sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

Michael Strain argues that US interest rate cuts this year will have to be reversed in 2026 as inflation re-accelerates

Economy / opinion
Michael Strain argues that US interest rate cuts this year will have to be reversed in 2026 as inflation re-accelerates
Powell's wrong move

As was widely expected, the US Federal Reserve has lowered its policy rate by 25 basis points, to 4-4.25%. A slight majority of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) expect to cut again at both the October and December meetings, with additional easing expected in 2026. But the Fed is being too dovish, and risks setting itself up to hike interest rates next year.

The case for beginning a monetary-easing cycle this month rests on three judgments. First, the deterioration in headline payroll gains – the economy has added an average of just 29,000 net new jobs per month over the past three months, and employment contracted in June – is a strong indication of a weakening labour market. Second, underlying inflation is on course to return to the Fed’s target, albeit gradually. And third, there is considerable distance between the Fed’s policy rate and the rate at which the Fed would no longer be holding back economic growth. The Fed estimates this so-called neutral rate to be 3%.

On each point, the Fed is off base.

Payroll gains are hard to interpret because of sudden changes in immigration. It is likely that the number of net new payroll jobs needed to keep up with population growth is below 50,000 per month. It is even conceivable that future changes in net immigration flows could imply that the break-even number of monthly net payroll gains may become negative: net reductions in the level of employment could be required for the labour market to keep up with population changes.

The unemployment rate – a ratio which accounts for immigration changes in both its numerator and denominator – is typically the best measure of labour-market tightness, and it takes on added importance in light of changes in immigration that make it hard to interpret headline payroll statistics. At 4.3% in August, the unemployment rate is quite low, and has increased by only ten basis points over the past year.

Wage growth tells the same story as the unemployment rate: It is solid, slowly cooling, and indicates that the headline payroll numbers tell us more about the supply side of the labour market than businesses’ demand for workers.

The labour market could hardly deteriorate markedly, as the Fed suggests, without an increase in the number of laid-off workers. But monthly layoffs have been flat over the past year, and at 1.8 million per month, are at roughly the same level as during the hot labour market of 2019.

As for underlying inflation, I am more concerned than the Fed seems to be. Though the Fed was behind the curve in recognizing the threat of inflation in 2021, its aggressive response in 2022 caused underlying inflation to begin falling that autumn. Core inflation, as measured by the deflator on personal consumption expenditure (PCE), fell by around three percentage points from the spring of 2022 to the spring of 2024.

But over the past year, core PCE inflation has not improved, falling only 28 basis points from April 2024 to April 2025. Worryingly, core PCE inflation increased over the summer, and in July was 2.9% – well above the Fed’s target and moving in the wrong direction.

It may be that this acceleration of underlying inflation is driven by one-off price increases due to higher tariffs. But consumer spending – the key driver of aggregate demand – is strong. Retail sales data for August surprised forecasters on the upside, increasing by a robust 5% year on year.

This strength is reflected in nowcasts. Economists at Goldman Sachs currently expect the economy to grow at a 2.5% annualized growth this year, and the Atlanta Fed tracks 3.3% growth in the current quarter. Both of these estimates are above the economy’s underlying sustainable potential, implying upward pressure on prices.

Judging from the labour market, price inflation, consumer spending, and overall economic activity, a 4.4% federal funds rate did not seem to be significantly restraining consumers and businesses. The Fed’s estimate of the neutral rate is wrong. To adequately slow demand, the Fed appears to need the policy rate to be above 4%. But the Fed intends to push the rate down to 3.6% this year, with an additional cut in 2026. This is likely to tighten an already-strong labour market and could cause inflation to accelerate at a faster rate. In that event, the Fed would have cut rates this year, only to have to reverse course in 2026.

Add to this President Donald Trump’s continued threats to the Fed’s political independence, and the situation becomes even more worrisome. One member of the FOMC expects five additional rate cuts by the end of 2025, which would find the federal funds rate below 3%. If additional Fed appointees hold similar views, inflationary pressure could grow further still, increasing the likelihood that the Fed will need to raise rates next year.

Generals can lose the current war by fighting the last one. The Fed seems to be looking back two wars, to the weak labour market that followed the 2008 financial crisis and the low neutral rate of interest of those years. Today’s economy is quite different – and the Fed has not yet won the more recent war against the return of inflation.


Michael R. Strain, Director of Economic Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author, most recently, of The American Dream Is Not Dead: (But Populism Could Kill It) (Templeton Press, 2020). This content is © Project Syndicate, 2025, and is here with permission.

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.