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Analysts are divided over what Warsh’s leadership could mean for China and for global financial markets more broadly. While some expect him to intensify competition with China, others warned that any perception of political interference in the central bank could accelerate a global capital shift away from US assets.
Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura, said that a Warsh-led Fed would amount to a “policy experiment of a scale not to be underestimated”, centred on whether the central bank could maintain US dollar dominance and price stability while pursuing institutional streamlining, deregulation and greater technological openness.
“The reforms are underpinned by Warsh’s distinctly competitive view towards China – he sees China as the primary challenger to US economic dominance in both institutional and technological terms,” Lu wrote in an article published on the China Chief Economists Forum’s (CCEF) social media account on Wednesday.
“[He] advocates strengthening America’s position in long-term competition with China through … AI-driven productivity gains, a leaner and more efficient Federal Reserve, a stable and credible US dollar and flexible trade and monetary policies.”
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