Fed Consensus Is Great; Dissent Is Even Better

This week, the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) delivered another 25 basis point reduction in the federal funds rate in what some called a “hawkish” cut. The argument for it being a hawkish cut was because out of the three members who dissented, two of those members dissented because they wanted no cuts during the meeting. The third dissenter was highly dovish and wanted a 50 basis point cut rather than a 25 basis point cut.

Many times, criticism of the Fed has come associated with the argument that it is “a good friend’s club” exposing a “group think mentality.” However, nothing could be further from the truth with this group. Anybody that knows how economists think knows that they are always accused of being two-handed, that is, “on the one hand and on the second hand.” There have been cases when we have encountered three- or even four-handed economists, so nothing is farther from the truth that Fed officials are suffering from some sort of group think in their monetary policy decisions.

Furthermore, achieving consensus at the FOMC level is not the same thing as steadfast agreement on the decisions the committee makes, it is just a negotiated consensus after considering all of the alternatives. Thus, when that consensus is broken, it is not because the institution is broken, it is because the institution is working as it is intended to work.

We favored a rate cut at this time. However, we realize that a very good case could have been made, from a monetary policy as well as an economic point of view, for no cuts or even higher rates, although the latter alternative had a very, very high bar, as the chair of the Fed seems to have alluded to during the press conference after the FOMC decision.

In fact, we believe that Fed officials finally decided to go ahead with a rate cut as a way to buy time to get a better reading on economic activity after the delay in data releases due to the government shutdown. However, it is clear that there was an important lack of conviction that a rate cut was really needed at this time, which is why two dissenters opted for no cut in rates during the meeting.

For the majority of FOMC members, they were probably indifferent between cutting by 25 basis points or keeping rates steady, as long as markets kept upward pressure on longer term rates, as it has been the case since September of 2024, when the cycle started. Meanwhile, those preferring to keep rates unchanged were probably more concerned with inflation expectations being affected by the political pressure coming from the Trump administration to lower rates more forcefully.