From Squawk Pod: The future of the Fed: Austan Goolsbee & Krishna Guha - 04/21/25 | Audio Only · · CNBC Television
“Look, everything's always on the table. As I say, it's a huge table, but the Fed is supposed to be the steady hand here. What we what we need to do is look through the get the through line and and where are things going to be, let's call it after the 90-day pause and going through the year.”
On , Austan Goolsbee, President at Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, spoke about monetary policy during Squawk Pod: The future of the Fed: Austan Goolsbee & Krishna Guha - 04/21/25 | Audio Only on CNBC Television.
Austan Goolsbee, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, has expressed growing concern about inflation, stating that the U.S. has been above the Fed’s 2% target for five years and that progress has stalled and is now deteriorating. He noted that inflation is rising in categories beyond tariffs and oil, such as services, and said he is less optimistic about disinflation progress. Goolsbee dissented against a rate cut at the Fed’s last meeting of the previous year, saying it felt too early to cut rates without assurance that inflation is returning to target. He described the job market as stable but not good, with hiring, layoff, and vacancy rates holding steady. On artificial intelligence, Goolsbee said it will be “massively transformational” and happen fast, but he does not expect rapid job losses, citing industries where AI’s current error rate is unacceptable. He warned that if AI-driven productivity gains are hyped before they materialize, the economy could overheat in the short run. Goolsbee also said he is interested in seeing what incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh proposes on monetary policy and the balance sheet, and he noted that the Fed’s ample-reserves regime corresponds with a larger balance sheet than in the past.