President Trump and his team are studying whether the president of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, is an option, according to the director of the National Council of the Economic Council, Kevin Hassett.
Thought designated by the President and approved by the Congress, the president of the Federal Reserve is an independent role. Powell was nominated to lead the Fed by Trump in 2017 and was renominated to fulfill another 4 -year mandate by President Joe Biden in November 2021. Powell’s mandate as president of the Fed ends on May 15, 2026.
“The president and his team will continue studying that matter,” said Hassett when a press group was asked on Friday if he probably eliminated Powell from his post.
Mr. Trump on Thursday He pointed Powell In a publication on social networks, writing that Fed should reduce interest rates and add that its “termination cannot be quick enough.”
In a speech pronounced on Wednesday, Powell warned That the Trump administration’s commercial war could result in a combination of greater inflation and slower growth. This economic mixture describes the stagflation, a combination of “stagnation” and “inflation” that characterizes periods when economic growth fails while price increases accelerate.
On Wednesday, Powell also reiterated that the Central Bank plans to keep stable interest rates for now, also causing Mr. Trump.
“It’s too late. Always too late. A little slow and I’m not happy with him. I let him know and, if I want his departure, he will be out of there very fast, believe me,” Trump said Thursday at the White House.
Can Mr. Trump shoot Powell?
A historical ruling of the Supreme Court in 1935 affirmed the authority of the Congress to create independent federal agencies whose members of the Board could only be forced before their terms expired “for cause.”
After Trump was chosen in November, Powell said he I would not drop If the president asks, which he has previously criticized his performance. Powell has also pointed out that presidents cannot legally or degrade the president of the FED.
But Trump this week fired two Democrats to the Board of another financial regulator, the National Credit Union Administration, Reuters reported Wednesday. And in March, the White House dismissed two Democratic members of the Federal Commerce Commission, which has historically operated as an independent and bipartisan commission.
Even if Trump could eliminate Powell, it is not clear that doing so would change the direction of the decisions of the Central Bank on interest rates. These calls are made by the Federal Open Market Committee, or a group of 12 FOM-A FOMC members, responsible for establishing monetary policies, and not at Powell’s discretion.
Who would replace Powell?
The Governor of the Fed, Kevin Warssh, 55, is a former Morgan Stanley executive who was nominated for the Board of Governors of the Fed by President George W. Bush.
Trump is considering selecting Warssh as a Powell replacement, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. However, Warsh has advised Mr. Trump to allow Powell to remain until the end of his mandate, the publication added.
Widely respected, Warssh is a consultant who is even more aggressive, or is willing to allow interest rates to remain high to control inflation, which Powell, according to a January blog post by Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff.