#Scott Bessent

8 09, 2025

Karen Petrou: What Treasury Wants from the Fed and Why It Should Get it

2025-09-08T09:29:11-04:00September 8th, 2025|The Vault|

With all the bandwidth absorbed by the Miran and Cook dramas, insufficient attention was paid late last week to Secretary Bessent’s Wall Street Journal article laying out a new monetary-policy model.  I like it a lot and not just because Mr. Bessent quotes my book.  As he says, we need a different monetary policy model, one that the Fed is clearly unable to develop on its own judging by the five years of work that went into the ultra-cautious 2025 fiddles with the 2020 model.  Most of what Mr. Bessent wants will make the Fed better at its core mission and a more independent guardian of the public good, overdue reforms that Democrats should support.

What does reform entail?  First, the Fed would adhere to its statutory mandate, not the truncated “dual” one recent Fed leadership selects in defense of its legitimacy.  Secretary Bessent and Stephen Miran read all the law, not just selected passages, correctly observing that the mandate is a triple-header of maximum employment, price stability, and “moderate long-term interest rates.”  Mr. Miran’s testimony cites the 1946 Full Employment Act as one source of this mandate along with the 1978 law.  Current law also implores the Fed to act in concert with the federal government to further the “general welfare.”  The FRB and FOMC thus have an affirmative, express duty to do all they can to reduce economic inequality, not inadvertently but significantly worsen it as has long been the case.  Mr. Bessent seconds this view …

10 02, 2025

Karen Petrou: Payment-System Politics and the Havoc It Wreaks

2025-02-10T09:16:53-05:00February 10th, 2025|The Vault|

Any bank that granted even just “read-only” access to its payment services with as few controls as the U.S. Treasury would and should be harshly sanctioned by its supervisors.  Who steps in to ensure the smooth functioning of the multi-trillion Treasury payment system?  Do any of Mr. Musk’s operatives know what would happen if they pulled the wrong plug and disabled critical payments on U.S. debt or to American citizens such as those for Social Security?  And, what if they don’t care if they disrupt payments if they believe this suits a political purpose?

When I wrote my memo last week hoping that these fears are alarmist, we didn’t know then what we know now about unlimited payment system access by a key DOGE warrior since named to head the Fiscal Service and the youth, inexperience, and dubious histories of the payment-system teams.  Do any of them know that payment-system finality is an essential element of payment-system credibility and financial-system stability or do they view the payment system as a video game with a prize for the team member who finds the target that rings the loudest political bell?  Do any of these Trump appointees know that making even a little mistake could be catastrophic in a system handling trillions of dollars in billions of transactions or are they looking for viral moments on encrypted social-media platforms so they become the envy of like-minded young men?

As FedFin noted last week, what Congress and the press took as a pledge …

Go to Top