Why it is likely to cut rates this week

Why it is likely to cut rates this week

Why it is likely to cut rates this week

Investors across the globe are looking at the Federal Reserve as its officials gather on Tuesday and Wednesday to decide on interest rates. The Fed has held rates steady at 4.25%–4.50% since December 2024.

The so-called federal funds rate impacts interest rates for consumers and businesses in the world’s biggest economy, meaning a series of cuts could boost spending and investment.

For now, the US economy is nonetheless mired in uncertainty. Hiring has slowed sharply, while inflation remains stubbornly high.

One key question for the Fed is: Should they be more concerned about people who are out of work and struggling to find jobs, or should they focus more on the struggles many Americans face in keeping up with rising costs for groceries and other items? The Fed’s mandate from Congress requires it to seek both stable prices and full employment.

For now, Fed Chair Jerome Powell and other Fed policymakers have signalled the Fed is more concerned about weaker hiring, a key reason investors expect the central bank to reduce its benchmark interest rate by a quarter point on Wednesday to about 4.1%.

Still, stubbornly high inflation may force them to proceed slowly and limit how many reductions they make. The central bank will also release its quarterly economic projections on Wednesday, and economists project they will show that policymakers expect one or two additional cuts this year, plus several more next year.

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Ellen Meade, an economics professor at Duke University and former senior economist at the Fed, said it’s a stark contrast to the early pandemic, when it was clear the Fed had to rapidly reduce rates to boost the economy. And when inflation surged in 2021 and 2022, it was also a straightforward call for the Fed, which moved quickly to raise borrowing costs to combat higher prices.

But now, “it’s a tough time,” Meade said. “It would be a tough time, even if the politics and the whole thing weren’t going on the way they are. Some people would want to cut, some people would not want to cut.”

Amid all the economic uncertainty, US President Donald Trump is applying unprecedented political pressure on the Fed, demanding sharply lower rates, seeking to fire Cook, and insulting Powell, whom he has called a “numbskull”, “fool”, and “moron.”

Loretta Mester, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and finance professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, said that Fed officials won’t let the criticisms sway their decisions on policy. Still, the attacks are unfortunate, she said, because they threaten to undermine the Fed’s credibility with the public.