Bill Dudley Has a Warning for the Fed as Kevin Warsh Inherits a Inflation Mess

Source Beincrypto

Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley warned on Tuesday that the central bank risks losing credibility. He pointed to five years of inflation running above the 2% target.

Dudley said inflation expectations could become unanchored. The warning lands as Kevin Warsh begins his first week as Fed Chair under political pressure for lower rates.

Five Years Of Slipping Above Target

The Fed adopted its formal 2% inflation goal in January 2012. The central bank then spent most of the next decade trying to push prices up toward that level.

That picture flipped in early 2021, when pandemic-driven supply shocks and fiscal stimulus drove prices sharply higher.

By March 2026, headline personal consumption expenditures inflation reached 3.5% year over year. The core measure stood at 3.2%. Both readings remain elevated after roughly 60 months of overshoots.

Dudley pointed to the resilience of US growth as the harder problem. Policy rates have stayed above 4% since late 2022 while the labor market remains firm.

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He questioned whether the current settings are restrictive at all. Bond traders have echoed that doubt as markets defy central bank signals on the path of rates.

Neutral Rate And A New Chair

Dudley made the comment on Bloomberg’s Surveillance program, arguing that structural forces have likely raised the neutral interest rate.

Heavy capital spending tied to artificial intelligence and elevated federal borrowing may be lifting the real return investors demand.

If true, monetary policy is looser than the Fed assumes.

“I think the case for cutting rates now is actually very, very weak,” he said.

Long-run survey measures have ticked up, including the University of Michigan reading on 5 to 10-year expectations.

Governor Chris Waller’s preferred two-year forward gauge has also drifted higher. That signals household and business pricing behavior is shifting.

Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Chair on May 22 after the narrowest Senate confirmation vote on record. He has framed inflation as a choice the central bank can deliver against.

“Yeah. So, I believe what Milton and you just channeled, which is inflation is a choice. Uh, as you said at the beginning of this setup, inflation and ensuring [price stability]…Not only is inflation a choice, but a sound dollar is also a choice…Inflation is a choice, and the Fed must take responsibility for it,” he emphasized.

The Test Ahead

President Donald Trump has pushed openly for lower rates. Warsh’s slim confirmation margin leaves limited room for missteps. Some analysts already warn against rate cuts until the inflation path is clearer.

The next personal consumption expenditures release, due in late June, will be the first read on Warsh’s tenure.

A move toward 2% would buy time. Another miss would put Dudley’s warning at the center of the policy debate.

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