Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead

Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead

Spread the love

At Davos, Citadel CEO Ken Griffin pointed to Japan’s bond selloff – where super-long yields surged and 40-year yields hit record highs – as an “explicit warning” about what happens when investors start to doubt a government’s fiscal trajectory. His message was blunt: when a country’s “fiscal house is not in order,” “bond vigilantes” can “extract their price.”

That is not political rhetoric. It is bond arithmetic.

Long-term yields can be thought of as a bundle of (1) expected real short rates, (2) expected inflation, and (3) risk premia – especially the term premium and inflation-risk premium. The fiscal channel matters because persistent deficits affect yields through multiple mechanisms simultaneously:

More issuance increases the compensation investors demand. When governments run larger deficits, they supply more duration risk to the market that must be absorbed by private balance sheets. A large economics literature finds that higher deficits and higher debt are associated with higher long-term sovereign yields, with effects that grow when starting debt levels are already elevated.

Inflation tail risk raises premia. When inflation is already above target, deficit-financed demand can sustain price pressures, raising the compensation investors require for bearing inflation uncertainty.

The effects compound through higher term premiums. When fiscal and inflation uncertainty rise together, the compensation investors demand for holding long-duration bonds increases – showing up as higher term premiums embedded in long-term yields.

Griffin’s point matters because higher long-term yields cascade throughout the economy: mortgage rates reprice off Treasuries plus a spread, corporate borrowing costs rise tightening financial conditions, and federal interest expense increases, which worsens future deficits and reinforces the cycle.

The Supply-Side Constraint: Deficits Without Productivity Growth Mean Persistent Inflation

The deeper concern is on the supply side, and this is where Griffin’s warning becomes a story about why interest rate cuts may be off the table for months. If deficit-financed spending remains strong while productivity growth disappoints, the economy faces sustained price pressures without the relief that faster potential growth would provide.

Griffin was explicit about this risk at Davos, expressing skepticism that AI productivity gains – Washington’s hoped-for fiscal savior – would materialize quickly enough to matter for near-term policy. While the AI industry requires “tremendous hype” to fund infrastructure buildout, Griffin cautioned that AI “may or may not be” the economic breakthrough needed to expand the economy’s capacity fast enough to absorb fiscal impulse without inflation.

Without productivity acceleration, inflation could remain sticky and well above the Fed’s target. The Fed cannot cut rates in an environment where demand is being sustained by fiscal policy while supply-side capacity is failing to keep pace. Doing so would risk re-accelerating inflation expectations – exactly what the Federal Open Market Committee spent 2022-2023 fighting to control.

The Fed’s Inflation Problem: Forecasts Keep Getting Revised Higher

Start with the inflation facts. The latest PCE report shows headline PCE inflation at 2.8% year-over-year, up from 2.7% the prior month. Core PCE is also at 2.8%. The direction is not alarming, but it is enough to keep the Fed cautious – because it underscores that inflation is not gliding cleanly back to 2%.

Now compare that outcome to the Fed’s own forecasting record:

December 2024 SEP: median projection of 2.5% for end-2025 PCE, 2.1% for end-2026December 2025 SEP: revised to 2.9% for end-2025 PCE, 2.4% for end-2026 (with core PCE at 3.0% in 2025 and 2.5% in 2026)

That upward revision is the key story: disinflation proved slower than forecast, and the committee has marked up the expected inflation path into 2026. The Fed entered 2025 thinking “close to 2% in 2026” was reasonable. It is entering 2026 with inflation expected to remain in the mid-2s – still 40 basis points above target at year-end.

The committee’s credibility is directly tied to actually delivering 2% inflation, not 2.4% inflation. With the forecast already revised higher once, the bar for delivering additional accommodation is extremely high. Each cut risks being interpreted as the Fed giving up on the 2% target.

The December FOMC minutes framed policy as risk management: inflation remained “somewhat elevated,” uncertainty “remains elevated,” and the committee emphasized assessing “incoming data” and the “balance of risks.” But crucially, several participants argued that incoming data did not suggest significant further weakening in the labor market.

The original justification for the 100 basis points of cuts delivered in the second half of 2025 was insurance against labor-market deterioration. If that deterioration has stopped – or never materialized to the degree feared – then the insurance motive evaporates. The Fed is left with inflation at 2.8% and no compelling reason to ease further.

Putting It Together: The Case for an Extended Hold

Griffin’s fiscal warning and the Fed’s own forecast revisions point in the same direction. When productivity growth disappoints and fiscal policy remains expansionary, inflation stays sticky at 2.8%, and the labor market stabilizes rather than weakens, the Fed faces a simple reality: there is no affirmative case for cutting rates in the first quarter of 2026.

The likely outcome this week is not just “no cut” – it could be the beginning of an extended hold period. The Fed will wait for concrete evidence of one of two things: either inflation convincingly moves toward 2%, or the labor market deteriorates meaningfully enough to justify insurance cuts despite elevated inflation.

How to Treat the 2026 Inflation Projection

Given the Fed’s track record of upward revisions, the right approach to the 2.4% end-2026 projection is:

Treat it as a baseline that may prove optimistic. The 2024→2025 revision demonstrated that persistence can surprise. With fiscal policy likely to remain expansionary and productivity gains uncertain, risks are skewed toward higher inflation outcomes.Recognize it still implies 40 bps above target. Even if the Fed hits its own forecast, 2.4% is not 2.0%. The committee will likely require inflation to actually reach 2% on a sustained basis before resuming cuts.Understand the policy implication: A 2.4% inflation path combined with resilient growth suggests the neutral rate may be higher than the 2010s conditioned us to expect. If inflation proves sticky, “neutral” could be 3.5% or higher – close to where policy already sits.

Here’s the bottom line

The confluence of absent productivity gains, sticky inflation, declining labor supply – partly due to immigration policy – and upwardly-revised Fed forecasts creates powerful constraints on further easing. The most likely outcome is not gradual cuts through 2026, but an extended hold – with any resumption of easing contingent on inflation actually converging to 2%, not just being forecast to do so. For the week ahead, expect no cut and a message that patience is the entirety of 2026 policy.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois officials say Bears still may stay despite team's Indiana statement

Illinois officials say Bears still may stay despite team’s Indiana statement

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Although the Chicago Bears say the team’s board of directors moved to advance plans for a stadium...
More than 60% of Minnesota high-risk Medicaid providers fail review

More than 60% of Minnesota high-risk Medicaid providers fail review

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Nearly two-thirds of Minnesota's high-risk Medicaid providers have had taxpayer funding paused following a federally-mandated review process that state officials say was necessary to protect...
Senate sends $70B bill funding ICE, border patrol to vacant House

Senate sends $70B bill funding ICE, border patrol to vacant House

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. Senate Republicans finally passed their roughly $70 billion immigration enforcement funding bill after an 18-hour vote-a-rama that ended early Friday morning. The 52-47 final...
Chicago Bears to advance stadium project in Indiana

Chicago Bears to advance stadium project in Indiana

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago Bears are moving forward with plans to build a stadium in Northwest Indiana. Bears Chairman...
Greer, Carr commended for seeking fairness in EU treatment of US tech firms

Greer, Carr commended for seeking fairness in EU treatment of US tech firms

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square Public Policy Solutions sent a letter Friday to United States Trade Representative Ambassador Jamieson Greer and Federal Communications Commission chairman Brendan Carr commending both men...
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker pauses data center tax credits

Illinois quick hits: Pritzker pauses data center tax credits

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Pritzker pauses data center tax credits Gov. J.B. Pritzker has ordered the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to pause...
U.S. adds 172k jobs in 'strong' May report, unemployment remains at 4.3%

U.S. adds 172k jobs in ‘strong’ May report, unemployment remains at 4.3%

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. economy added 172,000 jobs in May's better-than-expected report while the unemployment rate remained at 4.3%, according to data released Friday by the U.S....
Researchers put a number on how much debt U.S. can carry

Researchers put a number on how much debt U.S. can carry

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The United States has about 20 years to change course on its national debt before it reaches the estimated limits of its debt capacity, according...
Colorado governor vetoes legislation allowing ICE to be sued

Colorado governor vetoes legislation allowing ICE to be sued

By Liam HibbertThe Center Square Colorado Gov. Jared Polis vetoed a Democrat-backed bill on Wednesday that would have allowed citizens to sue immigration enforcement officers for civil rights violations. The...
Ballots processed slowly as Californians await 36-day count

Ballots processed slowly as Californians await 36-day count

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square It will be more than a month before Californians see the official results from Tuesday's primary. That is especially the case in the races for...

WATCH: WA mayor stands by pro-ICE, anti-Antifa proclamations

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square The city of Battle Ground has been getting more attention this week than the small southwest Washington community typically receives, due to national coverage of...
U.S. House narrowly passes bill to fund USDA, FDA in 2027

U.S. House narrowly passes bill to fund USDA, FDA in 2027

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Less than four months before fiscal year 2027 begins, the U.S. House passed the second of the 12 annual appropriations bills that will fund the...
Ruling: Illinois Supreme Court likely overstepped in ousting of Cook County judge

Ruling: Illinois Supreme Court likely overstepped in ousting of Cook County judge

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A federal judge says he believes a Cook County judge has leveled serious accusations against the Illinois Supreme Court for trampling his...
Illinois passes law to restrict new federal migrant detention centers

Illinois passes law to restrict new federal migrant detention centers

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Lawmakers passed a bill last weekend that will heavily restrict where immigration detention centers can operate in...
Alcohol tax amendments may be unconstitutional

Alcohol tax amendments may be unconstitutional

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois government officials have proposed amending the way the state taxes alcohol, but the changes may not...