The Fed avoided a recession in 2024. But it couldn’t shake inflation.

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The Federal Reserve did what many thought it couldn’t achieve in 2024, and yet in one respect it still ended the year the way it started — worried about stubborn price pressures.

What it pulled off was a rare economic soft landing, using elevated interest rates to nudge inflation lower without triggering a US recession.

Unemployment rose, but never got out of control. The economy remained surprisingly strong. And policymakers felt good enough about their progress to start cutting rates for the first time in more than 4 years.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell, at his last press conference of the year, sounded very pleased with the way 2024 turned out.

“I think it’s pretty clear we have avoided a recession,” he told reporters this month, and “the path down has been better than many predicted.”

Fed policy is in a “really good place. I expect another good year next year.”

Yet it’s clear that the No. 1 concern for Powell and his colleagues as 2025 looms is the same issue that attracted so much of their attention a year ago: inflation.

While a key gauge of inflation tracked by the Fed is considerably lower than its 2022 peak and down from a year ago, it is still above the Fed’s 2% target. And it has been moving sideways in recent months, another point of concern.

Then there is the uncertainty of what will happen next year when President-elect Donald Trump takes office for the second time. Many economists predict his trade and immigration policies will act as more upward pressure on inflation, making it more difficult for the Fed to ease monetary policy further.

Powell made it clear at his Dec. 18 press conference that he needs to see more progress on inflation before rates go down again, and the Fed would be moving cautiously. His colleagues on the Fed reinforced that caution by lowering their forecast for 2025 rate cuts to just two, down from four previously.

Those same officials now see inflation at 2.5% at the end of next year, up from their previous forecast of 2.1%. Policymakers now don’t expect to reach their 2% goal until 2027.

“It’s kind of common sense thinking that when the path is uncertain you go a little bit slower,” Powell said. “It’s not unlike driving on a foggy night or walking into a dark room full of furniture. You just slow down.”

The markets had high expectations for the Fed as it started 2024. Traders made aggressive predictions for a total of six interest rate cuts that would start in March.

But inflation, which has been falling dramatically during the last half of 2023, refused to cooperate. It heated back up in the first quarter.

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