Federal Reserve likely to defy Trump, keep rates unchanged this week
[May 05, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve will likely keep its key
short-term interest rate unchanged on Wednesday, despite weeks of harsh
criticism and demands from President Donald Trump that the Fed reduce
borrowing costs.
After causing a sharp drop in financial markets two weeks ago by saying
he could fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell, Trump subsequently backed off and
said he had no intention of doing so. Still, he and Treasury Secretary
Scott Bessent have said the Fed should cut rates.
They argue that inflation has steadily cooled and high borrowing costs
are no longer needed to restrain price increases. The Fed sharply ramped
up its short-term rate in 2022 and 2023 as pandemic-era inflation
spiked.
Separately, Elon Musk, the head of Trump's Department of Government
Efficiency, last Wednesday suggested that DOGE should look more closely
at the Fed's spending on its facilities.
The heightened scrutiny shows that even as the Trump administration
backs off its threats to fire Powell, the Fed is still subject to
unusually sharp political pressures, despite its status as an
independent agency.

Even so, the Fed will almost certainly leave its key rate unchanged at
about 4.3% when it meets Tuesday and Wednesday. Powell and many of the
other 18 officials that sit on the Fed's rate-setting committee have
said they want to see how Trump's tariffs affect the economy before
making any moves.
Trump, however, on Friday said on the social media platform Truth Social
that there is “NO INFLATION” and claimed that grocery and egg prices
have fallen, and that gas has dropped to $1.98 a gallon.
That's not entirely true: Grocery prices have jumped 0.5% in two of the
past three months and are up 2.4% from a year ago. Gas and oil prices
have declined — gas costs are down 10% from a year ago — continuing a
longer-running trend that has continued in part because of fears the
economy will weaken. Still, AAA says gas prices nationwide average $3.18
a gallon.
Inflation did drop noticeably in March, an encouraging sign, though in
the first three months of the year it was 3.6%, according to the Fed's
preferred gauge, well above its 2% target.
Without tariffs, economists say it's possible the Fed would soon reduce
its benchmark rate, because it is currently at a level intended to slow
borrowing and spending and cool inflation. Yet the Fed can't now cut
rates with Trump's broad tariffs likely to raise prices in the coming
months.
Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at BNY, said that the Fed is “scarred”
by what happened in 2021, when prices rose amid supply snarls and Powell
and other Fed officials said the increase would likely be “transitory.”
Instead, inflation soared to a peak of 9.1% in June 2022.
This time they will be more cautious, he said.
“That’s a Fed that is going to have to wait for evidence and be slow to
adjust on that evidence,” Reinhart said.

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 Plus, Trump's badgering of Powell
makes it harder for the Fed chair to cut rates because doing so
anytime soon would be seen as knuckling under to the White House,
said Preston Mui, an economist at Employ America.
“You could imagine a world where there isn’t pressure from the Trump
administration and they cut rates ... sooner, because they feel
comfortable making the argument that they're doing so because of the
data,” he said.
For his part, Powell said last month that tariffs would likely push
up inflation and slow the economy, a tricky combination for the Fed.
The central bank would typically raise rates — or at least keep them
elevated — to fight inflation, while it would cut them to spur the
economy if unemployment rose.
Powell has said that the impact of the tariffs on inflation could be
temporary — a one-time price increase — but most recently said it
“could also be more persistent.” That suggests that Powell will want
to wait, potentially for months, to ensure tariffs don't sustainably
raise inflation before considering a rate cut.
Some economists forecast the Fed won't cut rates until its September
meeting, or even later.
Yet Fed officials could move sooner if the tariffs hit the economy
hard enough to cause layoffs and push up unemployment. Wall Street
investors appear to expect such an outcome — they project that the
first cut will occur in July, according to futures pricing.
Separately, Musk criticized the Fed Wednesday for spending $2.5
billion on an extensive renovation of two of its buildings in
Washington, D.C.
“Since at the end of the day, this is all taxpayer money, we should
certainly look to see if indeed the Federal Reserve is spending $2.5
billion on their interior designer,” Musk said. “That’s an eyebrow
raiser.”
Fed officials acknowledge that the cost of the renovations have
risen as prices for building materials and labor have spiked amid
the post-pandemic inflation. And former Fed officials, speaking on
background, say that local regulations forced the Fed to do more of
the expansion underground, rather than making the buildings taller,
which added to the cost.

Meanwhile, Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor and a potential
candidate to replace Powell as chair when Powell's term expires next
year, said recently that the Fed has attracted greater scrutiny
because of its failure to keep prices in check.
“The Fed's current wounds are largely self-inflicted,” he said in a
speech during an International Monetary Fund conference in late
April, in which he also slammed the Fed for participating in a
global forum on climate change. “A strategic reset is necessary to
mitigate losses of credibility, changes in standing, and most
important, worse economic outcomes for our fellow citizens.”
Powell, for his part, said last month that “Fed independence is very
widely understood and supported in Washington, in Congress, where it
really matters.”
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