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Trump’s Shadow Fed Pick Torches Powell: ’Repeating 1970s-Style Policy Blunders’

Trump’s Shadow Fed Pick Torches Powell: ’Repeating 1970s-Style Policy Blunders’

Published:
2025-04-26 04:24:22
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Trump’s Fed chair pick-in-waiting slams Powell for “systematic errors”

Jerome Powell’s inflation fight draws fire from Trump’s rumored Fed chair contender—accused of ’amateur-hour monetary policy’ as rate cuts lag.

Behind the curtain: Political jockeying heats up while markets yawn—another day, another central banking drama that changes nothing for your shrinking paycheck.

Warsh links Powell’s policies to reckless government spending

Warsh slammed the Fed’s $7 trillion balance sheet, saying it made it easier for politicians to keep throwing money around without thinking about the price.

Warsh said, “Fiscal policymakers — that is, elected members of Congress — found it considerably easier appropriating money knowing that government’s financing costs would be subsidised by the central bank,” referring to the massive Treasury bond-buying spree under quantitative easing.

The attack landed right in the middle of a serious fight between Trump and Powell. Just last week, Trump said he couldn’t wait for Powell’s “termination” as Fed chair. But later, Trump eased up, telling reporters he didn’t actually plan to fire him — which helped settle nerves across global markets that were already shaky.

Warsh, who was once on Trump’s shortlist for Treasury secretary, used the Washington stage to drop his first public comments on monetary policy in months. Warsh isn’t a new critic either. He sat at the Fed when quantitative easing first started and has kept close tabs on what he sees as failures ever since.

He didn’t stop at inflation and government spending. Warsh dragged the Fed’s climate change and social inclusion campaigns into the spotlight. He pointed out how the Fed used to be part of the Network for Greening the Financial System. Warsh admitted that the Fed had finally “changed its tune” by quitting the group in January, but didn’t suggest that it made up for anything else.

Powell’s days are still numbered even if Trump cools down. His term ends in May 2026. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier this month that the White House will start hunting for a replacement this fall. Warsh is one of the frontrunners alongside Kevin Hassett, who currently leads the National Economic Council.

The real stakes are about control. Trump’s anger at Powell for not slashing rates, plus hints from the White House that they might have the authority to fire the Fed boss, have ripped open fears about the central bank’s independence. That fear helped crush equities and slammed the dollar in trading.

Even though Warsh said he fully supports the Fed’s “operational independence” when it comes to setting interest rates, he was clear that doesn’t mean central bankers get a free pass. “When the monetary outcomes are poor, the Fed should be subjected to serious questioning,” Warsh said.

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