New York Post

THE FED’S LEFT FACE

Either way, decision on Jay will mean lib bent

- Charles Gasparino

AS this column goes to press, the Wall Street C-suite class is giving Jerome Powell slight odds to be reappointe­d as Federal Reserve chairman. Yes, he is disliked by progressiv­es such as Elizabeth Warren; they have a big say in just about anything the Biden administra­tion does these days and they think Powell is some pawn of Wall Street because of his banking background.

That aside, Warren has been unusually silent in recent days as President Biden’s selection deadline looms, which Wall Streeters say signals some kind of deal is in the works. The most likely outcome given that silence is that Powell will get the nod for another term, and the markets will breathe a sigh of relief that an out-and-out socialist isn’t tapped to run the nation’s central banks.

Don’t be too quick to celebrate, though, because what’s good for Wall Street isn’t necessaril­y in Main Street’s best interest. To appease his pal Warren, Uncle Joe will likely have to fill some of those Fed vacancies, like vice chair, with some lefties that will force the “moderate” Powell to run the Fed in a more dovish fashion than he has been (and yes, that’s possible).

For example, he may be forced to postpone his plans to taper the Fed’s money-printing bond purchases, and he will definitely work to keep interest rates at zero as he tries to navigate the Dems’ efforts to remake the US economy into a European-style welfare state.

Again, this may or may not be the scenario that emerges. Fed Governor Lael Brainard, who is adored by the progressiv­es for her easymoney advocacy, may get the nod because Biden is about as tough with the progressiv­e wing of his party as he was with the Taliban.

Either way, if you think the Fed has been too easy with the money supply and inflation is here to say, this isn’t a time to rejoice. The nation’s supposedly independen­t central bank is about to take a turn to the far left, and officially become an arm of White House fiscal policy, no matter who is named chair.

For starters, despite Powell’s reputation on Wall Street as a moderate, he’s been a horrible Fed chairman, usurping its political independen­ce. In 2019, he allowed himself to be bullied by President Donald Trump, backing off necessary Fed rate increases amid a booming economy that would have given the central bank extra juice when it needed it during the height of the pandemic-fueled recession.

Without much wiggle room to cut short-term rates, during the COVID-19 crisis the Fed had just one real weapon in its arsenal: the heavy hammer of “quantitati­ve easing,” economic-speak for printing money. Sure, it helped smooth out the impact of business closings and lockdowns, but it also created massive economic incentives to speculate, setting the stage for a market crash and, of course, spiking inflation.

It’s one of the reasons why weird crypto assets are trading the way they are and meme stocks of money-losing companies keep attracting buyers: When there’s this much liquidity, investors are giddily spendthrif­t in search of a return.

Throw in the Biden administra­tion’s never-ending expansion of the federal welfare state — which Powell has supported — and you have the perfect recipe for the rapid rise in prices we’re seeing today.

Worst of all, Powell appears to be as recklessly oblivious to the inflation threat as Biden has been recklessly oblivious to the border crisis and every other malady in plain sight. Contrary to evidence, he’s still calling inflation “transitory,” as if he’s been getting briefings from his press secretary on how to spin economic policy.

Again, the central bank is supposed to be independen­t but Powell’s obvious parroting the White House line is a blatant attempt by him to get reappointe­d, and according to many Fed watchers, borderline criminal. Half of the Fed’s mandate is to fight inflation and he’s offering no real warnings about its impact even as prominent liberal economists (think Larry Summers and Steve Rattner) say he’s playing with fire.

That’s why some former Fed officials who care about the inflation threat tell me in a more perfect world, Powell shouldn’t get a second chance. “It would be malpractic­e to keep him,” one said. “At least Brainard has an IQ.”

OK, maybe Brainard, who has an economics Ph.D. from Harvard and has both private sector and policy experience, looks a lot better than Powell on paper (Powell is a former investment banker with a law degree from Georgetown). But if she’s appointed chair, she will also owe her job to Elizabeth Warren, and that means mimicking Powell’s approach (or lack of it) to the inflation scourge.

But it could be worse. If we’re really unlucky we may get the worst of both worlds, as many of my Wall Street sources are predicting: Powell’s reappointm­ent, and Biden slipping progressiv­e Brainard in as a Fed vice chair just in time for the thick of the Christmas shopping season.

 ?? ?? Surely, you don’t jest
If President Biden retains Jerome Powell as Fed chairman, he will manipulate him to continue carrying out liberal monetary policies, much to the delight of Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
Surely, you don’t jest If President Biden retains Jerome Powell as Fed chairman, he will manipulate him to continue carrying out liberal monetary policies, much to the delight of Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
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