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Reading: Prime economist Diane Swonk: Jerome Powell dangers shedding the Fed’s credibility on a bet about AI and immigration
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Prime economist Diane Swonk: Jerome Powell dangers shedding the Fed’s credibility on a bet about AI and immigration
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Prime economist Diane Swonk: Jerome Powell dangers shedding the Fed’s credibility on a bet about AI and immigration

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Last updated: December 10, 2025 10:26 pm
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Published: December 10, 2025
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned Wednesday afternoon that the U.S. labor market could also be considerably weaker than the official information counsel. However in accordance with KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk, the Fed could also be drawing the mistaken conclusion—and in doing so, dangers undermining its hard-won credibility on preventing inflation.

In a brand new evaluation shared with Fortune, Swonk argues that Powell is treating the slowdown in hiring as an indication of weakening demand that have to be offset with decrease rates of interest. But when that weak point is being pushed as an alternative by structural forces—particularly, AI adoption and sharp declines in immigration—then reducing charges received’t repair the underlying drawback and will worsen inflation.

“Powell dangers the Fed’s inflation-fighting credibility if the weak point in employment is due extra to AI and curbs in immigration than weak demand,” Swonk wrote.

That warning comes after some of the contentious Federal Open Market Committee conferences in years. The Fed minimize charges by 1 / 4 level for the third assembly in a row, taking the federal funds charge down to three.5%–3.75%, however the vote fractured the committee. Swonk notes it was the primary time since 2019 that there have been three dissents, and so they got here “in reverse instructions.”

Governor Stephen Miran — at present on go away from the White Home Council of Financial Advisers — voted for a half-point minimize, whereas Kansas Metropolis Fed President Jeff Schmid and Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee voted to carry charges regular.

Swonk highlights that the Fed’s assertion resurrected language meant to point a pause: “In contemplating the extent and timing of extra changes… the Committee will fastidiously assess incoming information, the evolving outlook and the steadiness of dangers.” Powell strengthened that stance, saying “We’re nicely positioned to see how the financial system evolves” and emphasizing that policymakers would want to “be a bit skeptical” of knowledge distorted by the federal government shutdown.

However the larger subject, Swonk argues, is that Powell stored pointing to imminent downward revisions to employment, revisions she warns could not imply what the Fed thinks they do.

If job progress is detrimental as a result of automation is changing employees or as a result of the labor pressure is shrinking as a result of immigration coverage, then financial coverage can’t clear up the issue. That’s as a result of charge cuts can stimulate demand, however they can not create employees or reverse automation selections already made by corporations. 

“The problem is that if that weak point is because of AI and curbs on immigration, then charge cuts won’t do a lot to shore up the labor market. Extra may present up in inflation,” she wrote.

Powell, through the convention, acknowledged that AI could also be “a part of the story” behind the cooling labor market, citing main employers like Amazon which have linked hiring freezes and job cuts to automation. However he confused that it’s “not a giant a part of the story but,” and stated it’s too early to know whether or not this wave of technological change will finally destroy extra jobs than it creates.

He additionally famous that labor provide has “come down fairly sharply” as a result of a drop in immigration and participation.

A misinterpret may turn out to be particularly harmful given the fiscal backdrop. Swonk notes that “expansions to tax cuts final yr will present up as a report excessive tax refunds in early 2026,” warning that the windfall may “additional entrench inflation very similar to we noticed within the wake of the pandemic.” 

On the identical time, federal debt is projected to surpass GDP for the primary time since World Struggle II, marking a degree of issuance that’s “plenty of debt for bond markets to soak up.”

Swonk additionally flags mounting dangers to credibility contained in the Fed itself.

Six individuals needed to carry charges regular, and the market brazenly dismissed Powell’s try at a hawkish spin: traders “priced in additional cuts after the assembly,” she notes. Powell now seems to be one of many extra dovish voices on the committee, elevating questions in regards to the route of coverage if the administration installs a brand new chair aligned with Miran’s extra aggressive easing stance.

Swonk expects the Fed to pause early subsequent yr, however warns that if inflation fails to chill as anticipated, “the bond market may develop extra skittish about charge cuts.”

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