Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari signaled Wednesday that the Federal Reserve remains firmly focused on inflation risks, warning that stronger labor market conditions and rising energy-driven price pressures are strengthening the case for maintaining a hawkish policy stance.
Kashkari said the labor market now looks “a bit better” than it did earlier this year, while inflation pressures linked to the Iran war have intensified. “We are dead serious about getting inflation back down,” he said, reinforcing the Fed’s growing concern that higher oil prices may eventually spill more broadly into underlying inflation. His comments align with the increasingly hawkish tone emerging from several Fed officials following hotter-than-expected CPI and PPI reports this week.
The Minneapolis Fed chief was one of three policymakers who dissented at the Fed’s April meeting, advocating for language that would explicitly preserve the possibility of future rate hikes. His remarks suggest that policymakers see little urgency to pivot toward cuts while the economy remains relatively resilient and inflation continues running well above target.
Instead, the combination of stable employment conditions and persistent price pressures is increasingly shifting the Fed debate toward how long restrictive policy may need to remain in place — and whether another hike could eventually become necessary.




