Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers thinks it was a mistake for Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to use the term “transitory” in a recent briefing about inflation.
“I was astonished to see him resurrect that concept.”
U.S. central bank officials released their economic projections for the rest of 2025 at the March policy meeting, lifting their inflation expectations higher.
At the same time, business and consumer surveys have revealed rising inflation forecasts for the year ahead.
But while Powell thinks that tariffs could delay the Federal Reserve’s inflation progress and trigger price increases, he believes that the potential effects of trade policy changes will be short-lived.
“That can be the case in the case of tariff inflation. I think that would depend on the tariff inflation moving through fairly quickly and, critically, as well on inflation expectations being well anchored.”
As for a potential recession, Summers said he thinks that Powell could be right that the United States will not slip into a downturn.
“But it’s certainly not something that I would want to bank on,” he said.
“This is clearly a more worrying picture than we had in December, and there’s only been one important change, and that’s been the change in tariff policy.”
Powell shrugged off outside recession forecasts and dismissed stagflation concerns.
When headline inflation started creeping up in 2021, Powell and other officials repeatedly stated that it would be transitory and driven by COVID-19 pandemic-related factors.
A Brief History of ‘Transitory’
In the first half of 2021, Biden rejected persistent inflation pressures, telling reporters that prices would rise slightly and then return to normal levels.He also encouraged the Federal Reserve to do whatever it could to keep inflation in check.
“The overwhelming consensus is it’s going to pop up a little bit and then go back down,” Biden told reporters in June 2021.
When the annual inflation rate topped 6 percent later in the year, Powell attempted to clarify the definition of the increasingly ubiquitous word.
“Transitory is a word that people have had different understandings of,” Powell said at a November 2021 post-meeting news conference. “For some, it carries a sense of ‘short-lived,’ and that there’s a real-time component, measured in months.”
The Federal Reserve chief tossed the word in the dustbin.
“I think it’s probably a good time to retire that word and try to explain more clearly what we mean,” Powell said before Congress.
Over the past few years, Powell and others have talked about using the term—sometimes in a comical manner.

Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen also expressed regret at describing inflation as transitory.
Biden deflected blame for his economic prognostication. Last year, he stated on multiple occasions that he inherited 9 percent inflation, which was the peak reached in June 2022.
Wall Street Watching
Christian Hoffmann, head of fixed income at Thornburg Investment Management, said, “Powell made an interesting comment that if inflation is persistent in 2025 it won’t likely continue beyond this year.”A chorus of market watchers have been weighing in on Powell’s post-meeting comments, with many taken aback by the use of the COVID-19 pandemic-era phrase.
By using the term, Powell assured the financial markets that the Fed could keep unwinding policy restraint to support economic growth and the labor market, according to Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote Bank.
“Chair Jerome Powell stressed that the potential impact of tariffs on inflation would be ‘transitory’—implying that the Fed could continue to ease policy to support growth,” Ozkardeskaya said in a note to The Epoch Times.
Mohamed El-Erian, a top economist and the chief economic adviser at Allianz, also expected the Federal Reserve to refrain from using the word.
According to El-Erian, it would be premature to say inflationary effects would be transitory, “especially given that companies and households still have fresh in their minds the recent history of high unanticipated inflation.”
At the same time, reintroducing the word during his news conference might have assuaged tariff-related economic fears, according to Tom Essaye, president and founder of Sevens Research Report.
“The Fed provided a slightly dovish surprise and offered investors some reason for optimism, although it’s not nearly enough to offset the headwinds still hitting stocks,” Essaye said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times.
U.S. stocks added to their March 20 gains throughout the news conference, with the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average popping by nearly 400 points.