Lorie Logan, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, during a research conference at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in Dallas, Texas, US, on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025.
Desiree Rios | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Dallas Federal Reserve President Lorie Logan, asserting that this week’s good inflation news wasn’t good enough, called Thursday for “modestly” higher interest rates to win a battle the central bank has been losing for the past five years.
A voting member this year on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, Logan insisted that inflation is still a major problem for U.S. households that demands action from policymakers. While other Fed officials have expressed a preference for higher rates if inflation metrics don’t improve, Logan’s is the most specific call for a hike.
“I currently believe modestly higher interest rates would better balance the outlook and risks for the FOMC’s dual mandate goals,” Logan said in prepared remarks for a speech in Houston. “Every month of above-target inflation has compounded the strain on Americans’ budgets.”
Earlier in the week, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported some progress on that front: Consumer prices for June dropped 0.4%, the biggest monthly decline since April 2020, while wholesale prices slipped 0.3%. Both gauges benefited from slumping oil pricesthough costs in several other key categories, most notably housing, also softened.
Still, Logan said there’s more work to do for the Fed to meet its 2% inflation goal. Despite the monthly decline, consumer prices rose 3.5% from a year ago, while wholesale costs increased 5.5%. Inflation has been above the central bank’s target since early 2021.
“One month of relief is not enough. It is time to finish the job of restoring price stability,” she said. “In monetary policy as in hockey, you have to skate where the puck is going. Unfortunately, inflation does not appear to be headed sustainably back all the way to 2 percent.”
Markets already expect the FOMC to raise its key overnight borrowing rate by a quarter percentage point later this year — possibly as soon as September, but more likely October, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tracker of fed funds futures pricing.
The committee next meets July 28-29, with traders pricing in just 12.3% odds of a hike.
Logan pointed to a number of widely cited gauges as well as alternative measures such as core prices less housing to show that inflation is mired well ahead of the Fed’s target even with the recent slide in energy prices and waning tariff impacts.
“If inflation is not heading all the way to 2 percent on its own, then at least some policy restriction is needed to help get it there,” she said. “If higher inflation becomes entrenched, we’d need sharper rate increases to bring it back to target, with a larger cost for the labor market. Better modest restriction now than severe restriction later.”
Logan did not specifically state that she would push for an increase at this month’s meeting or quantify how much higher she thinks rates need to go.
