Reading Between the Dots: Politics, Policy, and the Fed’s New Direction

The Federal Reserve’s September meeting may be remembered less for the modest quarter-point cut it delivered and more for what it revealed about the state of the institution itself. In the space of just a few days, we saw a rushed confirmation of a new governor, a highly unusual dissent calling for a much larger rate reduction, and the culmination of a weeks-long White House effort to remove a sitting member of the Board. Taken together, these events suggest the Fed is no longer insulated from political pressure in the way investors once assumed.

Stephen Miran, a Trump-backed economist, was confirmed by the Senate on September 15 and sworn in the very next morning—just hours before the Fed convened. At his first meeting, he immediately dissented, pushing for a 50-basis-point cut instead of the 25-point move supported by all other voters. More tellingly, Miran sketched a path for another 125 points of cuts by year-end, which would bring the policy rate well below 3%. That is not a minor adjustment—it would mark one of the most aggressive easing cycles in modern history, undertaken at a time when core inflation remains close to 3% and unemployment, while rising, is still only about 4.3%.

To understand why this matters, it helps to remember how the Fed typically frames policy. Economists often use rules of thumb such as the Taylor Rule, which balances inflation against the level of slack in the economy. By those measures, today’s conditions call for a policy rate roughly around neutral—somewhere close to 3.5–4%. The Cleveland Fed’s own model places the neutral nominal funds rate at about 3.7%. Cutting meaningfully below that level while inflation remains sticky would represent a shift from mildly restrictive policy to overt stimulus. And while this move may be supported by arguments about a weak labor market or an outdated approach by the Fed and their terrible track record, it is at least partially also justified by politics.

The political context is important. Trump first announced plans to remove Governor Lisa Cook in late August, alleging misconduct from before her appointment. On September 9, a federal judge blocked that dismissal, ruling that the case did not meet the “for cause” threshold required by law. The administration appealed, seeking an emergency order that would have prevented Cook from voting at the September meeting. The appeals court refused, allowing her to remain. While Cook ultimately kept her seat, the episode underscores just how far the White House was willing to go to influence the Fed’s composition ahead of a critical policy decision.

For decades, markets treated the Fed as an independent arbiter, occasionally swayed by politics but never truly captured. That assumption looks less secure today. International observers have taken notice—Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel warned this month that U.S. political interference in the central bank threatens financial stability and could raise long-term borrowing costs as investors demand compensation for lost credibility. The concern is straightforward: if the Fed is pressured into cutting rates too far, inflation will remain above target, and bond markets will force higher yields at the long end. The result is a steeper yield curve for all the wrong reasons.