His two worst economic ideas collide
By Catherine Rampell
May 10 at 10:11 AM
... Last fall, Trump began loudly complaining about the Feds interest rate hikes, in defiance of a multidecade-long policy for the White House to never comment on Fed decisions. The reason for this norm is clear: Central banks must be politically independent in both practice and perception in order to credibly commit to stable prices. If the public believes that politicians rather than independent technocrats control the printing press, inflation can easily spiral out of control. Lots of other countries throughout history (Venezuela, Argentina, pre-euro Italy) have served as cautionary tales.
But none of that mattered to Trump. He has been throwing tantrums about the Feds modest interest rate increases, claiming that they threaten both the U.S. economy and his presidency. At one point, there were even reports that Trump was considering taking the unprecedented and cataclysmic step of firing the Fed chair whom he appointed, Jerome H. Powell.
Markets paid attention. As it turns out, China did, too.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Beijing noticed Trumps latest Fed-related outbursts and interpreted them as evidence that the president was freaked out about the underlying health of the U.S. economy. They suggested that he might be secretly desperate to make a deal, any deal, with China ...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2019/05/10/trumps-two-worst-economic-ideas-collide/?utm_term=.0faa99e63a41