Eakinomics: The
Fed Stands Firm. Why?
The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) finished its June policy
meeting and decided to hold the federal funds rate (the policy rate) unchanged at 2.25 to 2.5 percent.
The interesting question is, why?
One possibility is that it was the easiest way to reach consensus given
the sharp divergence of views among the committee members. In the “dot plot” of interest rate
projections by members of the FOMC, seven members favor cutting rates by
50 basis points over the remainder of the year, one member favors a
single 25 basis point cut, eight members favor no change in rates, and a
single FOMC member believes another 15 point hike is appropriate. Given
that the FOMC is split about the path forward, no change is the easy
compromise for the moment. It will be harder to make the same case in a
month.
Another possibility is that only one member really felt that the data
supported a cut at this moment — James Bullard of the St. Louis Fed, who
dissented from the vote. Since the Fed statement promised “the
committee will closely monitor the implications of incoming information
for the economic outlook and will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion,”
I can only assume that at least eight members (those who expect further
cuts) anticipate that the data will deteriorate to the point that a rate
cut is called for. Unfortunately, this logic does not hang together.
If one really believes that growth and inflation are softening, it makes
no sense to wait further. One should cut and do so preemptively.
A final possibility is that it doesn’t matter what the data and dot plots
say. In light of the president’s ceaseless and counterproductive bullying of the Fed and
Chairman Jerome Powell, the FOMC may have felt it imperative to assert
its independence by not changing rates. Obviously, if the economy is
weakening significantly, that strategy falls apart at some point.
The upshot is that we probably did not learn much from the Fed meeting.
What will the July meeting bring?
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