Federal Reserve faces tough balancing act between fighting inflation and
spurring economic growth
[May 07, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve could keep its key rate unchanged
for several more months as it evaluates the impact of President Donald
Trump's widespread tariffs on hiring and inflation, some economists say,
even as the White House pushes for a rate cut.
The Fed is nearly certain to keep its rate unchanged when it concludes
its latest policy meeting Wednesday. Chair Jerome Powell and other Fed
officials have signaled that they want to see how the duties — including
145% on all imports from China — impact consumer prices and the economy.
The central bank's caution could lead to more conflict between the Fed
and the Trump administration. On Sunday, Trump again urged the Fed to
cut rates in a television interview and said Powell “just doesn't like
me because I think he's a total stiff.” With inflation not far from the
Fed's 2% target for now, Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
argue that the Fed could reduce its rate. The Fed pushed it higher in
2022 and 2023 to fight inflation.

If the Fed were to cut, it could lower other borrowing costs, such as
for mortgages, auto loans, and credit cards, though that is not
guaranteed.
Trump also said Sunday he wouldn't fire Powell because the chair's term
ends next May and he will be able to appoint a new chair then. Yet if
the economy stumbles in the coming months, Trump could renew his threats
to remove Powell.
A big issue facing the Fed is how tariffs will impact inflation. Nearly
all economists and Fed officials expect the import taxes will lift
prices, but it's not clear by how much or for how long. Tariffs
typically cause a one-time increase in prices, but not necessarily
ongoing inflation. Yet if Trump announces further tariffs — as he has
threatened to do on pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and copper — or if
Americans worry that inflation will get worse, that could send prices
higher in a more persistent way.
Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide, said this could keep
the Fed on the sidelines until September.
“It’s hard for them to cut sooner because they’ve got to weigh, what’s
the inflation impact?” Bostjancic said. “Is this going to be somewhat
persistent and add to inflation expectations?”
Economists and the Fed are closely watching inflation expectations,
which are essentially a measure of how much consumers are concerned that
inflation will worsen. Higher inflation expectations can be
self-fulfilling, because it Americans think prices will rise, they can
take steps that push up costs, such as asking for higher wages.
For now, the U.S. economy is mostly in solid shape, and inflation has
cooled considerably from its peak in 2022. Consumers are spending at a
healthy pace, though some of that may reflect buying things like cars
ahead of tariffs. Businesses are still adding workers at a steady pace,
and unemployment is low.
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 Still, there are signs inflation
will worsen in the coming months. Surveys of both manufacturing and
services firms show that they are seeing higher prices from their
suppliers. And a survey by the Federal Reserve's Dallas branch found
that nearly 55% of manufacturing firms expect to pass on the impact
of tariff increases to their customers.
“The bottom line is that inflation will be rising significantly over
the next six months,” Torsten Slok, chief economist at the Apollo
Group, said in an email.
Yet the tariffs could also weigh heavily on the economy,
particularly because of the uncertainty they have created. Huge
tariffs on about 60 other nations, announced April 2, were then
postponed until July 9, but could be reimposed. Business surveys
show that firms are postponing investment decisions until they have
greater clarity.
Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, said the
uncertainty surrounding trade policy gives him “night terrors.”
“The economics of uncertainty are absolutely suffocating," Sweet
said. “Businesses that don’t know the rules of the road, their
knee-jerk reaction is to sit on their hands. And that’s what they’re
doing.”
But if the uncertainty delays hiring, slows the economy and pushes
up the unemployment rate, the Fed could quickly shift toward
interest rate cuts. A sharp economic slowdown could eventually cool
inflation by itself, economists say.
“If you felt like the economy was really slowing down, then I think
that would probably take precedence (over inflation), because
usually the way the committee thinks is that will also drag
inflation somewhat with it,” said Jim Bullard, former president of
the Federal Reserve's St. Louis branch, and currently dean of Purdue
University's business school.
In March, the Fed signaled that it could cut rates twice this year.
But since then, the Trump administration imposed duties that Powell
said last month were larger and broader than the Fed expected.

The duties, Powell acknowledged, could both slow growth and lift
prices, which puts the Fed in a tough spot. It would usually cut
rates to boost growth and hiring, while it would raise them to cool
spending and inflation. Powell signaled that if the two goals came
into conflict, Fed officials would put more weight on inflation
concerns.
“Without price stability, we cannot achieve the long periods of
strong labor market conditions that benefit all Americans,” Powell
said.
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