Radical thoughts on 19th Street
A higher inflation target for central banks would be a bad idea
Feb 18th 2010 | From The Economist print edition
EVEN in economics, the guardians of orthodoxy are not given to capricious changes of mind. So when economists at the IMF question received wisdom and the fundâs established views twice in a week, it is no small matter. Two new papers have done exactly that. The first reversal, on inflation targets, makes less sense than the second, on capital controls.
The initial firecracker came on February 12th, with an analysis of the lessons of the financial crisis for macroeconomic policy, led by Olivier Blanchard, the IMFâs chief economist. The report called for several bold innovations. The most radical of these is that central banks should raise their inflation targetsâperhaps to 4% from the standard 2% or so.
REST OF THE ARTICLE
http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15545904
A higher inflation target for central banks would be a bad idea
Feb 18th 2010 | From The Economist print edition
EVEN in economics, the guardians of orthodoxy are not given to capricious changes of mind. So when economists at the IMF question received wisdom and the fundâs established views twice in a week, it is no small matter. Two new papers have done exactly that. The first reversal, on inflation targets, makes less sense than the second, on capital controls.
The initial firecracker came on February 12th, with an analysis of the lessons of the financial crisis for macroeconomic policy, led by Olivier Blanchard, the IMFâs chief economist. The report called for several bold innovations. The most radical of these is that central banks should raise their inflation targetsâperhaps to 4% from the standard 2% or so.
REST OF THE ARTICLE
http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15545904