Fed's Musalem: Feds goals are in tension

  • Inflation is a problem and so is employment
Fed

The St. Louis Fed Pres. Musalem is speaking and says:

  • Fed’s goals are in tension

  • Inflation running high, labor market showing signs of potential weakness

  • Balanced approach on monetary policy only works if inflation expectations are anchored

  • Less able to respond to short-term labor market fluctuations if inflation expectations become unanchored

  • Right now inflation expectations a little elevated up to 2 years out

  • Long-term inflation expectations are anchored

  • inflation materially above target.

  • Labor market looks at full employment, could we get

  • Expect tariff impact on inflation to fade by 2nd half of 2026.

  • Only 10% of inflation we are seeing is tariffs

  • Expects labor market. In some orderly way

  • prices to stop increasing due to tariffs after mid 2026.

  • There are material risks around baseline expectations.

  • Inflation could rise more, labor market could weaken more.

  • Supported September rate cut as insurance against labor market weakening.

  • Policy is between modestly restrictive and neutral.

  • Financial conditions are accommodative.

  • Open-minded on potential further rate cuts as further insurance.

  • Believe we should tread with caution.

  • Limited room for more easing before policy gets overly accommodative.

  • Monetary policy should continue to lean against inflation

  • Expects 4Q GDP to be healthy

  • GDP growth is likely to be close to potential for the year.

  • Data suggst all households are spending.

  • Anecdotes shall low income households stretching to do so

  • Consumer spending by some groups like Hispanics has softened.

  • Cutting back on spending because of inflation, not from job market.

  • Really important to achieve 2% inflation goal.

  • St. Louis Fed will conduct on the survey to measure labor market this month

Overall, he’s more dovish than hawkish—willing to cut rates to protect the labor market—but his caution on inflation means he’s not strongly dovish. He’s positioning himself as a measured dove rather than an aggressive one.

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