Editorial Board

The Fed Has to Grapple With Mounting Uncertainty

Thanks to the pandemic, its job was already difficult. As risks keep building, things aren’t getting any easier.

All clear?

Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve told investors more or less what they’d expected to hear — that it will most likely start tapering its bond-buying program soon, “liftoff” on interest rates might (or might not) happen next year, the recent spike in inflation is still deemed transitory, and the medium-term forecast for employment is a jobless rate of well below 4%. As intended, financial markets were mostly unmoved.

Viewed as a central-case scenario, the Fed’s unchanged outlook is certainly defensible. Yet Fed-watchers would be foolish to get too complacent. The range of uncertainty around these projections and the policy choices that will affect them is only getting wider.