2026年5月13日 上午10:02 UTC / 路透社
作者:霍华德·施奈德、安·萨菲尔
2026年5月13日 上午10:02 UTC 更新于15分钟前
2026年4月21日,美国华盛顿国会山,美国总统唐纳德·特朗普提名的下一任美联储主席候选人凯文·沃什在参议院银行委员会确认听证会上作证。路透社/凯文·拉马克/档案照片
- 内容提要
- 资产负债表调整、通胀分析及其他议题料将逐步推进
- 沃什的改革思路将涉及美联储的技术性、文化性变革
- 针对人工智能、资产负债表的反对声音已初步显现
华盛顿,5月13日(路透社)——15年前,凯文·沃什因反对大规模债券购买计划而离开美联储,该计划如今已让美联储背上了6.7万亿美元的资产负债表包袱。预计沃什将于本月重返美联储担任掌门人,他带着宏大的改革议程,但这些议程可能很难快速落地。
沃什的批评涵盖美联储监控通胀的方式、救助市场的意愿以及沟通策略等方方面面。他的思路不仅涉及对美联储经济分析的技术性改革,还将涉及美联储与金融市场乃至更广泛公众沟通方式的敏感转变——这些议题此前曾被反复讨论,且被认为难以快速调整。
《本周突发观点》新闻简报将为您带来路透社全球金融评论团队的洞察与思路。[点击此处订阅]。
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这位56岁的律师兼金融家可能会迅速调整沟通基调,并自行决定缩减新闻发布会等举措,重回2007至2009年经济衰退和金融危机前更为克制、不透明的央行运作模式。而那场危机之后,美联储转向了更为公开的解释和针对市场的“前瞻性指引”政策。
曾在2006年至2009年与沃什一同担任美联储理事的芝加哥大学经济学教授兰德尔·克罗兹纳表示,沃什并不认同这种前瞻性指引做法,但他“也不想扰乱市场。他有太多想要推进的事项,这些都需要时间来逐步落实”。“这不是‘一刀切’,也不会说明天我们就能把资产负债表缩减到4万亿美元。”
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特朗普提名沃什接替杰罗姆·鲍威尔担任美联储主席的提名预计将于本周在参议院获得通过。特朗普曾与鲍威尔多次发生冲突,最初要求降息,后来又通过解雇美联储理事莉萨·库克以及司法部对鲍威尔展开刑事调查来加大施压力度,许多人认为这是对美联储独立性的更广泛攻击。库克的案件目前正待美国最高法院审理,司法部已结束对鲍威尔的调查。
鲍威尔担任美联储主席的八年任期将于本周五结束,但他决定继续留在美联储理事会,直至该调查完全结案,部分原因是为了缓冲政府对美联储的进一步法律攻击。
超越利率范畴
沃什眼下的挑战将是如何应对特朗普的降息要求与经济数据之间的矛盾——当前经济数据几乎不支持降息。美国失业率仍维持在4.3%的较低水平,而作为美联储管理的另一关键指标的通胀率,仍远高于央行2%的目标,且可能进一步走高。
事实上,当沃什在6月主持首次政策会议时,如果能让联邦公开市场委员会(FOMC)的同僚们不再提及可能需要加息,就已经算是一场胜利。在4月28日至29日的会议上,有三位美联储政策制定者投下反对票,支持添加类似表述的新措辞,而随着通胀范围扩大到关税或高油价无法解释的领域,这种趋势可能会愈演愈烈。
鲍威尔在2018年被特朗普提拔为美联储主席后,大约过了六个月时间,特朗普才开始对他大加指责。就目前而言,投资者预计2028年之前美联储不会降息。
在过去一年的演讲、采访和公开听证会上,沃什提出了多种理由,解释为何尽管当前数据如此,利率仍可能下调:人工智能带来的生产率提升可能会让所有商品变得更便宜;缩减美联储较长期债券持有量可能为短期利率下调提供空间;以及另一种更精准的通胀衡量指标实际上显示,物价涨幅比美联储目前采用的指标要慢。
尽管他在这些问题上的论点可能站得住脚,但要辅以令人信服的研究并说服其他政策制定者,即便有可能做到,也需要花费时间。
前美联储工作人员和官员表示,沃什最有可能采取的首批举措是委托开展一系列内部审查,随后在FOMC上进行辩论,之后才可能对银行准备金规则进行调整——这是缩减资产负债表的一条可行路径——或是在政策讨论中纳入不同的通胀数据。
沃什还暗示,他希望改革一些长期沿用的沟通工具,比如季度发布的《经济前景摘要》(SEP),其中包含“点阵图”利率预测图表。外界对SEP的多个方面普遍存在不满,因此这可能是推进改革速度较快的一个领域。
但美联储发布的SEP和美联储主席举行的新闻发布会都已成为塑造公众预期的有力工具。布鲁金斯学会最近针对学术界和私营部门的美联储专家开展的一项调查显示,29名受访者中几乎所有人都认为会后新闻发布会“有用或极为有用”,仅有略多于一半的人对SEP和点阵图给出了相同评价。
前圣路易斯联储主席、普渡大学米奇·丹尼尔斯商学院院长詹姆斯·布拉德表示,新闻发布会尤其是“解释政策决策和经济展望的国际标准”。“我认为很难对此做出改变。”
反对声音已初步显现
其他议题上,前美联储官员和工作人员表示,沃什的提案和其他任何方案一样,都需要经过审核。
例如,市场上已经流传着各种缩减资产负债表的想法,但对于沃什提出的缩减债券持有量可为降息腾出空间的观点,存在不少质疑。
沃什关于生产率提升对通胀影响的言论,从理论上讲已被广泛接受,但对于所需时间框架以及对利率的影响存在疑虑。芝加哥联储主席奥斯汀·古尔斯比上周提出了另一种情景:人工智能革命的预期过于广泛,以至于人们开始提前消费预期的股票和财富收益,推高通胀,迫使美联储加息。
双方的分歧不在于人工智能对经济的影响本身,而在于时间和风险——生产率提升需要多长时间才能降低通胀, versus 如今刺激额外支出,以及美联储能否稳妥地寄望于未来的反通胀效应,从而冒险现在就降息。
“他关于需求与供给影响的判断或许是对的,”古尔斯比在洛杉矶参加一场会议后对记者表示。“我认为这值得思考……我不知道这场辩论的基本规则会是什么……我希望,就我而言……这场辩论能立足于严谨的经济研究。”
霍华德·施奈德报道;丹·伯恩斯、保罗·西马奥编辑
我们的准则:路透社汤姆森路透信托原则。
Warsh has big plans for the Fed, but results may take time
2026-05-13 10:02 AM UTC / Reuters
By Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
May 13, 2026 10:02 AM UTC Updated 15 mins ago
Kevin Warsh, U.S. President Donald Trump’s nominee to be next chair of the Federal Reserve, testifies before a Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 21, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
- Summary
- Changes to balance sheet, inflation analysis, other issues expected to be gradual
- Warsh’s ideas would involve technical, cultural change at the central bank
- Counterarguments on AI, balance sheet already taking shape
WASHINGTON, May 13 (Reuters) – Fifteen years after leaving the Federal Reserve in opposition to an expansive bond-buying program that has since saddled it with a $6.7 trillion portfolio, Kevin Warsh is expected to return as the U.S. central bank’s leader this month with a big reform agenda that may be tough to translate into quick changes.
With critiques spanning everything from how the Fed monitors inflation to its willingness to bail out markets to its communications strategy, Warsh’s ideas would involve not just technical reform to the central bank’s economic analyses, but sensitive shifts in how it speaks to financial markets and the public more broadly – issues previously hashed over and considered hard to meddle with quickly.
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The 56-year-old lawyer and financier could make fast changes in tone and at his discretion cut back on things like press conferences, a return to the more restrained, opaque form of central banking that existed before the 2007-2009 recession and financial crisis triggered a bias towards more public explanation and “forward guidance” for markets about where policy was heading.
Warsh is not a fan of that approach, but he also “doesn’t want to disrupt the markets. There are so many things that he wants to do and it is just going to take time to work through that,” said Randall Kroszner, a University of Chicago economics professor who served alongside Warsh as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2009. “It’s not just ‘off with their heads’ or suddenly tomorrow we’re going to have the balance sheet be $4 trillion.”
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President Donald Trump’s nomination of Warsh to take over the top job from Fed Chair Jerome Powell is expected to clear the U.S. Senate this week. Trump clashed repeatedly with Powell, initially demanding interest rate cuts but expanding his pressure through an effort to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook and a Justice Department criminal probe of Powell that many consider a broader assault on the central bank’s independence. The Cook case is pending before the U.S. Supreme Court and the Justice Department has closed its Powell investigation.
Powell’s eight-year tenure as Fed chief ends on Friday, but he has decided to keep his seat on the central bank’s Board of Governors while that investigation fully winds down, in part to buffer the Fed against further legal attacks by the administration.
BEYOND INTEREST RATES
Warsh’s immediate challenge will be to navigate that same conflict between Trump’s rate-cut demands and economic data that leaves little room for them. The U.S. unemployment rate remains a relatively low 4.3%, while inflation, the other key issue the Fed manages, remains well above the central bank’s 2% target and is likely moving higher.
When Warsh chairs his first policy meeting in June, in fact, it may be a victory for him if he keeps colleagues on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee from saying a rate hike may actually be needed. Three Fed policymakers dissented at the April 28-29 meeting in favor of new language along those lines, and that trend may gain momentum based on inflation broadening beyond what can be attributed to tariffs or elevated oil prices.
Powell had about six months after Trump promoted him to the Fed chief job in 2018 before the president began berating him, and at this point investors do not expect rate cuts before 2028.
Warsh, in speeches, interviews and public hearings over the past year, has provided various arguments for why interest rates might still fall despite the current data: Productivity gains flowing from artificial intelligence may make everything cheaper; shrinking the Fed’s longer-dated bond holdings might justify lower short-term rates; and alternate and more accurate measures of inflation actually show prices rising more slowly than those currently emphasized by the Fed.
While he may have reasonable arguments about any of those items, buttressing them with compelling research and convincing fellow policymakers will take time, if it’s possible at all.
Former Fed staff and officials said the most likely first steps would be for Warsh to commission a range of internal reviews, followed by debates at the FOMC and, later, potential changes in things like rules for bank reserves – one possible path to a smaller balance sheet – or the incorporation of different inflation data in policy discussions.
Warsh has also indicated he would like to change some longstanding communication tools like the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections, which includes the “dot plot” chart of rate projections. There’s broad dissatisfaction about aspects of the SEP, for example, making that a possible area for faster reform.
But both the SEPs issued by the central bank and the press conferences held by the Fed chief have become powerful tools for shaping public expectations. In a recent Brookings Institution survey of academic and private-sector Fed experts, nearly all of the 29 respondents regarded the post-meeting press conference as “useful or extremely useful” and just over half said the same about the SEP and dot plot.
Press conferences in particular are “an international standard” for explaining policy decisions and the economic outlook, said former St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, the dean of Purdue University’s Mitch Daniels School of Business. “I think it would be hard to change that.”
COUNTERARGUMENTS ALREADY DEVELOPING
On other issues, former Fed officials and staff say Warsh’s proposals would need to be vetted like any other.
Ideas are already circulating about how to reduce the balance sheet, for example, but there is skepticism about Warsh’s notion that shrinking bond holdings would allow for rate cuts.
Warsh’s comments about the impact of improving productivity on inflation also are broadly accepted – in theory – but with doubts about the time frame involved and the implications for rates. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee last week laid out an alternative scenario in which the AI revolution becomes so broadly anticipated that people start spending expected stock and wealth gains today, driving up inflation and forcing the Fed to hike rates.
The difference in views is less about what AI means for the economy and more about timing and risk – how long improving productivity takes to lower inflation versus stoking extra spending today, and whether the Fed can safely bank on future disinflation to risk cutting rates now.
“He might be right in the impact on demand versus the impact on supply,” Goolsbee told reporters after participating in a conference in Los Angeles. “I think it is worth thinking about … I don’t know what the debate ground rules are going to be … I hope, for my purposes … it will be rooted in serious economic research.”
Reporting by Howard Schneider; editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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