The last time a U.S. president exerted such pressure on the Federal Reserve was in 1971 with Nixon, and two years later the U.S. entered a period of stagflation.
Original Article Title: "The Last Time a U.S. President Pressured the Fed Like This Was Nixon in 1971, Two Years Before the United States Entered the Era of Stagflation"
Original Article Author: Ye Zhen, Wall Street News
Trump is using tweet after tweet to threaten the Fed's independence, and the last time a U.S. president pressured the Fed like this was in 1971, on the eve of the United States' Great Stagflation.
In 1971, the U.S. economy was already facing a "stagflation" dilemma, with an unemployment rate of 6.1%, an inflation rate exceeding 5.8%, and a continued expansion of the trade deficit. In order to seek re-election, President Nixon exerted unprecedented pressure on then Fed Chairman Burns.
White House records show that in 1971, Nixon's interactions with Burns significantly increased, especially in the third and fourth quarters of 1971, with formal meetings between the two reaching 17 times per quarter, far exceeding the usual communication frequency.
This intervention manifested at the policy operations level as follows: in that year, the U.S. federal funds rate plummeted from 5% at the beginning of the year to 3.5% at year-end, and the M1 money supply growth rate reached a post-World War II peak of 8.4%. In the year of the Bretton Woods system's collapse and the dramatic transformation of the global monetary system, Burns' political compromises laid the groundwork for the later "Great Inflation," which was only resolved after Paul Volcker significantly raised interest rates beginning in 1979.
As a result, Burns carried the historical stigma. Today's Powell has no intention of repeating Burns' fate.
Burns' Compromise: Political Interests Override Price Stability
In 1970, Nixon personally nominated Arthur Burns to be the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. Burns was an economist at Columbia University and had been Nixon's economic advisor during the campaign, and the two were very close. Nixon had high hopes for Burns—not as a guardian of monetary policy, but as a "cooperator" in political strategy.
At the time, Nixon faced immense pressure to win re-election in 1972, and the U.S. economy had not fully recovered from the recession of 1969, with high unemployment rates. He desperately needed a wave of economic growth, even if it was a false prosperity created through "easy money."
Therefore, he repeatedly pressured Burns, hoping the Fed would cut interest rates and increase money supply to stimulate growth. The White House's internal recordings captured multiple conversations between Nixon and Burns.
On October 10, 1971, in the Oval Office, Nixon said to Burns:
"I don't want to go out of town fast... If we lose, this will be the last time a conservative is in Washington."
He suggested that if he failed to be re-elected, Burns would face a future dominated by Democrats, and the political atmosphere would change drastically. Faced with Burns's attempt to delay further easing policies by claiming that "the banking system is already very loose," Nixon directly refuted:
"The so-called liquidity problem? That's just bullshit."
Shortly after, in a phone call, Burns reported to Nixon, "We have lowered the discount rate to 4.5%."
Nixon responded:
"Good, good, good... You can lead 'em. You always have. Just kick 'em in the rump a little."
Not only did Nixon pressure Burns on policy, but he also made his stance clear on personnel arrangements. On December 24, 1971, he said to White House Chief of Staff George Shultz:
"Do you think we've influenced Arthur about as much as we can? I mean, how much can I put the screws to him?"
"If not, I'll bring him in."
Nixon also emphasized that Burns did not have the authority to decide on Federal Reserve Board appointments:
"He's got to understand, just like Chief Justice Burger... I'm not going to let him name his people."
These dialogues are from White House recordings, clearly showing the U.S. President's systematic pressure on the Fed Chairman. And Burns indeed "complied" and defended his actions with a set of theories.
He believed that a tight monetary policy and the consequent rise in unemployment were ineffective in curbing the inflation at the time, as the root of inflation lay in factors beyond the Fed's control, such as unions, food and energy shortages, and OPEC's control of oil prices.
From 1971 to 1972, the Fed lowered interest rates, expanded the money supply, and drove a brief economic boom, which also helped Nixon achieve his re-election goal. However, the cost of this "artificially created" economic prosperity soon became apparent.
Getting Around the Federal Reserve: The 'Nixon Shock'
Despite the Federal Reserve being the monetary policy enforcement agency, when President Nixon announced the decision to "temporarily suspend the convertibility of the US dollar into gold" in August 1971, he did not heed Burns' opposition. From August 13-15, 1971, Nixon convened a closed-door meeting with 15 key advisors at Camp David, including Burns, Treasury Secretary Connally, and then-Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Monetary Affairs Volcker.
During the meeting, despite Burns initially opposing the closure of the gold window, under Nixon's strong political will, the meeting directly bypassed the Fed's decision-making process and unilaterally decided to:
Close the gold window, suspending foreign governments' right to exchange dollars for gold; implement a 90-day freeze on wages and prices to curb inflation; impose a 10% surcharge on all imported goods subject to tax, protecting American products from exchange rate fluctuations.
This series of measures, known as the 'Nixon Shock,' shattered the foundation of the Bretton Woods system established in 1944, causing a surge in gold prices and the disintegration of the global exchange rate system.
Initially, wage and price controls temporarily suppressed inflation, with US inflation kept at 3.3% in 1972. However, by 1973, Nixon lifted price controls, and at this point, the consequences of excessive dollar circulation and supply-demand imbalance quickly became apparent. Coupled with the first oil crisis that same year, prices began to soar.
The US economy then fell into a rare 'stagflation' situation, with the inflation rate reaching 8.8% in 1973 and soaring to 12.3% in 1974, while unemployment continued to rise, forming a typical stagnation-inflation pattern.
At this time, Burns attempted to tighten monetary policy, only to find that he had already lost credibility. His reliance on political compromises and non-monetary measures laid the groundwork for 'Great Inflation,' until Paul Volcker took office in 1979 and thoroughly 'suppressed' inflation with an extreme tightening policy, thereby restoring the Fed's independent prestige.
Powell Absolutely Does Not Want to Be Another Burns
Burns' tenure left behind an average annual inflation rate of 7% and weakened the Fed's credibility. Internal Federal Reserve documents and Nixon's recordings show that Burns placed short-term political needs above long-term price stability, making his tenure a textbook example of central bank independence being undermined.
Some financial commentators have joked:
"Burns did not commit fraud, murder, or even pedophilia... His only crime was—cutting interest rates before inflation was fully under control."
In contrast, Volcker's successor, Paul Volcker, "choked" inflation with a 19% interest rate, causing a severe recession but emerging as the hero who slayed inflation in the eyes of Wall Street, economic history, and the public. History has shown that Americans can forgive a Federal Reserve chair who leads the economy into a recession, but they will not forgive a chair who ignites inflation.
Powell is well aware of this and has no intention of becoming the next Burns.
You may also like

ChainCatcher Hong Kong Themed Forum Highlights: Decoding the Growth Engine Under the Integration of Crypto Assets and Smart Economy

Why can this institution still grow by 150% when the scale of leading crypto VCs has shrunk significantly?

Anthropic's $1 trillion, compared to DeepSeek's $100 billion

Geopolitical Risk Persists, Is Bitcoin Becoming a Key Barometer?

Annualized 11.5%, Wall Street Buzzing: Is MicroStrategy's STRC Bitcoin's Savior or Destroyer?

An Obscure Open Source AI Tool Alerted on Kelp DAO's $292 million Bug 12 Days Ago

Mixin has launched USTD-margined perpetual contracts, bringing derivative trading into the chat scene.
The privacy-focused crypto wallet Mixin announced today the launch of its U-based perpetual contract (a derivative priced in USDT). Unlike traditional exchanges, Mixin has taken a new approach by "liberating" derivative trading from isolated matching engines and embedding it into the instant messaging environment.
Users can directly open positions within the app with leverage of up to 200x, while sharing positions, discussing strategies, and copy trading within private communities. Trading, social interaction, and asset management are integrated into the same interface.
Based on its non-custodial architecture, Mixin has eliminated friction from the traditional onboarding process, allowing users to participate in perpetual contract trading without identity verification.
The trading process has been streamlined into five steps:
· Choose the trading asset
· Select long or short
· Input position size and leverage
· Confirm order details
· Confirm and open the position
The interface provides real-time visualization of price, position, and profit and loss (PnL), allowing users to complete trades without switching between multiple modules.
Mixin has directly integrated social features into the derivative trading environment. Users can create private trading communities and interact around real-time positions:
· End-to-end encrypted private groups supporting up to 1024 members
· End-to-end encrypted voice communication
· One-click position sharing
· One-click trade copying
On the execution side, Mixin aggregates liquidity from multiple sources and accesses decentralized protocol and external market liquidity through a unified trading interface.
By combining social interaction with trade execution, Mixin enables users to collaborate, share, and execute trading strategies instantly within the same environment.
Mixin has also introduced a referral incentive system based on trading behavior:
· Users can join with an invite code
· Up to 60% of trading fees as referral rewards
· Incentive mechanism designed for long-term, sustainable earnings
This model aims to drive user-driven network expansion and organic growth.
Mixin's derivative transactions are built on top of its existing self-custody wallet infrastructure, with core features including:
· Separation of transaction account and asset storage
· User full control over assets
· Platform does not custody user funds
· Built-in privacy mechanisms to reduce data exposure
The system aims to strike a balance between transaction efficiency, asset security, and privacy protection.
Against the background of perpetual contracts becoming a mainstream trading tool, Mixin is exploring a different development direction by lowering barriers, enhancing social and privacy attributes.
The platform does not only view transactions as execution actions but positions them as a networked activity: transactions have social attributes, strategies can be shared, and relationships between individuals also become part of the financial system.
Mixin's design is based on a user-initiated, user-controlled model. The platform neither custodies assets nor executes transactions on behalf of users.
This model aligns with a statement issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 13, 2026, titled "Staff Statement on Whether Partial User Interface Used in Preparing Cryptocurrency Securities Transactions May Require Broker-Dealer Registration."
The statement indicates that, under the premise where transactions are entirely initiated and controlled by users, non-custodial service providers that offer neutral interfaces may not need to register as broker-dealers or exchanges.
Mixin is a decentralized, self-custodial privacy wallet designed to provide secure and efficient digital asset management services.
Its core capabilities include:
· Aggregation: integrating multi-chain assets and routing between different transaction paths to simplify user operations
· High liquidity access: connecting to various liquidity sources, including decentralized protocols and external markets
· Decentralization: achieving full user control over assets without relying on custodial intermediaries
· Privacy protection: safeguarding assets and data through MPC, CryptoNote, and end-to-end encrypted communication
Mixin has been in operation for over 8 years, supporting over 40 blockchains and more than 10,000 assets, with a global user base exceeding 10 million and an on-chain self-custodied asset scale of over $1 billion.

$600 million stolen in 20 days, ushering in the era of AI hackers in the crypto world

Vitalik's 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Summit Speech: Ethereum's Ultimate Vision as the "World Computer" and Future Roadmap

On the same day Aave introduced rsETH, why did Spark decide to exit?

Full Post-Mortem of the KelpDAO Incident: Why Did Aave, Which Was Not Compromised, End Up in Crisis Situation?

After a $290 million DeFi liquidation, is the security promise still there?

ZachXBT's post ignites RAVE nearing zero, what is the truth behind the insider control?

Vitalik 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Carnival Speech Transcript: We do not compete on speed; security and decentralization are the core

In-depth Analysis of RAVE Events: Short Squeeze, Crash, and Quantitative Financial Models of Liquidity Manipulation

Eve of Ceasefire, US Military Fires on Iranian Vessel | Rewire News Morning Brief

Figma's stock price drops over 7%, will Claude Design be the terminator?


