Michelle Bowman pushed back against raising rates to fight inflation, arguing the spike is temporary and tightening would do more harm than good.
Michelle Bowman pushed back against raising rates to fight inflation, arguing the spike is temporary and tightening would do more harm than good.

Michelle Bowman pushed back against raising rates to fight inflation, arguing the spike is temporary and tightening would do more harm than good.
Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman cautioned against raising interest rates to address the current inflation spike, saying that reacting to temporarily elevated energy prices would add unwarranted policy restraint and weigh on economic activity.
"Reacting to temporarily elevated energy price inflation would add unwarranted policy restraint, weighing unnecessarily on economic activity and labor market conditions," Bowman said Friday at a conference in Reykjavik, Iceland.
The remarks came a day after the Commerce Department reported the personal consumption expenditures price index rose 3.8% in April from a year earlier, with the core measure excluding food and energy at 3.3%. The Dallas Fed's trimmed mean gauge, which strips out extreme components, puts the 12-month rate at 2.3% — closer to the central bank's 2% target. Markets currently price virtually no chance of rate cuts through at least 2027 and see the possibility of hikes beginning in early 2027.
Bowman's stance places her at odds with the three Federal Open Market Committee members who voted against the most recent post-meeting statement's inclusion of language indicating the next rate move could be a cut. The governor said the policy response depends on the duration of the conflict with Iran — if fighting is prolonged and inflation pressures steepen, "the more likely I will consider shifting my approach."
The fed funds rate has stood at 5.25% to 5.50% since July 2023, following 525 basis points of tightening over the prior 18 months. Bowman's comments suggest she views the current inflation overshoot as driven by energy supply shocks rather than demand overheating — a distinction with direct implications for the rate path. The last time a Fed official publicly warned against responding to energy-driven inflation was in 2022, when then-Governor Lael Brainard argued the central bank should look through supply-side price spikes. The Fed ultimately raised rates by 425 basis points that year as inflation broadened beyond energy, a precedent that highlights the risk of assuming price pressures will prove transitory.
The yield on the two-year Treasury, the most sensitive to Fed policy expectations, has traded in a range of 3.80% to 4.20% this month as traders parse conflicting signals from officials. The S&P 500 has gained about 2% since Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Fed chair on May 22, reflecting market optimism that the new leadership will maintain a patient approach to tightening. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has edged lower over the same period, as the prospect of a more accommodative Fed narrows the rate advantage over other major currencies.
Bowman's remarks also come as she leads the most sweeping overhaul of U.S. bank capital rules since the 2008 financial crisis. The Fed's own staff estimates that easing the GSIB surcharge and Basel rules would cut Common Equity Tier 1 requirements at the eight largest U.S. banks by 4.8%, according to Reuters. That deregulation push, combined with a dovish line on rates, creates a policy mix that favors risk assets in the near term — provided inflation does not become entrenched. Senator Elizabeth Warren has warned that loosening capital rules while the economy faces elevated price pressures is "especially destructive," according to a June 2025 letter to regulators.
The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for June 16-17. OIS markets currently assign a 68% probability that the committee will hold rates steady, with the remainder pricing a 25-basis-point hike. If Bowman's view prevails, the Fed could remain on hold through year-end even if headline inflation stays above target — a scenario that would test the central bank's credibility but could sustain the equity rally.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.