It’s also probably a prerequisite for some of the policies he has espoused, most notably his plan for a universal tariff, a complete ban on imports of essential goods from China and mass deportations of immigrants. He also wants another round of tax cuts for companies and the wealthy.
Tariffs are essentially a tax on domestic consumers, who pay for them via higher prices. Tax cuts for the wealthy translate to higher levels of spending. Deporting the immigrants who provide low-cost labour would increase companies’ employment costs.
Even an attempt to shake up or coerce the Fed into pursuing Trump’s preferred low-rate, loose money policies would unsettle financial markets.
Those policies would be inflationary. The current Fed would inevitably have to respond with higher interest rates and tighter monetary policies. There would be a collision between the White House and the central bank – unless the White House had gained real influence over the bank.
The Fed’s distance from politicians is a matter of law and structure. Its governors are appointed for 14-year terms (more than three US political cycles) and, while the president appoints the chair when a vacancy arrises, it is the governors and the other members of the Open Market Committee that decide who chairs the body that actually makes monetary policy decisions. Even if removed as Fed chair, Powell can remain a governor until 2028.
Nevertheless, attempts by the White House to direct the central bank aren’t unprecedented.
Arthur Burns was a chair of the Fed in the 1970s when Richard Nixon, who had appointed him, pressured him to adopt an expansionary monetary policy stance even though the inflation rate was relatively high.
Whether it was that pressure, or concern about instability within the US financial system, or his own Keynesian convictions, he did what Nixon wanted.
Inflation took off, and it took Paul Volker, a federal funds rate that reached 20 per cent and a nasty recession to bring raging inflation – it peaked at almost 15 per cent in 1980 – under control.
Apart from that episode during Burns’ chairmanship, the Fed has positioned itself as being studiously apolitical.
It has both raised and lowered interest rates in the lead-up to US elections when the economic data dictated, whether that suited the incumbent administration or not.
The implications of Trump’s agenda, if he were to regain the presidency, and whether and how the Fed might be forced to respond to it, matter beyond America’s borders. The US economy, US interest rates, US financial markets and the US dollar in particular have significant influence on economic settings and policies elsewhere.
There are, as Trump discovered in his last term, significant legal and institutional obstacles to any White House attempt to direct the Fed. He can, for instance, only fire Powell for “cause,” or for “inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office”. A difference of monetary policy opinions doesn’t quite qualify.
Nevertheless, even an attempt to shake up or coerce the Fed into pursuing Trump’s preferred low-rate, loose money policies would unsettle financial markets.
In recent decades, there has been a developed world consensus that the key objective of a central bank is to maintain price stability, with a secondary objective for some central banks of maximising employment.
That involves setting policies that target long-term goals – well beyond the political cycles – and it produces predictable responses to changes in economic conditions.
It is obvious to everyone, for instance, that the Fed would like to cut US interest rates this year as economic growth is slowing, but it won’t do so until the inflation rate is clearly and sustainably tracking towards its target of 2 per cent. A rate cut might help Joe Biden while maintaining, or even raising, rates would boost Trump, but that’s not a factor in its decision-making.
If the Fed, or any other central bank, isn’t seen to be independent and focused on clear policy goals, it would lose control of inflation expectations and inflation outcomes. Financial markets, driven by the lack of policy certainties, would become more volatile.
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For the US, with its debt and deficits steadily heading towards levels that could only be sustained by the dollar’s primacy and the haven status of its Treasury bond market, any question mark over the Fed’s independence would lead to, at best, higher market interest rates and, at worst, a dearth of foreign investment in Treasury bonds that would force rates even higher and/or precipitate a debt crisis.
Trump’s instincts might be to sack Powell, if he can, and replace him with someone who can help bring the Fed into line with his own economic preferences, but the practical obstacles and the potential damage if Powell and his fellow governors resisted might deter him.
He does have some advisers and big donors who could be expected to see the risks of an assault on the Fed’s independence, no matter how frustrating that independence might be to Trump’s authoritarian instincts.