Short version: no.
In my recent post on central banks and independence, I cited Harvard economist Jason Furman in discussing how lower central bank rates won’t necessarily translate into lower private borrowing costs:
The Federal Reserve only sets a handful of interest rates, and those are limited to rates between banks—the discount rate (the rate at which banks can borrow from the Fed) and the interest rate it pays on bank reserves at the Fed. The Fed tries to influence the Federal Funds Rate (the rate at which banks borrow from each other) through FOMC operations, but they do not set that rate.
The actual rates you and I see are still determined by market factors: risk, inflation, supply, demand, etc. The Fed cannot set interest rates for mortgages, credit cards, and so on. It does not have that power. It tries to influence those rates, yes, but it does not set them.
However, the President has argued that reducing rates would reduce Federal borrowing costs, lowering costs for all Americans. There are two problems with this, one theoretical and one practical.
First, the theoretical: US Treasury interest rates are set in the market, not by the Federal Reserve. Like most prices (and an interest rate is a price), the rate emerges from the intersection of supply and demand. The rate is not set by the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve tries to influence rates through its monetary policy, but it does not set rates. If the Federal Reserve lowers its rates but the fundamental supply and demand in the marketplace does not change, neither will Treasury rates. It’d be like pushing on a rope: no matter how much you push, it’ll just coil in on itself.
Indeed, if the market believes the Federal Reserve rate cuts are unjustified, likely causing inflation, the market may demand higher interest rates to compensate for the expected inflation. Thus, arbitrarily lowering Federal Reserve rates could actually lead to higher borrowing costs for the Federal government.
We have seen this behavior in the US before. For example, in the period 2003–2004, the Federal Reserve target rate was falling/flat, and Treasury interest rates were generally rising. In the period 2008–2015, the Federal Reserve target rate was flat—close to zero—and Treasury interest rates did their own thing: sometimes rising, sometimes falling, sometimes being flat. Most recently, Treasuries started to rise in August 2020, a full year and a half before the Federal Reserve started raising rates. And Treasury rates continued to rise even as the Fed began cutting rates in 2024.
Second, the practical: Current projections of the US federal budget and debt indicate that debt will continue to grow if nothing changes. Consequently, this suggests that the Federal Government will need to issue more Treasuries to fund the debt. That suggests an increasing supply curve. If the supply curve increases, all else held equal, the price of a commodity falls. Since the price of a bond and its interest rate are inverses, the increase in Treasury supply indicates a rising interest rate, thus leading to higher borrowing costs.
Ultimately, it is only good economic sense, not wishful thinking, that will lead to lower borrowing costs in the US.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Aug 26 2025 at 10:05am
Fed funds above 2 year so I suspect short term rates will go down but yield curve might steepen because of inflation expectations. We’ll see how it all plays out.
David Seltzer
Aug 26 2025 at 12:49pm
Craig, Yeah. Given the negative spread, a rate cut could be on the horizon. Especially if the Fed govs and presidents become worried about sluggish economic growth and a potential recession.
Pierre Lemieux
Aug 26 2025 at 8:15pm
It has already started, hasn’t it? The yield gap is reported to be the largest in three years.
Thomas L Hutcheson
Aug 26 2025 at 10:24pm
The Fed can (unfortunately) reduce real rates for a while. It is one of the reasons that the Fed needs to chose the _lowest_ rate of inflation needed to facilitate asjustment of relative prices to shocks.
Jon Murphy
Aug 27 2025 at 12:14pm
True. I was thinking long-term.
Jose Pablo
Aug 27 2025 at 9:35pm
the President has argued that reducing rates would reduce Federal borrowing costs, lowering costs for all Americans
This claim makes little sense. In 2024, roughly 80% of outstanding U.S. debt was held by Americans. It is hard to see how reducing payments to American bondholders somehow “lowers costs” for America as a whole. Lower rates mean less income for American holders of U.S. debt.
The President seems to overlook that interest payments are, for the most part, simply a transfer of funds from some Americans to other Americans.
Confusing transfers with savings is either sloppy economics or convenient politics. Or both.
Jose Pablo
Aug 27 2025 at 9:52pm
Current projections of the US federal budget and debt indicate that debt will continue to grow if nothing changes (…) If the supply curve increases, all else held equal,
But all else is not equal. One of the main alternatives to ever-growing debt is higher taxation. And higher taxes would certainly affect the demand for government debt: if domestic bondholders are forced to pay more taxes, they will have less money available to buy that same debt.
Taxes are far from being free, as people frequently, and erroneously, assume (in fact, their opportunity cost is far higher than the interest rates on government debt)
So, when asked about the effect on the supply and demand for government debt of financing the state through borrowing rather than taxation, the honest answer is: it’s complicated
KC
Aug 29 2025 at 12:43pm
Short version: no?
Are you, and/or others, suggesting that lowering fed rates has not historically had a influence on rates decreasing? and that decreased rates lower borrowing costs for all?
Jon Murphy
Aug 30 2025 at 9:55am
Please read beyond just the first sentence. I address those points explicitly in this post.
Knut P. Heen
Sep 3 2025 at 6:24am
Both the demand curve and the supply curve for financial assets are flat. Financial assets are not scarce commodities. Every single one of us can issue a million bonds tomorrow, buy the bonds everyone else issues, and nothing happens to the interest rates nor the bond prices. The only thing that happens is that the balance sheet changes. We now own a million bonds and we have a million bonds as liabilities as well.
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