Kevin Warsh has been Federal Reserve chairman for less than two months. He initially revealed his plan to form these panels in June, stating they would address communications, data, balance sheet, labor markets and growth, and inflation targets.
The announcement on Thursday created five separate groups. Each will look at one part of the Fed's work. "The goal is straightforward: to ensure the Fed is best positioned to achieve our objectives in this consequential time," Warsh said.
The Five Task Forces
Warsh created one task force for each area he wants to improve. The Communications group will examine how the Fed talks to markets and the public. The Data group will look at the numbers the Fed uses to make decisions.
The Productivity and Jobs task force will focus on the labor market and economic growth. The Inflation Frameworks team will review how the Fed sets its target for rising prices.
Each group includes experts from outside the Fed. For example, Mervyn King, the former Bank of England governor, is on the Communications task force. Raghuram Rajan, former governor of the Reserve Bank of India, joins the Balance Sheet team. Jeremy Stein, a former Fed governor, also serves on that group.
The committees are designed to work autonomously, tasked with examining data, offering honest assessments, and delivering thorough results to FOMC members. The central bank's statement did not specify a deadline for the task forces' work, but Warsh has predicted changes will happen before 2027.
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Outside Experts, Inside Problems
The list of members reads like a who's who of economics and business. Marc Andreessen, the venture capitalist, joins the Productivity and Jobs task force. In late June, he was appointed to the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board, a civilian advisory panel.
Doug McMillon, former CEO of Walmart, sits on the Data task force. Greg Mankiw, who previously led the White House Council of Economic Advisers, will examine inflation strategies.
William White, a Canadian economist, cautioned against loose central bank policies before the 2008 crisis, also joins the Inflation team. Thomas Sargent, an economist from New York University, is on that same group. Other members include Karen Dynan from Harvard on the Balance Sheet team and Raj Chetty from Harvard on the Data team.
Warsh is pulling experts from many fields. Asha Sharma, Microsoft's executive vice president and head of Xbox, brings a tech perspective to the Productivity group. Peter R. Fisher, a professor at the University of Washington's Foster School of Business, will work on communications. Arminio Fraga, founder and chairman of Gávea Investimentos and former head of Brazil's central bank, also joins that group.
What Warsh Expects
"I am honored that the best minds from a range of disciplines have agreed to work with us to sharpen our performance as an institution," Warsh said. "The goal is straightforward: to ensure the Fed is best positioned to achieve our objectives in this consequential time."
These committees will function independently and provide their conclusions to FOMC members. Warsh first shared his plan to create the task forces in June 2026. Now the groups are formed.
Here are the appointees for each panel:
- Communications: Peter R. Fisher, Arminio Fraga, and Mervyn King.
- Balance Sheet Policy: Karen Dynan, Raghuram Rajan, and Jeremy Stein.
- Data: Doug McMillon, Raj Chetty, and Kevin Murphy.
- Productivity and Jobs: Marc Andreessen, Charles I. Jones, and Asha Sharma.
- Inflation Frameworks: Greg Mankiw, William White, and Thomas Sargent.
Federal Reserve personnel will back the task forces.
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