
Federal Reserve chair candidate Kevin Warsh is scheduled to visit Capitol Hill on Tuesday to persuade lawmakers that he can fulfill a presidential mandate for reduced interest rates while maintaining autonomy in policy-making.
During a highly anticipated session before the Senate Banking Committee, the former Fed governor will be questioned on various topics, including monetary policy, banking regulations, and the intricacies of his personal finances.
However, none may prove as crucial as delineating the distinctions between the Fed’s decision-making and political influence.
“He faces a challenging communication dilemma,” remarked Bill English, a Yale School of Management professor and former Fed director of monetary affairs from 2010 to 2015, a period coinciding with Warsh’s tenure.
“I think he will likely address this by articulating his belief that rates can feasibly go lower, potentially significantly lower,” English stated. “At the same time, when directly queried about independence, he should emphasize his commitment to it. He believes independence is crucial and that a less autonomous Fed, in the medium and long run, would harm the nation.”
The issue of political independence has been a prominent concern in the quest for a successor to current Chair Jerome Powell.
Warsh’s perspectives on independence
In comments he’s set to present to the committee at the outset of the hearing, Warsh provided a conditional endorsement of Fed independence.
“Let me emphasize: the independence of monetary policy is crucial. Monetary policymakers must operate in the nation’s best interest, their decisions rooted in analytical rigor, meaningful discussion, and clear decision-making,” he stated in prepared remarks.
Nonetheless, he mentioned that he does not perceive independence to be jeopardized when the central bank’s actions are scrutinized by elected officials, asserting that “the Fed must remain within its domain” and avoid straying into “fiscal and social policies where it lacks authority and expertise.”
Warsh is likely to confront numerous inquiries regarding his political affiliation with President Donald Trump, who has made it clear that a commitment to lowering interest rates was a key criterion for his nominee. Trump selected Warsh in late January, following an extensive search that involved nearly a dozen candidates.
Democrats in Congress, including leading member Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., are anticipated to question the nominee concerning the independence issue, in addition to expressing concerns about his financial situation.
If confirmed, Warsh would become the richest Fed chair in the central bank’s 113-year existence. Financial disclosures submitted ahead of the hearing suggest he would need to divest a substantial portion of his assets to comply with the stringent Fed policies governing where senior officials can invest.
Warren met with Warsh last Thursday and emerged with “serious worries that if he is confirmed, he will act as Donald Trump’s puppet.” She also contended that Warsh had failed to disclose “over $100 million in assets.”
The nomination process itself could be delayed while awaiting the outcome of inquiries into Warsh’s views.
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., has pledged to block the nomination until an investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington, D.C. regarding renovations at the Fed’s headquarters is concluded. A court overturned U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s subpoena of Powell, but she has expressed intentions to seek an appeal.
White House officials are optimistic that Warsh will eventually gain the committee’s approval, where Republicans hold a 12-10 majority.
“I anticipate that after everyone sees him at his hearing and observes how agile he is on his feet, how well-versed he is about the Fed, and how sound his ideas are regarding returning the Fed to a nonpartisan stance, it will be difficult to oppose voting ‘yes,'” National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett stated Monday on CNBC.
Building consensus
Once in position, Warsh will lead a Federal Open Market Committee staffed with officials who have voiced concerns about the forthcoming monetary policy direction. While market expectations keep the committee at a standstill for the remainder of the year, officials themselves still have indicated a potential rate reduction and Warsh has also shown support for lowering rates.
Warsh will “arrive with a vision of what he hopes to consider and accomplish, and then the state of the economy will dictate our actions,” San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly commented last week. “You adapt to the economy you have, and you strategize for the economy you aim to achieve.”
Concerning his strategies beyond rate adjustments, Warsh last year called for changes in leadership at the Fed and claimed that current officials possess a “credibility deficit” that he aims to remedy.
English, the former Fed official, remarked that his experiences with Warsh indicated he could collaborate with others—an essential trait in the consensus-driven central bank.
“He was not a difficult individual for the other policymakers or staff or anyone to collaborate with,” English noted. “So, I doubt he will attempt to drastically change things immediately without bringing the other policymakers along. To persuade them, he will need to present his arguments and rationale in a reasonable manner.”














