Biden to reappoint Jerome Powell as Fed chair, say economists
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[July 17, 2021] By
Shrutee Sarkar and Howard Schneider
BENGALURU/
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Joe Biden will reappoint current Federal Reserve Chair Jerome
Powell for a second four-year term starting February next year,
according to an overwhelming majority of economists polled by Reuters
this week.
Powell took office from Janet Yellen as chair of the Board of Governors
of the Fed in February 2018 and has had to maneuver the economy through
its worst crisis since World War Two, battered by the COVID-19 pandemic
which started early last year.
The White House will decide in coming months whether it wants Powell to
remain but any decision to replace him could flare market reaction just
as the U.S. economy is battling high inflation and employment activity
is lagging the overall recovery. [ECILT/US]
Ninety percent of economists, or 36 of 40, in response to an additional
question in the July 12-15 Reuters poll on the U.S. economy, said Biden
would choose the status quo.
"It's (Powell's reappointment) likely at this point. Powell does have
some strong competition, in particular from Lael Brainard, one of his
colleagues as governor. She's the second most likely, but Powell is the
favorite right now," said James Sweeney, chief economist at Credit
Suisse.
Jim O'Sullivan, chief U.S. macro strategist at TD Securities, agrees.
"I guess it's like a tradition. If you're seen as doing a decent job for
continuity then the president kind of re-appoints, even if it was a
president of a different party that appointed him in the first place,"
he said.
In congressional hearings this week Powell pledged "powerful support" to
complete the economic recovery from the pandemic and said the Fed should
stay focused on getting as many people back to work as possible. He also
said the sudden spike in inflation was transitory.
Powell's focus on jobs has won praise from the Biden administration and
among the broader community of Democratic policy analysts. A private
equity lawyer promoted to Fed chair by Republican President Donald
Trump, he has also won early endorsements for a second term from some
congressional Republicans.
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Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies before the Senate
Banking Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
December 1, 2020. Susan Walsh/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
But those same hearings saw sharp questioning from members of both parties,
offering an overview of the issues likely to frame debate over Powell's future.
Republicans said they were worried recent high inflation might endure, and that
Powell may be taking too lax an approach to it; some Democrats argued he has not
been tough enough on large Wall Street banks.
A shift in the Fed's top job would come as the central bank is laying plans to
phase out $120 billion in monthly bond purchases and handle the political debate
around rising inflation pressure, both sensitive and potentially
market-disrupting discussions.
Four economists in the Reuters poll said Biden would not reappoint Powell, with
two of those predicting Lael Brainard, a member of the central bank's Board of
Governors, would take over.
"It is a very close call. Powell has done a good job and works well with the
U.S. Treasury, but we would not be surprised to see Joe Biden look to strengthen
diversity at senior levels," said James Knightley, chief international economist
at ING.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Powell were set to discuss the red-hot
housing market and its risks with fellow regulators on Friday, to make sure the
country is not vulnerable to a crash similar to the financial crisis in 2008.
A sudden relapse in house prices could pose another serious threat to the
economy. In the meantime the highly infectious Delta variant that has become the
dominant COVID-19 strain and further variations pose the top economic risk this
year. [ECILT/US]
(Reporting by Shrutee Sarkar; Additional reporting by Howard Schneider; Polling
by Hari Kishan, Manjul Paul and Tushar Goenka, Editing by Rahul Karunakar and
Andrea Ricci)
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