market trends are at odds with Donald Trump’s push for lower interest rates because tariff-driven cost pressures collide with slowing growth risks. This mix raises the chance that cutting too soon could reignite inflation while failing to restore momentum.
Tariffs can lift goods prices as import costs pass through, even as uncertainty restrains investment and hiring. That combination keeps markets cautious on rapid easing and leaves policymakers wary of adding demand into a supply-constrained backdrop.
The federal reserve’s dual mandate, price stability and maximum employment, pulls in opposite directions when inflation is supply-driven but growth softens. Tightening risks amplifying job losses; easing risks entrenching inflation above target.
In recent remarks about trade-related shocks, Jerome H. Powell, Chair of the Federal Reserve, underscored the inflation side of the trade-off. He said tariffs are “highly likely to generate at least a temporary rise in inflation,” while also cautioning that growth and employment could come under pressure.
Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve Governor, has noted that trade policy is already influencing manufacturing and investment, and that current monetary settings are positioned to respond as conditions evolve. That framing highlights why officials emphasize flexibility and data dependence under policy uncertainty.
With tariffs and regulatory shifts clouding the outlook, markets and officials appear reluctant to pre-commit to cuts. Krishna Guha of Evercore ISI has argued there is no clear dovish lean until policy risks become clearer, reinforcing a wait-and-see stance.
Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG, has described a mild stagflation risk, slower growth with firmer prices, and warned that confidence is eroding amid tariff questions. “Uncertainty is real,” she said, pointing to higher expected input costs.
Tariffs raise import costs that firms may pass on to consumers, lifting goods inflation. If higher prices coincide with softer demand, the Fed must weigh inflation control against employment risks, often favoring patience over rapid changes.
Supply shocks complicate the mandate because standard demand management tools have limited effect on cost-push inflation. The Fed typically prioritizes restoring price stability while seeking to avoid unnecessary damage to employment.
Higher tariffs lift goods prices via import costs. Firms trim margins and hiring. The Fed likely stays cautious, weighing inflation risks against weakening demand before adjusting rates.
Easing tariffs reduce input costs and goods inflation. Confidence, capex, and hiring may stabilize. The Fed gains flexibility to calibrate rates as price pressures and labor conditions normalize.
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