The Day

Trump breaks tradition, criticizes Fed.

Presidents have typically reserved comment on independen­t institutio­n

- By DAVID J. LYNCH

Washington — President Donald Trump on Thursday said he’s “not thrilled” the U.S. central bank under Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is continuing to raise interest rates, suggesting the Fed may be undercutti­ng his efforts to grow the economy.

“I don’t like all of this work that we’re putting into the economy and then I see rates going up,” he said.

Presidents have long declined to comment on the Fed’s actions, out of respect for the independen­ce of the institutio­n, and to avoid any hint of political influence over the nation’s monetary supply. CNBC released details of the Trump interview in a story on its website Thursday.

“Now I’m just saying the same thing that I would have said as a private citizen,” Trump said, according to CNBC. “So somebody would say, ‘Oh, maybe you shouldn’t say that as president. I couldn’t care less what they say, because my views haven’t changed.”

Trump nominated Powell as Fed chairman last year to replace Janet Yellen. Powell was a governor on the Fed and has largely followed the path the Fed has been on for years, slowly raising interest rates as the economy strengthen­s, unemployme­nt declines and inflation stirs.

The Fed slashed short-term rates to near zero in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. In June, the nation’s central bank raised rates for the seventh time since December 2015, in a move designed to slowly cool the economy.

By adding fuel to an economy that already was at full employment, Trump has contribute­d to the situation he is criticizin­g. Last year, the Republican-controlled Congress cut corporate and individual taxes by $1.3 trillion, providing a boost for an economic expansion that was in its 9th year.

With unemployme­nt falling to near half-century lows, the Fed risks falling behind the pace of interest rates increases needed to prevent runaway inflation, some economists say.

“He’s contribute­d to an incredible challenge for the Fed. He’s the one who’s done this — caused the Fed to continue raising rates and go further than they otherwise would,” said Laurence Meyer, a former member of the Fed’s board of governors.

For years presidents have avoided commenting on the Fed, which markets broadly trust to act in service of its dual objective — maintainin­g maximum employment and stable prices — rather than a political aim. In 1972, President Richard Nixon pressured then-Fed Chairman Arthur Burns to keep rates low, despite signs that the economy was overheatin­g, to help his re-election campaign. Nixon won a second term in November 1972, but by the following year, consumer prices were increasing at an annual rate of nearly 10 percent.

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