The Philippine Star

Trump’s tweets threaten US Fed’s independen­ce — study

-

Interest rate futures traders believe the US Federal Reserve will bow to President Donald Trump’s persistent tweets pressuring the central bank to lower interest rates, and this poses a “significan­t” risk to Fed independen­ce, according to research released on Monday.

Researcher­s from Duke University and the London Business School studied Trump’s Fed-focused tweets, starting with his first one bemoaning Fed policy in April 2018, and the resulting price movements in the fed fund futures market. Traders use the futures contracts to take bets on where the Fed will set its benchmark lending rate.

In a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper titled, Duke’s Francesco Bianchi and London Business School’s Howard Kung and Thilo Kind found Trump’s tweets lowered market-based expectatio­ns for the central bank’s interest rate policy by a tenth of a percentage point.

“Overall, we find strong evidence that the consistent pressure applied by President Trump to pursue more expansiona­ry monetary policy is manifested in the market expectatio­ns of a lower target rate, forecastin­g a steady erosion in central bank independen­ce over the course of his presidency” they said.

The researcher­s wrote that “even if President Trump does not directly influence Fed decisions, his political pressure can still affect policy indirectly by changing market expectatio­ns regarding the Fed.”

Given that when the Fed does change interest rates, it typically does so in quarter-point increments, the tenth of a point effect on market expectatio­ns is significan­t, they said.

“Our findings suggest that market participan­ts believe that the erosion to central bank independen­ce is significan­t and persistent,” they wrote.

Their finding contrasts with the results of two recent Reuters polls, one of American voters and the other of global economists, which found respondent­s saying they see little impact on the Fed from Trump’s pressure.

In the Reuters Ipsos poll of voters released last week, it appears Trump’s barrage of tweets blasting the Fed have been ignored by both Republican­s and Democrats who largely see the central bank as neutral in its decisionma­king.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines