Warsh: 'I will not be Trump's puppet'. The tycoon: disappointed if he doesn't cut rates
"The Fed is sticking to its forecasts longer than it should," has the man nominated by Donald Trump to lead the Federal Reserve, during a hearing before the Senate Banking Committee
"The independence of the Federal Reserve depends on the Fed itself". The US Central Bank's president-designate, Kevin Warsh, in his confirmation hearing before the US Senate Banking Committee, said he was "absolutely convinced of the Fed's independence". Warsh, at the outset, said he was "deeply grateful to President Trump for his confidence," reiterating the two pillars of monetary policy of full employment and price stability.
"Absolutely not, I will not be the puppet" of President Donald Trump, Warsh later said in response to a question from the Senate Banking Committee. Warsh added that "the president has never asked me to predetermine, commit, fix, decide on any interest rate decisions in any of our discussions, nor would I ever agree to do so." During the hearing, part of the process for confirmation of his nomination (which must take place in the Senate), Warsh added: "The President has never once asked me to commit to a specific interest rate decision, full stop, nor would I have agreed to do so if he had."
A "fatal mistake" to have let inflation rise
In his prepared statement for the Senate Banking Committee, Warsh said that the US central bank must be largely independent of political influences while remaining focused on its primary objectives. "The Fed must remain within its areas of responsibility. The Fed's independence is most at risk when it gets into fiscal and social policies in which it has neither authority nor expertise."
For the central bank leadership candidate, however, over the past few years, especially since Covid, 'the Fed has missed the mark and we are still dealing with the monetary policy mistakes made in 2021 and 2022: when you let inflation go up, it is harder to bring it down'. That was a 'fatal mistake' that is still being dealt with. For Donald Trump's appointee, 'fundamental reform is needed to make things right', through a 'regime change, a new inflation framework, a different use of Fed tools (rates and balance sheet) and new communication'.
The Federal Reserve has two tools, "monetary policy and credibility," Warsh emphasised again, remarking to the Senate Banking Committee that he believes "a reform-oriented Federal Reserve can make a real difference for the American people. That is why, in spite of pressure from President Donald Trump, 'I am committed to ensuring that the conduct of monetary policy remains strictly independent'. Warsh emphasised the importance of the independence of monetary policy and that policymakers 'must act in the best interests of the nation', rejecting arguments that political pressures influence monetary policymakers.

