The Indicator from Planet Money - America's next top Fed Chair
Episode Date: February 2, 2026Kevin Warsh has been tapped as the next chair of the Federal Reserve. We’re sure that he’ll have a lot of questions about how to run the Fed if confirmed. So we put together this briefing.On today...’s show, three Fed watchers give their advice for the next chair. On politics, interest rate cuts and dealing with the Fed’s repeated trading scandals. Oh, and can someone please forward this episode to Kevin Warsh?Related episodes: One Fed battle after anotherLisa Cook and the fight for the FedA primer on the Federal Reserve's independenceIt's hard out there for a Fed chairFor sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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NPR.
This is the indicator from Planet Money.
I'm Darien Woods.
And I'm Whalen Wong.
On Friday, we heard the long-anticipated conclusion
to what has been like the economics equivalent of the Bachelor.
President Trump finally picked who he wanted to lead the U.S. Central Bank,
the Federal Reserve.
Yes, President Trump said he would nominate Kevin Warsh to lead the Fed.
Kevin Walsh started his career at Morgan Stanley.
Later, he was a governor at the Fed during the Great Recession.
And if confirmed by the Senate,
He'll start after the current Fed Chair Jerome Powell's term expires in May.
Kevin Warsh would lead the Fed at a tempestuous time.
The central bank's independence is under attack by the president.
Yeah, Trump routinely bashing the outgoing Fed chair publicly was only the start.
He also tried to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, accusing her of mortgage fraud.
She denies this and has brought a case to the Supreme Court.
We've also had the Department of Justice subpoena the Fed over building renovation costs.
And that's not even taking into account what's happening in the state.
the actual economy. The dollar sliding, elevated inflation, talks of a bubble in AI stocks,
and money rushing to buy up precious metals. The next Fed chair has his work cut out for him.
In the public service, the new leader is often given a briefing, you know, what's happening
with the organization, what's the landscape out there, and what policy options are at their
disposal. So today on the show, we're going to do just that. Our briefing to the incoming Fed
Chair.
Jerome Powell was asked last week what his advice to a new Fed chair would be.
He had a strong message.
Stay out of elected politics.
Don't get pulled into elected politics.
Don't do it.
And for our briefing to the incoming Fed chair, we gathered the views of three Fedwatches.
They all have different perspectives on what matters for the Fed.
First is Skanda Arminov who runs the think tank Employ America.
That's a group who tries to support full employment and macroeconomic stability,
and looks for alternatives to using higher interest rates to fight inflation.
Skanda raises the big issue of the moment, which is the pressure to be loyal to the president.
I don't think it serves the interest of full employment if the Fed cannot have a credible impact on financial markets.
Skanda thinks Kevin Warsh is an unfortunate choice, noting his public remarks have been marked by, in his words,
persistent obsequiousness towards President Trump.
And so that, well, preservation of credibility, we are seeing a version of it erode.
Scanda points to longer-term interest rates. These are interest rates that feed through into new mortgages. And in the last few months, these longer-term interest rates have been going up. That's even though the Federal Reserve has been cutting short-term interest rates. Basically, even as the Fed has been trying to make it easier to borrow, the markets have been saying, no, actually, we want to make it harder for people to borrow for things like houses.
That suggests that investors think the Fed will need to raise interest rates higher or are forecasting in full.
inflation will go up in the future.
Investors want more compensation for risk.
This should be kind of a little bit of a warning sign
that we're seeing the types of things that we would normally be concerned
about associated with Fed independence being eroded.
So Skanda's message to the new Fed chair?
Central banks ultimately have their effect
through some understanding that these policies are rooted in
objective analysis, data dependence,
an objective evaluation.
In other words, Scana wants the new Fed chair to look at the numbers, not the politics.
Following the numbers means the Fed will sometimes have to take unpopular action, like raise interest
rates, which brings us to the next of our indicator advisors to the incoming Fed chair, Edithia
Bavé. Aditya is a senior U.S. economist at Bank of America.
I think the biggest question for the next Fed chair is do rates need to even come
The Fed has been lowering interest rates for roughly a year and a half, with another two cuts expected this year.
Aditya doesn't think that's needed.
Consumer spending on average has been strong.
GDP, that's been strong as well.
And the financial markets are doing great.
The stock market is up significantly.
None of that suggests that the current policy rates are particularly, you know, imposing some restraint on the economy.
Some have called this a jobless boom.
What do you make of that where there actually isn't a lot of hiring,
even though I've seen numbers like GDP output being quite high?
I think there's certainly some evidence of that.
Hiring has slowed down a lot, and yet GDP continues to grow.
There's a few reasons for that.
I think in terms of consumer spending, you see higher income folks
probably feeling quite comfortable about spending in part
because their wealth has increased in the stock market, and that's playing a part in this.
The other thing that's really driving GDP growth is AI-related investment, and that's not very
labor-intensive. So we're able to get that GDP growth without adding a lot of jobs.
So Aditya's advice is stop cutting interest rates and look at maybe even raising them.
Now, this might come as a surprise to the many people feeling glum about the U.S.
economy. It is bluttering for those on lower incomes. They've seen their pay growth mostly eaten up
by inflation. Overall, though, Aditya says the U.S. economy is running strong on average. And Aditya says
the Fed can only really affect what's happening in the economy on average. Redistribution,
moving money from one group to another, is more of a job for Congress. And knowing which branch
of government is responsible for what is critical for an incoming Fed share. Just
ask Sarah Binder. Sarah's a professor of political science at George Washington University and a senior
fellow at the Brookings Institution. She's the co-author of The Myth of Independence, how Congress
governs the Federal Reserve. She quotes the Fed Chair who held that position during the Great Recession.
Ben Bernanke in his last press conference as chair said, Congress is our boss, right, crystallizing
the importance of making sure you have Congress on your side, even as the Federal Reserve.
That's actually what Jerome Powell said last week, too.
They were both saying that Fed autonomy to set interest rates independently of politicians
doesn't mean that the Fed can just do whatever it wants.
It's ultimately accountable to Congress.
And that explains Sarah's advice to the incoming Fed Chair.
One issue that keeps coming up, despite the many efforts, I think, of this Fed under Chair Powell,
to address, is the question of the disclosure,
and the behavior of Fed officials in terms of trading stocks, bonds, and other financial disclosures.
Failure to follow the rules.
This is a big issue that Sarah thinks hasn't gotten the attention it deserves, like in August last year.
That's when governor of the Federal Reserve Board, Adriana Kugler, resigned.
The resignation was accompanied by a short press release with no details about why.
Then, in November, it came to light that she had resigned because her husband,
had broken the rules around Fed officials trading.
There have been purchases of individual stocks that's not allowed.
And there had been purchases during the blackout period leading up to the Federal Reserve's decision day.
That's also not allowed.
Often it seems inadvertently violated the rules, but then are allowed to leave quietly.
This wasn't a one-off. Fed Vice Chair Richard Clareder resigned in 2022 amidst a trading scandal the previous year.
Two regional Fed presidents also left her position.
positions after controversial trading?
So addressing that, increasing confidence that the Fed has a tough set of rules and having
some consequences for violating the rules seems an important step for the Fed to address.
All right. So if you're hearing this, Fed officials, keep your noses clean.
Noses clean.
So Sarah wants stronger consequences for Fed officials breaking the rules on some types of trading
in their personal lives. She thinks that would help the Fed.
have a stronger relationship with its boss, Congress, and its ultimate boss, us.
Yeah, don't forget that, new Fed chair.
Now, if the nominated incoming chair would like to discuss these points in any further detail, call us.
Yeah, we have open office hours.
This episode was produced by Corey Bridges with engineering by Jimmy Keely.
It was fact-acted by Sierra Juarez.
Keikin Canada edits the show and The Indicator is a production of NPR.
