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Is inflation targeting dead? Central Banking After the Crisis - Vox

Is inflation targeting dead? Central Banking After the Crisis - Vox

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Introductionbalance-sheet impairments that obstruct <strong>the</strong> flow of funds to productive parts in <strong>the</strong>economy. In upturns, diligence is required to avoid imbalances that make <strong>the</strong> economyvulnerable to liquidity and deflationary spirals.This perspective holds great promise – and <strong>the</strong>re are indications that central banks arealready using aspects of it to guide <strong>the</strong> balance-sheet leveraging policies. The Fed, forexample, has focused on mortgage-backed securities, while <strong>the</strong> ECB has focused onbank-owned securities. More analysis and evidence is likely to be needed before itmakes its way into <strong>the</strong> toolkit.This sequence of ‘challenge and response’ has moved <strong>inflation</strong> <strong>targeting</strong> a very longway from what it was before Lehman’s fall. Many of our authors worry that this shiftmay lead to disaster – even though each step seems justified at <strong>the</strong> time.Future pitfallsThe exceptional policies which central banks have implemented to deal with <strong>the</strong> Criseshave blurred <strong>the</strong> distinction between monetary and fiscal policy. This challengescentral banks’ independence, and <strong>the</strong>reby <strong>the</strong> principle of <strong>inflation</strong> <strong>targeting</strong>. “Weare nearing a critical juncture for modern central banking,” as Mohamed EL-Erian putit. <strong>Central</strong> bankers stepped outside <strong>the</strong>ir conventional roles to prevent <strong>the</strong> first GreatRecession from being <strong>the</strong> second Great Depression. “But with o<strong>the</strong>r policymakersessentially missing in action, <strong>the</strong>y have found <strong>the</strong>mselves pushed fur<strong>the</strong>r and fur<strong>the</strong>raway from <strong>the</strong>ir operational comfort zones, forced into ever more experimentation withincreasingly uncertain longer-term outcomes.” The threat is twofold.Game of chickenThe first threat is <strong>the</strong> ‘game of chicken’ that governments are playing with central banks.Governments seem to be hoping to shift some of <strong>the</strong> political costs to central banks by21

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