The Federal Reserve, charged with a dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment, now appears to be tilting its focus back toward inflation after a recent stretch in which labor-market concerns had gained relative prominence, according to an analysis from UBS Global Research.
UBS economist Arend Kapteyn reports that heading into early 2026 the weight the Fed attached to unemployment in setting its policy path had converged with, and was marginally above, the weight it placed on inflation. That posture, Kapteyn writes, is now under pressure from what he describes as a stagflationary shock "emanating from the Middle East," a development that is shifting the balance modestly back toward inflation.
"Our impression is that the emphasis is shifting back a bit towards inflation, but confirmation will have to wait for the June Summary of Economic Projections," Kapteyn said.
The UBS team derived its conclusion by examining how movements in the Federal Open Market Committee's dot plot - the FOMC's projection of an appropriate policy interest rate - respond to revisions in the committee's own forecasts for inflation and unemployment. Their approach used rolling 10-quarter regressions based on data from the Fed's Summary of Economic Projections. The regression coefficients provide a way to track the relative weight the Fed places on each side of its mandate over time.
That historical perspective shows a clear evolution. During the post-pandemic surge in inflation, the Fed prioritized getting price growth under control. A labor market that was at or near full employment gave policymakers room to tighten policy aggressively without running afoul of the employment objective. As the inflation episode eased, however, attention shifted toward the labor market. In the UBS regressions, the unemployment coefficient rose while the inflation coefficient fell.
By early 2026 the two coefficients had come into near parity, with the unemployment weighting edging slightly higher than inflation. UBS characterizes that state as a broadly balanced Fed - not decisively hawkish on inflation nor decisively dovish on employment.
The paper traces the coefficients from the third quarter of 2024 through the first quarter of 2026. Over that span the unemployment coefficient climbed from nearly zero to above one, while the inflation coefficient dropped from about two toward the same range; the two lines crossed at some point in 2025 before settling into the near-equal position observed in the opening months of 2026.
The methodology is straightforward in concept: if the Fed's inflation projections move higher while unemployment forecasts are unchanged and the median funds rate projection does not rise, that behavior would indicate a lower weighting on inflation risks and a more dovish stance. Conversely, if inflation revisions push the rate projection up with unemployment forecasts stable, that would signal a hawkish tilt.
Kapteyn warns that the current environment - with the possibility of rising inflation coinciding with a weakening labor market - presents a more difficult policy tradeoff than the post-pandemic period. A simultaneous uptick in both inflation and unemployment would force a direct reconciliation of the competing elements of the Fed's mandate, a tradeoff the committee largely sidestepped during its 2022-2023 tightening cycle.
The June Summary of Economic Projections will be the first formal test of how the FOMC intends to resolve that potential tradeoff in its published forecasts. Until the committee releases those projections, UBS says impressions about a renewed emphasis on inflation remain provisional.
Context and implications
UBS's analysis highlights how the Fed's internal priorities can shift as the outlook for inflation and employment evolves. Market participants typically watch the SEP and the dot plot for clues about future policy, and a re-emergence of inflation as the dominant concern could influence interest-rate expectations, bond yields and policy-sensitive sectors of the economy.