Some Federal Reserve policymakers argued at their most recent meeting in March that inflation was likely worsening, even before the government reported Wednesday that price increases re-accelerated last month.
According to the minutes of the Feds March 19-20 meeting released Wednesday, all 19 Fed officials generally agreed that high inflation readings in January and February had not increased their confidence that inflation was falling steadily to their 2% target.
Many economists had suggested that the outsize price increases in the first two months of 2024 probably reflected one-time increases that often happen at the start of a year as companies impose annual price increases.
But some Fed officials at the March meeting disputed that assessment, and said the higher prices were relatively broad-based and therefore should not be discounted as merely statistical aberrations.
On Wednesday, that assessment appeared to be confirmed.
The government reported that for a third straight month, consumer inflation rose at a pace faster than is consistent with the Feds target level.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, core prices jumped 0.4% from February to March.
Such core prices were 3.8% higher than they were a year earlier.
Wednesdays data figures raised fears that inflation appears, for now, to be stuck above the Feds 2% target.
It has made little progress this year after having steadily dropped in 2023.
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The leveling-off of inflation makes it less likely that the Fed will implement the three quarter-point rate cuts that the officials had projected after their March meeting.
The minutes indicated that there was uncertainty among the policymakers about inflations persistence and said they expected some unevenness in monthly inflation readings.
Almost all the officials, according to the minutes, favored cutting their benchmark rate at some point this year.
But the elevated inflation readings for March may upend those views before the Fed next meets at the end of this month.
Wednesdays inflation data roiled financial markets, sending stock prices sharply lower.
Many economists had forecast that the Fed would begin reducing interest rates at its June meeting.
But on Wednesday, several analysts pushed back their projections to July or September in light of the March inflation figures.
Some economists suggest that the Fed may not cut rates at all this year. In addition to chronically elevated inflation, job growth was robust last month, evidence that the economy remains healthy despite the Feds raising its benchmark rate last year to a 23-year high.