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Powell faces pressure from multiple fronts as Fed prepares to cut rates

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • 16 hours ago
  • 5 min read
Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, delivers remarks after the central bank held interest rates steady for a fifth meeting in a row, in Washington, July 30, 2025. The chair of the central bank is grappling with internal divisions amid a complicated economic backdrop while being besieged by President Trump and front-runners jockeying to replace him. (Caroline Gutman/The New York Times)
Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, delivers remarks after the central bank held interest rates steady for a fifth meeting in a row, in Washington, July 30, 2025. The chair of the central bank is grappling with internal divisions amid a complicated economic backdrop while being besieged by President Trump and front-runners jockeying to replace him. (Caroline Gutman/The New York Times)

By COLBY SMITH


At a congressional hearing in June, Jerome Powell touched briefly on his goals for his final year at the helm of the Federal Reserve.


“All I want to do in what’s left of my time at the Fed is to have the economy be strong, have inflation be under control and have a solid labor market,” Powell told members of the House Financial Services Committee. “I want to turn it over to my successor in that condition.”


Six months later, Powell is facing a host of economic threats, including resurgent price pressures and stalling jobs growth. That has created a rift inside the central bank about what threat to focus on, shattering the consensus that Powell had been able to cultivate around interest rate decisions through his eight years as chair.


Powell is also under attack by people outside the central bank — chiefly President Donald Trump, who has spent months browbeating him for not slashing borrowing costs. Other broadsides have come from the contenders to replace Powell when his term ends in May, a list Trump said had been whittled down to one front-runner broadly assumed to be Kevin A. Hassett, the White House’s top economic adviser.


It is against this backdrop that Powell is expected to steer the central bank toward a third consecutive interest rate reduction this week at the Fed’s final gathering of the year. What on the surface appears to be a routine decision, however, has been anything but, underscoring the acute challenge that Powell is up against in his remaining months as chair.


“You can make a perfectly good case for cutting at this point, and you could also make a reasonable case for not,” said Jon Faust, a fellow at the Center for Financial Economics at Johns Hopkins University and a former senior adviser to Powell.


Such an unusually close call suggests that the Fed could struggle to provide much more relief to borrowers if the economy holds steady, an uncomfortable spot for the politically independent central bank.


“If there aren’t sequential cuts forthcoming, the heat from the president will very quickly ratchet back up,” Faust said.


A fractured Fed


Powell started to sound unnerved around the time that Trump unveiled sky-high tariffs on nearly all of the country’s trading partners in April. The Fed chair had been relatively sanguine about the economic outlook before that point, refuting worries that stagflation — a combination of higher inflation and slower growth — was at risk of taking root.


Even after the president backtracked on his initial round of tariffs, Powell started to articulate how the Fed would confront a situation in which its goals of low, stable prices and a healthy labor were in tension with one another. It would force the Fed to make “what will no doubt be a very difficult judgment” about which to make a priority, he conceded.


The economy has so far avoided outright stagflation, but the Fed appears further from its goals than at the start of the year. Inflation has edged up, and it is unclear if the full effects of Trump’s tariffs on consumer prices have materialized. Monthly jobs growth has sharply slowed and the unemployment rate has ticked up, even as consumers continue to spend.


That has prompted a fierce debate among officials about where the biggest risk lies and how to set interest rates accordingly. For those more worried about the labor market, an interest rate reduction is necessary to avoid causing undue economic pain. For those concerned about inflation, standing pat is seen as more prudent to avoid inadvertently stoking price pressures and causing inflation to remain stuck above the Fed’s 2% target.


Once-unanimous policy decisions have since been replaced by much more fractured votes that have featured dissents in opposite directions. December’s decision is expected to be no different.


The balance only tipped in favor of another quarter-point reduction recently, after John C. Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and a close ally of Powell, signaled support for one. Williams, who has a permanent vote on the policy-setting committee, joined a powerful group of officials backing a cut, including multiple members of the board of governors based in Washington. Those officials vote at every meeting.


In the other camp sit many of the officials who lead the 12 regional reserve banks across the country and vote on policy decisions on a rotating basis. One of those is Jeffrey K. Schmid, the president of the Kansas City Fed, who cast an official dissent against October’s cut.


Dissents in both directions are once again likely this week. While some officials want the Fed to pause, Stephen Miran, Trump’s pick to join the Fed’s board, has said consistently that he wants larger, half-point reductions.


Opting for a quarter-point cut is likely to prevent an even bigger fight from breaking out, said Ajay Rajadhyaksha, global chair of research at Barclays, who warned that there was a risk of “even more strident dissents” without one.


Succession planning


Trump is expected to name Powell’s successor early next year. Hassett, a longtime loyalist of the president, is widely seen as his preferred pick. Since returning to the White House as director of the White House’s National Economic Council, Hassett has become a mainstay on cable TV promoting the need for substantially lower interest rates despite forecasting strong growth next year.


Hassett has also amplified his criticism of the central bank, faulting the staff and accusing officials of injecting politics into their policy decision-making. He also questioned at one point if Powell should be fired over his handling of renovations to the Fed’s Washington headquarters after the costs attracted the president’s ire.


Whoever is selected to lead the Fed will inherit many of the challenges that Powell is dealing with. For one, the next chair may struggle to deliver the interest rate cuts that Trump so desperately wants given the split among voting members.


Even Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary who is also leading the search, acknowledged recently the limitations of the chair’s influence.


“At end of the day, he or she is one vote,” he said last week at The New York Times’ DealBook Conference. Next year, many of the regional presidents who are most vocally opposed to further interest rate cuts will also be voting members of the policy committee, suggesting that the bar for reducing borrowing costs further is likely to shift higher.

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