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Fed Chairman Warsh faces an inflation credibility test: Analysis


Kevin Warsh, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, arrives for a House Financial Services Committee hearing in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, July 14, 2026.

Daniel Heuer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Credibility is everything for Kevin Warsh. Congressional hearings this week showed how hard it will be for the new Federal Reserve chairman to keep it.

Warsh had few, if any, major slip-ups amid intense questioning from Democrats — and supportive commentary from Republicans — in back-to-back days of testimony before the House and Senate on Tuesday and Wednesday. But with both parties in full agreement that prices are still rising too fast, the Fed chairman needs to quickly deliver on his promises to keep prices stable. If not, he risks losing support both within the Fed and in the chairman’s traditional power base on Capitol Hill.

Part of Warsh’s challenge is that he wants to rethink how the Fed measures inflation itself. Two important measures of prices — the consumer and producer price indexes — showed unexpected declines this week. CPI fell by 0.4% in June, while PPI fell 0.3%. 

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“Any central bank would be happy to have the data going in the right direction,” Warsh said Wednesday. “My view is these are all imperfect measures of the state of underlying inflation.”

The Iran war has raised gas prices in the U.S., but Warsh said that isn’t necessarily inflation, or at least not the kind the Fed can deal with.

“Particular price shocks happen to particular prices that we don’t have control over. But I don’t want to suggest we don’t have control over inflation in the medium term. That’s our job,” Warsh said. 

Warsh has appointed a task force to help answer the question he’s asking about the nature of inflation, but it won’t deliver results for months. The Fed will meet in two weeks to decide on the course for interest rates, and its voting officials appear divided on whether factors such as the boom in data-center construction to support a growing artificial intelligence industry are starting to raise generalized prices. 

Fed Governor Lisa Cook in a speech Wednesday pointed to AI spending as a potential driver of inflation. She warned of “significant price increases for chips, other high-tech equipment, software, and utilities.” That is changing her overall view of inflation, she said, “with inflation risks now outweighing employment risks.”

The debate over AI spending “is one of the good family fights” at the Fed, Warsh said. His view was that supply would likely grow to catch up with demand. “I don’t view one change in prices as necessarily being inflationary because I think there’s a supply response. In that way, this is different from a foreign conflict and what it might do, which tends to reduce the supply side of the economy.”

Whether a separate task force on AI will help resolve that debate remains to be seen. Some Republican senators praised the intellectual diversity of the members of Warsh’s task forces, and…



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