The past year at the Federal Reserve saw the two sides of its congressionally mandated goals for maximum employment and stable prices in conflict — a situation not seen since the 1970s with stagflation. That dynamic caused divisions within the Fed also not seen in years, evidenced by dissents from opposing directions about interest rate policy.
That’s all expected to persist into 2026.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell was able to forge consensus across a divided central bank to cut interest rates three times this year, noted Matthew Luzzetti, chief US economist for Deutsche Bank. But a new Fed chair might find it more difficult to gain consensus if inflation remains elevated while the job market remains soft.
“While the most likely path remains for further rate cuts ahead, we also see a risk scenario where the next chair eventually faces a committee that could look to raise rates,” said Luzzetti.
Read more: How the Fed rate decision affects your bank accounts, loans, credit cards, and investments
Added Ian Wyatt, chief economist at Huntington Bank, “The new chair will have a tough task herding cats and building a consensus in such an environment, particularly if their views are well out of step with the median governor.”
Coming into 2025, President Trump’s flurry of changes to economic policies, from a roller coaster of new tariff rates to closing off the border to dampen immigration, put the central bank on pause for much of the year as officials tried to sort through what the impact would be on the economy, inflation, and jobs.
The Fed’s holding pattern frustrated Trump, who hammered the central bank to lower interest rates and went after Powell on technicalities in an effort to remove him. Threats of firing Powell over policy disagreements caused fears of jeopardizing central bank independence and rattled markets. While the president stopped short of firing Powell, he did fire Fed governor Lisa Cook over alleged mortgage fraud — a matter still being litigated in court that the Supreme Court will hear early next year.
Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve Board of Governors member, speaks during an event at the Brookings Institution, Monday, Nov. 3, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) · ASSOCIATED PRESS
At the same time, Fed governor Adriana Kugler stepped down during the summer, leading the president to appoint White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran to serve out the remaining five months in her term. Miran did not step down from his position at the White House, only taking a leave of absence. It’s a move that many Fed watchers worried would compromise Fed independence — and one that Miran himself had previously warned about prior to his position in the administration.