For the first time since the financial crisis ended a decade ago, the Federal Reserve is talking about the need to tap on the brakes of the economy, according to minutes of the March FOMC meeting released Wednesday.

Since the crisis, Fed policy has been “accommodative” or supporting growth.

At the March meeting, “some” participants suggested it might become necessary to revise statement language to acknowledge that “monetary policy eventually would likely gradually move from an accommodative stance to being a neutral or restraining factor for economic activity,” the minutes said.

The Fed estimates that the longer run neutral interest rate is 2.9%. At the March meeting, the Fed raised its benchmark federal-funds rate by a quarter percentage point to between 1.5% and 1.75%. That is the sixth quarter-point move since December 2015.

Read: Fed sticks to gradual rate path

“The Fed minutes show few doves as the focus turns from lowflation to avoiding overheating,” said Krishna Guha, economist for Evercore ISI. The minutes show that Fed officials were confident that the economy would shrug off its weak first quarter and grow strongly this year.

“All participants agreed that the outlook for the economy beyond the current quarter had strengthened in recent months,” the minutes said.

And all Fed officials said they expected inflation on a 12-month basis to move higher. They anticipated the stronger consumer price inflation data, released earlier Wednesday, because some soft readings from early 2017 would drop out of the calculations.

Read: Inflation perks up in March

By itself, “this would not justify a change in the projected path for the federal funds rate,” the minutes said.

Some officials argued that a modest overshoot of the Fed’s 2% target might help anchor inflation expectations.

But there was a debate about the risks of an economy operating above trend with a tight labor market. An overheated economy could not be ruled out, the minutes show.

In a rare show of unity, “all” Fed officials saw some further firming of monetary policy as likely to be needed.

This should reinforce the view that the Fed is likely to hike interest rates at its policy meeting in June.

Fed officials remain uncertain about the impact of the Trump tax cuts and increase in government spending that passed Congress over the past few months.

“There have been few historical examples of expansionary fiscal policy being implemented when the economy was operating at a high level of resource utilization,” the minutes said.

Fed officials like Chicago Fed President Charles Evans and Fed Governor Lael Brainard are less dovish “based on concerns that fiscal stimulus could push the labor market into extreme and unsustainable conditions,” Guha said.

Related: CBO warns of the return of trillion-dollar deficits

They also signaled concern about protectionism.

“Participants did not see the steel and aluminum tariffs, by themselves, as likely to have a significant effect on the national economic outlook, but a strong majority of participants viewed the prospect of retaliatory trade actions by other countries, as well as other issues and uncertainties associated with trade policies, as downside risks for the U.S. economy,” the minutes read.

Stocks DJIA, +0.51% remained lower in trading after the minutes were released. The Dow has dropped about 8% from its peak in late January.

Any lingering hope of a Fed “put” near current market levels out to be disabused, Guha added.

Members said that “notwithstanding increased market volatility over the intermeeting period, financial conditions have stayed accommodative and indicated contacts had taken market turbulence in stride.”