Business Day

‘A good time to raise rates’

• Take advantage of improving outlook, says report

- Marc Jones London

Major central banks should press ahead with interestra­te increases, the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s says, while recognisin­g that some turbulence in markets will have to be negotiated along the way. The bank said on Sunday in one of its most upbeat annual reports for years that global growth could soon be back at long-term average levels.

Major central banks should press ahead with interest rate increases, the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s says, while recognisin­g that some turbulence in markets will have to be negotiated along the way.

The bank, an umbrella body for leading central banks, said on Sunday in one of its most upbeat annual reports for years that global growth could soon be back at long-term average levels after a sharp improvemen­t in sentiment over the past year.

Though pockets of risk remained because of high debt levels, low productivi­ty growth and dwindling policy firepower, the bank said policy makers should take advantage of the improving economic outlook and its surprising­ly negligible effect on inflation to accelerate the “great unwinding” of quantitati­ve easing programmes and record low interest rates.

New technologi­es and working practices were probably helping to suppress inflation, it said, though normal impulses should kick in if unemployme­nt continued to drop.

“Since we are now emerging from a very long period of very accommodat­ive monetary policy, whatever we do, we will have to do it in a very careful way,” said the bank’s head of research, Hyun Song Shin.

STAY THE COURSE

“If we leave it too late, it is going to be much more difficult to accomplish that unwinding. Even if there are some shortterm bumps in the road it would be much more advisable to stay the course and begin that process of normalisat­ion.”

The Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s identified four main risks to the global outlook in the medium term: a sudden flare-up of inflation that forces up interest rates and hurts growth; financial

IF WE LEAVE IT TOO LATE, IT IS GOING TO BE MUCH MORE DIFFICULT TO ACCOMPLISH THAT UNWINDING

stress linked to the contractio­n phase of financial cycles; a rise in protection­ism; and weaker consumptio­n not offset by stronger investment.

The first seems unlikely for now, with Shin saying the bank had been surprised that inflation and wage growth had remained so subdued as growth in major economies picked up.

The question for central bankers was whether new technologi­es and working practices had fundamenta­lly changed the inputs in their economic models and whether it was right to keep such a heavy focus on keeping inflation at certain levels.

But inflation was not the only variable. “We should keep one eye at least on financial developmen­ts,” Shin said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Suppressed price rises: The improving economic outlook has had a surprising­ly negligible effect on inflation.
/Reuters Suppressed price rises: The improving economic outlook has had a surprising­ly negligible effect on inflation.

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