Monday, November 24, 2008

Kaizen BoE quotes

I'm pretty much done writing the program for my next buy and hold post, but there's been some setbacks and it has taken longer than expected. I should be able to finish it the weekend after I get back from Thanksgiving holidays. In the mean time, enjoy some Kaizen BoE quotes. I love it when Central Bankers admit mistakes.

"Because a number of countries, most obviously China, chose to peg their currencies either to the dollar or to a basket in which the dollar featured heavily, the FOMC had to cut rates more aggressively to maintain domestic activity than would have been the case if the dollar had been free to depreciate against them. Moreover, by virtue of the currency pegs, this monetary looseness in the United States was transmitted overseas, despite attempts at sterilisation. Now the primary driver behind the surge in commodity prices over the past three years or so has been the rapid development of the emerging market economies and the consequent growth in commodity demand running up against relatively inelastic supply. But the general pickup in inflation worldwide, together with the appreciation of a range of asset prices, suggests that accommodative monetary policies may have also played a part.

"The pattern of global imbalances that resulted from this mix of policies has vexed policymakers for some time. We knew they were unsustainable and worried that the unwinding might be disorderly, though I don’t think anyone could have guessed the course that events would actually take. But we did see that there were vulnerabilities present. However, nothing very much was done about these imbalances. Why was that?"
...
"Indeed, a central bank seeking to stabilize inflation over a sufficiently long time horizon should necessarily recognize the possible adverse longterm consequences of a credit-driven asset-price boom in its policy deliberations."

All from Charles Bean - Deputy Governor for monetary policy of the BoE -
‘Some Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Recent Financial Turmoil’ -
Remarks at Conference on Globalisation, Inflation and Monetary Policy -
Istanbul, 22 November 2008

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