The Federal Reserve: Waiting for More Policy Clarity

Originally published March 21, 2025

Chief Economist Eugenio J. Alemán discusses current economic conditions.

This week, and according to many, Federal Reserve (Fed) officials jumped onto the uncertainty bandwagon, along with consumers and businesses, waiting for more policy clarity from the Trump administration – and who could blame them with policies in daily flux? But this is not quite correct, even back in December, when the Fed released the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) and the dot plot, it was clear that uncertainty had already permeated its decision as it postponed the achievement of the inflation target by one year, from 2026 to 2027, as we indicated at the end of December of 2024.

It is true that this time around there was an increased number of Fed members who were more hawkish than in December 2024, as shown in the dot plot comparison below, but the vast majority of them remained in the two rate cuts camp for this year, which is what they had deemed necessary for 2025 after the December 2024 meeting. And if inflation increases more and stays high for longer, which is not the Fed’s base case today, we may see more Fed members jumping onto the more hawkish bandwagon. For now, the dovish members of the Fed seem to be ‘well-anchored.’

Updated Fed Dot Plot