John Williams, President of the New York Fed, believes current interest rates are appropriately “modestly restrictive,” giving the central bank space to monitor economic developments. But he warns that the full economic impact of tariffs hasn’t hit yet — and it’s coming.
Williams expects tariffs to increase inflation by 1 percentage point through early next year, pushing inflation to as high as 3.5% in the near term before cooling to 2.5% in 2026, with a return to the 2% target only by 2027. He also sees GDP slowing to just 1% and unemployment ticking up to 4.5% by year-end. While Fed officials anticipate rate cuts later this year, they remain cautious, watching to see whether the inflation spike will be short-lived — or more persistent.