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.
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