Saturday, January 31, 2026

What do we make of Kevin Warsh, Trump nominee for Fed chief?

Give credit where it's due. President Trump's appointee as Fed chief, Kevin Warsh, is exceptional talent- and he is nobody's stooge. Trump seems to have made a good call. 

Warsh is relatively young (55). At 35, he was the youngest member ever of the Fed Board of Governors when appointed to it in 2006. With his Kennedyesque looks, he may well be the most handsome Chair of the Fed in its history.

Warsh lacks the heavyweight academic credentials of Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke and Janet Allen, all three PhDs in Economics and the latter two big names in academia. He got his BA in public policy and then a JD in Law from Harvard. His background is similar to that of Jerome Powell's (BA in political science plus law). 

But that's precisely the striking thing about him- how many people with BAs get on to the board of a central bank and especially the Fed at 35? Prior to that he worked at the middle level in the M&A department of Morgan Stanley and then briefly in the Bush administration. It says something about the man's calibre that, with this fairly light experience, he could vault on to the board of the Fed. 

Warsh proved his mettle during the 2008 financial crisis when he served as a conduit to Wall Street, given his numerous contacts.  According to Ben Bernanke, his experience and insights helped contributed to the crisis-fighting strategy  of the Fed.   

Bernanke notes his contribution to the financial reform efforts that followed the crisis. He led a committee that conceptualised 'macroprudential regulation'. Bernanke writes:

"In late 2008, amid the crisis firefighting, we at the Fed began working on our own proposals for financial reform. I wanted to have a well formulated position before the legislative debates went into high gear. Kevin Warsh led a committee of Board members and Reserve Bank presidents that laid out some key principles. Kevin's committee considered a more explicitly 'macroprudential' or system-wide, approach to supervision and regulation. Historically, financial oversight had been almost entirely 'microprudential' – focused on the safety and soundness of individual firms, on the theory that if you take care of the trees, the forest will take care of itself. In contrast, the macroprudential approach strives for a forest-and-trees perspective." (Wikipedia)

Warsh disagreed vehemently with the Fed's persisting with Quantitative Easing beyond a point. His basic point was that the it went well beyond the remit of the Fed. That is a position he holds to this day. He warned- incorrectly, as it turned out- about inflation during the financial crisis and he expressed his opposition to QE2 while voting for it out of respect for Bernanke. Think of it- a BA arguing with a prospective Nobel Laureate on a topic on which the latter had made his reputation, banking crises! That shows confidence and it shows class.

Warsh left the Fed in 2011. He has since straddled the worlds of academic and financial markets. He's a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution and a lecturer at Stanford Business School, a testament to the fact that he's taken seriously in academic circles. In 2017, he was a contender for Fed Chairman. Trump eventually opted for Powell, partly because he thought that Warsh was too young and looked too young to be taken seriously as Fed chief! It was a decision that Trump came to regret- and that he has now set right.

Warsh has moved from hawk on inflation during the financial crisis years to a relative dove in recent years. He backs Trump's instinct for cutting interest rates and he thinks the Fed has underestimated the productivity boost to the US economy emanating from AI. His detractors see his shift as opportunistic but many grant that Warsh is not somebody who takes the independence of the Fed lightly. If he did, Trump may not have chosen him. Criticise Trump as much as you likes but he understands that without a credible and competent Fed, he cannot get the economy to perform. That's why he overlooked a couple of candidates who were perceived as excessively deferential to him.

Warsh favours a 'regime change' at the Fed. He wants the Fed get its balance right- he thinks at the moment its size is too big and its interest rates too high. Warsh would move to shed a big chunk of its portfolio. That would cause interest rates to rise. The Fed can then move to cut its policy rate with vigour. He has Trump's backing but he will need to carry his colleagues with him.

Call me an optimist but I can see Warsh at the helm of the Fed providing the right to support to Trump as he attempts a major reset of the US economy. 





Sunday, January 25, 2026

Trump is right, the US economy is booming

 At Davos, President Trump said:

Growth is exploding, productivity is surging, investment is soaring, incomes are rising, inflation has been defeated. We are the hottest country anywhere in the world.

His remarks drew jeers from his detractors. 

Well, Trump's right.

In Q4, US gdp growth is projected at 5.4 per cent, according to the Atlanta Federal Reserve. Jason Furman, Harvard Professor and former Chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors is quoted as saying:

“Most advanced economies would be thrilled to have the US growth numbers." 

Which is more or less what Trump said at Davos. 

We have the IMF's revised forecasts for the world economy and the US. 

The world economy is projected to grow at 3.3 per cent in 2025, a shade below the growth rate of 3.4 per cent in 2024. US gdp will grow at 2.1 per cent, higher than the 1.8 per cent forecast last April (although below the unusual growth rate of 2.8 per cent in 2024).

Here's the juicy part: global growth and US growth are not one-off things in the face of tariffs- it's not that advance stocking by importers, implementation of tariffs late in the calendar year and absorbing of costs by importers have cushioned growth for one year. 

In 2026, global growth will again be 3.3 per cent and the US economy is projected to accelerate to 2.4 per cent (according to Goldman Sachs, to 2.8 per cent).

So, the doomsayers have been proved wrong for now about the impact of Trump tariffs- neither the world economy nor the US economy is collapsing. As Gillian Tett, FT commentator, puts it:

When Trump unleashed policy “rupture” a year ago, it sparked gloomy economic predictions. However, as the president crowed at Davos, the American economy is booming in 2026, due to a mixture of monetary, fiscal and regulatory stimulus.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Economist freaks out on India

Is India back in flavour- with the western media, if not with foreign investors? The Economist has as  many as four articles on India in its online edition- two on PM Modi, one on the Indian economy and a review of the book on the Indian economy by Arvind Subramaniam and Devesh Kapur. The tone is extremely favourable.

The title of the piece on the economy is telling: Rising giant- The Ascent of India's economy. The Economist lauds India's gdp growth of 7.4 per cent in a year in which it has been hit by a 50 per cent tariff on exports to US. The paper ascribes India's performance to three factors: luck, macroeconomic policy and structural reform.

India has been lucky to have had a second year of good monsoons which have boosted agricultural output and caused food prices to fall by 2.7 per cent in the past year. A low inflation deflation has boosted real gdp growth. Macroeconomic policy includes fiscal consolidation, a reduction in the Goods and Services tax and cuts in interest rates. Structural reforms comprise the reduction in labour codes from 29 to 4, financial regulation overhaul, removal of the cap of 100 per cent FDI on insurance and opening up of  nuclear power to the private sector. The government has signed three trade agreements: Britain, Oman and New Zealand. The Economist gives credit to Trump for spurring India's reforms.

The Economist says adversity has caused PM Modi to focus even more on economic reform and growth. It urges more reforms, some of the "big bang" sort that many economists have urged over the years but which the government has rightly eschewed:

The recent reforms are not enough. Some merely correct recent errors. Although India’s average tariff rate is drifting down, it is still higher than it was when Mr Modi first won power in 2014. Much-needed reforms to agriculture are still locked in a box marked “too hard”. So are changes to make it easier for companies to acquire land. India’s awful schools continue to waste hundreds of millions of young minds. Smog and traffic jams steal some of the boost India could gain from urbanisation. Unforced errors remain common: this month India’s Supreme Court alarmed foreign investors with a ruling that has thrown into confusion what tax they must pay on capital gains. 

Foreign commentators must understand that India will reform in its own way, with due regard for popular sentiment-  and this is an approach that has worked. 

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Globalisation has failed the world- US Commerce Secretary

You have to credit the Trump administration with one thing: straight talk. Mr Trump gives the lead in this respect- no mincing of words, no beating about the bush, calling a spade a spade.

In an astonishingly candid article in FT, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick makes it plain that, in the view of the Trump administration, globalisation has failed the US and it has, perhaps, failed the world. Buying goods from wherever these are cheapest, moving production to the lowest cost places in the world, growing through the services economy while neglecting manufacturing- the US has no appetite for any of these.

Some of our past leaders believed the lies that offshoring was necessary, borders were not, and our national interest needed to submit to global lower cost of labour for the common good. That approach failed the US, crushed American workers and ripped apart most of the rest of the world as well. It destroyed industries, weakened supply chains and left working people in most western countries behind.

America has turned protectionist in the past year and Lutnick thinks it's paying off:

One year in and the results have been historic. Our exports are up, our imports down, our trade deficit is down by 35 per cent and our budget deficit dramatically lower. Our GDP growth is driven by record investment in the US economy. Our strong 4.3 per cent GDP numbers didn’t appear by coincidence. They are the direct result of America First policies that prioritise US production, resilience and workers.

Lutnick could not have been more blunt. 

But does that not mean that the mantra of globalisation preached to nations such as India for the past several decades was phoney? That nations prosper not by leaving things to firms and markets but through active intervention by governments to promote domestic production through subsidies, incentives and protectionist walls? That self-reliance or what is now called atmanirbharta is central to economic success? 

India turned protectionist in 2018- thereafter, average tariffs started rising. Liberalisers criticised this as anti-reform. They need to check with the US Commerce Secretary. 

Friday, January 16, 2026

Will 2026 be worse for the world economy?

 Gita Gopinath, Harvard prof and former Deputy MD of IMF, thinks it will.

She gives her reasoning:

So why hasn’t the world felt the sting of tariffs yet? The answer lies partly in actual tariffs being around half of what the US announced thanks to numerous exemptions. Yet at 14 per cent this remains a sharp escalation, the consequences of which had two offsets. First, AI spending and the stock market surge powered by AI optimism have propped up US growth and buoyed economies like Taiwan and South Korea that export AI-related goods. Second, fiscal policy has been more expansionary, not only in the US, but even more so in Germany and China. These forces masked the drag from American tariffs and Chinese retaliation. They also made 2025 look far more stable than it actually was. 

These favourable factors will not operate in 2026, she says. The AI boom is not sustainable. Importers cannot absorb 95 per cent of the higher costs, as they did in 2025. China cannot continue with its export-led strategy. The EU needs deep reforms that aren't happening.

Well, we'll see. Current inflation forecasts do not show a marked increase in inflation in the US for 2026. Stock market valuations for AI companies may get corrected but investment in AI is proceeding apace, particularly on the part of tech companies with large hoards of cash. China has diversified its exports away from the US and is growing exports to low-income countries at a much higher rate than before.

The thing is that many economists and commentators don't like the Trump administration. They want it to fail with its economic policy reset which includes protectionism, Buy American, Hire American etc. They disapprove of the massive fiscal deficit implied by Trump's Big Beautiful Bill for taxes passed last year.

It's not just that the real economy was not impacted as badly as experts had forecast- Gopinath's explanations may hold for the  real economy. But what about financial markets which are said to be forward looking? They should be factoring in the implications for next year and the years ahead? 

The aren't. Neither the US stock market nor the US bond market reacted anywhere as harshly as the commentators had forecast in 2025. Okay, stock market valuations may be influenced by AI stocks. But why have bond market yields hardly budged? 

2026 could be the year of reckoning for the experts and not President Trump!  

 

 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Anti-Indian rhetoric hits US firms

American firms are beginning to feel the impact of the anti-Indian rhetoric now current in the Maga community, says an FT report. 

FedEx CEO, Raj Subramaniam, faces charges of laying off  American workers and replacing them with lower-cost Indian workers. Walmart, Verizon and Dish Network are among the other companies targeted by those who believe the H 1-B visa has been misused to let in low-cost Indian workers. There is also a clamour to kick out Green Card holders of Indian origin.

The rise to prominence of Indians in the American corporate world is clearly evoking a backlash. Indians are also prominent in educational institutions: an estimated 60 or more schools have Indians as dean. At HBS and Stern School, Indian succeeded Indian as dean. The hard work and success of Indians in the US, once touted as a tribute to American society, is beginning to now working to the detriment of the Indian community.

Unfortunately, negativity towards Indians in the US seems to be spilling over into US policy stance towards India. 

Experts got it wrong in 2025!

My latest piece in BS on some of the great misses of forecasters in 2025. Which, of course, means you have take the forecasts for 2026 with more than the proverbial pinch of salt.

Pundits stumbled badly in 2025

A New Year has begun. With it come forecasts for what we might expect this year. We need to view these forecasts with more than ordinary scepticism. 

Forecasters, in general, have a terrible record; in 2025, they stumbled badly in multiple areas. Just look at what the pundits —economists, military analysts, foreign policy experts and others —predicted during the year or what they failed to foresee. What follows is a limited sample.

Trump’s tariffs and US economic growth

Last April, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast growth of 1.8 per cent for the United States’ gross domestic product (GDP) in 2025 and 1.6 per cent in 2026, down from 2.8 per cent in 2024. Last October, it revised its forecasts to 2.0 per cent and 2.1 per cent, respectively. As everybody now acknowledges, the apocalypse that was forecast for the US ain’t happening.

 Economists are now trying to explain away their misses. The increase in tariffs has not been as high as feared earlier — as though an increase in the weighted average tariff from just under 3 per cent to around 17 per cent is not bad enough. Exporters frontloaded their exports to the US —surely, this should have been anticipated and built into forecasts? The artificial intelligence (AI) boom has obscured weaknesses in the economy —well, US GDP growth of 4.3 per cent in the third quarter of 2025 was driven by consumer spending and exports, not business investment. 

 The real shocker for economists is that the setbacks to the US economy as a result of Donald Trump’s tariffs don’t seem to be materialising in 2026 either, going by current forecasts. Goldman Sachs forecasts US GDP growth of 2.8 per cent for 2026!

India’s GDP growth in FY26

President Trump announced his Liberation Day tariffs last April, with a “reciprocal tariff” of 25 per cent on India. In August, he slapped an additional 25 per cent punitive tariff in response to India’s imports of oil from Russia. Last April, the Reserve Bank of India revised its gdp growth forecast for FY26 downwards to 6.5 per cent from the 6.7 per cent forecast earlier. Following the punitive tariff of August 2025, some private agencies said India’s GDP growth could fall below 6 per cent.

Nobody could have imagined that in a year in which Indian exports to the US faced tariffs of over 50 per cent for more than half the financial year, India’s GDP growth would be 7.4 per cent, higher than the previous year’s 6.5 per cent. Now, many agencies see growth momentum being maintained in FY27 at 7-7.5 per cent. 

Note that no economist or agency had given India any chance of attaining growth of over 7 per cent over a four- or five-year period without it meeting the well-known laundry list of reforms: A fiscal deficit close to 3.3 per cent, privatisation, speedier land acquisition, an overhaul of agricultural laws, hire and fire on a much bigger scale than even the latest labour Codes promise, among others. 

Anti-Indian sentiment in the US

When Mr Trump won the elections in 2024, it was assumed that the India- US relationship would move to an even higher trajectory. The way the relationship has unfolded since has come as a shock to the establishment.   

Pundits used to say that, whatever the equations between the two governments at any point, the people-to-people relationship between India and the US was an underlying positive. That no longer seems true. It appears that that anti-India sentiment in the Trump administration is an aspect of a wider anti-Indian sentiment in the Maga (Make America Great Again) community.  

Several elements have contributed to the souring of sentiments towards Indians.  The misuse of H-1B visas intended for highly skilled persons to ferret out low-cost labour is one factor. The very success of Indians in different walks of life is another: On social media, Americans ask whether the US needs Indians to head corporations such as Microsoft, Google and IBM; and whether a Vivek Ramaswamy is American enough to run for high office Non-resident Indians flaunting their religiosity has evoked angry responses: An 85-foot statue of Hanuman in Texas, the noisy celebrations of Indian festivals in prominent suburbs, etc.  No pundit saw the negativity towards India or the Indian community in the US coming.

Pakistan’s resurgence on the international stage

Pakistan was in the doghouse when Mr Trump returned to office last January. Its resurgence in the world of diplomacy in 2025 was truly remarkable.  

 Following the Pahalgam massacre and the Indo-Pak skirmish of last May, Pakistan did not quite draw any international condemnation. On the contrary, it used the skirmish to restore itself in Mr Trump’s favour by, among other things, repeatedly giving Mr Trump credit for bringing the hostilities to an end. Thereafter, Pakistan’s army chief, General Asam Munir, was welcomed twice to the White House, perhaps a unique first for any serving general. 

In late 2025, the US approved a $686 million package for Pakistan for maintenance of F-16 aircraft sustainment and upgrades of F-16 aircraft. Pakistan also signed a mutual defence pact with Saudi Arabia, something that could not have happened without Washington’s blessings. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif claims with some justification that Pakistan is on good terms with three major powers, namely, China, Russia and the US. The turnaround in Pakistan’s international standing has left foreign policy experts bewildered.

Israel’s dominance of West Asia 

 On October 7, 2023, Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel. A brutal response from Israel followed. In late 2024, Israel extended its operations in a bigger way in Lebanon. Commentators warned that Hezbollah was not Hamas; it had more than 100,000 missiles at its disposal and had the capacity to raze Israel’s cities. PM Benjamin Netanyahu was leading Israel towards disaster. 

 What the pundits did not know was that Israel had accumulated intelligence on Hezbollah hideouts for its personnel as well as its missiles. Israel proceeded to decapitate the Hezbollah leadership and decimate 80 per cent of Hezbollah’s missile capabilities. The militia is today a pale shadow of its former self. 

 In December 2024, a new front opened in Syria with a rebel outfit moving to topple the Assad regime in days, with the help of Israel and Türkiye. Last June, Israel and the US attacked and substantially incapacitated Iran’s nuclear facilities. Pundits, who had warned that Israel’s PM Netanyahu had over-extended himself, had to eat their words. Israel’s dominance of West Asia increased in 2025. 

There is no dearth of forecasts for 2026. The Epstein files will prove Mr Trump’s undoing (perhaps already proved wrong). Venezuela will turn out to be Mr Trump’s quagmire (looking dicey even now). The Republican Party will lose badly in this year’s US polls, the AI bubble will burst, the full effect of tariffs on inflation in the US will be felt in 2026 (hmmm).  

In Intellectuals, a lengthy diatribe against the cerebral types, historian Paul Johnson writes, “A dozen people picked at random on the street are at least as likely to offer sensible views on moral and political matters as a cross-section of the intelligentsia…. beware intellectuals.” For “intellectuals” one might well substitute “experts”.