WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve’s official account of its latest policy meeting, published Wednesday, does not mention any discussion of President Trump’s demands that the Fed should stop raising interest rates.

But it makes clear that Mr. Trump’s economic policies are very much on the Fed’s mind.

The strength of economic growth, thanks in part to the tax cuts Mr. Trump championed last year, is prompting Fed officials to consider the need to prevent the economy from overheating for the first time since the 2008 financial crisis, according to the minutes of the September meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee.

Most Fed officials predicted in September that the Fed would raise its benchmark interest rate to a mildly restrictive level, above 3 percent, by the second half of 2019.

“It’s time to readjust the policy stance at least to neutral,” Charles L. Evans, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said Friday on CNBC. “Let’s see how the economy is performing at that point, and then we might have to do a little bit more after that.”