Charting the Global Economy: Fed Goes for Big Rate Cut as BOE Holds

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(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve kicked off its campaign to lower interest rates with a larger-than-typical half percentage-point cut, while the Bank of England decided against a second consecutive reduction.

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The Fed’s rate cut, which was larger than forecasters had generally anticipated, is Chair Jerome Powell’s attempt at ensuring a soft landing for the economy. In the UK, central bankers warned investors they won’t rush to ease monetary policy as they await further signs that inflationary pressures have subsided. Neither decision was unanimous.

Meantime, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda pushed the likelihood of an October rate hike further to the sidelines Friday with a cautious message that pointed to ongoing concern over the market meltdown that followed July’s rate increase.

Here are some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week on the latest developments in the global economy, markets and geopolitics:

US

Updated projections released alongside the Fed’s rate decision also showed that while the median official supported another 50 basis points in cuts over their final two meetings this year, policymakers are still split over how much more to ease before inflation has definitively returned to the central bank’s 2% target: Seven of 19 envisioned only 25 basis points of additional cuts in 2024 and two opposed any further moves this year.

In the US, an average family of four will spend more annually on child care than they do on housing. Both presidential candidates have put forward specific policy proposals to address housing affordability. But neither Kamala Harris nor Donald Trump have detailed how they would reduce costs for parents who are now in many cases spending $33,000 a year for two kids in day care.

Donald Trump has promised to use sweeping new tariffs to fund everything from tax cuts to child care. But economists say the new import charges are unlikely to create anything close to the revenue boom he would need.

Europe

Policymakers from London to Frankfurt are signaling limited appetite to follow the US with steep cuts in borrowing costs, opening up a new transatlantic divide over the speed of global loosening.

Ireland could need to complete around 52,000 new homes each year until 2050 to house the country’s growing population, according to the central bank, a figure that far exceeds current government targets of 33,000 annually. Obtaining debt and equity funding may be made more challenging by a complex planning process and low productivity in the construction sector, it said.