Kevin Warsh says he wants a new inflation framework
- We are still dealing with the legacy of the policy errors in 2021 and 2022
- Once you let inflation take hold, it's harder to bring down
- We need fundamental policy reforms to fix inflation
- Inflation is less severe but Americans are still feeling it
- Says he wants a new inflation framework
- We need new tools
- We need new communication
- Mentions forward guidance, forecasts and dot plot
- Says Fed should wait until meetings as forecasts hurt decision making
More to come
For background on Kevin Warsh, here's the quick version.
He's not a new face. Warsh sat on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors from February 2006 to March 2011 — sworn in by Dick Cheney at age 35, the youngest governor in the Fed's history. Before that it was Morgan Stanley M&A, then a stint in the Bush 43 White House as executive secretary of the National Economic Council. Stanford undergrad, Harvard Law. Central casting, as Trump might say.
But it's the Governor years that matter here, because that's the résumé he's running on — and the one Elizabeth Warren is running against.
Warsh was Ben Bernanke's guy on Wall Street. Full stop. He was the Fed's liaison to the banks when everything broke in 2008, which means his fingerprints are on just about every major crisis-era decision: the Bear Stearns fire sale to JPMorgan, the AIG bailout, Lehman, and the emergency conversion of Goldman and Morgan Stanley into bank holding companies. That last one is awkward given Morgan Stanley wrote his paycheck before Washington did.
Supporters call that battle-tested. Markets have long given him credit as a steady hand who earned his stripes in the trenches. Critics — and Warren has the receipts queued up — point to his July 2007 testimony that subprime didn't pose systemic risk, and a pattern of protecting the big banks at taxpayer expense.
The other thing to remember: he dissented against QE2 in 2010. The $600 billion Treasury buy was a bridge too far for him, and he walked a few months later. He's spent the decade since arguing the Fed's balance sheet is bloated, its communications are too loud, and the institution has drifted out of its lane.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.提供 MainLink:Investinglive RSS Breaking News Feed
