June 4, 2026, 9:19 a.m.

Economy

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The predicament of the Federal Reserve under the shadow of stagflation

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In March 2026, the US economy found itself in a complex predicament under multiple pressures, with the Federal Reserve facing unprecedented challenges in its policy choices. Weak labor market conditions, soaring oil prices, and sticky inflation intertwined, casting a shadow of "stagflation". The policy makers' divergent views on the economic outlook and the volatility of market bets further exposed the limitations of the current monetary framework.

The employment data in February became the trigger for a shift in market sentiment. The private sector added less than 300,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate rose to 4.4%. This data was not only far below the monthly 30,000 increase required to maintain a stable unemployment rate, but also the worst performance since 2009 (excluding the impact of the pandemic in 2020). Although Federal Reserve President Mary Daly attributed the data fluctuations to the medical industry strike and federal layoffs, combined with the expected annual employment growth, the trend of labor market contraction has become difficult to ignore. More seriously, the weak employment and rising oil prices form a vicious cycle: the increase in energy costs directly boosts the proportion of essential goods in consumer spending, squeezing disposable income, and thereby suppressing non-energy consumption demand, ultimately reverting to the job market. This dual squeeze of demand-side contraction and cost-side increase is the typical feature of stagflation.

In this context, the inflation target of the Federal Reserve appears increasingly distant. The core PCE price index in December remained at 2.9%, far above the 2% policy target. Although policymakers generally expected the January data to be flat, after the oil price exceeded $90 per barrel, the contribution of the energy sub-index to inflation might again expand. Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee acknowledged that the progress of inflation decline has lagged behind expectations, and war risks and supply chain reconfiguration have exacerbated price stickiness. What is more alarming is that the weak labor market has not effectively curbed wage growth, with unit labor costs continuing to rise, suggesting that service inflation may form a new upward pressure. This contradictory phenomenon of "weak employment but stubborn inflation" has completely shattered the traditional Phillips curve explanation framework, leaving the Fed's policy anchor in chaos.

The market's bet on a rate cut in June is essentially a questioning of the credibility of the Federal Reserve's policies. Traders raised the probability of a rate cut to 51%, reflecting concerns about policy lag: if waiting for inflation to clearly decline before taking action, the job market may have suffered irreversible damage. However, there are still significant differences within the Fed regarding the timing of the rate cut. The hawkish representative, Cleveland Federal Reserve President Beth Harman, insists that "policies need to remain unchanged for a long time", believing that the downward trend of inflation has not yet been solidified; the dovish like Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Milan advocates for an immediate rate cut to alleviate the squeeze on consumption caused by energy costs. This divergence exposes the fundamental conflict between the dual missions - when both unemployment rate rise and inflation overreach occur simultaneously, monetary authorities cannot suppress inflation through raising interest rates and cannot stimulate employment through rate cuts, ultimately falling into policy paralysis.

The deeper problem lies in the outdated response framework of the Federal Reserve to external shocks. Oil price increases were mostly regarded by most officials as "one-off events", but the normalization of geopolitical risks and the pain of energy transition mean that such shocks will recur. If each time we rely on the "observation period" to delay decision-making, policy flexibility will be severely weakened. Moreover, excessive market speculation on policy paths has also exacerbated financial instability. After the release of employment data, the steepening of the US Treasury yield curve and the fluctuations of the US dollar index reflect that investors are re-pricing policy uncertainty, this expected chaos may further suppress business investment and consumer confidence.

The Federal Reserve is not only facing short-term data fluctuations, but also the adaptability challenge of its monetary framework. When traditional policy tools fail in a stagflation environment and market expectations and policy goals continue to deviate, perhaps a more fundamental reflection is needed: should the flexibility of the inflation target be adjusted? How to restructure the dynamic relationship between the labor market and the price level? The answers to these questions will determine whether the US economy can avoid the "lost decade".

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