Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
The United States has a big bank. It is called the Federal Reserve. It helps the country with money.
The bank has a leader. The old leader's name is Jerome Powell. His job will end today, May 15.
There is a new leader. His name is Kevin Warsh. The Senate voted for him on May 13.
Warsh is now the 17th leader of the Federal Reserve. His job will last four years. Many people want to know what he will do.
- bank
- a place that keeps money safe and lends money
- Senate
- a group of people who make laws in the United States
- vote
- to choose by raising your hand or marking paper
- leader
- the person in charge of a group
- money
- what you use to buy and sell things
- job
- the work a person does
- term
- the time a person stays in a job
- country
- a place with its own land and government
Level 2 — Elementary
Kevin Warsh has a new job. He is the next chair of the United States Federal Reserve, also called the 'Fed.' The Fed is the country's central bank, and it decides how high interest rates should be.
The Senate voted on May 13. The result was close: 54 senators voted yes, and 45 voted no. Almost every Republican supported Warsh. Only one Democrat, John Fetterman, also voted yes.
Warsh takes over on May 15, the day Jerome Powell's term as chair ends. Powell led the Fed for eight years and through a long fight with inflation.
President Trump has often asked the Fed to cut interest rates. Warsh is seen as friendly to lower rates, so many investors expect cheaper borrowing soon. But other economists worry that fast cuts could make prices rise again.
- central bank
- a national bank that controls money and interest rates
- interest rate
- the cost of borrowing money, written as a percent
- term
- the official time someone holds a job
- inflation
- when prices for most things go up over time
- investor
- a person who puts money into stocks, bonds or businesses
- Republican
- a member of the US political party usually called the GOP
- Democrat
- a member of the other main US political party
- cut rates
- to make interest rates lower than before
Level 3 — Intermediate
Kevin Warsh was confirmed by the United States Senate on Wednesday, May 13, as the 17th chair of the Federal Reserve. The vote — 54 in favour and 45 opposed — fell almost entirely along party lines, with John Fetterman of Pennsylvania the only Democrat to support the nominee.
Warsh's four-year term officially begins on Thursday, May 15, the same day Jerome Powell's chairmanship expires after eight turbulent years that included the Covid-19 emergency rate cuts of 2020, the post-pandemic inflation surge, and the start of the latest Iran-related energy spike. Powell, per a deal first reported in early May, will stay on as a sitting governor rather than retire — an arrangement last used by Marriner Eccles in 1948.
Warsh is no stranger to the Fed. He served on the Board of Governors from 2006 to 2011, helping engineer the emergency response to the 2008 financial crisis. Since leaving, he has been one of President Trump's preferred candidates and is generally viewed as a 'dovish hawk' — willing to cut rates when growth is at risk but vocal about the dangers of letting inflation drift.
Markets reacted modestly. The dollar slipped slightly, two-year Treasury yields fell three basis points, and futures pricing in a rate cut at the next FOMC meeting jumped from 40 per cent to 55 per cent. Warsh's first scheduled FOMC press conference, in mid-June, will be the moment when his actual stance becomes legible — not his confirmation speech.
- confirm
- to officially approve a nominee for a job
- along party lines
- split between political parties, with each side voting the same way
- turbulent
- full of sudden change and difficulty
- governor
- a senior member of the Federal Reserve Board
- dovish
- preferring lower rates and looser money policy
- hawkish
- preferring higher rates to fight inflation
- basis point
- one hundredth of a percentage point in interest rates
- FOMC
- the Federal Open Market Committee, which sets US interest rates
Level 4 — Advanced
The United States Senate confirmed Kevin M. Warsh on Wednesday, May 13, as the 17th chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The 54–45 roll-call largely tracked party lines, with Senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania the lone Democrat to cross the aisle. Warsh's statutory four-year term begins Thursday, May 15, the day Jerome H. Powell's chairmanship lapses, ending the longest tenure of any Fed chair since William McChesney Martin Jr.
Continuity will be partial. In an arrangement last invoked in 1948, when Marriner Eccles stayed on as a governor after Thomas McCabe replaced him as chair, Powell will remain a sitting member of the Board. The compromise — reportedly brokered by Treasury Secretary Bessent — preserves institutional memory through what is likely to be a delicate handoff: inflation has just re-accelerated to a 3.8 per cent year-over-year print, the strongest in nearly three years, while the Iran-induced energy spike continues to compress household real incomes.
Warsh enters the office with an unusually defined ideology. A former M&A lawyer and Morgan Stanley dealmaker before joining the Bush Treasury, he served on the Fed Board from 2006 to 2011, helping design the alphabet soup of crisis facilities — TAF, PDCF, TALF — that stabilised dollar funding in 2008. He resigned in 2011 in pointed dissent over the expansion of quantitative easing. Since then he has written widely, often arguing that the post-Bernanke Fed undervalued real-rate discipline. Markets accordingly read him as a 'dovish hawk': sympathetic to growth, but unwilling to let inflation expectations drift even cosmetically.
The reaction on Treasury markets was small but directional. Two-year yields fell three basis points and the federal funds futures strip moved to imply a 55 per cent probability of a 25-basis-point cut at the June FOMC, up from 40 per cent before the vote. The true test, however, will be the June press conference. Whether Warsh signals comfort with cutting into a hot CPI print, defers to incoming data, or invokes the so-called 'dual mandate' to justify holding will tell investors more about the next four years than any prepared speech he is likely to give in the meantime.
- statutory
- set or required by law
- roll-call
- a formal vote where each member's choice is recorded by name
- lapses
- comes to an end, especially of a term or right
- institutional memory
- knowledge of how an organisation has worked over time
- re-accelerated
- started speeding up again after a slowdown
- quantitative easing
- a Fed policy of buying assets to inject money into the economy
- dual mandate
- the Fed's twin goals of stable prices and maximum employment
- drift
- to move gradually away from a target without sudden change