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Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell has signalled he would push back on calls for interest rate cuts as soon as July, saying the US economy remains โsolidโ and the effects of President Donald Trumpโs trade war and other policy changes are โuncertainโ.
Two members of the Fedโs board โ Chris Waller and Michelle Bowman โ have said in recent days that they would support a cut at the Fedโs next rate-setting vote in July, saying recent inflation readings suggested that Trumpโs tariffs would have less impact on prices than feared.
While Powell on Tuesday is set to acknowledge that the impact of Trumpโs tariffs is now expected to be less dramatic than predicted in April, he will tell Congress that โincreases in tariffs this year are likely toย push up prices and weigh on economic activityโ.
Hours ahead of Powellโs testimony, Trump posted on his Truth Social network: โI hope Congress really works this very dumb, hardheaded person, over. We will be paying for his incompetence for many years to come.โ
Powell, whose term as Fed chair ends in May 2026, has been under fire from the US president over the Federal Open Market Committeeโs decision to keep interest rates on hold. Trump has called for a cut in benchmark borrowing costs of โat leastโ two to three percentage points.ย
The Fed lowered borrowing costs by 1 percentage point last year, but most officials on the FOMC say they want to wait and see how the impact of the trade war plays out before cutting rates again.
In preparedย remarks, the Fed chair willย say that while the inflationary impact of the US presidentโs policies โcould be short livedโ, it was โalso possible that the inflationary effects could instead be more persistentโ.ย
The US economy, meanwhile, remains โin a solid positionโ, signalling that Powell believes interest rates can remain where they are for now, without unduly damaging Americaโs labour market.
โThe unemployment rate remains low, and the labour market is at or near maximum employment,โ Powell will tell the House of Representativesโ financial services committee shortly after 10am Eastern time.
At 4.25 to 4.5 per cent, the Fedโs benchmark target range remains in restrictive territory โ above a neutral level that neither limits nor spurs growth.
Fed officials are increasingly split on where borrowing costs will end up by the end of 2025.
While both Waller and Bowman want cuts as soon as July, seven officials do not think interest rates will move at all this year.
Ten members support two or more quarter-point cuts, with the remaining two backing one cut.


