Hoping for lower borrowing costs? Fed likely to stand pat again
[June 18, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The inflation-fighters at the Federal Reserve are
expected to keep their key interest rate unchanged Wednesday for the
fourth straight time. That's likely to shift attention to how many
interest rate cuts they forecast for this year.
It's widely expected that the 19 Fed officials that participate in the
central bank's interest-rate decisions will project two rate cuts for
this year, as they did in December and March. But some economists expect
that one or both of those cuts could be pushed back to 2026.
The Fed will almost certainly keep the short-term rate it controls at
about 4.3%, economists say, where it has stood since the central bank
last cut rates in December. Since then, it has stayed on the sidelines
while it evaluates the impact of President Donald Trump's tariffs and
other policy changes on the economy and prices.
Inflation has been cooling since January, and many economists say that
without the higher import taxes, the Fed would likely be cutting its
rate further. According to the Fed's preferred measure, inflation
dropped to just 2.1% in April, the lowest since last September. Core
inflation — which exclude the volatile food and energy categories — was
2.5%.

Those figures suggest inflation is largely coming under control, for
now. Yet the Fed's short-term interest rate remains at an elevated level
intended to slow growth and inflation. Some economists argue that with
inflation cooling, the Fed could resume its rate reductions.
When the Fed reduces its rate, it often — though not always — leads to
lower costs for consumer and business borrowing, including for
mortgages, auto loans, and credit cards. Yet financial markets also
influence the level of longer-term rates and can keep them elevated even
if the Fed reduces the shorter-term rate it controls.
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 But Fed officials have said they
want to see whether Trump's tariffs boost inflation and for how
long. Economists generally believe a tariff hike should at least
lead to a one-time increase in prices, as companies seek to offset
the cost of higher duties. Many Fed officials, however, are worried
that the tariffs could lead to more sustained inflation.
“While theory might suggest that (the Fed) should look through a
one-time increase in prices, I would be uncomfortable staking the
Fed’s reputation and credibility on theory,” Jeffrey Schmid,
president of the Fed's Kansas City branch and a voting member of the
Fed's interest-rate setting committee, said earlier this month.
The Trump White House has sharply ramped up
pressure on Powell to reduce borrowing costs, with Trump himself
calling the Fed chair a “numbskull” last week for not cutting. Other
officials, including Vice President JD Vance and Commerce Secretary
Howard Lutnick, are also calling for a rate reduction.
Pushing the Fed to cut rates simply to save the government on its
interest payments typically raises alarms among economists, because
it would threaten the Fed’s congressional mandate to focus on stable
prices and maximum employment.
One of Trump's complaints is that the Fed isn't cutting rates even
as other central banks around the world have reduced their borrowing
costs, including in Europe, Canada, and the U.K. On Tuesday, the
Bank of Japan kept its key short-term rate unchanged at 0.5%, after
actually raising it recently.
But the European Central Bank, Bank of Canada, and Bank of England
have reduced their rates this year in part because U.S. tariffs are
weakening their economies. So far the U.S. economy is mostly solid,
with the unemployment rate low.
The Bank of England has cut its rate twice this year but is expected
to keep it unchanged at 4.25% when it meets Thursday.
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