Fed minutes: Most officials supported further rate cuts as worries about
jobs rose
[October 09, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Most members of the Federal Reserve's interest-rate
setting committee supported further reductions to its key interest rate
this year, according to minutes from last month's meeting released
Wednesday.
A majority of Fed officials felt that the risk unemployment would rise
had worsened since their previous meeting in July, while the risk of
rising inflation “had either diminished or not increased,” the minutes
said. As a result, the central bank decided at its Sept. 16-17 meeting
to reduce its key rate by a quarter-point to about 4.1%, its first cut
this year.
Rate cuts by the Fed can gradually lower borrowing costs for things like
mortgages, auto loans, and business loans, encouraging more spending and
hiring.
Still, the minutes underscored the deep division on the 19-person
committee between those who feel that the Fed's short-term rate is too
high and weighing on the economy, and those who point to persistent
inflation that remains above the central bank's 2% target as evidence
that the Fed needs to be cautious about reducing rates.

Only one official formally dissented from the quarter-point cut: Stephen
Miran, who was appointed by President Donald Trump and was approved by
the Senate just hours before the meeting began. He supported a larger,
half-point cut instead.
But the minutes noted that “a few” policymakers said they could have
supported keeping rates unchanged, or said that “there was merit” in
such a step.
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The differences help explain Chair Jerome Powell’s statements during the
news conference that followed the meeting: “There are no risk-free paths
now. It’s not incredibly obvious what to do.”
Miran said in remarks Tuesday that he thinks inflation will steadily
decline back toward the Fed’s 2% target, despite Trump’s tariffs, and as
a result he doesn’t think the Fed’s rate needs to be nearly as high as
it is. Rental costs are steadily declining and will bring down
inflation, he said, while tariff revenue will reduce the government’s
budget deficit and reduce longer-term interest rates, which gives the
Fed more room to cut.
Yet many other Fed officials remain concerned about stubbornly high
inflation, the minutes showed. Jeffrey Schmid, president of the Federal
Reserve’s Kansas City branch, said in a speech Monday that “inflation is
too high” and argued that the Fed should keep rates high enough to cool
demand and prevent inflation from worsening.
And Austan Goolsbee, president of the Fed's Chicago branch, said in an
interview Friday with The Associated Press that he supported a cautious
approach toward more cuts, and wanted to see evidence that inflation
would cool further.
“I am a little uneasy with front loading rate cuts, presuming that those
upticks in inflation will just go away," he said.
The minutes provide insight into how the Fed's policymakers were
thinking last month about inflation, interest rates, and hiring. Since
then, however, the federal government shutdown has cut off the flow of
economic data that the Fed relies on to inform its decisions. The
September jobs report wasn't issued as scheduled last Friday, and if the
shutdown continues, it could also delay the release of the inflation
report set for next Wednesday.
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