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by Jerome a Paris
in rather pointed fashion...
I don't see this as an attack on central banks, quite the contrary - this is a defense of the independence of the Central Banks - at least the ECB - against the massive pressure from bankers, pundits and others who have said that salvation can only come from massive monetary injection into the financial system. But it is interesting that the angle chosen to describe her words are strongly critical - under the very rules that the Germans are supposed to uphold.
edited by whataboutbob
Note that the ECB is not criticized for injecting unlimited liquidity into the banking system (something it was the first to do, as it was the first to acknowledge that banks even had a problem), but for the bond purchases, aka quantitative easing aka printing money and trading it for bonds of lesser quality. In the case of the ECB, it only agreed to take in covered bonds, ie the safest kind (as they are backed both by the resources of the issuer, usually a bank, and by assets put up as collateral), but that seems to have gone too far for the Germans already.
Ultimately, this is a debate about inflation vs deflation and which one is the biggest threat in the medium term. As people know, I tend to lean on the Germans' side here: the problem has always been inflation - it was asset inflation rather than consumer price inflation, but it was stil inflation, and it WAS caused by loose monetary policy. And it's certainly not going to be solved now by yet another round of monetary creation. Those that say that the short term problem is recessionary deflation, and that activity needs to be boosted, by spending, in any way, including by way of debt, also say that quantitative easing is not creating inflation because banks are largely "sterilising" the money created by reboosting their balance sheets and not lending that much more. But either the money is used, or it's useless, sloshing around pointlessly in zombie banks' balance sheets. If, at least, States were using money raised by debt to invest in public infrastructure, it might vaguely make sense, but no, the goal seems to be to boost spending in highly indirect and uncertain ways - and otherwise avoid bank bankruptcies. But at some point, all that money will spill over, or be grabbed by canny financial players, and that can only trigger inflation. But expect more demonisation of the party-pooping Germans in the meantime |
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Merkel steps into the inflation debate | 127 comments (127 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Merkel steps into the inflation debate | 127 comments (127 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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