A supporter of former US president Donald Trump holds up his portrait as the motorcade carrying US President Joe Biden passes by in Emmaus, Pennsylvania.—AFP
A supporter of former US president Donald Trump holds up his portrait as the motorcade carrying US President Joe Biden passes by in Emmaus, Pennsylvania.—AFP

On the surface, Donald Trump’s blistering comments about the Federal Reserve beginning in 2018 seemed a grand breach of protocol for a US president, with the businessman-turned-politician railing against a “loco” central bank he thought was undermining his economic policies with interest rate increases.

Inside the Fed, however, an institution designed to be insulated from direct political influence, Trump’s insults in interviews and social media posts landed with nary a whisper among policymakers, according to newly released transcripts of the US central bank’s eight policy meetings in 2018, a year that marked the leadership change from former Chair Janet Yellen to current chief Jerome Powell, who was handpicked by Trump.

Powell, at least in the official record of the Fed’s meetings released last Friday, never uttered Trump’s name, and neither did any of the Fed governors and reserve bank presidents charged with navigating what proved a surprisingly turbulent year for monetary policymakers.

The economy overall was moving along well with strong growth and low unemployment.

Though US presidents take a hands-off attitude towards the central bank, Trump’s frustration over Powell mounted during his tenure in the White House

But the new trade policies of the Trump administration, including tariffs and curbs on trade with China, had introduced a wealth of unknowns into the monetary policy debate, including the possibility of higher inflation and growth fueled by tax cuts that figured into the Fed’s gradual rate increases.

By the time of the Fed’s Nov 7-8, 2018 meeting, financial conditions had grown notably tighter, especially in the aftermath of an interview Powell had given to the Public Broadcasting Service a month earlier that stoked a sell-off in stocks and a sharp widening in credit spreads on corporate bonds.

Simon Potter, who was at the time the head of the New York Fed’s markets operations, noted how the Powell interview — in which he said the Fed’s policy rate was “a long way” from neutral, or the point at which it was neither stimulative nor restrictive — was seen by markets as a turning point.

The “notable rise in Treasury yields” that day, Potter said, “precipitated a subsequent reassessment of equity valuations. The move in yields was attributed in part to better-than-expected economic data as well as comments by Chairman Powell that were seen as suggesting a potentially more restrictive monetary policy path and a higher neutral rate.”

“Financial conditions” were mentioned 22 times at that meeting, notably more than at either of the two previous policy gatherings, and key Fed officials, such as Richard Clarida, then the Fed’s vice chair, took stock of a situation in terms that have echoed the central bank’s current deliberations on whether to call time on a tightening cycle.

Clarida mentioned rising bond-yield “term premiums” and posited there was a historic case for the bond market doing “some of the Fed’s job for it” — topics that have been bandied about by current central bank officials.

He also described an economy not unlike the present one — with faster-than-trend growth expected soon to cool, a job market at or near full employment and risks of “excess-demand-driven” inflation seen as likely to fade and augur for a change in policymakers’ outlook.

At the Dec 18-19 meeting that year, policymakers boosted the Fed’s benchmark overnight interest rate to the 2.25-2.50 per cent range, in what would prove to be the final increase of that hiking cycle.

“With growth expected to decline to closer to trend next year, we can afford to be patient about further policy firming, especially in an environment in which inflation is still muted,” Powell told his colleagues.

The Fed leader described an economy where the data had been strong, but sentiment was weak while noting upside inflation risks had declined and the risks of tighter financial conditions had risen.

While that debate included extensive staff analysis of how new international trade frictions and administration policies were influencing the economy, that was the only apparent avenue through which Trump entered the discourse.

There was only one direct reference to Trump’s running commentary about the Fed, and that was to document that it was having no influence.

At the July 31-Aug 1 meeting, Fed staff discussed how “recent comments by President Trump” had influenced the views of market participants about monetary policy, and found in a survey that investors felt the president “would have no material effect on the (rate-setting Federal Open Market) Committee’s reaction function.”

Though US presidents typically take a hands-off attitude towards the Fed, Trump’s frustration over Powell and the central bank mounted during his four years in the White House. He would eventually call Powell an enemy of the US, comparing him to Chinese leader Xi Jinping, and saying the Fed chief was among his worst appointments.

Trump, who is favoured to be the 2024 Republican presidential nominee, is running even with President Joe Biden at the outset of the race for the White House, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week.

Should the former president win the Nov 5 election and return to the White House next year, it will mark a reunion of sorts. Powell’s current term lasts through May 2026, 16 months after the next presidential inauguration.

Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, January 15th, 2024

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