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Former head of Dallas Fed Kaplan urges a half-point interest rate cut

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Former Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan: I would be advocating for a 50 basis point rate cut

If Robert Kaplan still had a say in the matter, he’d be pushing for a half percentage point interest rate reduction at this week’s Federal Reserve meeting.

The former Dallas Fed president told CNBC on Tuesday that making the bolder move of 50 basis points would better position policymakers heading into the latter part of the year and the economic challenges ahead.

“If I were sitting at the table, I would be advocating for 50 in this meeting,” Kaplan said during a “Squawk Box” interview. “I think the Fed may be a meeting or so late, and if I had a do-over, I might prefer we had started the cutting in July, not September.”

Markets currently are putting about 2 to 1 odds that the Federal Open Market Committee will approve a 50 basis point reduction, as opposed to the 25 basis point cut it had been pricing in leading up to Friday, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch. One basis point equals 0.01%.

Fed funds, the central bank’s benchmark overnight lending rate, currently stands at 5.25% to 5.50%.

Should the committee decide to make the more aggressive move, Kaplan said it would then be incumbent on Chair Jerome Powell in his post-meeting press conference on Wednesday to indicate that additional cuts ahead are “likely to be more measured.” The Fed’s two-day policy meeting gets underway Tuesday.

“From a risk management point of view, 50 makes the most sense,” Kaplan said. “If the group is split, a lot of this will depend, actually, on what Jay Powell personally thinks, what is his personal disposition on all this, and then his ability to wrangle everybody to a unanimous decision.”

Kaplan ran the Dallas Fed from 2015-21 and is now a managing director at Goldman Sachs.

Economics

Matt Gaetz v the ethics committee

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On December 23rd a congressional committee released a lurid 37-page report alleging ethical misconduct by Matt Gaetz, the former maverick member of the House of Representatives who briefly stood as Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney-general. In a different time the investigation’s details about illicit sex and drug use would definitively end Mr Gaetz’s political career, and perhaps it will now. Yet he could soon test how far deviance has been defined down in America’s norm-smashing political era.

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Economics

Matt Gaetz vs the ethics committee

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On December 23rd a congressional committee released a lurid 37-page report alleging ethical misconduct by Matt Gaetz, the former maverick member of the House of Representatives who briefly stood as Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney-general. In a different time the investigation’s details about illicit sex and drug use would definitively end Mr Gaetz’s political career, and perhaps it will now. Yet he could soon test how far deviance has been defined down in America’s norm-smashing political era.

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Economics

At the state level, democracy in America is fracturing

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The residents of Bristol, Tennessee and Bristol, Virginia share a border, a downtown and even a Nascar speedway. But thanks to the quirks of American federalism, the 27,800 Bristolians who live in the Volunteer State reside in America’s least democratic state, while their 16,800 neighbors to the north live in one of the most democratic.

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