Jerome Powell has
resisted pressures to tighten money, on the correct grounds that the uptick in reported inflation is the transitory result of supply bottlenecks as the economy reopens. Powell has lately given himself a little more wiggle room in the unlikely event that inflation worsens. The Fed ends a two-day policy meeting today. My sources say that any policy shading will be mainly about starting to pull back on bond purchases, but not on raising rates anytime soon. As a former Wall Street guy who was appointed Fed chair by Trump, Powell is presumably a liberal Democrat’s dream—a loose-money Republican. Powell’s term as chair expires in February 2022. He’d like to keep his job, and there is a Reappoint Powell lobby that stretches from Wall Street to some progressives focused on cheap money,
like Dean Baker. As I wrote in a column yesterday, reappointing
Powell would be a big mistake. He is great on monetary policy but terrible on everything else the Fed does, namely financial regulation and supervision, weakening Dodd-Frank, economic concentration, and climate issues. The Democratic alternative as chair, Fed governor Lael Brainard, is at least as good as Powell on monetary policy and much better on everything else. The premise of Democrats for Powell is that he gives Biden’s policy of tax, borrow, and invest "cover" with Republicans. But think harder: Reappointing Powell provides no carryover benefit. (Query: Which Republican
will say, "Good old Joe Biden reappointed Powell. I guess I’ll vote for infrastructure after all."?) Nor does Biden need any cover on monetary policy. Wall Street and corporate America all want cheap money. Another premise of the Powell bandwagon is that Powell would be easily confirmed. But so would Lael Brainard, who was a centrist Democrat in the Obama Treasury, and since being named to the Fed in 2014 has evolved (like Biden) into more of a progressive. One other clincher: If Biden reappoints Powell, a majority of Fed governors will be Wall Street conservatives. But if Powell doesn’t stay chair, he likely quits the Fed. So does Randy Quarles, the truly awful Fed vice chair for supervision. Two other seats are already open or will soon be. By dumping Powell, Biden thus gets four nominees. So the Fed goes from the current 4-to-1 pro-corporate, to 5-2 progressive. Despite a spate of coordinated leaks that Powell’s reappointment is a done deal, it isn’t.
The five-month strike is about worker power in America. It’s also about fighting for a just transition for carbon-intensive industries. BY
LUIS FELIZ LEON
Farms seem to be the only thing that doesn’t count as ‘infrastructure.’ But an emerging consensus agrees that anti-competitive practices have made food supply a national-security risk. BY LEE HARRIS