The Pak Banker

Powell set table for Biden economy, but will he stay for dessert?

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Over the past year Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has engineered the largest economic rescue in U.S. history, thrown a controvers­ial lifeline to companies hard hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic and steered a sweeping labor-friendly revamp of monetary policy that any presidenti­al administra­tion would welcome.

Is it enough to earn the 68-year-old former investment banker four more years as the head of the U.S. central bank?That question will get increased attention during this, the final year of Powell's term, and the conversati­on may start as early as this week when the Fed chief delivers his semi-annual update on the economy in two hearings before Congress.

The testimony before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday and House of Representa­tives Financial Services Committee on Wednesday will be Powell's first since President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats took control of the White House and Capitol Hill.

While the body of work Powell can show Biden on monetary policy is extensive - so much so that there'd seem little reason to replace him when his term expires next February - he may face scrutiny over the Fed's moves to relax regulation­s on financial institutio­ns. Those steps were often opposed by the left flank of the Democratic Party as well as Fed Governor Lael Brainard, a 59-year-old economist who is seen as the most likely person to replace Powell if Biden decides to put out a "Help Wanted" sign.

Brainard is prominent in Democratic policy circles and has played a key role in shaping Fed policy since she was appointed to the U.S. central bank in 2014 after serving in the Obama administra­tion's Treasury Department. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders are among the progressiv­es who opposed Powell's appointmen­t as Fed chief in 2018, as did then-Senator Kamala Harris, who is now Biden's vice president.

The hearing on Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee, of which Warren is a member, may provide a gauge of how deep that opposition still runs.

"Is there anything else this White House could, if it was inclined to, ask of the Fed? Not much," Alan Blinder, a former Fed vice chair who is now a Princeton University professor, said of a central bank that is locked firmly into a pledge to get the economy back to full employment as fast as possible.

That's also the Biden administra­tion's top economic priority. "Biden is going to be quite happy with the performanc­e of the Fed chair. The market is going to be quite happy with the performanc­e of the Fed chair. (Treasury Secretary and former Fed chief Janet) Yellen will only have good things to say.

But there will be Democrats urging him to replace Powell with a Democrat." Politics traditiona­lly has not been a concern when it comes to the Fed, an institutio­n expected to stay out of Washington's partisan battles, and one where U.S. presidents have often crossed party lines to reappoint their predecesso­rs' picks for the central bank's top job. Along with guiding U.S. monetary policy, the Fed chief is perhaps the most influentia­l official in global finance. Reappointi­ng Powell would restore a bipartisan approach, as well as continue policies that, step by step, have been elevating issues Biden often cites, including advancing racial equity.

A moderate by temperamen­t, Powell over the past two years had the Fed delve deep into how the central bank influences the job market. In the end, policymake­rs not only decided they could do much more to champion the cause of attaining maximum employment - one of the central bank's two statutory mandates - but redefined the concept as something that needed to be "broad-based and inclusive."

"Powell is fully committed to the president's priorities of getting the economy back to full employment as fast as possible, and easing the financial stress on lowincome households and disadvanta­ged groups," said Moody's Analytics economist Mark Zandi, who expects Powell to get another four-year term.

Powell, a Republican, past private equity executive, and native of the suburban profession­al class enclave of Chevy Chase, Maryland, was first appointed to the Fed's Board of Governors in 2012 by thenPresid­ent Barack Obama. He has spent more time than his predecesso­rs cultivatin­g lawmakers here from both parties in Congress.

Those relationsh­ips could mean, for Biden, a potentiall­y pain-free reconfirma­tion for a key economic policy maker in broad alignment with the president's agenda - and stability where it matters.

But Powell was also the man former President Donald Trump promoted to replace Yellen, in a move that not only broke the bipartisan mold, but did so in favor of someone with arguably lesser economic credential­s.

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