July 31, 2025
The National News Desk recently published an article featuring Mark Williams, Master Lecturer of Finance, discussing how the U.S. economy has remained resilient despite trade tensions and new tariffs imposed by President Trump, showing low unemployment, modest growth, and only slightly elevated inflation.
At its July 30 meeting, the Fed kept its benchmark rate steady at 4.25–4.5%, signaling a cautious, data-driven approach heading into the next decision in September. Chair Jerome Powell stressed that moving too quickly could reignite inflation, while acting too late could hurt job growth. Beneath the solid surface of employment data lie troubling signs: wage stagnation, weaker hiring across sectors, and declining demand for workers. Meanwhile, tariffs are beginning to push consumer prices higher, and key trade negotiations, with China, Canada, and Mexico, remain unresolved.
“All these events that are still unknown have created continued uncertainty, so the Fed continues to operate under environmental uncertainty, which means they’re very cautious and being data-dependent,” Williams adds.
For now, the Fed remains in wait-and-see mode, balancing encouraging economic headlines with the unpredictable ripple effects of trade policy and inflationary pressure.