
Economist Podcasts Tug of Warsh: will the new chair politicise the Fed?
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Feb 3, 2026 Archie Hall, US economics editor who decodes Kevin Warsh’s Fed nomination; Erin Connolly, Asia diplomatic editor reporting on Thailand’s youth-led parties and royal influence; Emma Irving, Hong Kong news editor highlighting the city’s iconic trams. They discuss the politics around the Fed pick, Thailand’s contested election dynamics and monarchy’s role, and how trams quietly sustain Hong Kong tourism.
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Young Fed Insider Who Resigned Over QE
- Walsh was appointed to the Fed at 35 and became closely involved in crisis-era bank rescues.
- He left in 2011 over objections to prolonged quantitative easing and its economic effects.
Political Signals Versus Historical Stance
- Trump wanted a rate-cutter, but Walsh historically worried about inflation and kept a hawkish view.
- The key question is whether recent pro-cut signals reflect conviction or auditioning for the presidency.
Chair Influence Limited By Committee
- Big interest-rate cuts are hard to enact because the Fed's rate decisions are set by a committee.
- Walsh could influence marginal direction but likely cannot force large cuts without wider support or a crisis.



