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The Fed is as clueless as the markets

Jonathan Levin
Jonathan Levin • 4 min read
The Fed is as clueless as the markets
Jerome Powell, chairman of the US Federal Reserves / Photo: Bloomberg
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In normal times, the conduct of monetary policy is a lot like driving a car through a thick fog of uncertainty. You have a general idea of where you’re going, but you want to move slowly to avoid accidents. At the moment, it’s more like driving while double blindfolded — in a car with malfunctioning breaks. The most prudent move is to stop.

With its decision Wednesday, the Federal Reserve has now cut rates by 100 basis points to 4.25%-4.5%, appropriate adjustments given the meaningful moderation in inflation from the peaks of 2022. But nobody knows what comes next — and I mean nobody.

The key feature of the Fed’s latest economic projections was the uncertainty surrounding them. The median forecaster on the Fed’s rate-setting committee now projects that inflation progress will slow meaningfully in 2025, and that the central bank will cut rates just two more times by next December.

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