The Federal Reserve's new chair faces a defining question: is the AI boom a productivity miracle that lets the central bank stand still, or a demand shock that will force it to raise rates?
Kevin Warsh presided over his first Federal Open Market Committee meeting on June 17, holding the fed funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75% in a unanimous decision. But the vote masked a deep internal divide: nine of 18 policymakers projected at least one rate hike this year, while the rest saw no move, according to the Summary of Economic Projections released alongside the statement.
"The committee thought the labor markets were stable — some around the table thought they were trending better than that," Warsh said in his first press conference as chair, declining to elaborate on the path ahead. He also chose not to submit his own dot-plot projection, consistent with his long-held view that forward guidance reduces the Fed's flexibility.
The core debate splitting the FOMC centers on whether the current AI investment wave resembles 1996, when Alan Greenspan held rates steady as productivity gains absorbed demand without stoking inflation, or 1999, when Greenspan began raising rates as asset prices surged and the labor market tightened — ultimately ending in the dot-com bust. Warsh has signaled his leanings. "Strong productivity-driven growth is not something we fear — it's something we embrace," he said during the press conference, echoing Greenspan's 1996 posture.
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee has mounted the most systematic challenge to that view. In a speech at Stanford University last month, Goolsbee argued that a widely anticipated productivity boom can itself become inflationary, as households and businesses borrow against expected future wealth before the gains materialize. "Eventually you have to raise rates by much more than if you had acted earlier," Goolsbee said. He pointed to AI data center construction pushing up land, electricity, and chip prices, and noted Apple's recent price increases as evidence the mechanism is already in motion.
Fed Governor Christopher Waller offered a counterargument at the same Stanford event, noting that the "expected productivity" channel only works if households can borrow against future income. "If they can't front-run that spending, the whole mechanism gets short-circuited," Waller said.
The 1990s analogy has limits. Greenspan's 1996 bet benefited from tailwinds Warsh does not enjoy: cheap imports from globalization, a declining federal deficit, and falling commodity prices. Warsh faces tariffs raising import costs, a widening fiscal deficit, and an energy shock from the recently concluded US-Iran conflict that pushed CPI to 4.2% in May — the hottest annual reading since April 2023 and the 62nd consecutive month above the Fed's 2% target.
The US-Iran interim peace deal signed June 17 has eased some pressure, sending crude oil below $80 a barrel. CME FedWatch data shows traders pricing a 25-basis-point rate hike by September, though the probability has fallen from 68% a week ago to about 59% after the deal.
Warsh's push to reduce forward guidance creates a structural tension. The practice of pre-announcing rate moves was established in 1999 — precisely the year Greenspan began signaling hikes to avoid surprising markets. If the economy tracks the 1999 scenario rather than 1996, Warsh will face a choice: use the forward guidance he wants to abolish, or let markets guess the timing and magnitude of rate moves, risking sharper volatility.
The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for July 28-29. Warsh has announced five internal task forces to review Fed communications, the balance sheet, data sources, productivity and jobs, and inflation frameworks — but their recommendations will take weeks to emerge. Until then, markets must parse the same question dividing the committee: 1996 or 1999?
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.