CELEBRITY
BREAKING: Powell basically said the quiet part out loud: the Trump admin’s push to control the Fed is built on false pretenses. The Fed is meant to be independent so politicians can’t game the economy. Losing that independence would be bad news.
BREAKING: Powell basically said the quiet part out loud: the Trump admin’s push to control the Fed is built on false pretenses. The Fed is meant to be independent so politicians can’t game the economy. Losing that independence would be bad news.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has rarely been blunt about politics. That’s why his recent remarks stood out. In carefully chosen but unmistakable terms, Powell pushed back against the idea—floated again by figures close to Donald Trump—that the Federal Reserve should be brought more directly under political control.
The argument for that push, Powell suggested, rests on false pretenses. The Fed was designed to be independent not out of elitism or secrecy, but to protect the economy from short-term political pressures. Elected officials face incentives to juice growth, cut rates, or flood markets with easy money ahead of elections. An independent central bank exists to resist exactly that kind of temptation.
Powell warned that eroding this independence would come with real costs. Markets trust the Fed precisely because it can make unpopular decisions—like raising interest rates to fight inflation—without worrying about political backlash. If investors begin to believe monetary policy is being dictated by the White House, confidence in the dollar, bond markets, and long-term economic stability could weaken quickly.
This isn’t a theoretical concern. History, both in the U.S. and abroad, shows that politicized central banks often lead to higher inflation, economic volatility, and diminished credibility. Powell’s message was straightforward: once independence is lost, it’s hard to regain—and the damage can last for years.
By saying this publicly, Powell effectively said the quiet part out loud. The debate isn’t about improving accountability or efficiency at the Fed. It’s about whether politicians should be able to “game” the economy for short-term gain. In Powell’s view, and in the Fed’s founding logic, that’s a line the country crosses at its own risk.
