logo
Who is Stephen Miran, Donald Trump's Fed nominee?

Who is Stephen Miran, Donald Trump's Fed nominee?

Mint2 days ago
US President Donald Trump likes to stir things up, and he's done it again with his choice of Stephen Miran to fill an open seat on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. We can't recall when a President nominated to the Fed someone whose abiding policy conviction is to weaken the U.S. dollar.
Mr. Miran has been chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers in Mr. Trump's second term. He's an ardent promoter of the President's economic policies, especially tariffs. For Mr. Miran, this is a matter of conviction. Before his White House days he offered a detailed case for rewriting the rules of the global trade and financial system.
He summed up his central argument in a widely cited November 2024 essay: 'From a trade perspective, the dollar is persistently overvalued, in large part because dollar assets function as the world's reserve currency." Foreign central banks hold huge dollar reserves and most of the world's goods are traded in dollars. He says this global demand for dollars results in an overvalued greenback that leads to trade imbalances and harms Americans.
His solution? Manage a decline in the dollar's value over time by reducing the global demand for the U.S. currency, or at least mitigate the effects of its overvaluation. Tariffs do the latter in his view by forcing foreigners to pay for the fact that their currencies are undervalued and boost their exports to the U.S.
But his ambition goes beyond tariffs. In that 2024 essay he laid out other policy options for negotiating a weaker dollar and diminishing its reserve-currency status. One idea is to tax foreigners who hold U.S. Treasury debt as an incentive to hold less of it. This would amount to a de facto default on current debt.
More ambitiously, Mr. Miran floats a 'Mar-a-Lago Accord" in which leading nations would negotiate a new global financial system to rebalance currency values. This echoes the Plaza and Louvre accords of the 1980s that coordinated monetary policies to arrest the surging dollar amid the rush of capital and goods into the U.S. during the Reagan economic boom. Mr. Miran says his essay wasn't 'policy advocacy," but when you land something like this after an election it's intended to get the attention of policy makers. It did, and Mr. Miran got the White House job.
One question is whether Mr. Miran has talked to Mr. Trump about all this. The President likes a weak dollar for protectionist purposes, but he also likes the dollar's reserve-currency status. That status lets the U.S. borrow more cheaply to fund its deficits and gives him leverage to impose sanctions to pursue U.S. security interests.
China and Russia in particular want to break the dollar's hold on global trade so U.S. sanctions won't matter. Mr. Trump has gone out of his way to impose higher tariffs on countries that are trying to diminish the dollar's global status—see Brazil.
Others have written on these pages about the burden of being a reserve-currency country, notably Lewis Lehrman and John Mueller. But their answer is a global monetary reform that links the dollar to gold. Their goal is a stable dollar, not a weak one.
This is a debate worth having, as improbable as such a reform is. But Mr. Miran gives no indication he has given any thought to such a global monetary reform. His preoccupation is devaluing the dollar to reduce the flow of capital and imported goods to the U.S.
None of this is at stake any time soon, since Mr. Miran would for now only fill the remaining term of Adriana Kugler, who resigned Friday and whose term ends in January. Mr. Miran would be only a single vote on the Federal Open Market Committee.
But Mr. Trump is also looking to replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell, and as Chair Mr. Miran would have a global platform and influence. Senators can do the country a favor by exploring Mr. Miran's views and whether a dollar devaluationist at the Fed is in the U.S. national interest.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PM Modi May Visit New York for Possible UNGA Speech Amid Ongoing Trump Tariff Dispute
PM Modi May Visit New York for Possible UNGA Speech Amid Ongoing Trump Tariff Dispute

Hans India

time16 minutes ago

  • Hans India

PM Modi May Visit New York for Possible UNGA Speech Amid Ongoing Trump Tariff Dispute

Indian PM Modi US visit in September for the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) meeting to be held in New York City. India's 'Head of Government (HG)' is set to speak at the high-level debate of the 80th session of the General Assembly on the morning of September 26, news agency PTI reported, citing the provisional list of speakers. Heads of Government of Israel, China, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, among others, are also expected to address the PM Modi UNGA 2025 general debate on September 26. If PM Modi's New York trip in September, it would come at a time when the US has hiked tariffs on New Delhi to 50 per cent for its purchases of Russian crude oil, which US President Donald Trump has said has 'fueled' Moscow's war in Ukraine. Trump tariff row India US on most imports from India for the purchase of Russian oil. That additional levy, on top of the 25 per cent tariff he already announced, would bring the duties on products and goods that India exports to the US to 50 per cent if fully applied. The executive order Trump signed on the grounds that the purchase of oil by India from Russia threatens UN General Assembly address Modi into effect on August 27, leaving a three-week window to work out a deal. In a sharply worded statement, the MEA said, 'It is extremely unfortunate that the US should choose to impose additional tariffs on India for actions that several other countries are also taking in their own national interest.' Also, a US trade delegation will be coming to India before August 25. The two countries have been sniping at each other about tariffs. Trump, in a post on Truth Social, said, '"I am pleased to announce that President Vladimir Putin of Russia and I will meet on Friday, August 15, 2025, in Alaska. More information about the meeting will be shared soon." Thank you for your attention to India US relations 2025!' he added.

Before Trump talks to Putin, Germany and others want to bend his ear
Before Trump talks to Putin, Germany and others want to bend his ear

Economic Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Before Trump talks to Putin, Germany and others want to bend his ear

NYT News Service FILE -- President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin of Russia during a joint news conference in Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018. President Trump is pushing to end the war in Ukraine, but analysts say the Russian leader could turn a hastily-planned meeting to his advantage. President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday in Alaska, to discuss a path to ending the war that began when Russia invaded Ukraine 3 1/2 years ago. Before he does, his European allies would like to have a word. Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany will convene a Ukraine-themed video call Wednesday that is set to include Trump, Vice President JD Vance, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine and several of Trump's favorite European leaders, including Prime Minister Giorgi Meloni of Italy. A wide range of public statements from Merz and others suggest the leaders will implore Trump not to cut a peace deal with Putin behind the backs of Zelenskyy or his European allies. Zelenskyy has not been invited to Alaska. The European leaders will likely stress that any discussions of terms for ending the war must start with a full ceasefire. They also believe that Europe's approval is essential for any plans to enforce a truce with European troops. It will be the latest attempt by Merz and his European counterparts to head off Trump's unilateral impulses and to keep him from falling under Putin's sway -- though Merz and his allies almost never frame it that way. Instead, the center-right chancellor and fellow leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, regularly portray themselves as closely aligned with Trump on Ukraine, even as they publicly and privately encourage him to do more to support officials in Ukraine's capital, Kyiv. "We cannot accept that territorial issues between Russia and America are discussed or even decided over the heads of Europeans, over the heads of Ukrainians," Merz said in a television interview Sunday. "I assume that the American government sees it the same way. That is why there is this close coordination." Merz has staked much of his early term on rebuilding Germany's military and reclaiming its leadership position for Europe and the world, with a firm gaze toward Russia. He has courted Trump aggressively since taking office in early May, with text messages, phone calls, international summits and an Oval Office visit. He has relentlessly pitched Trump on the idea that by intervening boldly and decisively on the side of Ukraine against Russia, the United States could force Putin into a ceasefire and serious talks on ending the war. It has been the chancellor's primary request of the president, overwhelming other major issues, like Trump's push to impose new tariffs on Europe. Trump seemed receptive, to varying degrees, particularly as he grew frustrated in recent months with Putin's continued bombardments of Ukraine. He agreed to sell American weapons to Germany and others, to then be supplied to Kyiv, and he has threatened harsh economic penalties on Moscow if the war continues. But then, last week, after overtures from Putin, Trump shifted again. He hastily scheduled the Alaska meeting. This week, he told reporters he wanted to see what Putin had on his mind, and whether he could broker "a deal" on the war, including swaps of land currently held by Ukraine and Russia. Merz and his allies fear what that discussion could bring. So they have stacked the video call with top Europeans who enjoy good relations with Trump, including the leaders of Poland and Finland and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. European leaders refuse to entertain any talk of redrawing borders before Putin agrees to a ceasefire. They do not want to negotiate away Ukrainian land that Russian forces do not currently hold. German officials have been more publicly oblique on whether they could support a truce that cedes some parts of prewar Ukraine to Russia, though privately, they have sounded resigned to the possibility. They also worry that peace on bad terms could encourage Putin to continue his push toward Western Europe, perhaps sending troops next to a neighbor like Lithuania, a member of NATO. "It really is a concern that Putin might feel emboldened," said Anna Sauerbrey, the foreign editor for Germany's Die Zeit newspaper. "Not to go for Berlin, of course, but to cause some unrest in other Baltic countries, other European countries." Above all, Europeans fear that Putin could use the Alaska meeting to sell Trump on a peace deal that Zelenskyy would never accept, leading Trump to turn his ire on the Ukrainian leader. Trump could then threaten to pull crucial American intelligence support for Ukraine on the battlefield, as his administration briefly did this spring. Europe would continue to back Ukraine in that case, but its task would be far more difficult. Merz and other leaders have acknowledged the need for American support. Sauerbrey said that reality puts European leaders in a "very weak position" to negotiate with Trump. "They can hope and pray" and continue to flatter him, she said. "But that's pretty much all they have." This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Gavin Newsom takes a jab at Donald Trump over redistricting ‘second-to-last warning' post: 'Lowest polling president'
Gavin Newsom takes a jab at Donald Trump over redistricting ‘second-to-last warning' post: 'Lowest polling president'

Mint

time16 minutes ago

  • Mint

Gavin Newsom takes a jab at Donald Trump over redistricting ‘second-to-last warning' post: 'Lowest polling president'

California Governor Gavin Newsom took a jab at US President Donald Trump on Tuesday with a social media post stating a "SECOND-TO-LAST WARNING" amid the ongoing blue state vs. red state feud over redistricting. "DONALD TRUMP, THE LOWEST POLLING PRESIDENT IN RECENT HISTORY, THIS IS YOUR SECOND-TO-LAST WARNING!!! (THE NEXT ONE IS THE LAST ONE!)," Newsom's press office posted on the social platform X. 'STAND DOWN NOW OR CALIFORNIA WILL COUNTER-STRIKE (LEGALLY!) TO DESTROY YOUR ILLEGAL CROOKED MAPS IN RED STATES.' The post continued, 'PRESS CONFERENCE COMING HOSTED BY AMERICA'S FAVORITE GOVERNOR, GAVIN NEWSOM. FINAL WARNING NEXT. YOU WON'T LIKE IT!!! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER.' Newsom sarcastically copies hallmarks of Trump's posts According to The Hill, Trump often uses his Truth Social feed to issue similarly styled missives about policies and to state political grievances. Among the hallmarks of Trump's posts that Newsom sarcastically copied were thanking followers for their "attention to this matter," curious uses of punctuation, capitalization and parenthetical asides, and references to himself as the "favorite" president. Newsom also seemed to mock Trump's waffling warnings and deadlines that led the spread of the "TACO" moniker, short for "Trump Always Chickens Out." The White House did not immediately respond to The Hill's request for comment on Newsom's post. Also Read | Newsom Proposes to Ease Permits for Oil Drilling in California Newsom, widely viewed as a potential candidate for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, sent a letter to President Trump on Monday, urging him to put a stop to the escalating redistricting back-and-forth triggered by Trump's push for Texas to draw a map more favorable to Republicans. "This attempt to rig congressional maps to hold onto power before a single vote is cast in the 2026 election is an affront to American democracy," the governor mentioned, The Hill reported. Newsom also took aim Tuesday at Trump's recent emergency declaration in the nation's capital to allow federal intervention in D.C.'s crime-fighting efforts as well as the president's threats to expand his efforts to other Democrat-led cities. "President Trump is peddling the same tired lie he used in Los Angeles claiming there's rampant lawlessness in Democratic cities like Washington, D.C.," Newsom said in a news release, highlighting high crime rates in GOP-led states. "His authoritarian orders aren't about safety they're an attack on the very foundation of our nation and a slap in the face to democracy."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store