03

THE STAGFLATION TRAP & FED PARALYSIS

Cut rates and inflation re-accelerates. Hold rates and the recession deepens. Raise rates and the debt becomes unserviceable. The Federal Reserve is inside a policy box with no exit — and the Iran war has welded it shut.

Active — All Exits Compromised

Stagflation — the simultaneous occurrence of stagnant growth and elevated inflation — is the Fed's worst nightmare precisely because the tools for fighting inflation (rate hikes, tight money) worsen the recession, while the tools for fighting recession (rate cuts, loose money) worsen inflation. The Fed cannot deploy both simultaneously. It must choose which crisis to prioritize, and either choice accelerates the other.

As of March 2026, the US is operating inside this trap. Core PCE inflation runs at 3.0%. Headline CPI is 2.4% — still above target and about to be savaged by oil at $100–$113 per barrel. The economy shed 92,000 jobs in February alone. The Sahm Rule — a historically reliable recession indicator triggered when the unemployment rate rises 0.5 percentage points above its prior 12-month low — has already fired. The Fed's own projections explicitly forecast stagflation. Yardeni Research raised its stagflation probability to 35%. Moody's assigns a 42% recession probability.

The Iran war has materially worsened every dimension of the trap. Walmart warned in February 2026 of an immediate 3% jump in general merchandise prices from tariffs alone — before the oil shock. With oil now at $100–$113 per barrel, diesel costs for transportation are spiking, feeding directly into every price in the economy. Core inflation, which was tracking toward the 2% target, is now tracking away from it. The Fed cannot cut into that environment without investor confidence in its inflation-fighting credibility collapsing — and that collapse would appear immediately in Treasury yields, which are the mechanism through which the fiscal dominance loop activates. Every basis point of rate cut that isn't credible becomes a basis point of yield increase as the market prices in the risk that the Fed has surrendered to fiscal pressure.

Meanwhile, every basis point the Fed holds — or raises — deepens the recession, increases the default rate on private credit and corporate debt, and widens the bank capital hole that the regulators are already trying to paper over by reducing capital requirements. The Fed is not choosing between two bad options. It is choosing between two options that each make the other problem worse — in a system that cannot absorb either.

Core PCE Inflation
3.0%
Above target. Rising with oil shock.
Oil Price (Current)
$100–113/bbl
Was $70 pre-conflict. Iran warns: $200 possible.
Recession Probability (Moody's)
42%
Polymarket: 40%. McKinsey: 70% of executives.
Sahm Rule
Triggered
Historically reliable recession indicator. Already fired.
The Stagflation Policy Box — No Viable Move
CUT rates: Consumer inflation re-accelerates (oil $100–$113, food prices rising, tariffs compounding). Bond market loses confidence in Fed inflation mandate. Treasury yields spike. Fiscal dominance deepens. Mortgage rates stay high anyway. Net effect: worse on both dimensions.
HOLD rates: Recession deepens. Job losses accelerate. Private credit defaults compound. Corporate refinancing wall becomes impassable for distressed issuers. Consumer delinquencies rise. Both recession and inflation worsen gradually.
RAISE rates: Debt service costs on $38.6T sovereign debt become openly catastrophic. Regional bank CRE losses become insolvency events. Corporate zombie count explodes. Housing freezes completely. Recession deepens faster than inflation cools.
The Fed is paralyzed. Any move accelerates one dimension of the crisis. Inaction allows both to worsen. The policy tool designed to manage this trade-off requires credibility the Fed is in the process of losing — through fiscal dominance, through the Warsh nomination, and through having cut rates into rising inflation.