Jerome Powell’s era of consensus at the Fed is over

Jerome Powell’s era of consensus at the Fed is over

Jerome Powell’s era of consensus at the Fed is over

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell leaves a press conference in Washington, DC, on October 29. - Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell leaves a press conference in Washington, DC, on October 29. – Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Federal Reserve policymakers are split over whether they should continue cutting interest rates, ending a period of consensus that has defined Chair Jerome Powell’s leadership of the central bank.

The Fed’s latest decision to lower interest rates by a quarter point in late October was opposed by two policymakers: one official who preferred to hold rates steady, and another who wanted a larger rate cut instead. A pair of opposing dissents had not been seen since 2019. Earlier this year, more than one Fed governor cast a dissenting vote for the first time in more than three decades.

The growing divide among Fed officials has spilled out into public speeches in recent days, presenting a challenge for Powell as he works to retain consensus among colleagues.

That division is a direct result of the uncertainty in the US economy and questions around the impacts of President Donald Trump’s aggressive trade policy. The murky economic outlook has divided the rate-setting committee, which is tasked by Congress to keep the labor market intact and to tame inflation. Some Fed officials want to continue to focus on reining in higher prices, believing that tariffs could jack up inflation. Other policymakers say it’s time to prioritize a weakening labor market.

Economists say the potential implications of a divided Fed are a mixed bag, but nonetheless represent an extraordinary shift in the politics of the world’s most powerful central bank.

“If these intellectual disagreements aren’t able to be reconciled, then that could affect the Fed’s effectiveness and credibility,” said Derek Tang, an economist at LHMeyer, a monetary policy analytics firm.

“In the next decade or so, the Fed could become like the Supreme Court, with people voting along party lines,” he said.

As leader of America’s central bank — and chair of its influential rate-setting committee — Powell now has his work cut out for him, but the outcome may be beyond his control.

Over the past few decades, the Fed chair has increasingly played a key part in shepherding the central bank’s policy decisions through careful consensus-building efforts.

The Fed chair’s role of seeking unanimous agreement notably began under former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke, according to Jon Hilsenrath, a long-time Fed watcher and senior adviser at brokerage firm StoneX Group. It involves regular meetings with members of the Fed’s seven-person Board of Governors and the 12 regional Fed bank presidents.

“Powell built on what Bernanke and (former Fed Chair Janet) Yellen did,” Hilsenrath said. “But this kind of breakdown in consensus is beyond Jay Powell or his leadership.”

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