If the economy does land softly in the current quarter, it could bear some similarities to the end of another aggressive Fed tightening cycle in early 1995 that concluded with the federal funds rate at 6.0%. Despite that rapid increase, the economy expanded robustly until 2000, weathering multiple financial difficulties along the way, including the Mexican peso crisis, the Thai baht devaluation, the Russian default and the collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management.
During that period, the Fed made modest adjustments to the federal funds rate: It was cut by 75 basis points, raised by 25 basis points, cut again by 75 basis points and then raised by 175 basis points to end the cycle at 6.5%, all while core inflation remained at or below the Fed’s 2.0% target. If a similar path were followed today, we could see a cycle-low federal funds rate of 4.125% and an end-of-cycle rate of 5.875%.
That said, in 1995 the US economy had more slack than it does now, with an unemployment rate of 5.5% (eventually falling to 3.8%). The unemployment rate currently stands at 4.3%, so there could be less room for a long expansion. In addition, it is possible that the same level of interest rates today exerts a greater drag on the economy than it did then because of higher debt levels and demographic changes.
Conversely, factors that could mitigate the drag from higher interest rates include fiscal stimulus, structural reshoring and capital expenditures related to artificial intelligence.
So far, however, the economy does appear to be tolerating higher interest rates. Despite recent concerns, the labour market seems to be holding up as well. A recent increase in the unemployment rate occurred as the economy created 114,00 new jobs, which indicates that the increase was driven primarily by additions to the labour force. This is precisely what Fed officials would like to see and most likely what they would consider a soft landing — slack being introduced in the labour market in a manner that allows wage growth to moderate while employment is still increasing.
Of course, if the influx to the labour force slows and the economy reaccelerates in 2025, the unemployment rate could start to decline again.