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FOMC 2021 Full Transcripts Release
Event overview
Federal Reserve publishes verbatim transcripts of 2021 FOMC meetings under the 5-year lag policy — covers pandemic-era monetary policy decisions.
The Federal Reserve is expected to post the full, verbatim transcripts of its 2021 Federal Open Market Committee meetings in mid-January 2027, honoring the Board's standing five-year lag policy. The release will cover the pandemic-era pivot from "transitory" inflation framing to the first signals of a tightening cycle that began in March 2022.
The FOMC held eight regularly scheduled meetings in 2021, plus unscheduled conference calls, across which policymakers debated the pace of asset-purchase tapering, rate-liftoff timing, and the evolving inflation outlook. January opened with the federal funds target at 0–0.25% and the balance sheet expanding by $120 billion per month in Treasury and MBS purchases; by the December 14–15 meeting, the committee had announced it would accelerate tapering and penciled in three rate hikes for 2022. The 2021 Summary of Economic Projections famously underestimated the path of inflation, with median core PCE projections for 2021 revised from 1.8% in December 2020 to 4.4% by December 2021. Headline CPI ended 2021 at 7.0%, a four-decade high, against a committee that had characterized price pressures as transitory well into the autumn. Fed Chair Jerome Powell, Vice Chair Richard Clarida (through January 2022), and regional Bank presidents including James Bullard, Esther George, and Raphael Bostic were the principal voices. The year also saw the October 2021 ethics-trading controversy that led to the resignations of Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren. The transcripts — distinct from the already-public minutes, statements, and press-conference transcripts — capture every speaker, every intervention, and the staff economic briefings. Historical transcripts are posted on the Fed's monetary policy page, which hosts full archives back to 1936.
The Federal Reserve Board adopted its five-year transcript-release policy in 2005 to balance transparency with candor in deliberations. Under that policy, verbatim transcripts are released approximately five years after the corresponding calendar year — meaning 2021 transcripts are due in January 2027. The exact date is typically tied to the first scheduled FOMC meeting of the release year, with the Board posting the materials on federalreserve.gov in the days preceding that meeting. Researchers and markets watch for the date because the release gives the first unfiltered look at how policymakers weighed the 2021 inflation surge in real time. The five-year lag was calibrated to match the typical business-cycle horizon, ensuring that live market-sensitive debate is no longer actionable by the time it becomes public.
Previous end-of-cycle transcript releases have reshaped the economic-history record. The 2007 transcripts, published in January 2013, revealed the depth of internal Fed misreading of the subprime crisis in its early months. The 2008 tranche, released in January 2014, showed the committee's real-time debate during the Lehman Brothers collapse in September 2008. The 2021 release is expected to draw comparable scrutiny because it coincides with the start of the most aggressive tightening cycle since the Volcker era. Academic researchers, including scholars at the NBER and Brookings, routinely mine the transcripts for natural-experiment identification strategies, and the release often triggers a follow-on cycle of working papers within six to twelve months.
The transcript release lands alongside the JFK/RFK/MLK next declassification tranche later the same month, both part of a January federal-records rhythm. It also feeds directly into the fiscal backdrop analyzed in the CBO Budget & Economic Outlook 2027-2037, due one month later.
When exactly will the 2021 FOMC transcripts post? Mid-January 2027, typically in the week preceding the first FOMC meeting of the year, with the precise day set internally by the Board's Secretariat.
Is the release confirmed or expected? Expected under the Board's long-standing five-year-lag policy; no specific date is pre-announced, but the annual cadence has held without exception since 2005.
Who is responsible for the release? The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, via the Monetary Policy division and the Office of the Secretary, oversees redaction review and posting.
Where can I read the transcripts once released? At https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomc_historical.htm, where each meeting is posted as a PDF alongside the corresponding staff materials.
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