The Fed's March projections put 2026 unemployment at a 4.4% median and 2026 PCE inflation at 2.7% (median), signaling policymakers are still willing to tolerate some labor-market cooling to finish the inflation job — the central tendency for 2026 PCE inflation runs 2.6%–3.1%, a wide lane for sticky services inflation.
The same projections show 2027 PCE inflation at 2.2% (median) and 2027 core PCE inflation at 2.2% (median) — a reminder that the "last mile" to 2% is not expected to be quick, and the economy is being told to absorb tighter financial conditions for longer than optimistic equity narratives assume.
Namibia's central bank is targeting June 2026 for a national instant payment system — with several participants having already completed integration and testing — a hard infrastructure deadline that signals real-time payments are moving from "fintech product" to "national utility" across the continent.
The Caribbean Development Bank approved US$464 million in new support for 2025 — a 50% increase over 2024 — and disbursed US$429 million (a 30% rise), including a US$47 million Barbados airport expansion, US$46 million Canouan airport upgrade, US$30 million Bahamas water project, and US$53.6 million for the Basic Needs Trust Fund across ten countries.
Capital is repricing globally toward durability: higher-for-longer rates in the US, sovereign payment infrastructure in Africa, and multilateral development finance in the Caribbean are all pointing in the same direction — execution and cash flow discipline over narrative-driven growth.
STORIES THAT MATTER
UNITED STATES — The Fed's Projections Are the Market's Real Rate Cut Calendar
For 2026, the Fed's median forecast is 4.4% unemployment with 2.7% PCE inflation and 2.7% core PCE inflation. That mix implies the Committee still expects inflation to run above target while the labor market softens — a setup where "policy patience" becomes the default.
For 2027, the same median forecasts move to 4.3% unemployment and 2.2% for both PCE and core PCE inflation. Translation: they see disinflation continuing, but not snapping back to 2% quickly.
The ranges matter as much as the medians.
The Fed's central tendency for 2026 inflation runs 2.6%–3.1% on PCE and 2.5%–2.8% on core PCE. That's not an "all clear."
That's a wide lane for sticky services inflation — and a warning that the economy can absorb tighter financial conditions for longer than optimistic equity narratives assume.