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Trump Swears In Warsh To Lead US Federal Reserve

 

 

U.S. President Donald Trump will ​swear in Kevin Warsh as the chair of the Federal Reserve on Friday at ‌the White House, the Trump administration said on Thursday.

Warsh was confirmed to the role in a near party-line vote on May 13.
He succeeds Jerome Powell as the chair of the central bank, though Powell’s separate term as a Fed ​governor extends through January of 2028.

Warsh, 56, will serve a four-year term as chair ​and a 14-year term as a Fed governor. Trump selected him as a ⁠bulwark against further rate hikes. Warsh has long expressed a desire to lower rates while slashing the ​Fed’s balance sheet.

He will take office as fellow governors contemplate raising rates to tame inflation brought on by ​Trump’s war on Iran.
A majority of Fed policymakers at their April 28-29 meeting felt “some policy firming would likely become appropriate” if inflation stays persistently above the central bank’s 2% target, according to minutes of the meeting released on ​Wednesday.
Warsh was passed over for the role in 2017 during Trump’s first term. A Fed governor ​from 2006 to 2011, he was the youngest member of the board at 35, when he was first ‌appointed in ⁠the George W. Bush administration.

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He is likely to face intense scrutiny as the Fed chair. Trump clashed with Powell for not cutting rates, tagging him with the nickname “Too Late,” and referring to him as a “jerk.”
The Trump administration overtly suggested the Fed should be less independent from the White House and dovetail ​monetary policy with the White ​House’s fiscal agenda. ⁠
Warsh during confirmation hearings embraced many of the same policies as Trump officials, but said he would maintain autonomy from the White House.

Fed Governor Stephen Miran ​will leave his position on the board on or shortly before Warsh is sworn into office. Miran ​took a leave ⁠of absence as the chair of Trump’s White House Council of Economic Advisers to fill a Fed vacancy.
He remained in that role longer than anticipated while prosecutors investigated Powell and the Fed over the cost of the renovation of the central ⁠bank’s Washington, ​D.C. headquarters.
A federal judge sharply criticized the case ​and North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican, stalled Warsh’s nomination in protest over the investigation.

Prosecutors dropped the inquiry in April, and ​Tillis lifted his hold on the nomination.

 

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