The Federal Reserve sets the price of money for the world’s largest economy, but the battle now unfolding in Washington is about far more than the next rate decision. President Donald Trump and his economic advisors are pushing to narrow the central bank’s mission and pull it closer to the White House.
For international investors, this is not a distant Beltway turf fight. It’s a direct threat to the stability of global capital markets.
For decades, the Fed’s independence has anchored confidence in the US dollar, the ultimate reserve currency.
The credibility allows the United States to borrow more cheaply, and it gives global investors a benchmark for pricing risk everywhere from Frankfurt to Singapore. Undermine that independence and the dollar’s special status will begin to fray, sending tremors through every asset class.
I have warned repeatedly that central bank autonomy is not a technocratic nicety. It’s the foundation of modern markets.
If traders start to believe that interest rates are being set to serve a political timetable—whether to juice growth ahead of an election or to finance ambitious spending plans—yields will rise to compensate for the added risk. The immediate impact would be higher borrowing costs for Washington. The wider consequence would be a repricing of risk across the world.
President Trump has made no secret of his intentions. He and senior advisors have floated proposals to strip the Fed of its dual mandate, which now balances price stability with maximum employment, and to limit its discretion over policy. Some have even suggested subjecting monetary decisions to review by the Treasury or Congress.
The aim, it seems, is to tighten political control over an institution that was designed, deliberately, to operate at arm’s length from the administration of the day.
History offers plenty of cautionary tales. Turkey’s lira crisis, Argentina’s chronic inflation, even episodes in post-war Britain all illustrate the dangers of letting elected officials dictate monetary policy.
Once credibility is lost, restoring it requires painful measures—steeper rate hikes, fiscal austerity, and years of rebuilding market trust.
The stakes for international investors could not be higher. The US Treasury market is the backbone of the global financial system. It sets the risk-free rate that underpins everything from corporate bonds in Europe to property loans in Asia. If doubts emerge about the Fed’s independence, foreign demand for Treasuries could waver. That would push yields higher, drive volatility across currencies, and complicate investment strategies everywhere.
Already we’re seeing early warning signs. The dollar has softened in recent weeks as traders digest reports of potential structural changes to the Fed. Gold has climbed as investors look for hedges against policy uncertainty. Emerging-market currencies, which often suffer when US policy becomes unpredictable, have started to wobble.
For portfolio managers in Dubai, London, New York or Hong Kong, this is not a theoretical debate. It shapes real decisions about asset allocation, hedging strategies, and risk management. A credible, independent Fed allows global investors to plan with confidence.
A politically constrained Fed would inject a new layer of uncertainty into every forecast.
None of this is to argue that the Fed should be above accountability. Transparency and communication are essential. But independence does not mean immunity from scrutiny; it means freedom from short-term political pressure so that policy can focus on long-term economic health. That principle has served the US, and by extension the world, exceptionally well.
International investors should be vocal in defending it. The dollar’s role as the global reserve currency is not a birthright.
It’s earned through sound governance and consistent policy. If the perception takes hold that monetary decisions are driven by politics rather than data, alternatives will gain ground. Other major economies are already exploring ways to reduce reliance on the dollar in trade and reserves.
Undercutting the Fed’s independence would accelerate that shift.
The global economy is entering a period of slower growth and heightened geopolitical tension. Stable, predictable monetary policy is more valuable than ever. Politicizing the Federal Reserve at such a moment would be reckless.
I urge policymakers, and market participants everywhere, to recognize what is at stake.
This isn’t merely an argument over interest rates or balance-sheet policy. It is a contest over the institutional framework that supports global finance.
International investors cannot afford to be bystanders. The credibility of the world’s most important central bank is on the line.
Nigel Green is deVere CEO and Founder
Also published on Medium.
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