Powell Says Trump’s Rate Cut Demands Won’t Change Fed Policy
With inflation no longer at the peak seen during Biden’s presidency, Trump has ramped up pressure on the Fed chair to lower rates.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers on Capitol Hill on Wednesday that the president’s calls for lower interest rates will not influence the central bank’s decisions, reiterating that Fed policymakers remain committed to following a data-dependent path on monetary policy.
The exchange highlights the recurring friction between U.S. presidents and Federal Reserve chiefs. Historically, presidents have favored lower interest rates, which can boost economic growth and, by extension, their political standing. In contrast, Fed policymakers prioritize inflation control, often resisting political pressure to lower rates in the name of ensuring price stability. Powell and his central bank colleagues have repeatedly underscored the Fed’s independence, arguing that shielding monetary policy from political influence is critical to preventing financial instability.
Now back in office, Trump has once again set his sights on monetary policy. With inflation no longer at the 9 percent peak seen during Biden’s presidency, Trump has ramped up pressure on Powell to lower rates, while also accusing the Fed of mismanaging inflation.
“If the Fed had spent less time on DEI, gender ideology, ‘green’ energy, and fake climate change, Inflation would never have been a problem,” Trump wrote after the Fed opted to keep rates steady at its January meeting. The remarks align with his administration’s broader efforts to dismantle Biden-era DEI initiatives and climate policies.
“Houston, we have a problem,” Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management, said in an emailed statement to The Epoch Times.
“The increase in inflation metrics completely takes away the ability of the Fed to cut rates, and although it’s too early to predict that they will begin raising rates any time soon, the market is going to start seriously considering that the next move the Fed makes—even if it is in late 2025 or early 2026—is going to be a hike and not a cut.”
“Potential tariffs add upside risk to inflation in coming quarters, but there are some encouraging signs that housing costs will slow meaningfully later in 2025 and keep the door open to the second half of the year cuts we are forecasting,” they wrote.
Andrew Moran contributed to this report.