- begin quote from:
Fed chair: I won't resign even if Trump asks
Fed chair Jerome Powell says he would not resign if Trump asked
Netflix is growing, but so is the box office
You can thank this man for expensive yoga pants
Facebook's data scandals aren't just bad publicity
Federal Reserve raises key interest rate
Elon Musk unveils the tunnel he says will solve LA traffic
This company is reinventing shaving for people of color
Life on the water: Inside Seattle's floating homes community
How Google got its start
Fed chair says he wouldn't resign if asked by Trump
Hiring surge: 312,000 jobs added in December
Big pharma deal: Bristol-Myers Squibb to buy Celgene
Apple warns that iPhone sales could take big hit
National average for gas at lowest since 2017
This company wants to make brushing your teeth fun
Here's how he makes $500,000 per month playing video games
An inside look at Wall Street's most famous trader
Netflix is growing, but so is the box office
You can thank this man for expensive yoga pants
Facebook's data scandals aren't just bad publicity
Federal Reserve raises key interest rate
Elon Musk unveils the tunnel he says will solve LA traffic
This company is reinventing shaving for people of color
Life on the water: Inside Seattle's floating homes community
How Google got its start
begin quote from: Fed chair says he wouldn't resign if asked by Trump
Fed chair Jerome Powell says he would not resign if Trump asked
Atlanta (CNN Business)Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell says he would not resign if pressured to do so by President Donald Trump."No," Powell answered simply, when asked Friday morning during a panel at the annual American Economics Association conference alongside former Fed chairs Janet Yellen and Ben Bernanke.Trump has repeatedly criticized Powell for continuing to tighten monetary policy, saying on Twitter that it's the "only problem" with the economy. The President has also asked advisers amid increasing market volatility in recent weeks whether he can fire Powell.It's unclear whether presidents legally can fire Fed chairs, whom they appoint for four-year terms. Trump chose Powell in 2017 to succeed Yellen, bucking the practice of reappointing Fed chairs to second terms.Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who supported Powell's appointment, tweeted in late December that Trump had never suggested firing Powell and did not believe he had the power to do so.Onstage in Atlanta on Friday, Powell said Trump had not directly expressed dissatisfaction to him, and that he has no plans to meet with Trump. White House aides have floated the idea of inviting the former investment banker to sit with the President in person to allay Trump's concerns."Meetings between presidents and Fed chairs do happen, but nothing's been scheduled," Powell told moderator Neil Irwin, an economics reporter for the New York Times.Both Yellen and Bernanke spoke about the importance of insulating monetary policy decisions from political concerns in order to reassure investors that rate changes are solidly grounded in economic data.Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon tangled with their Fed chairs, but more recently American leaders have refrained from commenting on policy decisions."Obviously the president has the right to comment on the Fed," Yellen said. "But I would worry that if it continues or intensifies, it could undermine confidence in the Fed."Powell jumped in again to reiterate that the Fed would not be swayed by comments from the President or any other politician."We are committed to achieving the goals that the law gives us, based on the best thinking," he said. "It's very much in the DNA of the Fed. We have a strong culture. It's not a fragile one, it's not subject to being disrupted, and I would want the public to have confidence in that."The Federal Reserve raised rates in December and has signaled that it would be open to considering rate changes in 2019, even amid signs that the global economy is starting to slow.
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Top 10 Posts This Month
- Here Are the New Members of Donald Trump’s Administration So Far
- Trump and Musk unleash a new kind of chaos on Washington
- Crowdsourcing - Wikipedia
- The AI Translated this about Drone Sightings in Europe from German to English for me
- The state of the Arctic: High temperatures, melting ice, fires and unprecedented emissions
- reprint of: Friday, March 18, 2016 More regarding "As Drones Evolve"
- More regarding "As Drones Evolve"
- "There is nothing so good that no bad may come of it and nothing so bad that no good may come of it": Descartes
- The Future of Climate Action Is Trade Policy
- I tried to get a copy from France from French Wikipedia but it just took me back to English Wikipedia:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment