Tag Archives: Federal Reserve

When the Courts Must Defend

When the Courts Must Defend the Independence of the Fed

By Calvin P. Tran

A federal judge blocks subpoenas targeting the Federal Reserve, raising deeper questions about political pressure on monetary policy.

For decades, the independence of the U.S. central bank rested less on court rulings than on an unwritten political norm: presidents do not pressure monetary policy.

This week, that tradition had to be defended in a courtroom.

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When the Invisible Hand is Throttled

When the Invisible Hand is Throttled

By Calvin P. Tran

Trump, a Curious Tale — when the ego becomes a macroeconomic risk

In American economic history, 15 percent is not an ordinary number.
It appears after collapse —
a deep contraction,
then a reflexive rebound.

A survival instinct.

But in Mr. Trump’s vocabulary, 15 percent is not the consequence of crisis.
It is the product of will. [1]

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