The Borneo Post

US Senate confirms Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair

-

WASHINGTON: The US Senate confirmed Federal Reserve Governor Jerome Powell as the next head of the central bank, succeeding Janet Yellen, a move likely to provide continuity in US monetary policy with the economy growing now for nine years straight.

The Republican- controlled Senate voted 84-13 to approve the 64year-old lawyer to a four-year term as Fed chair beginning early next month.

It was the most lopsided of recent Fed chair votes, signaling both Powell’s bipartisan appeal and the ebbing of some of the tensions raised by the central bank’s aggressive response to the 2007-2009 financial crisis and recession.

Controvers­y over those Fed policies led to a narrower 56-26 vote margin when Yellen became chair in 2013, and a 70-30 vote when former chair Ben Bernanke was named to a second term.

Powell will be “central to ensuring a safe and sound financial system while supporting a vibrant, growing economy,” banking committee chairman and Idaho Republican Mike Crapo said on the Senate floor.

“He will play a key role in rightsizin­g federal regulation­s and alleviatin­g unnecessar­y burdens.”

Powell takes over as chair with US monetary policy on a steady course toward gradually higher interest rates and a smaller balance sheet.

However, a debate is brewing within the central bank about whether it needs to rethink its approach to inflation and whether the recent massive tax overhaul legislatio­n will affect the US economy. Powell must also decide how far to accommodat­e a push by the Trump administra­tion to roll back some post- crisis financial regulation­s. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia