ARTIKEL POPULER

Kevin Warsh squeaked through the Senate 51-45 on Tuesday to claim a seat on the Federal Reserve (Fed) Board of Governors, with the separate vote to confirm him as Fed Chair scheduled for Wednesday and Jerome Powell's term as chair wrapping up on Friday. Fetterman and Coons were the only Democrats to cross over; the rest of the chamber broadly echoed Warren's "sock puppet" framing of a Trump-friendly chair. Warsh, 55, served as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011, originally backed the post-crisis quantitative easing (QE) program, then publicly turned on it and resigned in protest over the Fed's continued bond-buying. Roughly $6.6 trillion in balance sheet later, he is one Senate vote away from running the institution he walked out on.
That history matters. Warsh has floated a genuinely unusual policy combo for his Chair tenure: aggressive balance sheet tapering paired with short-end rate cuts, shrinking the Fed's market footprint while offsetting any long-end tightening by easing at the front. Citadel Securities flags a high bar for future QE under his watch, calling it "limited to crisis situations". Even his slogans are quotable, with Warsh telling the Banking Committee that price stability should mean "prices that no one's talking about", a softer rephrasing of the 2% target that hints he may quietly redefine the mandate without ever touching the number. Whether any of that survives a Trump White House demanding rate cuts, a $6.6 trillion balance sheet, and a 3.8% YoY Consumer Price Index (CPI) print that landed the very morning he was confirmed is the actual question. Can a self-described inflation hawk really cut into the hottest annual reading since May 2023 without becoming the very kind of central banker he spent a decade criticizing?
Fed FAQs
Monetary policy in the US is shaped by the Federal Reserve (Fed). The Fed has two mandates: to achieve price stability and foster full employment. Its primary tool to achieve these goals is by adjusting interest rates. When prices are rising too quickly and inflation is above the Fed’s 2% target, it raises interest rates, increasing borrowing costs throughout the economy. This results in a stronger US Dollar (USD) as it makes the US a more attractive place for international investors to park their money. When inflation falls below 2% or the Unemployment Rate is too high, the Fed may lower interest rates to encourage borrowing, which weighs on the Greenback.
The Federal Reserve (Fed) holds eight policy meetings a year, where the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) assesses economic conditions and makes monetary policy decisions. The FOMC is attended by twelve Fed officials – the seven members of the Board of Governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and four of the remaining eleven regional Reserve Bank presidents, who serve one-year terms on a rotating basis.
In extreme situations, the Federal Reserve may resort to a policy named Quantitative Easing (QE). QE is the process by which the Fed substantially increases the flow of credit in a stuck financial system. It is a non-standard policy measure used during crises or when inflation is extremely low. It was the Fed’s weapon of choice during the Great Financial Crisis in 2008. It involves the Fed printing more Dollars and using them to buy high grade bonds from financial institutions. QE usually weakens the US Dollar.
Quantitative tightening (QT) is the reverse process of QE, whereby the Federal Reserve stops buying bonds from financial institutions and does not reinvest the principal from the bonds it holds maturing, to purchase new bonds. It is usually positive for the value of the US Dollar.
Fetterman and Coons were the only Democrats to cross over; the rest of the chamber broadly echoed Warren's "sock puppet" framing of a Trump-friendly chair.












