
OECD Warns U.S. Inflation Could Hit 4.2% in 2026 — Far Above the Fed’s 2.7% Estimate
The credibility gap between official Federal Reserve projections and independent institutional forecasts has never been wider. On Thursday, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development released its March 2026 interim economic outlook — and what it contained was a direct challenge to the monetary policy assumptions that have been guiding markets since the start of the year. The OECD forecast all-items inflation in the U.S. at 4.2% for 2026 — a sharp step up from its prior projection of 2.8%, and well above the 2.7% Fed officials estimated when they updated their own forecasts last week. The differential is not a rounding error. It is a 155 basis point spread between what the world’s most widely cited multilateral economic body believes will happen and what the institution charged with managing U.S. price stability is projecting. For investors, fixed income traders, and corporate planners working off Fed guidance, the divergence carries significant operational implications. Two Drivers, One Very Large Problem The OECD’s Interim Economic Outlook, titled “Testing Resilience,” identifies the recent major disruption to global energy and commodity markets as the primary catalyst. The halt in shipments through the Strait of Hormuz and the closure and damage of some energy infrastructure













































