The Next Fed Meeting Will Offer More Surprises

The U.S. Federal Reserve has bitten the bullet: At their policy-making meeting next week, in recognition of persistent high inflation, officials will announce a speedier tapering of asset purchases that have been supporting economic growth. The aim is now to complete the program in time to be able to start raising short-term interest rates as soon as March should that prove necessary.

But the taper isn’t all that will be on the agenda at next week’s meeting. Fed officials are also likely to signal a faster and larger tightening of monetary policy over the next three years — to an extent that markets haven’t yet anticipated.

The last time the Fed published officials’ economic projections, in September, the outlook was remarkably benign. They expected inflation to fall back close to the Fed’s 2% target, even as employment pushed past the level consistent with price stability. And they thought this pleasant outcome would require very little Fed intervention: Their median projection for the central bank’s short-term target rate at the end of 2024 was 1.8%, well below the 2.5% level most judged as neutral.

This time around, the broad contours of the economic outlook will probably be similar. The median forecast for next year will show above-trend growth pushing unemployment below the 4% level considered sustainable in the long run. Inflation will fall from current high levels, though not as much as previously projected, resulting in a larger and more persistent miss over the Fed’s 2% objective.