Trump’s executive orders leave imprint on the Fed
The latest evidence is a decision by the Fed to halt hiring for permanent workers. The central bank has removed all job postings listed on its website aside from a single summer internship opportunity.
As a wholly independent organization that strives to operate apolitically, the Fed is not legally obligated to carry out decrees by the executive branch. But its decision to do so in certain cases reflects a strategy of sorts: Align with the executive branch when the Fed sees it is appropriate and lawful and, above all else, safeguard the independence of the central bank's monetary policy decisions.
"
That included whether the Fed remained committed to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the wake of Trump's executive order instructing federal workers to cease such activities.
"As has been our practice over many administrations, we are working to align our policies with the executive orders as appropriate and consistent with applicable law," Powell said.
The decision to adhere to the executive order on hiring mirrored a similar one made by
Even the Fed's practice of releasing an annual report since the mid-1990s reflects its choice to be in lock step with prevailing law when it sees fit.
Trump's actions targeting climate-related initiatives have also had an impact.
The
The event, which is still set to take place in May, plans to focus on the "impact of climate migration on economic output, household welfare and consumption" and "the effect of natural disasters and disaster mitigation on output and financial stability," among other topics.
The San Francisco Fed will now no longer host a virtual seminar on climate economics that it had regularly organized since 2020, a person familiar with the matter said. Upcoming sessions were recently postponed, and videos of earlier sessions have been removed from its website.
One economist who was a regular attendee expressed the sense that, for researchers, highlighting or putting a priority on climate-related work was no long considered a good idea.
"It was really not driven by politics. It was driven by the disconnect between the work of the NGFS and our mandate," he said, referring to the Fed's congressionally designated goals of maintaining a healthy labor market and achieving low, stable inflation.
The pullback extends to professional enrichment, as
Last fall, employees at 14 central banks and financial regulators around the world - including seven in
Some said they were not even supposed to look at the course materials, which include papers and classes on asset pricing, carbon disclosure and how climate change affects household finances.
"It's the first time in my life I've had a set of students who uniformly wanted to learn something and were told that they weren't allowed to do that," Tufano said.
Changes have also occurred on the regulatory side.
On other regulatory matters, however, the Fed has been more reluctant to comply with directives from the executive branch. Rule changes of that nature also require the seven-person
Kress cited the Fed's decision in 2021 to disregard an executive order by President
These decisions in the aggregate have generated unease but also understanding about how the Fed decides which orders to comply with and which to ignore and about its overarching interest in protecting its independence in setting interest rates.
"They'll give up almost everything to try to maintain independent monetary policy and not have to raise and lower interest rates to suit the president," said
This article originally appeared in



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