Voting Member Fomc James Bullard Sees Slow Growth Rather Than A Recession

Last updated: June 10, 2025, 04:27

Voting Member Fomc James Bullard Sees Slow Growth Rather Than A Recession

Voting Member of FOMC James Bullard Sees Slow

Voting FOMC member hints she will not support a rate cut at next

St. Louis Fed chief tells Minnesota audience slow growth is more

Bullard supports the Fed

Bullard supports the Fed's 25-basis point hike this week, which pushed its policy rate to 5.00%-5.25%, as expected. Policymakers had said they would will closely

James B. Bullard - Wikipedia

Fed president sees inflation fight stretching into 2025

In

In 2025, Bullard announced a new approach for the St. Louis Fed's near-term U.S. macroeconomic and monetary policy projections. The new approach is based on the idea that the economy may experience one of several possible persistent regimes, which involve a combination of recession or no recession, high or low productivity growth, and high or low real returns on short-term government debt. While switches between regimes are possible, they are difficult to foreca

Fed official: It’s ‘fantasy’ to think modest rate rises will

St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard told MarketWatch’s economics editor Greg Robb the Fed could slowly raise interest rates to a range of 5 percent

Instead of a recession

Another voting member of the FOMC, St Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard, believes the Federal Reserve needs to get inflation back to the 2 percent target.

Fed's Bullard says slow economic growth should be base case, not

Instead of a recession, Bullard said, the more likely scenarioor his base caseis for slow economic growth along with a somewhat softer labor market and declining inflation.

Bullard Provides Context on Federal Open Market

Fed’s Bullard suggests higher rates as ‘insurance’