Headline: Fed’s Paulson Calls for Caution Ahead of December Meeting as Labor Softens, Inflation Persists
The Federal Reserve should tread carefully at its December policy meeting, according to Philadelphia Fed President Anna Paulson, who warned that recent interest rate cuts are nearing the point where policy shifts from restraining growth to stimulating it. While backing the latest reductions, she emphasized that “each cut raises the bar for the next one,” underscoring the need to balance a cooling labor market with stubborn inflation.
Paulson, who is not a voter at the December 9–10 meeting and will rotate into a voting role in 2026, said she is slightly more concerned about employment than inflation at this stage. She characterized September’s payrolls data as encouraging, noting that slower job creation aligns with easing labor supply. However, she pointed out that hiring remains concentrated in healthcare and social services—often a hallmark of late-cycle dynamics that can mask broader labor-market fatigue.
On the inflation front, Paulson said tariff impacts have been more muted than anticipated, and softening demand is helping limit price pressures. Even so, inflation remains above the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal for a fifth straight year. She also highlighted growing divergence in consumer resilience: lower- and middle-income households are feeling the squeeze, while higher earners continue to spend, leaving growth more dependent on affluent consumers and increasingly sensitive to equity-market volatility. “With upside risks to inflation and downside risks to employment, monetary policy has to walk a fine line,” she said.
Key Points – Paulson supports recent interest rate cuts but cautions that further reductions get harder as policy nears stimulus territory. – She sees slightly greater risk in a weakening labor market than in inflation pressures. – September payrolls were “encouraging,” though hiring is concentrated in healthcare and social services, a late-cycle signal. – Lower- and middle-income households face financial strain; spending is being propped up by higher earners. – Inflation remains above 2% for the fifth consecutive year, with tariff effects smaller than expected. – Paulson will not vote in December but is slated to rotate into a voting seat in 2026.






