WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump is considering
nominating Federal Reserve Governor Jerome Powell and Stanford University
economist John
Taylor for the central bank’s top two jobs, in an apparent bid
to reassure markets and appease conservatives hungry for change.
Under that scenario, either Powell or Taylor would take the
reins from Fed Chair Janet Yellen when her term expires in early February, and
the other would fill the vice chair position left vacant when Stanley Fischer
retired this month.
“That is something that is under consideration, but he hasn’t
ruled out a number of options. He’ll have an announcement on that soon, in the
coming days,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters on Friday.
Making Powell, a soft-spoken centrist who has supported Yellen’s
gradual approach to raising interest rates, the next Fed chief would provide
the continuity in monetary policy that investors crave.
The addition of Taylor, who has backed an overhaul of the Fed
and embraced a more rigid rule-oriented monetary policy, would be a feather in
the cap of conservative Republicans who feel that monetary policy has been too
loose under Yellen, who was named as Fed chair by Democratic President Barack
Obama and has led the central bank since February 2014.
“I think Powell might be the safer pick insofar as we know
what we’re getting,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at J.P. Morgan
Chase. “He’s a guy who obviously knows the Fed culture, how the
(policy-setting) committee operates, so for some of those soft skills we know
he would be effective.”
Powell has embraced the Yellen Fed’s monetary policy, keeping
the faith that a tighter job market will eventually push wages higher and end a
lengthy period of worryingly low inflation.
Taylor has spent the last two decades refining and advocating
wider use of a rule that lays out where interest rates ought to be, given
certain conditions of inflation and the broader economy. His rule implies that
rates should be higher than they are now.
Yellen, speaking at an economic conference in Washington on
Friday evening, mounted a strong defense of the tools the Fed has used to fight
the sharp economic downturn triggered by the financial crisis and said there
was a risk of another crisis in which those “unconventional policies” may be needed
again.
Yellen, who Trump has indicated could still be named to
another term as Fed chair, was not asked about the Fed job and did not offer
any comment on the selection process.
“SCOPE FOR DISAPPOINTMENT”
Although Taylor is highly regarded within the Fed, his
rule-based rate-setting position has spurred criticism that he would handcuff
U.S. monetary policy.
Taylor pushed back at a meeting at the Boston Fed on
Saturday, saying he favored a flexible implementation of policy rules and did
not want to tie the Fed’s hands or suggest that he was motivated by a distrust
of policymakers.
“I think that’s completely incorrect,” he said. “I trust
policymakers; (rules) are an effort to make policy better.”
Some analysts suggest that fears that Taylor would bring an
inflexible monetary policy with him to the Fed, as some Republicans in Congress
hope, are likely exaggerated.
“There is some scope for disappointment if people think
putting Taylor in will just lead to mechanical-based policy,” Feroli said.
Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, speaking with
reporters on Friday, seemed to agree.
“Even if you pick a rule, the rule itself would need to be
modified given the structure of the economy,” she said. “But I do think being
systematic, looking at the kinds of information we look at systematically over
time, articulating our strategy for policy and being less discretionary is a
good idea.”
At the same time, there are concerns that the combination of
Powell and Taylor atop the world’s most powerful central bank could send a
confusing signal to markets.
It is unclear whether Trump, who has criticized Yellen’s
stewardship but also said on several occasions that he preferred rates to stay
low, wants to dramatically alter the Fed’s direction.
Although he appears to be tilting to Powell and Taylor, in
addition to Yellen the Republican president has interviewed his top economic
adviser Gary Cohn and former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh for the Fed chief
position.
Reporting
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