Can the Federal Reserve Bring the Inflation Rate Down to its 2% Target in 2023?

 | Dec 14, 2022 01:37AM ET

Inflation is going down, but the Fed will have to traverse more volatile waters to keep it that way.

The Consumer Price Index has been lower than forecasted for three consecutive months. November’s latest CPI at 7.1% vs. forecasted 7.3% added to the downward inflation trend. At this rate, is the Federal Reserve likely to reach its target inflation goal in 2023?

h2 The Fed’s Rate Hikes are Working/h2

The Federal Reserve pincered the economy between two extremes since March 2020. Having bloated its balance sheet by ~$5 trillion, the overflowing money liquidity propelled the stock and crypto markets to their all-time highs. By mid-2022, the cost of central banking’s “free money” began to manifest itself in the highest inflation rate since the early 1980s.

Given its dual mandate – employment and price stability – the Federal Reserve responded with the fastest rate hiking cycle in over 40 years. As the third consecutive month that positively exceeded expectations, November CPI at 7.1% vs. forecast 7.3% shows that the Fed got on top of inflation.