CIO Ritholtz Says Real FOMC Regime Change Is Fiscal, Not Fed Leadership

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Co-Founder, Chairman, and CIO of Ritholz Wealth Management LLC, Barry L. Ritholtz, has framed the current Federal Reserve debate around a larger policy shift. He argues that leadership changes at the FOMC matter less than the economy’s move from monetary dominance to fiscal dominance.

In his May 1 commentary, Ritholtz said replacing Jerome Powell with Kevin Warsh would have limited impact on inflation or broader economic conditions. His central point was that government spending now carries more economic force than interest-rate policy.

Fiscal Policy Takes the Lead

Per the report, Ritholtz contrasted the post-2008 financial crisis period with the post-pandemic economy. After the global financial crisis, the economy leaned heavily on monetary tools, including zero interest rates from 2008 to 2015 and $3.6 trillion in quantitative easing.

That period produced weak inflation, slow wage growth, and modest job creation. Moreover, personal consumption expenditures stayed below the Fed’s 2% target, despite aggressive central bank action.

According to Ritholtz, the Fed’s tools mainly lifted capital markets. Stocks, bonds, and real estate benefited, while creditworthy borrowers refinanced debt at low rates. Labor gains also remained limited.

Nevertheless, the pandemic period produced the opposite result. Congress moved from fiscal restraint to the largest peacetime fiscal expansion in U.S. history. That shift injected direct support into the economy.

Ritholtz argued that this fiscal surge, combined with Powell’s policy framework around inflation overshooting, helped push inflation to 9%. The result was a tougher environment for the Fed.

Inflation Story Changes After 2020

The commentary also cited Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid, who argued that low inflation assumptions had already weakened before the pandemic. Reid pointed to peak globalization and less supportive demographics by the mid-to-late 2010s.

Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid said,

“We had already passed peak globalisation and the point of most supportive demographics by the mid to late 2010s, foreshadowing future inflationary pressures.”

Those forces were then accelerated by pandemic stimulus and supply chain disruptions. A war-related energy spike in 2022 further added another layer of pressure. Reid also noted that 2026 brought another energy shock tied to the Iran conflict, extending the inflation pressure.

That sequence strengthened Ritholtz’s argument that inflation is no longer mainly a central bank story. The report’s main takeaway is that the Fed’s influence has changed. In the 2010s, monetary policy carried the economy. In the 2020s, fiscal policy became a stronger force.

That shift, Ritholtz argued, is the real regime change at the FOMC.

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