New York Fed President John Williams characterized real wage gains as "mildly disinflationary," offering a dovish counterpoint as the central bank remains split on whether to raise or hold rates at 3.6%.
New York Fed President John Williams characterized real wage gains as "mildly disinflationary," offering a dovish counterpoint as the central bank remains split on whether to raise or hold rates at 3.6%.

New York Fed President John Williams characterized real wage gains as "mildly disinflationary," offering a dovish counterpoint as the central bank remains split on whether to raise or hold rates at 3.6%.
New York Fed President John Williams said real wage growth is "mildly disinflationary," a signal that labor-cost pressures may ease as the central bank navigates a deeply divided path on its next rate move.
"Real wage growth is mildly disinflationary," Williams, who holds a permanent vote on the Federal Open Market Committee, said. He also noted the Fed working group's timeline is "quite tight" and that "transparency greatly benefits the Fed."
The comments come as the Fed's June minutes, released under new Chair Kevin Warsh, showed half of 18 policymakers supported raising rates by year-end while the other half favored holding or cutting. The fed funds rate currently stands at 3.6%, unchanged since the June 16-17 meeting. Inflation reached a three-year high of 4.2% in May, though gas prices have since eased.
Williams' characterization of wage growth as disinflationary bolsters the case for keeping policy steady, but the split within the FOMC — compounded by consumer inflation expectations at 3.7% for the one-year horizon, the highest in nearly three years — leaves the rate path uncertain heading into the July 28-29 meeting.
The Wage-Price Calculus
Williams' remarks target a core question for the Fed: whether rising wages are feeding into persistent inflation or absorbing slack without adding price pressure. The New York Fed's own survey of firms in its district found that businesses "aren't done passing on tariff costs," suggesting that pricing power remains elevated even as wage growth moderates. The last time the Fed faced a similar wage-inflation divergence was in late 2023, when the central bank held rates at 5.25-5.50% for seven months before beginning its easing cycle in September 2024.
The distinction matters for the rate path. If wage growth is genuinely disinflationary — meaning it reflects productivity gains or a cooling labor market rather than excess demand — the Fed can afford to hold steady. If instead firms continue passing higher labor costs to consumers, the 4.2% inflation reading may prove sticky. The New York Fed's consumer expectations survey showed three-year inflation expectations rose to 3.3%, a four-year high, suggesting households doubt price pressures will fade quickly.
A Divided Committee, A Tight Timeline
The Fed working group's "quite tight" timeline, as described by Williams, adds urgency to internal deliberations over regulatory and operational changes. The minutes revealed that "many" officials worried that massive AI infrastructure investment would sustain upward pressure on semiconductor and electricity prices, complicating the inflation outlook. Apple last month raised prices on laptops and iPads because of more expensive memory chips, a concrete example of the AI-driven cost pass-through that concerns policymakers.
OIS markets are pricing roughly even odds of a hold versus a hike at the July meeting, reflecting the uncertainty captured in the 50-50 split among policymakers. Warsh, who replaced Jerome Powell in May, did not submit a rate forecast — a break from tradition that, according to the minutes, reflects his view that doing so can lock policymakers into a specific approach that is harder to change if the economy shifts direction.
The last time the FOMC was this divided on the rate outlook was in mid-2023, when the committee ultimately held rates steady for seven months before cutting. If history is a guide, the current split may favor inaction — but the AI-driven inflation risk and elevated consumer expectations create a different backdrop than the post-pandemic normalization cycle.
For markets, the key question is whether Williams' disinflationary wage view gains traction among other FOMC voters. If it does, the probability of a hike in 2026 diminishes, supporting both equities and bonds. If it doesn't, the 50-50 split in the dot plot tilts hawkish, and the 3.6% fed funds rate becomes a floor rather than a ceiling.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.