Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
90 Day Fiance’s Kenny Niedermeier Shares Positive Update After Hannah’s Hospitalization

90 Day Fiance’s Kenny Niedermeier Shares Positive Update After Hannah’s Hospitalization

July 18, 2026
Giants start second half on strong note with much-needed win over Mariners

Giants start second half on strong note with much-needed win over Mariners

July 18, 2026
How to watch: England vs France, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Third-Place match

How to watch: England vs France, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Third-Place match

July 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • 90 Day Fiance’s Kenny Niedermeier Shares Positive Update After Hannah’s Hospitalization
  • Giants start second half on strong note with much-needed win over Mariners
  • How to watch: England vs France, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Third-Place match
  • Jennifer Garner’s Rich-Looking Jeans Are the Classic, Anti-Trendy Pair I’d Wear for Years
  • Max Fried takes huge step in injury recovery with Triple-A rehab start
  • What is the roundest animal?
  • DSA plan to abolish the Senate and presidency stuns House Democrats
  • ‘Scott Peterson: The New Evidence’ Docuseries Accuses Police of Destroying Evidence: Part 2 Recap
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Kevin Warsh’s first challenge as Fed Chair is to fight inflation — while keeping Trump happy
Kevin Warsh’s first challenge as Fed Chair is to fight inflation — while keeping Trump happy
Business

Kevin Warsh’s first challenge as Fed Chair is to fight inflation — while keeping Trump happy

News RoomBy News RoomMay 16, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

Ben Bernanke’s Fed pulled off a miracle during the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009. What might Kevin Warsh be forced to pull out of his hat as the central bank’s new boss?

On one level, those perilous years dwarfed any crisis that’s in the foreseeable future for the Federal Reserve. To address it, Bernanke with the help of others (then-NY Fed chief Tim Geithner and later Obama Treasury secretary among the most prominent) deployed drastic moves that remain controversial today: slashing rates to zero, injecting massive liquidity into an overextended banking system, bailing out AIG while giving the cold shoulder to Lehman Brothers.

We can debate Bernanke’s methods and their success all day. Did he rescue some banks that should have gone belly up because, hey, that’s how free markets work? Or was his real mistake consigning Lehman to the dustbin of history? Did his money-printing spree sow the seeds for eventual rampant inflation and create a bubble in ­financial assets?

What is less debatable is that Bernanke had a mandate for what he did: Save us from a second Great Depression — and do whatever it takes to make it happen. His “Quantitative Easing” — printing money to protect the banking system from a 1930s-style collapse — was among the unconventional results.

No consensus on cuts

As he begins his term as Fed chairman this week, Warsh finds himself in a starkly different world. Where Bernanke printed money for years, Warsh has no consensus to even cut short-term interest rates as President Trump, who appointed him, is now ­demanding.

More From Charles Gasparino

Meanwhile, the Fed’s policy board that sets interest rates — the powerful Open Market Committee — is no longer a monolith of consensus. Jerome Powell, the man he’s replacing and a Trump antagonist, will continue to vote on interest rates as a governor, as is his right even if it defies custom. Powell says he’s going nowhere until the inquiry into his Senate testimony about the cost of the Fed’s new headquarters — a probe that Trump initiated and which held up Warsh’s confirmation — is put to rest.

Talk to any Fed watcher and they will tell you it’s payback time for Trump over all his alleged harassment of Powell even if what began as a criminal investigation by the DOJ is now in the hands of the Fed inspector general and seemingly going nowhere. Recall all the mean tweets Trump dished out to “Too Late” Powell, calling him a “numbskull,” a “knucklehead” and worse as the president prodded him to slash rates.

Charlie Gasparino has his finger on the pulse of where business, politics and finance meet

Sign up to receive On The Money by Charlie Gasparino in your inbox every Thursday.

Thanks for signing up!

Warsh’s interest rate policy is at the heart of his uncertain future. Yes, he would love to cut rates to appease Trump. But if you know Warsh, you know he’s an inflation hawk. After he left the Fed as governor in 2011 and became an academic, he took to editorial pages to attack the Bernanke-Yellen-Powell Fed’s “easy money” regime that persisted after the worst of the financial crisis had passed.

Instead, Warsh lobbied for a more “disciplined” policy that reined in the Fed’s balance sheet. The Fed’s excesses, he argued, paved the way for the inflationary pressures we have now. If Warsh had his druthers, he would cut short-term rates and begin to unwind the Fed’s holdings of bonds — which he believes are the biggest piece of solving the inflation puzzle.

The thing is, he probably can’t. Consumer prices just hit 3.8% annualized, the highest since May 2023, fueled by the Iran war and its effects on energy prices. Last week, wholesale prices rose even more. On Friday, futures markets began pricing in an interest rate hike by the end of the year, as opposed to the cut they spent the past year betting on.

On the positive side, the macroeconomic environment is strong; AI is creating a boom that could last when its productivity benefits are fully realized. Artificial intelligence is creating employment particularly in blue collar professions that are at the core of its build-out. Technological advancements cull some jobs, but if history is any guide, they produce many more.

Optimists note that the Iran war won’t last forever, and if and when it does end, that would mean lower energy prices and inflationary relief.

Doubters aplenty

But you can easily see how things can go sideways, too. AI’s job-creation prospects have its doubters, and they’re not all ­“panicans,” as the president likes to call them.

The Iran conflict is heading into its third month with a hostile regime speaking out of all sides of its mouth on the biggest issues, including the Strait of Hormuz and its nuke program. Who knows what $200-a-barrel oil would do to the US economy.

Recall the “stagflation” — inflation and an economic slowdown — the last time we had a major oil-price shock in the 1970s.

Warsh inherits all of the above and probably more that hasn’t even crossed our radar yet. He’s a smart guy and he’s as up for the task as anybody, but I wouldn’t want to be him.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Airlines warn daylight saving time change will disrupt airport scheduling

Airlines warn daylight saving time change will disrupt airport scheduling

Sweetgreen shares jump 15% after Taco Bell linked to explosive diarrhea parasite

Sweetgreen shares jump 15% after Taco Bell linked to explosive diarrhea parasite

Taco Bell faces first lawsuits over diarrhea-causing contaminated lettuce

Taco Bell faces first lawsuits over diarrhea-causing contaminated lettuce

Stocks skid to losing week as Chinese AI fears fuel chipmaker rout

Stocks skid to losing week as Chinese AI fears fuel chipmaker rout

Newly retired couples could lose K a year in Social Security come 2033: What Americans need to know

Newly retired couples could lose $17K a year in Social Security come 2033: What Americans need to know

Judge won’t block Meta from axing workers who filed AI discrimination lawsuit

Judge won’t block Meta from axing workers who filed AI discrimination lawsuit

Exclusive | Stew Leonard’s lettuce sales drop 11% during cyclospora outbreak, prompting promotion of ‘safer’ greenhouse greens

Exclusive | Stew Leonard’s lettuce sales drop 11% during cyclospora outbreak, prompting promotion of ‘safer’ greenhouse greens

Amazon sued after teen injured in school bus crash involving driver with history of drug use, violations

Amazon sued after teen injured in school bus crash involving driver with history of drug use, violations

Apple races past Nvidia to reclaim crown as world’s most valuable company

Apple races past Nvidia to reclaim crown as world’s most valuable company

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Giants start second half on strong note with much-needed win over Mariners

Giants start second half on strong note with much-needed win over Mariners

July 18, 2026
How to watch: England vs France, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Third-Place match

How to watch: England vs France, the 2026 FIFA World Cup Third-Place match

July 18, 2026
Jennifer Garner’s Rich-Looking Jeans Are the Classic, Anti-Trendy Pair I’d Wear for Years

Jennifer Garner’s Rich-Looking Jeans Are the Classic, Anti-Trendy Pair I’d Wear for Years

July 18, 2026
Max Fried takes huge step in injury recovery with Triple-A rehab start

Max Fried takes huge step in injury recovery with Triple-A rehab start

July 18, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
What is the roundest animal?

What is the roundest animal?

July 18, 2026
DSA plan to abolish the Senate and presidency stuns House Democrats

DSA plan to abolish the Senate and presidency stuns House Democrats

July 18, 2026
‘Scott Peterson: The New Evidence’ Docuseries Accuses Police of Destroying Evidence: Part 2 Recap

‘Scott Peterson: The New Evidence’ Docuseries Accuses Police of Destroying Evidence: Part 2 Recap

July 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.