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Fed Keeps Rates Unchanged as Tariffs Cloud Inflation Outlook

Systemwide research teams are racing to measure tariff effects on consumer prices, with implications for household purchasing power

Overview

  • The Fed has kept its benchmark rate at 4.25%–4.5% since December because officials lack clarity on tariff pass-through to price inflation.
  • Minneapolis Fed chief Neel Kashkari warns of protracted trade talks and potential tit-for-tat levies, urging rates stay unchanged to defend long-term inflation expectations.
  • Some policymakers, including Fed Governor Christopher Waller, argue that tariff-driven price spikes may be temporary, allowing the bank to look through short-term shocks.
  • Research papers published since January estimate that initial China tariffs added roughly 0.3 percentage points to core goods inflation and forecast further increases under expanded levies.
  • Fed modeling shows that tariffs and possible retaliation could reduce real household incomes by about 1% nationally and swing state consumption by up to nearly 3%.