Warsh, who frequently invoked his predecessor during his May swearing-in, views the current Fed’s penchant for detailed guidance as a constraint on policy flexibility. His inaugural policy statement last week moved toward this leaner, more opaque approach, a hallmark of the "Great Moderation" era when Greenspan steered the U.S. economy with famously obscure language. For Warsh, the goal is to reduce the central bank's footprint and discourage the market from merely echoing official pronouncements.
This shift carries significant historical weight. While Greenspan’s tenure oversaw long-term growth, his reliance on the efficiency of financial institutions masked the systemic risks that culminated in the 2007-2009 financial crisis. Greenspan eventually admitted that his faith in rational markets was a "flaw" in his judgment, particularly regarding the housing bubble. As Warsh curtails the Dodd-Frank era regulations and scales back the Fed’s presence, he faces the delicate task of adopting Greenspan’s tactical restraint without repeating the oversight failures that left the system vulnerable to collapse.
Warsh argues that the modern Fed has become too chatty, effectively blinding itself to genuine market signals by creating a feedback loop. By prioritizing incoming data over explicit forward guidance, he intends to restore a system where investors and businesses dictate market direction. Whether this strategy can navigate modern economic volatility without repeating the blind spots of the past remains the defining question of his new chairmanship.

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