successor must be willing to cut rates to get the job, which means that markets will perceive any nominee - whether
That would bring bad economic consequences, even in the best-case scenario.
Suppose the new chair, unwilling to totally compromise his legacy, refuses to sharply cut rates like Trump wants. Instead, he delivers just a quarter-point cut - a concession to political pressure, perhaps, but a small one.
The market reaction would still be swift.
Investors would immediately assume that the cut was a product of political pressure, not economic data, and start to worry that the Fed would not be tough enough to fight inflation if it ticked up again. Investors might anticipate a higher steady state of inflation - at 3 or 4 percent, for example, rather than the Fed's 2 percent target.
Recent data gives reason to worry. In June, consumer prices rose 2.7 percent on an annual basis, up from 2.4 percent in May, indicating that Trump's tariffs are starting to trickle throughout the economy.
Beliefs about future prices - known as inflation "expectations" - can strongly influence actual prices. If people believe prices will increase, they will choose to spend rather than save, so their money doesn't lose value sitting in the bank.
Businesses, budgeting for the future, might preemptively raise prices or agree to higher wage contracts.
More spending puts upward pressure on prices, which in turn increases inflation expectations, initiating a dangerous cycle.
And the Fed - now more responsive to Trump's pressure - might be unwilling to raise interest rates aggressively enough to stop it.
Plus, even if Trump gets exactly what he wants - a Fed chair willing to vote for rate cuts on command - a short-term economic boost might not materialize.
A more dogmatic Fed chair is more likely to lose the confidence of the other 11 members on the
Rate cuts also help growth only if borrowing increases. But household consumption and business investment aren't affected by the interest rate that the Fed sets directly. Rather, most big loans - mortgages, auto loans and so on - are tied to longer-term
(Rather than park funds at the Fed to earn a now-lower rate, banks would rather lend to their customers. That reduces the cost of credit, pushing rates down.)
But if investors believe the Fed is lowering rates for political reasons, they might become more concerned about inflation and demand higher yields on long-term bonds to make up for the chance of future inflation eating into their returns.
That's what happened in
Politicians aren't good at monetary policy. They face a powerful temptation to goose the economy in the short term, even at the cost of future growth. (Just look at how Trump's budget bill will explode the national debt.) That's why independent central banks exist: to take the long view and make decisions based on economic fundamentals rather than the political calendar.
Trump threatens to destroy that independence. If the next chair pledges allegiance to Trump's economic preferences, future presidents might demand the same loyalty of their appointees, too. A permanent loss of
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