The Fed Will Duck and Weave on Policy, But Not for Long

When it comes to degrees of difficulty, this week’s Federal Reserve meeting is shaping up as a walk in the park compared to what awaits policymakers down the road. Officials will wish — and should prove able — to sidestep complex issues related to both monetary policy and the new political landscape. But it is likely to be a short reprieve for them, and it will deprive markets of the type of meaningful forward policy guidance that can help contain potentially damaging volatility.

You need only to look at the recent strength of the US economy and indications that inflation is not falling as fast as policymakers expected to understand why the Fed will refrain from cutting interest rates on Wednesday. In the process, it risks reminding many of the old, and once discredited notion of “stop-go” policy.

In successive meetings over just the last six months, the Fed has refrained from cutting (July), implemented a “jumbo cut” of half a percentage point (September), shifted to cutting by a quarter percentage point and signaled a no-drama path of similar cuts to come (October), and cut but U-turned on its policy guidance (December). This week, it will pause its cutting cycle.