Houston Chronicle

Fed chair stresses need for bank’s independen­ce

Powell says political pressure could threaten success

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned Friday that the Fed’s independen­ce from political pressure must be respected if it is to succeed in controllin­g inflation, maximizing employment and regulating the financial system.

His remarks Friday came after Kevin Warsh, a former Fed official who President Donald Trump interviewe­d for the chairman post, said in an interview earlier this month with Politico that Trump did not appear to view the Fed as an independen­t body. He said Trump was direct about how he thought interest rates should be managed.

Powell, in a speech in Stockholm, warned against taking that independen­ce for granted given its recent success in keeping inflation low.

“We must not forget the lessons of the past, when a lack of central bank independen­ce led to episodes of runaway inflation and subsequent economic contractio­ns,” Powell said in prepared remarks.

Following Warsh’s comments regarding Trump, members of the Senate Banking Committee quizzed two of Trump’s nominees for the Federal Reserve Board, Richard Clarida and Michelle Bowman, about the importance of Fed independen­ce.

Both said yes when asked by Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, whether they thought it was important for the Fed to remain free from White House influence. Clarida said that neither Trump nor any other member of his administra­tion had said anything during his interviews that would be compromisi­ng to the Fed’s independen­ce.

The double-digit inflation of the late 1970s is often blamed, in part, on then-Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, who was reluctant to raise shortterm interest rates high enough to choke off inflation for fear of causing massive unemployme­nt.

Burns and other Fed officials were pressured by President Richard Nixon, who was leery of any political blowback from rising unemployme­nt.

Inflation remained high into the early 1980s until Paul Volcker, appointed Fed chair by President Jimmy Carter, pushed short-term interest rates to nearly 20 percent. That sparked a sharp recession, but it also reined in inflation.

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