Trade Policy and Inflation Risks

Although the administration has expressed support for a lower federal funds rate, several policy developments since taking office continue to complicate that objective. In particular, recent tariff actions – some of which were legally challenged and later invalidated by the Supreme Court – have contributed to ongoing uncertainty around trade policy. Subsequent temporary tariff measures, even if intended as interim steps, may shape expectations for future policy direction.

Even if tariffs are refunded, the impact of policy uncertainty may linger. Businesses respond cautiously when policies appear unsettled, particularly when they increase input costs. In 2025, similar uncertainty contributed to slower hiring and a deceleration in employment growth. A comparable response in 2026 cannot be ruled out, particularly if firms face cost pressures and limited visibility into future policy.

Tariffs have delayed the return to 2% inflation

The fundamental issue is that tariffs push prices, and therefore inflation, higher. Absent the 2025 tariff wave, inflation would likely be at, or even below, the Fed’s 2% target, giving policymakers room to bring the funds rate closer to the Fed’s long-run neutral rate of ~3%. Instead, the administration is insisting on much larger rate cuts while simultaneously enacting policies that make disinflation harder.

Comments from several administration officials reveal a basic misunderstanding of the mechanics of interest rates. The Fed controls only one rate: the overnight federal funds rate. Every other rate – mortgages, business loans, the 10-year Treasury yield – is set by markets, not the central bank.

PCE

Since September 2024, the Fed has cut the funds rate by 175 basis points, yet the 10-year Treasury yield remains stuck near 4.25%. Markets simply do not believe inflation is coming down sustainably. As long as inflation expectations remain elevated, lowering the funds rate will not bring down long-term rates, rendering political pressure on the Fed largely pointless.

10-year treas yield