The Federal Reserve will not do what financial markets expect if US growth remains decent
It is quite conceivable that growth will remain at around 2% per year in the United States , at full employment and with quite low inflation (core inflation of around 1.5%). First, all economic agents are solvent, which staves off any recession; second, unit labour costs continue to increase very slowly, despite the full employment. If this scenario does unfold, the Federal Reserve could adjust interest rates downwards slightly, but not make the major downward adjustment expected by financial markets, given nominal growth of around 3.5% and a very low unemployment rate.