Fed officials raised the benchmark fed funds rate to a target range of 0.75%-1% from 0.25%-0.50%, double the typical increase and the first one that size since 2000. The Fed also detailed plans to reduce its holdings of mortgage-backed securities and other assets bought earlier in the pandemic in order to help keep financial markets running and support lending to households and businesses. The moves show just how serious the Fed’s Federal Open Market Committee is taking the recent spike in inflation, which officials readily acknowledge sneaked up on them and has only been made worse by the war in Ukraine. Taking money out of the economy and raising borrowing costs should discourage spending and reduce demand to cool the nation’s 8.5% inflation rate, the highest in 40 years. But it’s a difficult balancing act—to slow the economy enough to restrain inflation, but not so much that all economic growth is squashed and the country goes into a recession. “Inflation is much too high, and we understand the hardship it is causing. And we’re moving expeditiously to bring it back down,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said to start a press conference following the committee’s regular two-day meeting. The fed funds rate had been nearly zero since the start of the pandemic, a support mechanism for an economy with severe and sudden job loss. But in March of this year, the central bank raised the rate by a quarter percentage point and said many more increases would follow. The median projection of Fed officials at the time showed they expected a fed funds rate as high as 2.8% by next year, but economists at Deutsche Bank estimated last week that the rate would have to go as high as 6% to get the job done. The benchmark hasn’t been that high in over 20 years and would very likely cause a serious recession, notably increasing the unemployment rate, the economists said. Powell acknowledged Wednesday that the Fed’s actions could have painful consequences, since higher borrowing costs mean less investment by businesses and less spending by consumers. “What it means for consumers is higher financing costs, which is a downer,” said David Beckworth, senior research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. “The upshot, though, for consumers, will be that eventually inflation should decline. It’s a double-edged sword for consumers—higher financing costs in the short term, but in the long run, lower inflation.” Powell said he believed the economy could achieve a “soft or soft-ish landing” and avoid recession, but the Fed is prepared to do what it takes to bring inflation to heel, even if that means an economic downturn. More half-point hikes are “on the table” for the Federal Open Market Committee’s next meeting in June and in later months, but larger rate hikes are not currently being considered, he said at the press conference. Stocks got a boost from his encouraging words, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 Index, and the Nasdaq Composite all ending the day up more than 2%. While the latest rate increase was necessary, it’s not likely to be enough on its own to tame inflation, said Oren Klachkin, lead economist at Oxford Economics. The Fed said it would start its asset reductions in June and gradually ramp up the pace until it was shrinking its balance sheet by $95 billion worth of securities every month—a widely expected move. Have a question, comment, or story to share? You can reach Diccon at dhyatt@thebalance.com. Want to read more content like this? Sign up for The Balance’s newsletter for daily insights, analysis,