Federal Reserve: Inflation risk tilted to upside, labor market tilted to downside - part 1/2
2025-12-30_19-27 • 5m 12s
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
00:00.000
Brian,
thank
you
very
much.
Ministers
of
December
meeting
showed
the
rate
cut
that
the
Fed
the
25
base
point
rate
cut
was
maybe
a
closer
call
than
it
appeared
from
the
vote,
which
was
nine
in
favor
of
the
cut,
two
dissenting
against
it,
and
one
for
a
50
basis
point
cut.
The
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
00:14.240
minutes
show
that
a
few
of
those
who
voted
for
the
cut
said
they
could
have
supported
no
change
at
all,
and
some
wanted
to
wait
for
more
data.
Remember
the
government
was
still
close
was
still
they
were
still
getting
data
from
from
the
closed
government
period
there.
Inflation
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
00:29.200
risk
was
seen
till
to
the
upside,
labor
market
risk
to
the
downside,
and
what
you're
going
to
hear
now
is
a
debate
between
those
two
sides
who
care
some
care
more
about
inflation,
others
more
about
employment.
Those
supporting
the
cut
set
it
was
in
line
with
forecast
for
future
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
00:42.520
lower
inflation.
Now,
the
committee
did
appear
to
agree
on
the
need
for
future
cuts.
The
debate
was
about
the
timing
of
future
cuts.
Most
judge
further
rate
cuts
appropriate
if
inflation
declined
over
time
as
expected.
Some
however
wanted
to
wait,
they
want
to
keep
rates
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
01:01.000
unchanged,
quote,
for
some
time
to
assess
the
impact
of
recent
cuts
they
had
already
done.
Others
argue
to
move
to
a
more
neutral
policy
would
help
forestall
what
they
were
concerned
about,
a
quote,
major
deterioration
in
labor
market
conditions
to
forestall
that.
Many
saw
a
low
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
01:15.880
probability
that
tariffs
would
lead
to
persistent
inflation.
That
concern
about
tariffs
was
diminishing
there.
Several
were
concerned,
however,
that
higher
inflation
would
become
entrenched.
If
it
feels
like
I'm
going
back
and
forth,
it's
because
that's
the
way
the
minutes
read.
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
01:29.000
Many
expected
tariffs
inflation
to
Wayne,
but
debated
when
and
by
how
much.
Some
saw
persistent
price
pressure,
however,
unrelated
to
tariffs.
The
majority
of
participants
noted
that
inflation
is
above
target
for
some
time
and
had
not
moved
closer
and
some
were
concerned
that
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
01:43.400
the
Fed
the
idea
of
of
the
Fed
not
being
at
target
would
become
entrenched
and
the
commitment
to
the
2%
target
would
be
undermined
by
that.
The
labor
market
was
seen
continuing
to
soften,
but
stabilizing
next
year
with
appropriate
policy.
Now,
this
is
a
couple
interesting
facts
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
02:00.520
that
are
we
keep
talking
about
on
CNBC.
When
you
read
the
minutes,
you
see
that
the
Fed
itself
is
seeing
this
K-shaped
economy
with
strong
spending
by
higher
income
households,
while
lower
income
households
are
making
quote
adjustments
for
inflation.
And
a
number
were
hopeful
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
02:16.200
that
higher
productivity,
possibly
reflecting
AI,
could
boost
growth
without
inflation,
however,
also
dampen
job
creation.
So,
Brian,
I
wish
I
could
be
more
concise
about
how
the
committee
felt,
but
the
committee's
findings
were
literally
all
over
the
Brian Sullivan (Anchor)
02:30.000
place,
Brian.
Yeah,
you
and
I
been
doing
this
for
a
long
time,
Steve.
Normally
to
your
point,
I
think
it's
it's
pretty
concise
and
clear.
Here's
how
we
feel.
It
does
feel
the
last
few
months
and
with
these
minutes
in
particular
that
there
we
know
there's
dissent.
I
mean
there's
Brian Sullivan (Anchor)
02:44.480
been
dissension
literally
dissent.
But
it
does
feel
like
it's
just
a
little
more
loose
or
a
little
harder
to
understand.
What's
the
what
am
I
looking
for
here?
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
02:57.280
I
I
think
you're
hitting
it
right
on
the
right
on
the
nail
right
on
the
head
there,
Brian.
Let's
layer
in
a
couple
things
here.
One,
we
have
the
government
shut
down.
You
had
the
cut
off
essentially
of
official
data,
the
data
the
federal
lies
upon.
I
think
that's
a
backdrop
for
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:09.840
this
whole
debate
that's
probably
very
important
on
both
sides.
You
also
have
this
idea
that
you
have
these
tariffs
of
uncertain
inflation
effects
that
are
going
to
come
through.
You
did
have
the
alternative
data
showing
a
weakening
in
the
job
market.
So,
I
guess
Brian,
you
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:27.760
remember
that
phrase?
I
forget
who
thought
it
up.
Beth
thought
me
maybe
I
did.
But
if
you're
not
confused,
you're
not
paying
attention.
Well,
the
Fed
is
paying
attention
to
all
of
this
and
I
think
collectively
they're
confused,
but
some
are
going
to
side
more
on
the
idea
of
hey,
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:40.800
we
need
to
really
worry
about
the
job
market
and
others
are
saying,
you
know
what,
for
five
years
we've
been
above
target,
we
need
to
get
this
inflation
problem
under
control.
Brian Sullivan (Anchor)
03:48.320
And
there's
going
to
be
people
that
go
after
the
Fed
for
being
confused.
I
will
actually
be
a
little
more
gentle.
It's
near
the
end
of
the
year,
I
can
be
nice,
right?
Why
not?
And
it's
that
it
is
a
confusing
time
with
tariffs
and
in
inflation,
and
AI.
We
don't
know
what
exactly
Brian Sullivan (Anchor)
04:04.440
is
going
to
happen.
And
I
actually
don't
blame
the
Fed.
I
would
rather
have
them
say,
"We're
not
quite
sure."
versus
be
like,
"We're
We're
darn
sure."
And
then
have
it
be
darn
wrong.
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