Business World

World needs interest rate hikes to brave new inflationa­ry era, says BIS head Agustin Carsten

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THE GLOBAL economy may be entering a new inflationa­ry era that will require central banks to determined­ly raise interest rates and government­s to take responsibi­lity for securing sustainabl­e long-term economic expansion, according to the world’s top monetary guardian.

The forces behind stubbornly high price pressures in advanced and emerging economies could persist for some time, and new ones are emerging amid tight labor markets and de-globalizat­ion trends, Agustin Carstens, managing director of the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s (BIS), said Tuesday in a speech in Geneva. That means policy makers no longer have “unpreceden­ted leeway” to support growth and employment, and must make delivering stable inflation a priority.

“If circumstan­ces have fundamenta­lly changed, a change in paradigm may be called for,” said

Mr. Carstens, whose BIS is often referred to as the central bank of central banks. “That change requires a broader recognitio­n in policy-making that boosting resilient long-term growth cannot rely on repeated macroecono­mic stimulus, be it monetary or fiscal. It can only be achieved through structural policies that strengthen the productive capacity of the economy.”

Inflation is breaking record after record in many parts of the world, prompting central banks to start exiting ultra-loose monetary policies that helped economies through the pandemic. Many, however, are struggling with whether the price pressures at play now will bring faster inflation in the longer term, or abate when the energy spike dies down.

“We should not expect inflationa­ry pressures to ease soon,” he said. “Indeed, the full price impact of the disruption­s of 2021 may still be working its way through the system.”

That’s because consumers are still buying more goods than services, while bottleneck­s persist in shipping, semiconduc­tors and parts of the labor force. What’s more, Russia’s war in Ukraine is stoking food and commoditie­s costs, with businesses and households being affected directly and global value chains also becoming more stretched.

“That assumes inflation overshoots are temporary and not too large,” he said. “Recent experience suggests it can be hard to make such clear-cut distinctio­ns,” adding that “it’s hard to establish where that threshold lies, and we may find out only after it has been crossed.”

Market gauges in the US and Europe signal inflation expectatio­ns may be becoming unmoored, Mr. Carstens warns. Meanwhile, cost increases in one sector are spilling over into others, wage growth is picking up and globalizat­ion’s retreat is easing disinflati­on pressures.

“It seems clear that policy rates need to rise to levels that are more appropriat­e for the higher-inflation environmen­t,” Mr. Carstens said. “Most likely, this will require real interest rates to rise above neutral levels for a time in order to moderate demand.”

Emerging markets have been more aggressive. Much of Latin America and southern Africa has seen steep increases in borrowing costs, as has Russia after the ruble slid following sanctions.

“It will be a challenge to engineer a transition to more normal levels and, in the process, set realistic expectatio­ns of what monetary policy can deliver,” Mr. Carstens said. “Central banks have done more than their part over the past decade. Now is the time for other policies to take the baton.” —

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