Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh has launched one of the most ambitious internal reviews of the central bank in decades. Five new advisory task forces will examine the Federal Reserve's approach to communications, balance sheet policy, economic data, productivity and jobs, and inflation frameworks—the analytical foundations that shape U.S. monetary policy. The effort is significant. Chairman Warsh has made clear that he intends to reconsider many of the assumptions that have guided the Federal Reserve since the Global Financial Crisis, arguing that the economy has changed dramatically and that the central bank must modernize its analytical tools. The task forces are expected to make recommendations to the Federal Open Market Committee later this year. Yet one aspect of the announcement deserves far more attention than it has received. Among the fifteen external leaders selected to guide these task forces, there are no Black economists, business leaders, financial market expert...
The June 2026 Producer Price Index (PPI) offers the first meaningful sign in several months that inflationary pressures within the nation's supply chains may be easing. Producer prices for final demand fell 0.3 percent in June , reversing increases of 0.6 percent in May and 1.1 percent in April . Nevertheless, producer prices remain 5.5 percent higher than a year ago , underscoring that the cost environment facing American businesses—and especially Black- and minority-owned firms—remains challenging. When viewed alongside yesterday's Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, the June PPI suggests that inflation moderated, but the improvement is uneven. The CPI showed consumer prices falling 0.4 percent during June, driven primarily by lower energy prices. The PPI confirms that the same decline in energy prices is now working its way through the production pipeline. That is encouraging news, particularly for industries where minority-owned firms are heavily represented. Falling Energy...