The Congressional Budget Office has mapped out a path for interest rates over the next several years, and the message is pretty clear: rates are coming down, just not dramatically fast. According to the CBO's latest report released Thursday, the Federal Reserve's key interest rate should settle at 3.4% by the end of 2028.
Higher Yields and Softer Growth on the Horizon
While short-term rates are heading down, longer-term borrowing costs tell a different story. The CBO projects that 10-year Treasury yields will gradually climb from 4.1% in the fourth quarter of 2025 to 4.3% by the fourth quarter of 2028. That's not great news for anyone shopping for a mortgage over the next couple of years.
On the employment front, the CBO sees unemployment peaking at 4.6% in 2026 before easing to 4.4% in 2028. The forecast attributes these shifts to President Trump's tax and spending legislation, combined with reduced migration flows affecting labor supply.
Economic growth should get a boost in 2026, with real GDP projected to expand 2.2% thanks to fiscal stimulus and recovery from the late-2025 government shutdown. But that momentum won't last forever. Growth is expected to settle back to an average of 1.8% in 2027 and 2028 as the fiscal tailwinds fade and labor force growth slows. Those numbers line up reasonably well with the Federal Reserve's own projections of 2% growth in 2027 and 1.9% in 2028.




