Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Trump's Fed Shake-Up: How A Loyalist Chair Could Rewrite The Rules Of Global Money


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Donald Trump wants trusted adviser Kevin Hassett to run the Federal Reserve, turning a technical job into a high-stakes power play.
  • Global investors fear rate cuts driven by politics, not data, in an already debt-heavy, AI-fueled U.S. economy.
  • Behind the scenes, Washington is quietly reshaping the Fed's people and rules in ways that could raise or lower borrowing costs from São Paulo to Seoul.

    The next chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve is usually the kind of news that only bond traders obsess over. This time is different. Donald Trump's preferred candidate, Kevin Hassett, is not just another central banker.

    He is Trump 's close economic confidant, an experienced economist who shares the president's instincts and has his ear. On paper, Hassett is highly qualified: former Fed staffer, long track record in economic policy, and respected in many market circles.

    What makes investors nervous is not his résumé but his loyalty. They worry that in a tough moment he would be more likely to back Trump's demands for cheaper money than to tell him no.

    Look at where the U.S. stands. Public debt is around 120–125% of GDP, unusually high for a rich country. Private-credit funds, which operate largely outside traditional banking rules, have swelled to about $1.3 trillion and now finance a big slice of corporate borrowing.



    At the same time, tech giants are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into artificial-intelligence projects. The S&P 500 index has climbed almost 50% since early 2022 on the back of that optimism.

    Translated into everyday language: the system is stretched. Government, companies and markets are all leaning hard on the promise that growth and innovation will bail everyone out.
    Fed Risk and Political Pressure
    A Fed chair seen as eager to slash interest rates into that environment could inflate the bubble further. Or, if things go wrong, he could make the eventual hangover more painful.

    Bond markets are already flashing a small warning. Since Hassett emerged as favorite, the yield on 10-year U.S. government bonds has risen rather than fallen, even as talk of future rate cuts has grown louder. Normally, lower expected rates pull long yields down.

    The fact they have nudged up suggests investors are quietly adding a“political risk” surcharge to U.S. debt. Big asset managers sketch four possible paths.

    In the best case, the noise fades and the Fed stays firmly guided by its mandate and the data. More realistically, they see a slow erosion of independence: less rigid attention to inflation, more sensitivity to electoral cycles, more pressure to keep markets calm at any cost.

    At the extreme, they imagine legal and political pressure so strong that the Fed effectively loses its ability to resist the White House. Few expect that worst case, but the fact that serious people even model it is telling.

    Supporters of Trump's approach argue that the Fed has been too distant from elected leaders and too cautious about growth. In their view, rebalancing power away from unelected technocrats and toward accountable officials is healthy.

    They welcome moves that give Washington more say over appointments to the Fed's Board of Governors and the 12 regional banks.

    Proposals by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to tighten residency rules for regional presidents, and the push to promote loyal, market-friendly economists like Hassett and Stephen Miran, fit neatly into this strategy.

    Critics, especially in academic and progressive circles, see a different picture. To them, a more political Fed risks repeating the mistakes of the 1970s, when leaders tolerated too much inflation for too long and then had to crush the economy to restore credibility.

    They fear that once the line between central banking and day-to-day politics is blurred, it will be hard to redraw. Social media amplifies both sides.

    Pro-Trump voices hail a Hassett Fed as the end of what they see as an arrogant expert class that ignored ordinary workers. Crypto promoters argue that any sign of political meddling in the dollar makes alternatives like Bitcoin more attractive.

    Mainstream economists warn that this kind of speculative mood can spill over into real wages, savings and pensions. This is not an abstract Washington drama.

    The Fed's interest-rate decisions set a floor under global borrowing costs, whether for Brazilian infrastructure, European mortgages or Asian trade finance.

    A calm, data-driven Fed keeps that floor predictable. A Fed viewed as an arm of the presidency introduces new uncertainty that can make loans more expensive and capital flows more jumpy, even far from U.S. shores.

    In the end, the question is simple but profound: will the world's most powerful central bank remain a referee that follows clear rules, or become a more direct instrument of elected power? Trump's push for Kevin Hassett is the most visible test so far.

    The outcome will help decide how safe your savings are, how high your mortgage rate goes and how stable your local currency feels in the years ahead, whether you are watching from New York, Lisbon or Rio de Janeiro.

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  • The Rio Times

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