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    Home»World Economy»The Fed Is Split Because Inflation Is Political
    World Economy

    The Fed Is Split Because Inflation Is Political

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJuly 9, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    The Federal Reserve minutes from the June 16–17 meeting showed policymakers divided over where interest rates should go next. The official minutes admit the problem plainly. Inflation had “increased further and remained well above” the Fed’s 2% objective, while officials blamed tariffs, supply disruptions tied to the Strait of Hormuz, and demand from the AI boom. That is not a normal business cycle. That is government-created chaos colliding with war, energy, trade barriers, and capital flows.

    The Fed voted 12–0 to hold rates at 3.50% to 3.75%, but unanimity on the vote hides the split underneath. The minutes state that “a few participants” saw a case for raising rates immediately, while others thought policy was already “slightly restrictive.” That is central-bank language for confusion. They do not know whether inflation will fade or accelerate, because this is not simply consumer demand. The old Keynesian playbook does not work when prices are being driven by tariffs, war risk, energy shocks, and government deficits.

    The minutes also said “many participants” believed elevated commodity prices and supply disruptions could persist longer than expected. That is the key. They keep pretending inflation will return to 2% if they wait long enough. But confidence is collapsing in government itself. Rates are not rising merely because the Fed wants them higher. Rates rise when capital demands a higher return to buy government paper. That is the part the academics never understand.

    The Fed even admitted the ownership of Treasury securities has shifted away from “price-insensitive official-sector holders” toward “more price-sensitive private investors.” That is a major warning. Foreign central banks are not absorbing U.S. debt the same way they once did. Private capital wants compensation. This is why rates can rise even with a weakening economy. It is the sovereign debt crisis creeping into the room while everyone stares at CPI.

    Warsh is now trapped. Trump may want lower rates, Wall Street may want lower rates, and politicians always want cheap money. But if inflation reaccelerates, the Fed will be forced to raise because Keynesian economics is the only model they have. They will not admit the real problem is fiscal. They will not admit Washington’s endless borrowing, tariffs, war spending, and regulation are creating the very inflation they claim to fight.

    The minutes removed the prior easing bias and said the Committee “will deliver price stability.” That sentence is important. It means the Fed is preparing the public for the possibility that cuts are not coming. The split is no longer between hawks and doves. It is between those who still believe inflation will magically fade and those who can see that the system has changed.

    This is what I have explained many times. The Fed does not control the entire yield curve. It can influence short-term rates, but it cannot command global capital. If capital begins to distrust government debt, rates rise. If war escalates and capital flees Europe, the dollar can rise with gold. If inflation comes from energy, tariffs, food, and supply shocks, crushing small business with higher rates will not solve the problem. It will only expose how fragile the debt system has become.

     



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