Transcripts released by the Federal Reserve on Friday revealed the extent of officials’ 2016 debate over how fast to move up interest rates after lifting them from near zero at the end of the previous year.

Much of the discussion turned on geopolitical developments—first as a slowdown in China and in commodity prices threatened to cool down the U.S. manufacturing sector and later after voters in the U.K. voted in favor of leaving the European Union.

The Fed ended up raising its benchmark interest rate just once in 2016, in December, weeks after Donald Trump won the presidential election.

Hundreds of pages of transcripts of eight policy meetings in 2016, made public by the central bank after a traditional five-year lag, provide the most complete view of decision-making at the dawn of a transition to “normalizing” policy.

While the policy outcomes of the meetings were announced shortly after they ended, and minutes of the sessions summing them up were released three weeks later, the verbatim transcripts of the discussions weren’t public until now.

The transcripts offered new insight into the thinking of several key players still on the policy-making scene, including Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who was then entering his fifth year as a governor, and then-Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen, who is now Treasury secretary.

They show officials grappling that December with how the election of Mr. Trump, who had campaigned on promises to revamp government spending, taxes and trade policy, would reshape the outlook for growth and inflation in the years ahead.

They also reveal officials’ sense of humor at their hourslong policy deliberations. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard opened his discussion of the economy on Dec. 13, 2016, with a joke. “According to some interpretations of the Book of Revelations, when three unusual events occur together, they may be a sign that the apocalypse is near. Let’s take stock,” he began. “The Chicago Cubs have won the World Series, Donald Trump has won the presidency, and Bob Dylan has won a Nobel Prize.”

Write to Nick Timiraos at [email protected]

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This post first appeared on wsj.com

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