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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Mary C. Daly
| name = Mary C. Daly
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1963|04|04}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1968|7|5}}
| birth_place = <!-- not confirmed in sources -->
| birth_place = [[Clarence, New York]], U.S.
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| occupation = Economist, central banker
| occupation = Economist, central banker
| known_for = President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
| known_for = President and CEO of the [[Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco]]
| title = President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
| title = President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
| education = <!-- doctoral degree confirmed but institution details not fully sourced -->
| education = Ph.D., [[Syracuse University]]
}}
}}


'''Mary C. Daly''' is an American economist who has served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of the [[Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco]] since October 2018. In this capacity, she participates in the [[Federal Open Market Committee]] (FOMC), the body responsible for setting [[monetary policy]] in the United States. Daly's tenure at the San Francisco Fed has been marked by significant economic challenges, including the economic disruptions associated with the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], and more recently, the Federal Reserve's efforts to manage [[inflation]] while sustaining [[labor market]] stability. Prior to her appointment as president, Daly spent more than two decades as a researcher and executive at the San Francisco Fed, rising through its ranks to become executive vice president and director of research. In 2026, Daly has been a prominent voice in discussions about the economic implications of [[artificial intelligence]], cautioning that the Federal Reserve must carefully assess whether AI-driven productivity gains are translating into broader economic effects before adjusting interest rate policy.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-21 |title=Fed well positioned to study AI's economic impact, Daly says |url=https://finance-commerce.com/2026/02/mary-daly-fed-policy-ai-productivity-inflation/ |work=Finance & Commerce |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Mary C. Daly''' is an American economist who has served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of the [[Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco]] since October 2018. In this role, she participates in the [[Federal Open Market Committee]] (FOMC), which sets monetary policy for the United States. Daly's career at the San Francisco Fed spans more than two decades, during which she rose through the institution's research ranks before being named its leader. Her academic and policy work has focused on labor economics, wage dynamics, and the economic effects of inequality. In recent years, Daly has emerged as a prominent voice within the Federal Reserve System on topics including the impact of [[artificial intelligence]] on productivity, the health of the U.S. labor market, and the appropriate path for interest rate policy. Her public commentary has drawn attention for its combination of data-driven analysis and accessible communication aimed at explaining complex monetary policy decisions to a broad audience.


'''Note:''' ''Mary C. Daly, the Federal Reserve official, should not be confused with [[Mary Daly (theologian)|Mary Daly]] (1928–2010), the American radical feminist philosopher and theologian who taught at [[Boston College]].''
== Early Life ==
 
Mary Christine Daly was born on July 5, 1968, and grew up in Clarence, New York, a suburb of [[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo]]. She has spoken publicly about her upbringing in a working-class household and her early experiences in the labor market. Daly did not follow a traditional academic trajectory; she dropped out of high school and spent time working in a doughnut shop and other service-sector jobs before eventually pursuing higher education. These formative experiences with low-wage work and economic insecurity have been cited by Daly as shaping her professional interest in labor markets, inequality, and economic opportunity.


== Early Life ==
== Education ==


Mary C. Daly's early life was shaped by economic hardship. She has spoken publicly about growing up in a working-class household and dropping out of high school as a teenager. She later earned her [[General Educational Development|GED]] and pursued higher education, eventually obtaining advanced degrees in economics. Daly has cited her personal experience of economic insecurity as a motivating factor in her career as an economist and her focus on labor markets, wage dynamics, and the economic well-being of workers.
Daly earned her bachelor's degree from the [[University of Missouri–Kansas City]]. She subsequently obtained a master's degree in economics from the [[University of Illinois Springfield]] (then Sangamon State University). Daly went on to earn her Ph.D. in economics from [[Syracuse University]], where her doctoral research focused on labor economics and disability. Her academic training in labor market dynamics and applied microeconomics provided the foundation for her subsequent career at the Federal Reserve.


== Career ==
== Career ==


=== Research Career at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco ===
=== Early Career at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco ===
 
Daly joined the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco in 1996 as an economist in the bank's research department. Over the following two decades, she established herself as a specialist in labor economics, wage dynamics, and the economic consequences of disability and inequality. Her research output during this period included studies on wage rigidity, the measurement of labor market slack, and the effects of economic downturns on different segments of the workforce.


Daly joined the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco as a researcher, where she spent more than two decades building expertise in labor economics, wage dynamics, and the impact of economic policy on workers. Her research focused on areas including wage rigidity, the effects of unemployment on long-term labor market outcomes, and how economic shocks affect different segments of the population. Over the course of her career at the San Francisco Fed, she held positions of increasing responsibility, eventually serving as executive vice president and director of research — the senior-most research position at the bank. In this role, she was responsible for overseeing the bank's economic research division and advising the bank's president on monetary policy matters.
Daly advanced steadily through the research hierarchy at the San Francisco Fed. She held the positions of research advisor and associate director of research before being appointed executive vice president and director of research in 2017. In this capacity, she oversaw the bank's economic research operations and served as a key policy advisor to the bank's president.


=== Appointment as President and CEO ===
=== Appointment as President and CEO ===


In October 2018, Daly was appointed as the 13th President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She became the first person without an Ivy League degree to lead the San Francisco Fed, and her appointment was noted for the unconventional path she took to the position, having started from a background of economic disadvantage. As president, Daly became a voting or alternate member of the FOMC, participating in the Federal Reserve's deliberations on interest rates and monetary policy.
On October 1, 2018, Daly became the 13th president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She succeeded [[John C. Williams]], who left to become president of the [[Federal Reserve Bank of New York]]. Daly was the first person without an Ivy League or equivalent elite university background to lead the San Francisco Fed in the modern era, and her appointment was noted for reflecting a nontraditional career path in central banking. As president, Daly serves on the FOMC, participating in decisions on interest rates and the overall direction of U.S. monetary policy. She serves as a voting member of the FOMC on a rotating basis, in accordance with the Federal Reserve System's structure.
 
=== Monetary Policy Positions ===
 
Throughout her tenure as president, Daly has articulated positions on monetary policy that reflect a data-dependent approach to interest rate decisions. She has emphasized the importance of achieving both sides of the Federal Reserve's dual mandate: maximum employment and price stability.
 
During the period of elevated inflation that followed the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], Daly supported the Federal Reserve's aggressive interest rate increases aimed at bringing inflation back toward the 2 percent target. As inflationary pressures began to moderate, she became a voice for careful recalibration of policy, advocating for rate adjustments that would avoid unnecessarily weakening the labor market.


=== Monetary Policy During Economic Uncertainty ===
In November 2025, Daly publicly stated her support for a rate cut at the Federal Reserve's December meeting, citing concerns about the vulnerability of the labor market. In an interview with ''The Wall Street Journal'', she expressed the view that the central bank should lower interest rates to protect against potential deterioration in employment conditions.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-11-24 |title=Exclusive: Fed's Daly Backs December Rate Cut, Citing Vulnerable Labor Market |url=https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/feds-daly-backs-december-rate-cut-citing-vulnerable-labor-market-07a497b6?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=AWEtsqcNK--5gv53J5TkCXX8YegnXlcnkIs38uBtWHGRPfqJOv2mUw_S7hfn&gaa_ts=699d4825&gaa_sig=bNs6m4v8QuaWapKVLKG0Z1KmAcakFWqjyxSC8IEZ7T-_Gv0eD7nyo6Z-VuDdyPAfjauVgmXzrrhDcVJ2dDPomQ%3D%3D |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Daly's presidency has encompassed a period of significant economic turbulence. Following the COVID-19 pandemic, the Federal Reserve pursued aggressive monetary tightening to combat rising inflation, raising the [[federal funds rate]] to its highest level in decades. Daly has participated in these deliberations as a member of the FOMC.
By early 2026, Daly's public statements indicated a shift toward viewing monetary policy as appropriately positioned, describing it as being "in a good place." In February 2026, she stated that interest rate policy was well positioned as officials continued to assess evolving economic conditions, including the potential effects of artificial intelligence on productivity and inflation.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-20 |title=Fed well positioned to study AI's economic impact, Daly says |url=https://finance-commerce.com/2026/02/mary-daly-fed-policy-ai-productivity-inflation/ |work=Finance & Commerce |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> She further remarked that policy was "in a good place" while the central bank assessed the broader macroeconomic landscape.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-19 |title=Fed's Daly says policy 'in a good place' as officials assess AI's effect on economy |url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/fed-s-daly-says-policy-in-a-good-place-as-officials-assess-ai-s-effect-on-economy/ar-AA1WHGI4?ocid=finance-verthp-feeds |work=MSN |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


By late 2025, as inflationary pressures showed signs of moderating while the labor market exhibited some vulnerability, Daly expressed support for continued adjustments to interest rate policy. In November 2025, she publicly backed a rate cut at the Federal Reserve's December 2025 meeting, citing concerns about a vulnerable labor market. In an interview with ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'', Daly indicated that she saw lowering interest rates as appropriate given the economic conditions at the time.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-11-24 |title=Exclusive {{!}} Fed's Daly Backs December Rate Cut, Citing Vulnerable Labor Market |url=https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/feds-daly-backs-december-rate-cut-citing-vulnerable-labor-market-07a497b6?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=AWEtsqcNK--5gv53J5TkCXX8YegnXlcnkIs38uBtWHGRPfqJOv2mUw_S7hfn&gaa_ts=699d4825&gaa_sig=bNs6m4v8QuaWapKVLKG0Z1KmAcakFWqjyxSC8IEZ7T-_Gv0eD7nyo6Z-VuDdyPAfjauVgmXzrrhDcVJ2dDPomQ%3D%3D |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
=== Focus on Artificial Intelligence and the Economy ===


=== AI and Economic Policy (2026) ===
In 2025 and 2026, Daly emerged as one of the most vocal Federal Reserve officials addressing the economic implications of [[artificial intelligence]]. Drawing on the San Francisco Fed's proximity to the technology industry and [[Silicon Valley]], she provided detailed observations on how AI was reshaping hiring patterns, productivity, and the broader economy.


In early 2026, Daly emerged as one of the more prominent Federal Reserve voices on the economic implications of artificial intelligence. In a series of public statements and interviews in February 2026, she addressed how the Federal Reserve was evaluating whether AI-driven technological changes were producing measurable effects on productivity, inflation, and the labor market.
In a February 2026 interview with [[Reuters]], Daly stated that the Federal Reserve "must dig deep into the data" to assess whether artificial intelligence was boosting productivity growth in ways that could affect the appropriate path for interest rates. She emphasized that the central bank needed to carefully distinguish between genuine structural improvements in productivity and temporary or sector-specific effects.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-17 |title=Fed must dig deep on AI impact to make right rate calls ahead, Daly says |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/fed-must-dig-deep-ai-impact-make-right-rate-calls-ahead-daly-says-2026-02-17/ |work=Reuters |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In a February 2026 interview with [[Reuters]], Daly stated that the Federal Reserve needed to "dig deep into the data" to assess whether artificial intelligence was genuinely boosting productivity growth and enabling economic expansion without generating inflationary pressures. She emphasized the importance of data-driven analysis over speculation about the transformative potential of AI.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-17 |title=Fed must dig deep on AI impact to make right rate calls ahead, Daly says |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/fed-must-dig-deep-ai-impact-make-right-rate-calls-ahead-daly-says-2026-02-17/ |work=Reuters |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
In a conversation with [[Bloomberg News]], Daly elaborated on her assessment that there was not yet much indication that artificial intelligence was fundamentally changing the structure of the economy, but that the potential for such change required close monitoring by policymakers.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-18 |title=Bloomberg Talks: Mary Daly |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/audio/2026-02-18/bloomberg-talks-mary-daly-podcast |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In a conversation with [[Bloomberg News]], Daly noted that while there was significant discussion about AI's potential to fundamentally change the economy, there was not yet substantial evidence that such changes were manifesting in macroeconomic data.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-18 |title=Bloomberg Talks: Mary Daly |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/audio/2026-02-18/bloomberg-talks-mary-daly-podcast |work=Bloomberg.com |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
In a separate analysis reported by [[Axios]], Daly offered insight into how AI was playing out specifically in the [[San Francisco Bay Area]], describing a "transition phase" in which employers were beginning to integrate AI tools into hiring and workforce decisions. Her comments reflected firsthand observations drawn from the San Francisco Fed's engagement with businesses in its district, which includes major technology companies at the forefront of AI development and deployment.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-18 |title=How the San Francisco Fed is seeing AI reshape hiring |url=https://www.axios.com/local/san-francisco/2026/02/18/mary-daly-ai-hiring-transition-phase |work=Axios |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Daly also offered observations about how AI was reshaping hiring practices in the San Francisco Bay Area, the Federal Reserve district she oversees. In comments reported by [[Axios]], Daly described the current period as a "transition phase" in which AI was beginning to alter employment patterns, though the full implications remained uncertain.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-18 |title=How the San Francisco Fed is seeing AI reshape hiring |url=https://www.axios.com/local/san-francisco/2026/02/18/mary-daly-ai-hiring-transition-phase |work=Axios |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Daly characterized the productivity effects of AI as moving "under the hood," suggesting that while aggregate economic statistics had not yet captured a clear AI-driven productivity surge, underlying changes in business operations and labor utilization were beginning to take shape.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-20 |title=San Francisco Fed's Mary Daly Signals Policy Stability as AI Productivity Gains Move "Under the Hood" |url=https://markets.financialcontent.com/stocks/article/marketminute-2026-2-20-san-francisco-feds-mary-daly-signals-policy-stability-as-ai-productivity-gains-move-under-the-hood |work=FinancialContent |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In remarks covered by ''Finance & Commerce'' and other outlets, Daly described the Federal Reserve's current interest rate policy as "well positioned" to allow officials time to study AI's economic effects. She characterized AI-related productivity gains as moving "under the hood" of the economy — present but not yet clearly visible in aggregate economic statistics — and signaled that this warranted a stable policy stance rather than preemptive rate adjustments.<ref name="fc">{{cite news |date=2026-02-21 |title=Fed well positioned to study AI's economic impact, Daly says |url=https://finance-commerce.com/2026/02/mary-daly-fed-policy-ai-productivity-inflation/ |work=Finance & Commerce |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-20 |title=San Francisco Fed's Mary Daly Signals Policy Stability as AI Productivity Gains Move "Under the Hood" |url=https://markets.financialcontent.com/stocks/article/marketminute-2026-2-20-san-francisco-feds-mary-daly-signals-policy-stability-as-ai-productivity-gains-move-under-the-hood |work=FinancialContent |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
=== Research Contributions ===


Separately, Daly stated that monetary policy was "in a good place," reiterating that the central bank's current posture gave it flexibility to respond to evolving economic conditions, including those driven by technological change.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02-20 |title=Fed's Daly says policy 'in a good place' as officials assess AI's effect on economy |url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/fed-s-daly-says-policy-in-a-good-place-as-officials-assess-ai-s-effect-on-economy/ar-AA1WHGI4?ocid=finance-verthp-feeds |work=MSN |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Prior to her appointment as president, Daly published numerous research papers and contributed to the Federal Reserve's understanding of labor markets and economic measurement. Her work on wage rigidity explored the phenomenon of downward nominal wage stickiness — the observation that employers tend to resist cutting nominal wages even during economic downturns — and its implications for monetary policy. She also contributed to research on how standard unemployment statistics may understate or overstate true labor market slack, work that informed the Federal Reserve's assessment of the economy during and after the [[Great Recession]].


These comments reflected Daly's broader analytical approach to monetary policy, which has emphasized the importance of patience, data dependence, and caution against making premature policy changes based on anticipated rather than observed economic shifts.
Daly's research on disability and the labor force examined how physical and mental health conditions affect labor force participation, earnings, and economic well-being. This body of work connected her personal background and early career experiences with rigorous empirical analysis.


=== Role Within the Federal Reserve System ===
=== Leadership Style and Public Communication ===


As president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Daly oversees one of the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks. The San Francisco Fed's district is the largest by geography, covering nine western states, as well as [[American Samoa]], [[Guam]], and the [[Northern Mariana Islands]]. The district includes major technology centers such as [[Silicon Valley]] and [[Seattle]], placing Daly in a unique position to observe the effects of technological innovation on the economy firsthand.
As president of the San Francisco Fed, Daly has been noted for her efforts to communicate monetary policy in accessible terms. She has given public speeches, media interviews, and participated in community events aimed at explaining the Federal Reserve's decisions and their implications for ordinary Americans. She has frequently drawn on her own life story — including her experiences in low-wage work — to connect abstract economic concepts to lived experience.


In her role, Daly participates in FOMC meetings, where she contributes to decisions about the federal funds rate and other monetary policy tools. FOMC members rotate voting privileges, but all regional Fed presidents participate in discussions. Daly's perspective on labor markets and her district's proximity to the technology industry have given her a distinct voice within the Federal Reserve System on issues related to innovation, employment, and economic inequality.
Daly has also emphasized the importance of diversity and inclusion within the Federal Reserve System and in the economics profession more broadly. Under her leadership, the San Francisco Fed has pursued initiatives related to community development, economic equity, and the study of how monetary policy affects different demographic groups.


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Daly has spoken publicly about her unconventional path to the leadership of a Federal Reserve Bank. She dropped out of high school as a teenager and worked in a doughnut shop before returning to education. She has described these experiences as formative, giving her a personal understanding of the challenges faced by workers without advanced education and those in low-wage employment. Daly has used her personal narrative to advocate for economic policies that consider the experiences of workers across the income spectrum, and she has been open about how her background informs her approach to monetary policy and economic research.
Daly has spoken publicly about her unconventional path to a career in economics and central banking. She has described her early experiences dropping out of high school and working in service-sector jobs as formative influences on her understanding of the economy from the perspective of workers, particularly those in low-wage and insecure employment. She has cited these experiences as motivating her interest in labor economics and her commitment to ensuring that monetary policy takes into account the conditions faced by all segments of the workforce.
 
Daly resides in [[San Francisco]], where the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco is headquartered. She has maintained a relatively private personal life while serving as a public figure within the Federal Reserve System.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Daly's appointment as President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco was noted for its historic and symbolic significance, given her non-traditional educational and professional background. She has been recognized as a prominent voice within the Federal Reserve System on issues related to labor markets, economic inequality, and the intersection of technology and the economy. Her public commentary on AI and monetary policy in 2026 has attracted significant media attention from outlets including Reuters, Bloomberg, ''The Wall Street Journal'', Axios, and others, reflecting her standing as a key participant in national economic policy discussions.<ref name="fc" />
Daly's appointment as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco was itself recognized as notable, given her nontraditional educational and professional background. She has been featured in numerous media profiles and interviews that have highlighted her journey from working-class origins to leading one of the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks. Her public engagement on topics including AI and the economy, labor market conditions, and the Federal Reserve's role in promoting economic stability has garnered attention from financial media outlets including ''The Wall Street Journal'', [[Reuters]], [[Bloomberg News]], and [[Axios]].
 
As a leader within the Federal Reserve System, Daly participates in one of the most consequential decision-making bodies in global finance. Her contributions to FOMC deliberations and her public commentary on monetary policy are closely followed by financial markets, economists, and policymakers.
 
== Legacy ==
 
As of 2026, Daly continues to serve as president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, and her legacy remains in active formation. Her tenure has coincided with an exceptionally challenging period for monetary policy, encompassing the economic disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, a surge in inflation to levels not seen in decades, and the subsequent effort to bring inflation back to target without triggering a severe economic downturn.
 
Daly's emphasis on the Federal Reserve's dual mandate — and her vocal advocacy for giving equal weight to employment alongside price stability — has positioned her within the broader institutional debate about the appropriate conduct of monetary policy. Her work on the economic implications of artificial intelligence has placed the San Francisco Fed at the center of policy discussions about how technological change may reshape the economic landscape in ways that affect the conduct of central banking.
 
Her personal story, from high school dropout to Federal Reserve president, has been cited as illustrative of the value of nontraditional career paths in public service and economics. Whether this narrative becomes a lasting element of her institutional legacy will depend in part on the outcomes of the policy decisions in which she participates and the broader trajectory of the issues she has championed.


== References ==
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 06:27, 24 February 2026



Mary C. Daly
Born5 7, 1968
BirthplaceClarence, New York, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationEconomist, central banker
TitlePresident and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Known forPresident and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
EducationPh.D., Syracuse University

Mary C. Daly is an American economist who has served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco since October 2018. In this role, she participates in the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which sets monetary policy for the United States. Daly's career at the San Francisco Fed spans more than two decades, during which she rose through the institution's research ranks before being named its leader. Her academic and policy work has focused on labor economics, wage dynamics, and the economic effects of inequality. In recent years, Daly has emerged as a prominent voice within the Federal Reserve System on topics including the impact of artificial intelligence on productivity, the health of the U.S. labor market, and the appropriate path for interest rate policy. Her public commentary has drawn attention for its combination of data-driven analysis and accessible communication aimed at explaining complex monetary policy decisions to a broad audience.

Early Life

Mary Christine Daly was born on July 5, 1968, and grew up in Clarence, New York, a suburb of Buffalo. She has spoken publicly about her upbringing in a working-class household and her early experiences in the labor market. Daly did not follow a traditional academic trajectory; she dropped out of high school and spent time working in a doughnut shop and other service-sector jobs before eventually pursuing higher education. These formative experiences with low-wage work and economic insecurity have been cited by Daly as shaping her professional interest in labor markets, inequality, and economic opportunity.

Education

Daly earned her bachelor's degree from the University of Missouri–Kansas City. She subsequently obtained a master's degree in economics from the University of Illinois Springfield (then Sangamon State University). Daly went on to earn her Ph.D. in economics from Syracuse University, where her doctoral research focused on labor economics and disability. Her academic training in labor market dynamics and applied microeconomics provided the foundation for her subsequent career at the Federal Reserve.

Career

Early Career at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Daly joined the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco in 1996 as an economist in the bank's research department. Over the following two decades, she established herself as a specialist in labor economics, wage dynamics, and the economic consequences of disability and inequality. Her research output during this period included studies on wage rigidity, the measurement of labor market slack, and the effects of economic downturns on different segments of the workforce.

Daly advanced steadily through the research hierarchy at the San Francisco Fed. She held the positions of research advisor and associate director of research before being appointed executive vice president and director of research in 2017. In this capacity, she oversaw the bank's economic research operations and served as a key policy advisor to the bank's president.

Appointment as President and CEO

On October 1, 2018, Daly became the 13th president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She succeeded John C. Williams, who left to become president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Daly was the first person without an Ivy League or equivalent elite university background to lead the San Francisco Fed in the modern era, and her appointment was noted for reflecting a nontraditional career path in central banking. As president, Daly serves on the FOMC, participating in decisions on interest rates and the overall direction of U.S. monetary policy. She serves as a voting member of the FOMC on a rotating basis, in accordance with the Federal Reserve System's structure.

Monetary Policy Positions

Throughout her tenure as president, Daly has articulated positions on monetary policy that reflect a data-dependent approach to interest rate decisions. She has emphasized the importance of achieving both sides of the Federal Reserve's dual mandate: maximum employment and price stability.

During the period of elevated inflation that followed the COVID-19 pandemic, Daly supported the Federal Reserve's aggressive interest rate increases aimed at bringing inflation back toward the 2 percent target. As inflationary pressures began to moderate, she became a voice for careful recalibration of policy, advocating for rate adjustments that would avoid unnecessarily weakening the labor market.

In November 2025, Daly publicly stated her support for a rate cut at the Federal Reserve's December meeting, citing concerns about the vulnerability of the labor market. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, she expressed the view that the central bank should lower interest rates to protect against potential deterioration in employment conditions.[1]

By early 2026, Daly's public statements indicated a shift toward viewing monetary policy as appropriately positioned, describing it as being "in a good place." In February 2026, she stated that interest rate policy was well positioned as officials continued to assess evolving economic conditions, including the potential effects of artificial intelligence on productivity and inflation.[2] She further remarked that policy was "in a good place" while the central bank assessed the broader macroeconomic landscape.[3]

Focus on Artificial Intelligence and the Economy

In 2025 and 2026, Daly emerged as one of the most vocal Federal Reserve officials addressing the economic implications of artificial intelligence. Drawing on the San Francisco Fed's proximity to the technology industry and Silicon Valley, she provided detailed observations on how AI was reshaping hiring patterns, productivity, and the broader economy.

In a February 2026 interview with Reuters, Daly stated that the Federal Reserve "must dig deep into the data" to assess whether artificial intelligence was boosting productivity growth in ways that could affect the appropriate path for interest rates. She emphasized that the central bank needed to carefully distinguish between genuine structural improvements in productivity and temporary or sector-specific effects.[4]

In a conversation with Bloomberg News, Daly elaborated on her assessment that there was not yet much indication that artificial intelligence was fundamentally changing the structure of the economy, but that the potential for such change required close monitoring by policymakers.[5]

In a separate analysis reported by Axios, Daly offered insight into how AI was playing out specifically in the San Francisco Bay Area, describing a "transition phase" in which employers were beginning to integrate AI tools into hiring and workforce decisions. Her comments reflected firsthand observations drawn from the San Francisco Fed's engagement with businesses in its district, which includes major technology companies at the forefront of AI development and deployment.[6]

Daly characterized the productivity effects of AI as moving "under the hood," suggesting that while aggregate economic statistics had not yet captured a clear AI-driven productivity surge, underlying changes in business operations and labor utilization were beginning to take shape.[7]

Research Contributions

Prior to her appointment as president, Daly published numerous research papers and contributed to the Federal Reserve's understanding of labor markets and economic measurement. Her work on wage rigidity explored the phenomenon of downward nominal wage stickiness — the observation that employers tend to resist cutting nominal wages even during economic downturns — and its implications for monetary policy. She also contributed to research on how standard unemployment statistics may understate or overstate true labor market slack, work that informed the Federal Reserve's assessment of the economy during and after the Great Recession.

Daly's research on disability and the labor force examined how physical and mental health conditions affect labor force participation, earnings, and economic well-being. This body of work connected her personal background and early career experiences with rigorous empirical analysis.

Leadership Style and Public Communication

As president of the San Francisco Fed, Daly has been noted for her efforts to communicate monetary policy in accessible terms. She has given public speeches, media interviews, and participated in community events aimed at explaining the Federal Reserve's decisions and their implications for ordinary Americans. She has frequently drawn on her own life story — including her experiences in low-wage work — to connect abstract economic concepts to lived experience.

Daly has also emphasized the importance of diversity and inclusion within the Federal Reserve System and in the economics profession more broadly. Under her leadership, the San Francisco Fed has pursued initiatives related to community development, economic equity, and the study of how monetary policy affects different demographic groups.

Personal Life

Daly has spoken publicly about her unconventional path to a career in economics and central banking. She has described her early experiences dropping out of high school and working in service-sector jobs as formative influences on her understanding of the economy from the perspective of workers, particularly those in low-wage and insecure employment. She has cited these experiences as motivating her interest in labor economics and her commitment to ensuring that monetary policy takes into account the conditions faced by all segments of the workforce.

Daly resides in San Francisco, where the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco is headquartered. She has maintained a relatively private personal life while serving as a public figure within the Federal Reserve System.

Recognition

Daly's appointment as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco was itself recognized as notable, given her nontraditional educational and professional background. She has been featured in numerous media profiles and interviews that have highlighted her journey from working-class origins to leading one of the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks. Her public engagement on topics including AI and the economy, labor market conditions, and the Federal Reserve's role in promoting economic stability has garnered attention from financial media outlets including The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Bloomberg News, and Axios.

As a leader within the Federal Reserve System, Daly participates in one of the most consequential decision-making bodies in global finance. Her contributions to FOMC deliberations and her public commentary on monetary policy are closely followed by financial markets, economists, and policymakers.

Legacy

As of 2026, Daly continues to serve as president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, and her legacy remains in active formation. Her tenure has coincided with an exceptionally challenging period for monetary policy, encompassing the economic disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, a surge in inflation to levels not seen in decades, and the subsequent effort to bring inflation back to target without triggering a severe economic downturn.

Daly's emphasis on the Federal Reserve's dual mandate — and her vocal advocacy for giving equal weight to employment alongside price stability — has positioned her within the broader institutional debate about the appropriate conduct of monetary policy. Her work on the economic implications of artificial intelligence has placed the San Francisco Fed at the center of policy discussions about how technological change may reshape the economic landscape in ways that affect the conduct of central banking.

Her personal story, from high school dropout to Federal Reserve president, has been cited as illustrative of the value of nontraditional career paths in public service and economics. Whether this narrative becomes a lasting element of her institutional legacy will depend in part on the outcomes of the policy decisions in which she participates and the broader trajectory of the issues she has championed.

References

  1. "Exclusive: Fed's Daly Backs December Rate Cut, Citing Vulnerable Labor Market".The Wall Street Journal.2025-11-24.https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/feds-daly-backs-december-rate-cut-citing-vulnerable-labor-market-07a497b6?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=AWEtsqcNK--5gv53J5TkCXX8YegnXlcnkIs38uBtWHGRPfqJOv2mUw_S7hfn&gaa_ts=699d4825&gaa_sig=bNs6m4v8QuaWapKVLKG0Z1KmAcakFWqjyxSC8IEZ7T-_Gv0eD7nyo6Z-VuDdyPAfjauVgmXzrrhDcVJ2dDPomQ%3D%3D.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. "Fed well positioned to study AI's economic impact, Daly says".Finance & Commerce.2026-02-20.https://finance-commerce.com/2026/02/mary-daly-fed-policy-ai-productivity-inflation/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. "Fed's Daly says policy 'in a good place' as officials assess AI's effect on economy".MSN.2026-02-19.https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/fed-s-daly-says-policy-in-a-good-place-as-officials-assess-ai-s-effect-on-economy/ar-AA1WHGI4?ocid=finance-verthp-feeds.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. "Fed must dig deep on AI impact to make right rate calls ahead, Daly says".Reuters.2026-02-17.https://www.reuters.com/business/fed-must-dig-deep-ai-impact-make-right-rate-calls-ahead-daly-says-2026-02-17/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. "Bloomberg Talks: Mary Daly".Bloomberg.2026-02-18.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/audio/2026-02-18/bloomberg-talks-mary-daly-podcast.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. "How the San Francisco Fed is seeing AI reshape hiring".Axios.2026-02-18.https://www.axios.com/local/san-francisco/2026/02/18/mary-daly-ai-hiring-transition-phase.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. "San Francisco Fed's Mary Daly Signals Policy Stability as AI Productivity Gains Move "Under the Hood"".FinancialContent.2026-02-20.https://markets.financialcontent.com/stocks/article/marketminute-2026-2-20-san-francisco-feds-mary-daly-signals-policy-stability-as-ai-productivity-gains-move-under-the-hood.Retrieved 2026-02-24.