Inflation has peaked, the supply side is recovering, and the interest rate rises were for what?
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
So the IMF has come late to the transitory inflation party. What was obvious months ago is now at the forefront of IMF forecasts. Better late than never I suppose. It is becoming clear that most indicators are still not predicting a major demand-side collapse in most nations. Growth has moderated slightly and the forward indicators are looking up. At the same time, the inflation data around the world is suggesting the price pressures have peaked and lower inflation rates are expected. Real wages continue to fall, which means that the inflationary pressures were not being driven by wages. So no ..read more
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Bank of Japan continues to show who has the power
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
Its been around 9 months since the central banks of the world (bar Japan) started to push up interest rates. This reflected a return to the dominant mainstream view that fiscal policy should aim to support monetary policy in its fight against inflation and thus be biased towards surpluses, while central banks manipulated interest rates to deal with any inflationary pressures. The central banks would somehow form a ‘future-looking’ view that inflation was about to spring up and they would push rates up to curb the pressures. The corollary was that full employment would be achieved through price ..read more
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Australia – quarterly inflation rate declining
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
Today (January 25, 2023), the Australian Bureau of Statistics released the latest – Consumer Price Index, Australia – for the December-quarter 2022. It showed that the CPI rose 1.8 per cent in the quarter (down 0.1 point) and over the 12 months by 7.8 per cent (up 0.5 points). So, the annual inflation rate in Australia was higher in the December-quarter, but, the quarterly rate was lower, suggesting that the current episode is losing steam. The major sources of price increases are temporary – overshoots on pre-pandemic travel and holidays, anti-competitive cartel behaviour and the War in Ukrai ..read more
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Inflation up in Australia but the drivers are weakening
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
It’s Wednesday and I am still not up to full blog speed after a week doing other things. But I am getting there. Today we consider the latest inflation data from Australia, some fun in the Guardian newspaper and some nonsense about debt ceilings in the US. Then a visit to Paris. Monthly inflation data published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics today Today (January 11, 2022), the ABS published its – Monthly Consumer Price Index Indicator – for November 2022. Remember, this monthly edition is a new innovation at the ABS and doesn’t include all the relevant information that appears in the s ..read more
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Japan and the World Economy through the lens of MMT – video presentation
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
Today, I make available a video session that I recorded in Japan while I was working there in the latter part of this year. It sets out a range of interesting topics that form, in part, the research program that my colleagues and I at Kyoto University have mapped out to work on in the coming year. I hope that by the end of 2023 we will have advanced this program and perhaps will be able to stage some sort of event (Covid permitting) in Japan later next year to spread the knowledge. Japan and the World Economy through the lens of MMT One of the things I did while working in Japan recently was t ..read more
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Bank of Japan has not shifted direction on monetary policy
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
The hysteria surrounding the decision by the Bank of Japan (released December 19, 2022) to make a minor adjustment to its yield curve control ceiling on Japanese government 10-year bonds has been predictable but uninformed and full of vested interest agendas. You know the type of agenda that investment bankers engage in where they consistently pump out their media statements, which are soaked up by the financial media as if they are knowledge that needs repeating, that claim interest rates have to rise to deal with some inflation emergency or something. The media doesn’t tell the public who ab ..read more
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US inflation has peaked and monetary policy had nothing much to do with it
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
It’s Wednesday, and I have two things to write about briefly before exposing readers to some more music. First, the evidential base for my ‘this inflationary period is transitory’ narrative gains more weight. The latest CPI data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that inflation has peaked in the US and falling rapidly in the goods sector, which started this episode off. The second topic relates to measuring progress in the development and spread of new ideas. It is often difficult to know how far a new framework has penetrated the broader debate. But sometimes things happen that remi ..read more
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The transitory inflation conjecture gains even more data credence
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
Yesterday (November 30, 2022), the Australian Bureau of Statistics released the latest – Monthly Consumer Price Index Indicator – which is a new data series that the ABS has introduced to augment the quarterly CPI index release. Regular readers will know that I have considered this period of inflation to be transitory, which means that it is likely to dissipate rather quickly once the driving factors abate. It doesn’t mean that those driving factors are necessarily short-term in horizon. They might persist. But the important point is that second-round propagating mechanisms such as the wage-pr ..read more
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IMF continue to demonstrate their neoliberal biases
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
The IMF published a new blog the other day (November 21, 2022) – How Fiscal Restraint Can Help Fight Inflation – which demonstrates that the organisation is still stuck in a New Keynesian world and despite all the empirical dissonance that has been building over the last decades to militate against that economic approach, little evolution in thinking is apparent. The battle to dispense with the mainstream approach is going to be harder and longer than many thought. Background The IMF base their analysis on a – Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium – model, which is the main quantitative frame ..read more
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Champagne socialists in the banking sector reaping millions from public money
Bill Mitchell | Modern Monetary Theory
by bill
1y ago
It’s Wednesday, and before we get to the music segment, I document some developments in the banking system which are not receiving much press at the moment. I refer to the fact that the rate hikes now being implemented by most central banks are not just allowing the commercial banks to widen spreads between deposit and lending rates which will generate significant windfall profits for the banks and their shareholders. The increasing interest rates are also delivering massive cash injections to the banks who hold reserve accounts at the central banks. Why? Because the quantitative easing progra ..read more
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