Everyday Economics: The Fed hits pause. Miran says it may be misreading the risk

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(The Center Square) – Last week’s Fed meeting was not a surprise because policymakers held rates steady. Markets expected that. The surprise was the tone.


Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged that growth has held up better than expected and described the labor market as soft but broadly unchanged. “While job gains have remained low, the unemployment rate has been little changed in recent months,” he said. He also noted that other labor indicators, including hiring, layoffs and wage growth, “generally show little change in recent months.”


That matters because it helps explain the Fed’s current posture. Officials no longer see weak payroll growth alone as enough reason to ease. The break-even pace of job creation has fallen as labor-force growth has slowed, so very low job gains can still be consistent with a stable unemployment rate. In other words, the bar for worrying about the labor market has moved higher.


Powell offered little reassurance on inflation, even as he emphasized that the recent overshoot was concentrated in goods and linked partly to tariffs. The new Summary of Economic Projections showed a slightly higher inflation path than in December, while still leaving the median year-end 2026 fed-funds rate at 3.4%. That combination told investors the Fed still sees some cuts ahead, but not with much conviction. It also nudged the longer-run policy rate up to 3.1%, a subtle sign that officials may now see neutral as somewhat higher than before.


Markets responded accordingly. Stocks fell while Treasury yields rose, an uncomfortable combination that usually signals some mix of higher inflation, tighter policy and weaker confidence in future growth. The move was likely driven by the oil shock, fading hopes for rate cuts, and fears that central banks may have less room to respond if growth slows.


Housing sits right in the middle of that tension.


Powell said plainly that “activity in the housing sector has remained weak.” The data backed that up last week: January new-home sales fell sharply to a 587,000 annualized pace, the lowest level since late 2022. Construction spending has also been declining.


So this week, even with a light economic calendar, the Fed’s internal debate matters more than usual.


That is where Governor Stephen Miran becomes important. Miran dissented last week in favor of a rate cut, but his view is more nuanced than a simple call for easier policy. He has argued that official inflation measures, especially shelter, are overstating current inflation pressure because they lag market rents. In a December speech, he said PCE shelter had “actually overshot new rents,” expected a faster decline in shelter inflation ahead, and warned that “keeping policy unnecessarily tight … will lead to job losses.” He also cautioned that labor-market deterioration can happen “quickly and nonlinearly.”


That is the core disagreement now.


Powell’s message is that the economy is stable enough to wait. Miran’s message is that policy may already be too restrictive, that recent price shocks will ultimately squeeze demand, and that waiting too long could do unnecessary damage to a labor market that appears calm only on the surface.


For households, that debate is not abstract. It shapes financial conditions and squeezes household budgets across the entire income distribution. Higher yields feed through to mortgages, credit cards and auto loans, while stubborn inflation continues to erode purchasing power. The result is an economy that may still look stable in the aggregate, but feels increasingly strained at the kitchen table.

 

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