PANews reported on February 19th that, according to Jinshi, Federal Reserve policymakers almost unanimously agreed to keep interest rates unchanged at their meeting last month, but disagreements remained on subsequent actions: if inflation remained high, "some" officials were willing to support a rate hike; if inflation fell as expected, other officials preferred further rate cuts; meanwhile, all officials were addressing the new impact of artificial intelligence on the economy. The disagreements revealed in these meeting minutes occurred during Powell's third-to-last meeting as Fed Chairman, highlighting the challenges facing former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh—President Trump's nominee to succeed Powell in May—who needs to persuade the policy-making committee to support his and Trump's proposed rate cuts.
The minutes stated that given artificial intelligence is seen as possessing both enormous potential, risks, and uncertainties, the Federal Reserve's decision last month to pause monetary easing was appropriate to assess the current state of the economy after last year's 75-basis-point rate cut. Only a "minority" of policymakers supported further action at the meeting. Federal Reserve Governors Christopher Waller and Stephen Miran both voted against further rate cuts, citing concerns about a potential weakening labor market. In addition, opinions were divided among the other 17 officials. For example, the minutes recently mentioned for the first time that a rate hike might be necessary if inflation persists above the Fed's 2% target. Currently, inflation is about one percentage point above that target.

