WASHINGTON: At first glance, US President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen may have little in common.
Yellen is an academic economist and veteran of Democratic administrations who is committed to an open global economy, while Trump is a real estate mogul with an electoral base suspicious of the economic order Yellen helped to create.
Yet the two may have interests in common now that Trump is president and both want to get as many Americans working as possible.
Since her appointment as Fed chair in February 2014, Yellen has kept interest rates low and she currently pledges to raise them only slowly even though unemployment, at 4.5 percent, is at its lowest in nearly ten years.
Meanwhile, Trumpâs election campaign promises to cut taxes, spend money on infrastructure and deregulate banking, have helped propel a surge in the US Conference Boardâs consumer confidence index to its highest level since the Internet stocks crash 16 years ago.
Former Fed staff and colleagues who know Yellen said Trumpâs surprising remarks this week in a Wall Street Journal interview, in which he did not rule out Yellenâs reappointment to a new four year term next year, are not as outlandish as they may appear now that the president has a vested interest in keeping markets and the economy on an even keel.
And the same staff and colleagues say Yellen may well accept reappointment, despite Trumpâs criticism of her during last yearâs election campaign.
Many in Trumpâs Republican party have called for tighter monetary policy and a less activist Fed, but âthe president would not really find that useful,â said former Fed vice chair Donald Kohn.
If Trump fills three existing Federal Reserve board vacancies with people Yellen thinks she could work with, âit would be really difficult to turn downâ a reappointment when her term as chair expires in February 2018.
âIf she continues to do well, heâd be nuts to ditch her for an unknown quantity,â said University of California, Berkeley, economics professor Andrew Rose, a long-time colleague and co-author with Yellen of an oft-cited study of labor markets.
Yellen took over from Ben Bernanke as Fed chair in February 2014 with the US economic recovery from the 2008 financial crisis still on shaky ground, and she has made no secret she puts a priority on growth in jobs and wages and a broad recovery in US household wealth.
In a slow return to more normal monetary policy, Yellen has stopped the purchase of additional financial securities by the Fed and in December 2015 began raising short term interest rates for the first time in 10 years.
So far those policy shifts have been engineered with little apparent impact on job growth, and so mesh with Trumpâs core election campaign promises to restore employment and earnings.
The slow rise in interest rates in the past year has also happened while US stock prices have risen to record highs, though Trump has claimed the credit for himself.
Precedent for fed chair to stay on
There is precedent for Trump to stick with a former presidentâs Fed chair appointment. Paul Volcker, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, the three previous Fed chairs, served at least two four year terms and were nominated by both Democratic and Republican presidents.
However it may be a more difficult step for Trump.
During last yearâs election campaign, Trump accused Yellen of accepting orders from then President Obama to keep interest rates low for political reasons, and he said he would replace her as Fed chair because she is not a Republican party member.
In a particularly biting moment last year, in a campaign video advertisement, he labelled her as among the âglobal special interestsâ who had ruined life for middle America.
The Fed on Thursday said it had no response to Trumpâs comments published on Wednesday on Yellen and or on whether Yellen would consider a second term.
Much could still go wrong
Some of Trumpâs advisers and some Republican lawmakers want a more conservative Fed in which the chair has less power and would see a Yellen reappointment as yet another step away from his promise to âdrain the swampâ of the Washington establishment.
There are also three current vacancies on the Fedâs seven member Board of Governors, and unorthodox new members could make it difficult for Yellen to manage policy or accept another four year term.
But if the choice is her consensus style or someone unproven in their ability to manage public and market expectations, âheâd be wise to reappoint her,â said Joseph Gagnon, a former Fed staffer and Berkeley colleague of Yellenâs currently at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
âI donât see what is in his interests to appoint someone who is going to jack up interest rates.â