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Who Should Make US Monetary Policy?

Although these articles almost always focus on China trade and economics, former President Donald Trump’s comments on the subject of Federal Reserve (Fed) independence demand a perspective.
Some see Trump’s desire for a presidential role—formal or informal—as a break from past practice and an affront to the long-held belief that the Fed should have complete independence from political pressure.
Historically and practically speaking, however, presidents have always had tremendous influence on monetary policy. What Trump seeks, whether wise or not, would hardly be much of a practical departure from that past.
At a recent press conference, Trump, in response to a reporter’s question about how monetary policy is decided, said, “The president should at least have [a] say.” The former president then noted, “I feel that strongly.”
It also came out that Trump wants to give the president the power to fire the Fed chairman at will. Currently, that power comes only at the end of the Fed chairman’s four-year term.
Since then, Trump has softened this position, saying, “A president certainly can be talking about interest rates.”
Although wage-price controls failed and were lifted, the pattern was set for the rest of the decade and into the 1980s. President Jimmy Carter leaned on the Fed to moderate monetary restraint in the mid-1970s to avoid a recession. The Fed complied. As it turned out, the United States got both a recession and still more inflationary pressure. The pattern stopped only in the early 1980s, when, in a rare move, Fed Chairman Paul Volcker ignored the White House and insisted on anti-inflation monetary restraint even as the economy fell into recession.
And the pattern of presidential influence hasn’t disappeared. In 2018, Trump pressured Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to halt the Fed’s efforts to raise interest rates to levels that the Fed considered “normal.” Trump wanted Powell to cut interest rates. Powell resisted at first but yielded in 2019.
The chairman said at the time that the cuts were not in response to presidential pressure but rather part of an effort to ward off the economic effects of the tariffs placed on Chinese imports. The tariffs could best be described as a pretext, for any economic fallout would have been inflationary and required rate increases, not the cuts the president wanted and Powell delivered.
Ultimately, the COVID-19 pandemic required dramatic interest rate cuts that overshadowed this example of presidential influence.
The White House’s influence on monetary policy was again evident in 2021, when Powell adopted White House talking points on the worsening inflation picture emerging at the time. Insisting along with the White House that the inflation was “transitory,” Powell refused to institute anti-inflationary monetary restraint. His position was politically delicate. His term as chairman was ending, and he wanted President Joe Biden to reappoint him. Once he received that reappointment, he abruptly changed to anti-inflationary monetary restraint in March 2022.
Against such a record, talk about Fed independence sounds like a legal fiction. As should be clear, presidents have long had a powerful influence on monetary policy, whatever the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 states. Trump typically talks about things in terms of himself, but what he wants is hardly a departure from past practice by almost every president. Even if he were to take the White House, any formal change in the arrangements would be highly unlikely. The Fed, after all, is a product of Congress.
Changing the 1913 act would require a vote that would be contentious, to say the least. Getting it through would require Republican majorities in both houses and more discipline than the party likely can muster. The whole flap about the independence issue—whether pro or con—is closer to political than policy posturing.

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