Is inflation cured? Fed’s giant rate cut turns focus to cooling job market

The Federal Reserve wants you to think inflation is largely cured, so it can go tinker with a soft job market.

The central bank on Wednesday, Sept. 18, trimmed its target for its Federal Funds rate by a half-percentage-point to 4.74% to 5%, its first cut in four years. This is no minor policy tweak. Since 2000, rate cuts of this size were previously made during the pandemic lockdowns in 2020, the global financial collapse of 2007-08, and the dot-com crash of 2001-02.

RELATED: At long last, the Fed is slashing interest rates. Is it time to buy a home in the Bay Area?

And while Wall Street traders and borrowers may rejoice at the news, not everyone is thrilled that the Fed zapped its tight money policy.

Mark Schniepp, the economist from Santa Barbara behind the “California Economic Forecast,” doesn’t think the economy is weak enough to need such a significant boost.

Until this move, the Fed used high rates to cool the once-overheated economy. You might recall that in March 2022, the Fed began a battle against four-decades-high inflation with pricier financing. Pushing short-term rates swiftly from roughly zero to above 5% throttled the economy – statewide and nationally – back to moderate growth.

To Schniepp’s eyes, however, the business climate remains “too strong” to justify this level of Fed help. One estimate of the nation’s current gross domestic product growth is at 2.9% – a typical expansion rate.

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