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Trump is about to test whether the Fed learned its inflation lesson

Trump is about to test whether the Fed learned its inflation lesson
March 31, 2025
Bryan Mena - CNN

Washington (CNN) โ€” The Federal Reserve admits it badly misjudged the beginning of the inflation crisis, but officials hope they wonโ€™t make the same mistake again. President Donald Trumpโ€™s tariffs are about to determine whether Americaโ€™s central bank is up for the challenge.

In 2021, as the US economy recovered from the pandemic, consumer prices began to creep higher. Fed officials said then that rising inflation would only be โ€œtransitory.โ€

Notoriously, that proved to not be the case, and, by the spring of 2022, the Fed was in the throes of its most aggressive rate-hiking campaign since the 1980s.

Inflation has improved considerably since then, but the Fed still gets flak for being so wrong in 2021.

Now the Fed is working on a new โ€œpolicy framework,โ€ including lessons from its mistaken bet that high inflation would be just a blip. And while that framework needs to work for future crises, itโ€™s especially urgent at the moment โ€” given the chaos and confusion already spurred this year by President Donald Trumpโ€™s sweeping economic agenda, centered on tariffs, tax cuts and deregulation.

โ€œI think itโ€™s a fair criticism that we could have acted earlier,โ€ James Bullard, who served as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis from 2008 to 2023, told CNN in an interview late last year. โ€œBut youโ€™re never going to be totally certain in macroeconomics about whatโ€™s going to happen next and this is the world weโ€™ve always lived in.โ€

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a reliable critic of the Fed, was blunter during Chair Jerome Powellโ€™s February semiannual update on monetary policy: โ€œItโ€™s now clear that the Fed acted too late and let inflation get too high, and then responded by keeping rates too high for too long.โ€

How did the Fed get it wrong?

The pandemic triggered a sharp, two-month recession, with double-digit unemployment. In the previous downturn, during the 2007-2009 Great Recession, the labor market was slow to recover.

The Covid recession, hitting before prices started to jump, kept the Fed focused on promoting job growth, rather than wrangling inflation. After all, runaway prices hadnโ€™t been a problem in decades.

โ€œThe 2020 framework put more emphasis on full employment,โ€ said Laurence Ball, an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University who researches monetary policy.

But back then, economists were convinced that inflation would quickly fall down to earth.

โ€œThe good ship Transitory was a crowded one,โ€ Powell said last year in his keynote speech at the Kansas City Fedโ€™s Jackson Hole Economic Symposium.

Kristin Forbes, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former member of the White Houseโ€™s Council of Economic Advisers, said during a panel discussion earlier this month that it didnโ€™t matter the US central bank was late because it picked up ground by raising rates aggressively โ€” all without sacrificing too much of the economyโ€™s health.

โ€œCentral banks were slow to tighten, but they made up for that,โ€ she said.

The Fedโ€™s new approach will be tested

Every five years, the Fed revises a two-page document detailing the Fedโ€™s strategy and long-term macroeconomic goals. Thatโ€™s happening now, with officials expected to finish by this summer. But Trump has already changed the worldโ€™s biggest economy in big ways, just in two months in office. And there are more changes on the way.

On Wednesday, Trump is set to announce sweeping tariffs that will match those foreign countries impose on the United States, continuing an ongoing tariff spree that has already doubled duties on China to 20% and imposed new ones on metals and autos. Trumpโ€™s tariffs are widely expected to jack up prices and weaken growth, potentially leading the US economy toward โ€œstagflation,โ€ a toxic duo of tepid or negative growth and accelerating inflation.

โ€œItโ€™s a difficult moment right now because there are risks on both sides, with some measures indicating the risk of a recession while others suggest a resurgence of inflation,โ€ said Emi Nakamura, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. โ€œBut obviously, you donโ€™t want to be fighting the last war. You want to recognize that there are some special features in each economic cycle.โ€

โ€œSo, given that weโ€™ve had this recent experience with inflation, they have to be thinking about a framework in a context where thereโ€™s now a real concern that longer-term inflation expectations could get destabilized,โ€ Nakamura added. One closely watched survey by the University of Michigan, out Friday, showed that inflation expectations in the next 5 to 10 years surged this month to the highest level since February 1993.

Forbes, the MIT professor, suggested loosening the Fedโ€™s 2% inflation target to a band, such as 1.5%-2.5%. Powell has said the 2% target is not going away but hasnโ€™t weighed in on a range instead.

The Fedโ€™s framework review is also looking at the central bankโ€™s โ€œpolicy communications tools,โ€ according to the Fed, which was precisely the central bankโ€™s biggest mistake, according to Laurence Meyer, a former Fed governor who served from 1996 to 2002.

โ€œTransitory was a terrible word to use because that means fleeting, so markets lost some confidence in their communication,โ€ he told CNN. โ€œTemporary means not permanent, and thatโ€™s what they should have saidโ€

The-CNN-Wire
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