Warsh has big plans for the Fed
With critiques spanning everything from how the Fed monitors inflation to its willingness to bail out markets to its communications strategy, Warsh's ideas would involve not just technical reform to the central bank's economic analyses, but sensitive shifts in how it speaks to financial markets and the public more broadly — issues previously hashed over and considered hard to meddle with quickly.
The 56-year-old lawyer and financier could make fast changes in tone and, at his discretion, cut back on things like press conferences, a return to the more restrained, opaque form of central banking that existed before the 2007-2009 recession and financial crisis triggered a bias toward more public explanation and "forward guidance" for markets about where policy was heading.
Warsh is not a fan of that approach, but he also "doesn't want to disrupt the markets. There are so many things that he wants to do and it is just going to take time to work through that," said
President
Powell's eight-year tenure as Fed chief ends on Friday, but he has decided to keep his seat on the central bank's
Warsh's immediate challenge will be to navigate that same conflict between Trump's rate-cut demands and economic data that leaves little room for them. The
When Warsh chairs his first policy meeting in June, in fact, it may be a victory for him if he keeps colleagues on the rate-setting
Powell had about six months after Trump promoted him to the Fed chief job in 2018 before the president began berating him, and at this point investors do not expect rate cuts before 2028.
Warsh, in speeches, interviews and public hearings over the past year, has provided various arguments for why interest rates might still fall despite the current data: Productivity gains flowing from artificial intelligence may make everything cheaper; shrinking the Fed's longer-dated bond holdings might justify lower short-term rates; and alternate and more accurate measures of inflation actually show prices rising more slowly than those currently emphasized by the Fed.
While he may have reasonable arguments about any of those items, buttressing them with compelling research and convincing fellow policymakers will take time, if it's possible at all.
Former Fed staff and officials said the most likely first steps would be for Warsh to commission a range of internal reviews, followed by debates at the
Warsh has also indicated he would like to change some longstanding communication tools like the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections, which includes the "dot plot" chart of rate projections. There's broad dissatisfaction about aspects of the SEP, for example, making that a possible area for faster reform.
But both the SEPs issued by the central bank and the press conferences held by the Fed chief have become powerful tools for shaping public expectations. In a recent
Press conferences in particular are "an international standard" for explaining policy decisions and the economic outlook, said former St. Louis Fed President
On other issues, former Fed officials and staff say Warsh's proposals would need to be vetted like any other.



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