This article was originally published in Barron’s on 12 June 2026.
In his rise to the US Federal Reserve (Fed) chairmanship, Kevin Warsh has cast himself as a change agent. In his acceptance speech, he pledged to “lead a reform-oriented Federal Reserve, learning from past successes and mistakes, escaping static frameworks and models.” That reform is long overdue.
The US economy has changed profoundly since the pandemic, and the Fed’s mantra of “data dependence” is ill-suited to today’s challenges. The more important questions are structural. The Fed must rethink some of the assumptions underlying modern monetary policy.
First, how should the Fed respond to the declining effectiveness of monetary policy itself?
Economists have traditionally argued that monetary policy influences the business cycle primarily through investment. Investment is highly sensitive to interest rates: When the Fed wants to slow the economy, it raises rates, dampening investment, growth, and inflation. Yet the current AI-driven investment boom appears relatively insensitive to borrowing costs, blunting monetary policy’s ability to slow economic activity and inflation.
At the same time, much of today’s inflation volatility has originated in the supply side of the economy. The Fed’s tools have historically been better suited to managing demand-driven inflation than inflation caused by supply constraints.
Monetary policy is also becoming less effective in shaping longer-term interest rates. Historically, when the Fed cut short-term rates, long-term yields declined as well. Yet since the Fed began its current 175 basis-point (bp) easing cycle in September 2024, 10-year Treasury yields have risen by roughly 85 bps. This reflects resilient US growth and large fiscal deficits, which have muted the effects of Fed cuts.
Should the Fed prepare markets for more forceful and less predictable rate adjustments — and does forward guidance still have a useful role in a supply-driven economy?
A related question is how monetary policy should interact with fiscal policy in an era of structurally large government deficits. US President Donald Trump has made clear that he wants lower interest rates to reduce the government’s financing burden. Historically, the Fed has avoided acknowledging the extent to which monetary policy incentivizes government borrowing, preferring to defer responsibility to elected officials. Yet the Fed routinely considers leverage in the household and financial sectors because excessive leverage can create systemic risk.