Cryptocurrency
Fiscal dominance: Behind the Fed’s growing and unavoidable burden – Crypto News
This is a segment from The Breakdown newsletter. To read more editions, subscribe.
“The continuous rise of the debt-to-GDP ratio indicates that current policy is unsustainable.”
— Financial Report of the United States Government
There once was a happy time when Fed chairs felt free to lecture politicians on their irresponsible spending habits.
In 1990, for example, Alan Greenspan told Congress he would lower interest rates, but only if it cut the deficit.
In 1985, Paul Volcker even specified a number, telling Congress that the Fed’s “stable” monetary policy was contingent on Congress cutting about $50 billion from the federal budget deficit.
(Oh, for the days when $50 billion of federal debt wasn’t just a rounding error.)
In both cases, the Fed chairs were not-so-subtly threatening Congress and the White House with recession: That’s a nice economy you’ve got there. Would be a shame if something happened to it.
Now, however, it’s the other way around, with President Trump lecturing the Fed on interest rates.
In just the last few weeks, the president has opined that the fed funds rate is “AT LEAST 3 points too high,” insisted there is “no inflation” and mocked the Fed Chair as Jerome “Too Late” Powell.
This, too, is a shakedown: That’s some nice central-bank independence you’ve got there…
President Trump lobbied for lower interest rates during his first term as well. Like nearly every modern US president, he wanted the Fed to stimulate the economy.
This time, however, it’s about much more than that: Trump wants the Fed to finance the deficit.
The Trump vs. Powell showdown is ostensibly about the current level of interest rates (which the FOMC left unchanged today, presumably to the president’s displeasure).
But what the president has been threatening is “fiscal dominance” — the state of affairs when monetary policy is subordinated to the needs of government spending.
“Our Rate should be three points lower than they are saving us $1 trillion a year (as a Country),” the president recently wrote on Truth Social (in his signature style of random capitalization).
With repeated such statements, Mr. Trump has made history by being the first US president to explicitly call for fiscal dominance.
But he’s far from the first to acknowledge the possibility.
When Volcker and Greenspan threatened Congress with rate hikes, it brought the usually hidden link between monetary and fiscal policy out into the open.
It worked for them: Both Fed chairs had some success in using the threat of recession to get Congress to address its deficit spending, which is a hopeful precedent.
But that tactic seems unlikely to work this time.
Chair Powell has often warned about the risks of growing deficits, and even explained that higher deficits could mean higher long-term interest rates.
But it’s hard to imagine him making an explicit threat in the way Volcker and Greenspan did — perhaps because he knows he’s bargaining from a much weaker position.
In the 1980s, the most-feared effect of higher interest rates was recession, which the Fed was willing to risk in order to get Congress to change its free-spending ways.
Back then, lawmakers faced a ballooning defense budget and a stagnant economy, both of which seemed manageable.
At just 35% of GDP, the national debt seemed manageable too.
Now, with federal debt at 120% of GDP, the US spends more on interest payments than it does on defense:
The fast-rising blue line above may now be the biggest budgetary problem.
This puts the Fed in a bind because raising interest rates to encourage fiscal sanity would only exacerbate the problem it wants lawmakers to address.
The Fed could risk it, of course.
But if rate hikes drive the deficit even higher, who blinks first: the Fed or the White House?
Before answering, consider that 73% of federal spending is now non-discretionary, vs. just 45% in the 1980s.
To believe the Fed can win a showdown over deficits is to believe Congress will make significant cuts to non-discretionary spending like Social Security and Medicare.
This seems, well, unbelievable.
Now, especially, with a president who appears wholly unperturbed by the country’s growing indebtedness.
This may come from his experience as an over-indebted real estate developer in the 1990s.
“I figured it was the bank’s problem, not mine,” Trump later wrote of not being able to service his debts. “What the hell did I care? I actually told one bank, ‘I told you you shouldn’t have loaned me that money. I told you that goddamn deal was no good.’”
Now, as president, when Trump tells Powell that interest rates should be lower, what he’s really saying is that the national debt is the Fed’s problem, not his.
He’s not wrong.
“When interest payments on the debt rise and primary surpluses are politically off the table,” David Beckworth writes, “something else has to give. That something is more debt, more money creation, or both.”
Yes, the Fed could run the Volcker/Greenspan playbook and threaten Congress with higher interest rates.
But Powell presumably knows that following through would only exacerbate a problem that might ultimately be the Fed’s to fix — and pull forward the time by which it’s forced to fix it.
“If debt levels are too high and growing,” Beckworth explains, “it becomes the Fed’s job to accommodate — by suppressing interest rates or monetizing debt.”
That, and not President Trump, he warns, is the real existential threat to the Fed: “When the central bank is forced to accommodate fiscal needs, it loses its economic independence.”
Beckworth remains hopeful that it might not come to that.
And maybe it won’t. We’ve just seen how unpopular inflation is, so maybe if we get another bout of it, voters will force lawmakers to address the deficit.
But he despairs that the focus on Trump’s demands for lower interest rates is a distraction: “What we are witnessing is less about Trump himself and more about the growing and unavoidable fiscal demands being placed on the Fed.”
President Trump is the first to start explicitly making those demands, presumably because he knows the US government’s current fiscal policy is unsustainable.
But everyone knows that, even the government itself.
The only question now is: Who’s going to deal with it?
Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:
-
Blockchain7 days agoThe Quantum Clock Is Ticking on Blockchain Security – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week agoHow Americans are using AI at work, according to a new Gallup poll – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week agoHow Americans are using AI at work, according to a new Gallup poll – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoTether Launches Dollar-Backed Stablecoin USAT – Crypto News
-
Metaverse4 days agoContext engineering and the Future of AI-powered business – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoRiver Crypto Token Up 1,900% in the Last Month—What’s the Deal? – Crypto News
-
Metaverse4 days agoStop panicking about AI. Start preparing – Crypto News
-
others1 week agoUS Heiress Slaps Billion-Dollar Lawsuit on Banks for Allegedly Aiding the Looting of Her $350,000,000 Trust Fund – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoTrump-Backed WLFI Snaps Up 2,868 ETH, Sells $8M WBTC – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoTrump-Backed WLFI Snaps Up 2,868 ETH, Sells $8M WBTC – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoUS Storm Smashes Bitcoin Mining Power, Sending Hash Rates Tumbling – Crypto News
-
Metaverse1 week agoIs AI eating up jobs in UK? New report paints bleak picture – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoTrump family-backed American Bitcoin achieves 116% BTC yield – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoRiver price defies market downturn, explodes 40% to new ATH – Crypto News
-
Metaverse4 days agoContext engineering and the Future of AI-powered business – Crypto News
-
Metaverse4 days agoContext engineering and the Future of AI-powered business – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoBitcoin Gets the Macro Bug as $87,000 Comes Into Play – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoMakinaFi hit by $4.1M Ethereum hack as MEV tactics suspected – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week agoHow Americans are using AI at work, according to a new Gallup poll – Crypto News
-
others1 week agoPBOC sets USD/CNY reference rate at 6.9843 vs. 6.9929 previous – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoKalshi Expands Political Footprint with DC Office, Democratic Hire – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week agoElon Musk says ‘WhatsApp is not secure’ amid Meta privacy lawsuit; Sridhar Vembu cites ‘conflict of interest’ – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Fed Rate Cut Odds in January Crash to 99% Ahead of Dollar Yen Intervention- Will BTC React? – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week ago
Fed Rate Cut Odds in January Crash to 99% Ahead of Dollar Yen Intervention- Will BTC React? – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoBitcoin Gets the Macro Bug as $87,000 Comes Into Play – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Bitcoin and XRP Price At Risk As US Govt. Shutdown Odds Reach 73% – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Bitcoin and XRP Price At Risk As US Govt. Shutdown Odds Reach 73% – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Bitcoin Sentiment Weakens BTC ETFs Lose $103M- Is A Crash Imminent? – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Japan Set to Launch First Crypto ETFs as Early as 2028: Nikkei – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoRYO Digital Announces 2025 Year-End Milestones Across Its Ecosystem – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoRiver Crypto Token Up 1,900% in the Last Month—What’s the Deal? – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Experts Advise Caution As Crypto Market Heads Into A Bearish Week Ahead – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Experts Advise Caution As Crypto Market Heads Into A Bearish Week Ahead – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week ago‘Most Reliable’ Bitcoin Price Signal Hints at a 2026 Bull Run – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Bitcoin And XRP Price Prediction Ahead of FOMC Meeting Tomorrow, Jan 28 – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Bitcoin And XRP Price Prediction Ahead of FOMC Meeting Tomorrow, Jan 28 – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Bitcoin And XRP Price Prediction Ahead of FOMC Meeting Tomorrow, Jan 28 – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Bitcoin Faces Renewed Volatility as Investors Explore Options Like Everlight – Crypto News
-
others1 week ago
Jerome Powell Speech Tomorrow: What to Expect From Fed Meeting for Crypto Market? – Crypto News
-
Technology2 days ago
Fed Rate Cut Uncertainty Mounts as BLS Delays Jobs Report Amid Shutdown – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Fed Rate Cut Odds in January Crash to 99% Ahead of Dollar Yen Intervention- Will BTC React? – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Bitcoin and XRP Price At Risk As US Govt. Shutdown Odds Reach 73% – Crypto News
-
others1 week ago
U.S. Shutdown Odds Hit 78% as CLARITY Act Faces Fresh Uncertainty – Crypto News
-
others1 week ago478,188 Americans Warned After Hackers Strike Government-Related Firm Handling Sensitive Personal Data – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week ago
Crypto Events to Watch This Week: Is the Market Entering a New Recovery Phase? – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoCZ Won’t Return to Binance, Bullish on Bitcoin Supercycle – Crypto News
-
Blockchain1 week agoSolana (SOL) Slips Further As Bears Target Deeper Support Zones – Crypto News
-
Technology1 week agoIs TikTok still down in the United States? Check current status – Crypto News
-
Cryptocurrency1 week agoThe productivity bull case for almost everything – Crypto News
-
Business1 week ago
Experts Advise Caution As Crypto Market Heads Into A Bearish Week Ahead – Crypto News
