Shortly after taking over as chairman of the Federal Reserve, Kevin M. Warsh wrote to the central bank’s more than 20,000 employees about how he planned to lead an institution that he had long argued was in need of an overhaul.
In a June 2 letter that was viewed by The New York Times, Mr. Warsh vowed to foster “open, cleareyed discussions of Fed strategies, policies and operations.”
“Now more than ever, we must ensure the Fed is fit for purpose. And focused on the future,” he wrote, before concluding, “We are the Federal Reserve.”
Just a few weeks into Mr. Warsh’s tenure, his approach has begun to take shape. He has embraced aspects of how the Fed has historically operated, while also making clear that a substantive shift is afoot. Having campaigned for the job on the basis of “regime change,” this balance has alleviated immediate concerns both inside and outside the Fed about the new chairman’s aims for an institution that has long operated as a beacon of stability for the world’s largest economy and the financial system globally.
The centerpiece of Mr. Warsh’s strategy is a set of task forces focused on five areas that he says are “central to the broad conduct of monetary policy.” They include how the Fed communicates; its $6.7 trillion portfolio of government debt and mortgage-backed securities; the data sources it prioritizes; productivity trends and jobs; and the models and measures it uses to understand inflation.
Mr. Warsh will announce further details about the task forces in the next couple of weeks, according to people familiar with the matter. The goal is to wrap up work by year-end, after which policymakers will consider what reforms should be implemented and how. Each task force will be led by a few external people handpicked by Mr. Warsh. Select members of the Fed’s staff will be dispatched to support them.
Mr. Warsh adopted a similar tactic when choosing his closest advisers. He brought in outsiders he has known for years from conservative economic policymaking circles. They include Paul Winfree, who worked in the first Trump administration and wrote the chapter on reforming the Fed for the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 initiative, which has functioned as the president’s blueprint in his second term. Mr. Warsh also hired Daniel Heil, a fellow focused on fiscal policy at Stanford’s Hoover Institution.
Mr. Warsh has rounded out his team with two veteran Fed economists, Daniel Covitz and Eric Engstrom, who have both published extensive research on a range of core issues to the central bank. So far he has also kept all the division directors and senior staff in place.
Among staff and policymakers at the Fed, there is an apparent readiness to engage in what could be done differently. But a degree of defensiveness about the central bank’s conduct under past leadership is also palpable. Perhaps more than anything, there is an overwhelming sense of uncertainty about how far and how quickly Mr. Warsh will seek to usher in changes and how success will ultimately be defined.
A ‘Price Stability’ Pledge
Mr. Warsh’s debut at June’s policy meeting was telling. Procedurally, it followed the same structure as past gatherings. Staff held their regular briefings beforehand with policymakers, officials submitted a new slate of economic projections and rate forecasts as they do each quarter, the Fed released a policy statement alongside its rate decision, and Mr. Warsh held a news conference.
But in terms of substance, Mr. Warsh forged a new path.
The statement, which was unanimously supported by policymakers, was drastically scaled back in both length and content. Officials’ names were stripped out. It streamlined the overview of the economic backdrop, removed any semblance of a signal about what the Fed might do next with interest rates and stipulated unequivocally that the central bank would “deliver price stability” — changes instigated by Mr. Warsh, according to the people familiar with the matter.
Emphasizing price stability was a deliberate choice, and the goal was to shore up the Fed’s credibility after five years of missing its 2 percent inflation target, the people said. It also helped burnish Mr. Warsh’s own credibility given appreciable skepticism before he took over about how he would manage President Trump’s relentless demands for lower rates. Mr. Trump, who hosted Mr. Warsh’s swearing-in ceremony at the White House, had previously said he would not select someone who did not agree with him.
“Price stability is a way of demonstrating independence because you typically associate it with a hawkish tilt to policy,” said Donald Kohn, who served as vice chair of the central bank from 2006 to 2010, overlapping with Mr. Warsh’s tenure as a Fed governor. Mr. Kohn warned that if inflation did not show tangible signs of retreating, Mr. Warsh would be under pressure to reinforce his pledge by raising rates.
Before rejoining the Fed, Mr. Warsh often remarked that he did not care about decimal-point values when it came to inflation, suggesting that he was comfortable with a rate somewhere around 2 percent rather than a precise target. But as chairman, he has felt a responsibility to make clear to the public that the Fed will not accept anything above 2 percent for the time being. To him, continuing to overshoot that level would not be consistent with price stability.
Mr. Warsh believes the Fed cannot immediately influence near-term inflation trends, which are often driven by price fluctuations in idiosyncratic items like oil, eggs or beef. What the Fed can instead determine, in his view, is the trajectory of future inflation. The policy choices the central bank makes are important in that regard, but so too is the perception that the Fed is seen as credible on its inflation commitment.
Financial markets have shifted since Mr. Warsh’s first meeting in ways that have bolstered his confidence in his approach. Yields on U.S. government debt maturing in 10 years or more have fallen while measures of inflation expectations based on market activity have eased. At the same time, short-term Treasury yields have risen as traders have piled on bets that the Fed will raise rates this year, even as energy prices have dropped sharply in anticipation of an end to the war with Iran.
One complication for investors has been Mr. Warsh’s refusal to signal where rates might be headed, otherwise known as forward guidance. He declined to submit his own forecasts as part of a set of projections released by the Fed in June. Half of the officials projected the central bank would raise rates at least once this year, while the other half estimated the Fed would keep rates steady or cut.
This lack of direction has led to widely divergent views across Wall Street about what the Fed might do next. Some see the potential for a rate increase in the coming months, which they say would help buttress Mr. Warsh’s inflation-fighting credentials.
Others think that with inflation likely to ease in the second half of the year, there is no urgency to adjust rates. Many in this cohort think Mr. Warsh’s earlier inclination toward rate cuts while jockeying for the chairmanship has also not evaporated entirely. With a path to lower borrowing costs all but closed given the ongoing surge in inflation, they believe he will settle for an extended hold.
The one view with broad consensus, however, is that volatility is likely to rise.
“Forward guidance reduces volatility in the short-term but it raises it in the long-term; taking it away is the reverse,” said Stephen Miran, who in May stepped down as a Fed governor and has since rejoined Hudson Bay Capital, a hedge fund. He has also served as one of Mr. Trump’s top economic advisers. “Markets don’t know how you’re going to respond,” Mr. Miran continued, “but it reduces the odds of being wrong at turns. And being wrong at turns is what can lead to unnecessary recessions and inflation spikes.”
Transformation Via Task Force
How transparent the Fed should be about its future moves will be a key component of the communications task force that Mr. Warsh has created. The range of issues could include the cadence and structure of the policy meetings themselves, the quarterly projections the Fed now publishes, and the timing and content of the minutes that are now released roughly three weeks after each gathering in addition to historical transcripts. The task force could also examine how often officials should speak between meetings and, for Mr. Warsh specifically, the frequency of the post-meeting news conference.
One potential line of inquiry is whether there are lessons to glean from other central banks like the Bank of England, which Mr. Warsh has cited as an effective model for encouraging more candid deliberations during policy meetings and a favorable approach to summarizing and disseminating records of those gatherings.
The topics covered by this group and the four others will be unconstrained, reflecting the sweeping nature of the changes that Mr. Warsh is willing to consider. The degree of transformation depends largely on the task force.
A number of current and former Fed staffers, for example, balk at the idea that the central bank needs to radically rethink the data sources it uses. They say the central bank already monitors a plethora of private sector metrics that Mr. Warsh has often highlighted, in addition to official government statistics.
But when it comes to the Fed’s balance sheet, which Mr. Warsh has long argued should be smaller, there has already been an internal shift toward the idea that there are mechanisms to shrink it without disrupting markets.
An overarching concern is whether Mr. Warsh will furnish the task forces with only people inclined to ratify his long-held beliefs. Perhaps equally important as whom he selects is how Mr. Warsh socializes any proposals with his fellow officials on the Federal Open Market Committee, said William English, a Yale professor and a former director of the Fed’s division of monetary affairs.
“Warsh has to manage a difficult balancing act,” Mr. English said. “If the F.O.M.C. feels like its views aren’t being considered or they don’t respect the people on the task forces, they may well not support the conclusions.”

