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Why the Fed is cutting rates even as prices keep rising

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The Federal Reserve announced its second consecutive cut to its benchmark interest rate on Wednesday, reducing the federal funds rate by a quarter percentage point to a range of 3.75% to 4%.

While this will reduce borrowing costs for loans, credit cards and auto financing, lower interest rates can also fuel inflation. And inflation is still a concern: Prices are up 3% year over year as of September — well above the Fed’s target rate of 2%.

So why is the Fed still cutting rates?

The Fed is trying to protect jobs, which is part of its dual mandate to promote maximum employment and stable prices. And while inflation remains elevated, the labor market has been cooling in a way that could slow the economy.

“The Fed sees greater downside risk to the labor market than it sees the risk in inflation spiraling away,” Ryan Severino, chief economist and head of U.S. research at BGO, tells CNBC Make It.

Why the Fed’s focus has shifted from prices to jobs

In an August speech, Powell described the labor market as being in a “curious kind of balance,” where both demand for workers and labor supply were weakening — an uncommon pattern that often signals the start of a labor market slowdown.

Two months later, the picture hasn’t improved. “Payroll gains have slowed sharply … and the downside risks to employment appear to have risen,” he said in an Oct. 14 speech at the annual meeting of the National Association for Business Economics.

While the ongoing government shutdown has delayed some U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data releases, the latest available indicators still show a job market losing momentum:

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“The Fed is worried that layoffs will increase sooner and faster than hiring will accelerate,” says Severino. In cutting rates, “they are trying to head that off at the pass.”

Tariffs continue to add to price pressure

That doesn’t mean inflation isn’t a concern, especially with tariffs increasing costs.

As of October, Yale’s Budget Lab estimates that tariffs implemented in 2025 have lifted overall prices by about 1.3%, roughly equivalent to a $1,800 loss in household purchasing power.

Some economists, however, view tariffs as a one-time price shock — a temporary bump that raises inflation in the short term but not necessarily in a lasting way. By lowering rates gradually, the Fed aims to contain inflation while easing pressure on the job market.

As Powell put it in his October speech, there’s currently no “risk-free path” as the Fed navigates “the tension between our employment and inflation goals.”

In the meantime, the Fed is expected to announce another cut before the end of the year, especially if the labor market continues to weaken.

The probability of either a 25- or 50-basis-point cut by January is at 93% as of Wednesday afternoon, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. By the end of 2026, the federal funds rate is expected to be closer to 3%, which would mean at least one more cut.

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