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Reforming the Fed: Necessary but Risky Reforms
Introduction
The U.S. central bank—the Federal Reserve (commonly known as the "Fed")—has been criticized for its policies that are said to have exacerbated the "silent depression." This depression manifests as declining real wages, excessive financialization, and a "K-shaped economy," where Wall Street thrives while the middle class is marginalized. Former World Bank President David Malpass and former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh proposed bold reform plans aimed at shifting the Fed's policy focus toward wage growth, support for small businesses, and reducing funding for the fiscal deficit. However, their plans face significant trade-offs, including inflation risks and market instability.
This article analyzes their proposal, assesses its potential to revitalize the middle class, and explores the risks within the context of economic challenges in the United States, incorporating key data and insights.
Silent Recession: A Fractured Economic System
Since the post-World War II prosperity period, the U.S. economy has undergone profound changes, characterized at that time by high nominal growth, strong industrial capacity, and continuously rising real wages. Today, the economy presents the following characteristics:
These trends have been exacerbated by globalization (such as China joining the WTO in 2001) and the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing policies, which have severely impacted the middle class, reduced housing affordability, and concentrated wealth among the elite. In this context, Malpass and Walsh proposed transformative reforms.
David Malpass: Shifting the Federal Reserve's Focus to Wages and Growth
proposal
potential benefits
Risks and Challenges
Kevin Warsh: Shrinking the Role of the Federal Reserve
Proposal
potential benefits
Risks and Challenges
Shadow Federal Reserve and Political Background
The incident in 2025 where Trump drafted a letter proposing to dismiss Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell highlights the immense political pressure for reform. The concept of a "shadow Federal Reserve"—announcing a new chairman in advance to signal a shift in policy—could affect the market prematurely. The market reacted sharply to news about Powell, with the dollar falling by 2%, the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds rising by 50 basis points, and the stock market dropping by 3% (Bloomberg, July 17, 2025). Although the government later retracted this, Powell's term will end in May 2026, paving the way for a new chairman to implement reforms.
The ideas of Malpass and Walsh resonate with the structural transformation described by Strauss and Howe as the "Fourth Turning." After World War II, the 1951 Federal Reserve-Treasury Accord granted the Federal Reserve independence, but current proposals for yield curve control or large-scale quantitative easing may reverse this situation, echoing the Federal Reserve's policy of suppressing yields to finance war debt in the 1940s.
Weighing and Feasibility
The goal of Malpass and Waugh is to address the silent depression, but their proposal has inherent contradictions:
Opinion: Necessary but Risky Reforms
The proposals by Malpass and Walsh represent a welcome shift in the Federal Reserve's focus towards inflation and technical measures in the financial markets. Addressing real wages and small to medium-sized enterprises may resolve the middle class's predicament, reversing the decline in purchasing power over the past 25 years and the K-shaped economy. However, the risks are substantial. Growth driven by quantitative easing disproportionately benefits the wealthy, and suppressing bond yields may trigger inflation or market instability. The structural weaknesses in the U.S.—trade deficits, low productivity, and excessive financialization—limit the applicability of the post-World War II model.
A balanced solution may include:
If implemented improperly, these reforms could exacerbate inequality or inflation, but inaction will deepen the silent recession. The Federal Reserve must evolve to prioritize the middle class, but navigating the trade-offs will be a daunting challenge.
Conclusion
Malpass and Walsh provide a bold vision for reforming the Federal Reserve, addressing the impact of the silent depression on the middle class. Their focus on real wages, support for small and medium-sized enterprises, and a more streamlined Federal Reserve could restore economic fairness, but inflation, market volatility, and structural constraints pose significant risks. As Powell's term ends in 2026, the U.S. approaches a potential turning point, and the next Federal Reserve chair will face a delicate balance. The road ahead requires innovative policies, fiscal discipline, and a commitment to the forgotten American worker—otherwise, the silent depression will deepen further.