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Predictably, Trump immediately proved this point again on Thursday. In a post on Truth Social, he said the Fed should have cut interest rates already and “Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!”
Let’s start with Powell’s defence of Fed independence. “Our independence is a matter of law,” Powell said at the economic club of Chicago, clearly rebutting a president who has routinely tried to bully the central bank on social media and has already been testing the independence of other agencies. Supreme Court chief justice John Roberts has allowed Trump to go ahead with the firing of top officials at other agencies – a case that some see as teeing up a more market-sensitive battle over whether Trump can fire or demote Powell. He said he didn’t think that case would apply to the Fed and that he’d never bow to outside forces.
“We’re never going to be influenced by any political pressure,” Powell said. “People can say whatever they want, that’s fine. That’s not a problem. But we will do what we do strictly without consideration of political or any other extraneous factors.”
In his conversation with former Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan, Powell kept his cool and refrained from calling out Trump by name. But his bluntness was an unmistakable departure for the central banker who has essentially avoided commenting on White House policy and turned the other cheek when attacked by Trump in public. His remarks come at a time when concerns about the Fed’s independence are starting to spill over subtly into the market discourse. They also come as Trump’s trade policies threaten to put the central bank in an impossible position – essentially trying to simultaneously contain risks to its stable prices and labour market mandates.
Powell didn’t mince words about the ever-changing tariff plans, which could yet push US duties on imports to the highest in a century – depending on which day of the week you decide to run the numbers. Businesses and investors could pull back if clarity about the future isn’t restored, he said. “If the United States were to become a jurisdiction where risks are just structurally higher going forward, that would make us less attractive as a jurisdiction,” he said. “We don’t know that at this point, but I think that would be the effect.” At another point, he worried that cuts to scientific research may have “implications for economic growth, for productivity, for health, for all kinds of things.”He was clear about the bind that tariffs put the Fed in. “The effects of [the policy] are likely to move us away from our goals,” he said. “Unemployment is likely to go up as the economy slows in all likelihood, and inflation is likely to go up as tariffs find their way and some part of those tariffs come to be paid by the public. So that’s the strong likelihood.”
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/news/jerome-powell-shows-why-fed-reserves-independence-matters-in-a-turbulent-us/articleshow/120421968.cms