What is a soft landing?
When a central bank brings inflation down without causing a recession. Historically rare. The thing every Fed chair is trying to achieve right now.
Technical vs Plain English.
Context in 60 seconds.
"Soft landing" is shorthand for the Fed's holy grail. Whenever the Fed is in a rate-hiking cycle. Which they enter to fight inflation. Investors and journalists ask: "can they engineer a soft landing?" The question is high-stakes because the alternative is a recession, which usually means stocks fall 20-40%, unemployment rises, and the Fed has to reverse course and start cutting rates.
What makes a soft landing hard:
- Monetary policy works with a 12-18 month lag. By the time you see effects, you've over-tightened
- Inflation expectations get "sticky" once anchored. Hard to unanchor without a real downturn
- Labor market data lags inflation data. Fed sees inflation cool before they see jobs crack
- Politics: cutting rates too soon looks like the Fed is "giving up" on inflation
- Externally driven shocks (oil prices, supply chain) interact unpredictably
So when you read "the soft landing scenario remains intact" or "soft landing odds are rising/falling," what's actually being said: the Fed is on a tightrope between killing inflation and causing a recession, and analysts are constantly re-rating the odds. Markets price this in real-time. Equity rallies when soft-landing odds rise, sell off when they fall.
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