Trump Will Announce New Fed Chair Next Week: It Won't Matter
Round robin speculation on the next Fed chair shifted for the third time this past week. In April, Gary Cohn had the inside track. Then speculation shifted to John Taylor. Now the speculation is on Fed governor Jerome Powell.
President Donald Trump said Friday he would announce his choice for the next leader of the U.S. central bank “sometime next week,” and said he has “somebody very specific in mind,” as reported by the Wall Street Journal.
We know the pick will be fantastic because everything Trump does is fantastic.
“It will be a person who hopefully will do a fantastic job,” Mr. Trump said in a video posted to Instagram on Friday, adding, “I think everybody will be very impressed.”
Count me among the unimpressed, no matter who Trump chooses.
Conservative Hounds Howling
The speculation shift from Taylor to Powell has the conservatives hounds howling that Powell did not act to prevent the financial crisis and that he will not hike fast enough.
“I’m particularly concerned about how we effectively unwind this balance sheet, and John Taylor more than any other candidate is well positioned to do that,” said U.S. Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R., Texas), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. “Jerome Powell, I don’t know, but I have my concerns.”
Mr. Taylor, meanwhile, is facing questions about whether he would follow his own mathematical formula for setting interest rates—dubbed the Taylor Rule—if he becomes chairman. Under the rule , short-term interest rates would be around 3.5% now, compared with the Fed benchmark federal-funds rate’s current range between 1% and 1.25%, according to Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at J.P. Morgan.
Mr. Taylor’s supporters have said he wouldn’t be so rigid as his arguments might suggest, with some saying he would be less likely than Mr. Powell to raise interest rates to curb inflation that could stem from GOP tax cuts.
Reason to be Unimpressed
The idea that one can set interest rates via mathematical formula is ludicrous. But let's assume otherwise. If so, we should fire the whole lot of Fed governors and follow the rule.
The rule cannot possibly work because among other things inflation cannot be properly measured. Even if inflation could be measured, actual home prices are not in the formula.
Finally, the idea that a group of people with a proven track record of blowing asset bubbles will do anything other than the same thing, is silly in and of itself.
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It is sad. Whoever takes who normalizes rates will be blamed for crashing the economy when the blame like with Greenspan, goes to the one who put us where we are today. Even if they choose not to normalize rates, when a downturn comes if we are near zirp, the downturn will be very bad because the Federal Reserve will not have their usual weapon against severe downturns (the ability to lower rates substantially). When you mess with capitalism, the business cycle, and free market signalling, there is hell to pay. We should have learned that in school. It's sad the Federal reserve can't seem to get it into their head that Americans want to be responsible for their lives, not dependent on a socialist planned economy run by them. If you want to see where that leads and live in it then just go look at North Korea.