john keane caught up with one of those voters, fed governor lyle brainard at the imf world bank meetingsshington. tom: are we going to give up our 2% rate on inflation? are we going to have a theoretical change to a new disinflation? lyle: we are extremely focused at the federal reserve on ensuring that inflation stays anchored at 2%. so if you look at the way that the committee has responded in recent months, with a wait and see, the pause on rates, the very flat path that is projected now in the median snp projections, that is all a recognition that we are very committed to achieving and sustaining that 2% core pce inflation goal. it has been a big concern of mine and it will continue to be. here we are with employment consistently performing very well, and yet wage growth is very muted and overall inflation is till not consistently getting around that 2% target, so we are going to be patient. tom: william lee of the milken institute is one guest today who says he has never seen it like this. the polarity of market economists over one rate rise, the parlor game -- two rate rises, or on