John Williams says the Federal Reserve's current interest rates are exactly where they need to be to cool inflation. But nearly half of his fellow officials disagree and expect to raise rates at least one more time this year. Inflation jumped the most since 2023 in April, and Williams himself calls it "unquestionably elevated."
The Inflation Picture
According to Williams, the current level of interest rates is precisely appropriate for bringing inflation under control. He points to three factors keeping inflation high: tariffs, an energy shock from the war in Iran, and a surge in artificial-intelligence investment. "The AI investment boom may push up prices more than expected," Williams said. He added that global supply disruptions from the Middle East remain a risk to both growth and inflation.
The good news: tariff effects have mostly faded, and energy prices have dropped sharply, though Williams warned substantial risks remain. He forecasts inflation will end this year at 3.5%, well above the Fed's 2% long-run goal. He expects that target won't be reached until 2028.
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The Fed's Stance
At its last meeting, the Fed left interest rates steady. But the central bank also signaled that it will keep bank reserves at an "ample" level to stabilize short-term lending markets. Williams called the current balance-sheet regime "a very effective and flexible tool to support interest-rate control to the downside."
Peace talks between the US and Iran are unresolved, but oil prices have fallen sharply. That could ease some of the inflation pressure.
What to Watch
Despite Williams' confidence, the Fed remains divided. Meanwhile, financial markets have priced in a higher likelihood of a September hike, even as falling oil prices and fading tariff effects provide some counterbalance. The war in Iran and the AI investment boom continue to inject uncertainty into the inflation outlook, keeping the Fed's path anything but certain.
Background Context
The Fed has been struggling with above-target inflation since the post-pandemic recovery, and April's surprise jump in consumer prices - the largest monthly gain since 2023 - has intensified the debate over whether rates need to rise further. Williams's forecast of a gradual return to 2% by 2028 reflects the central bank's view that supply shocks, not excessive demand, are the main driver of current price pressures. Meanwhile, the labor market remains resilient, giving policymakers room to hold steady while watching how geopolitical and technological developments unfold.
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