Trump's wheeling and dealing is handcuffing the Fed from bailing him out: report
Trump’s trade deals won’t be helping the Federal Reserve roll back interest rates anytime soon, according to Bloomberg columnist Bill Dudley.
He questioned the “optimism” people are having as the tariffs roll back in the U.S.-China trade war. “I’m not seeing the ‘breakthrough.’”
Dudley added, “There’s still plenty of scope for economic damage that the Federal Reserve will struggle to contain.”
A former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Dudley broke down Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s plight into three parts.
“First, the rollback might not last and doesn’t change the broad contours of the story. Tariffs will still be high, fueling inflation and stunting growth.”
According to The Yale Budget Lab, the average tariff rate will be 17.8%. This is up from about 2.5% from the start of President Trump's second term.
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“Second,” Dudley said, “The 90-day pause merely extends the corrosive uncertainty surrounding the US administration’s policies. This will lead businesses to delay purchase, investment, and hiring decisions.”
Lastly, he believes “the Fed will still face the difficult choice between fighting inflation and supporting economic growth.”
For now, Dudley believes Powell and the Fed will have to hold “interest rates steady and watch inflation expectations, even as this raises the president’s ire.”
Trump has been pleading with Powell to lower interest rates since he came back into office. He also has threatened to remove Powell from office, which is unlawful.
Dudley believes the Fed “must wait for more information” before lowering rates. This is because “any major move would have only a 50/50 chance of a positive outcome.”
Experts believe a good inflation rate is 2%. However, the U.S. has not hit that target rate since 2021. According to Dudley, “this makes any attempt to prioritize growth fraught.”
He made clear, “The Fed shouldn’t be faulted here.”
While he didn’t name Trump, he did note the Fed’s problem is that they are “grappling with the fallout of trade policies that are beyond its control. One can only sympathize and hope that clarity about the proper course emerges soon enough that the Fed can keep the economy afloat.”