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Abstract:Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller, a top candidate to replace Jerome Powell as Fed chair, talks about the future of the central bank.
History shows that in countries where monetary policy is dictated – note that word – by party politics, democratic nations can become authoritarian states.
This casts vibes of banana republics where the economy is basically an inflationary hot mess.
The Federal Reserves independence from political and partisan demands is widely seen as essential to carrying out its dual congressional mandate of balancing inflation and unemployment.
And now Fed Governor Christopher J. Waller has put a stick in the sand when it comes to the Feds future as an independent central bank.
Why Fed independence is crucial
Unlike political institutions, the Fed makes monetary policy decisions without direct influence from the White House or Congress.
President Trump talks Federal Reserve reform, others balk
Economists and markets maintain that credibility and public trust in the Federal Reserve hinge on its ability to operate free from political pressures.
President Donald Trump has been highly critical of the Feds decision to hold interest rates at its current 4.25% to 4.50% this year.
The last Federal Fund Rate cut was in December 2024.
The White House maintains this has a powerful negative impact on multiple aspects of the U.S. economy, from the housing markets on Main Street to the stock market on Wall Street.
Federal Reserve drama heightens as Board of Governors twists
President Trump has blasted Fed Chair Jerome Powell with a barrage of personal and professional criticisms, and has directed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to begin interviewing candidates to fill Powells seat as chair when his term ends in May 2026.
The frustrated president is demanding a 3.0% rate cut to begin immediately.
Meanwhile, President Trump has a temporary Fed Governor (Stephen Miran) in the wings awaiting a Senate hearing confirmation hearing Sept. 4. He is also awaiting a federal judges ruling on whether he can fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook for cause over mortgage fraud allegations.
The White House also sees these moves as necessary to sway a majority of the Federal Open Market Committee to lower interest rates.
Opponents, including the entire Democratic congressional leadership, decry Trumps actions as a way to pack the FOMC to do his political bidding.
Christopher Waller‘s view on the Fed’s future
Bessent has garnered a list of 12 names of Fed candidates and is reported to begin interviewing them on Sept. 5, the same day a key August jobs report is due.
Waller is said to be among the top of the list to replace Powell.
He has not yet been scheduled for an interview with Bessent, Waller told CNBC Sept. 3.
More Federal Reserve:
“The independence of the Fed is critical to everything we do,” Waller said, adding it will remain independent moving forward “no matter what.”
Waller dissented at the July FOMC alongside Governor Michelle Bowman when the Fed opted to hold rates steady. It was the first FOMC dissent of Powells term as chair, and in decades at the Fed.
Waller and Bowman, who, along with Powell, were appointed during President Trump's first term, said signs of weakness in the labor market validated the need to cut the funds rate.
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