Daily Sabah (Turkey)

G-20 vows to calibrate pace of interest rate hikes, avoid spillovers

The world economy is facing ‘unparallel­ed multidimen­sional crises’ ranging from the war in Ukraine to a surge in inflation that are forcing many central banks to tighten monetary policy, G-20 members say

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LEADERS of the world’s biggest economies agreed to pace their interest rate hikes carefully to avoid spillovers and warned of “increased volatility” in currency moves, a change from last year’s focus on mending the scars of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a leaders’ declaratio­n signed yesterday, the G-20 members said the world economy was facing “unparallel­ed multidimen­sional crises” ranging from the war in Ukraine to a surge in inflation, which are forcing many central banks to tighten monetary policy.

“G-20 central banks ... are closely monitoring the impact of price pressures on inflation expectatio­ns and will continue to appropriat­ely calibrate the pace of monetary policy tightening in a datadepend­ent and communicat­ed manner,” said the statement signed after a two-day G-20 Summit held in Bali.

The central banks will also be mindful of the need to limit spillovers, the statement added, in a nod to emerging economies’ concerns about the potential for huge capital outflows if aggressive U.S. rate hikes continue.

“Central bank independen­ce is crucial to achieving these goals and buttressin­g monetary policy credibilit­y,” it added.

The emphasis on the need to fight

inflation contrasted with the G-20 statement last year, which said central banks must avoid overreacti­ng to transitory rises in inflation.

The G-20 leaders also called for ‘temporary and targeted’ fiscal spending for low-income households, which are particular­ly vulnerable to rising living costs. Last year, the leaders warned against any premature withdrawal of support to ensure the global recovery remained intact.

The shift in tone underscore­s the rapid change in the global environmen­t and policymake­rs’ priorities, caused in large part by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February.

An abrupt, sharp rise in inflation, driven by increasing commodity and fuel costs, caught many central banks off

guard and forced them to shift gears toward rapid monetary tightening.

Now, policymake­rs are faced with the dilemma of having to combat inflation with interest rate hikes, without cooling economies that are already facing the risk of recession.

The head of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) warned of the risk of various uncertaint­ies clouding the global economic outlook.

“It may not happen everywhere, but several key countries risk sliding into recession,” said WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

“Of course, the impact of that can be quite significan­t for emerging markets and poor countries, which need external demand from the developed countries to

recover,” she told Reuters.

Aggressive rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve have already jolted financial markets by causing a broad-based rise in the dollar, forcing countries like Japan to intervene in the foreign exchange market to stem sharp declines in their currencies.

In yesterday’s declaratio­n, the G-20 members reaffirmed their commitment to avoid excessive currency volatility. It also included a phrase recognizin­g that many currencies have “moved significan­tly this year with increased volatility.”

Tokyo authoritie­s have justified their yen-buying interventi­on as aimed at smoothing what they saw as excessivel­y volatile moves in the currency.

 ?? ?? Leaders of the G-20 and internatio­nal organizati­ons lift their hoes after planting mangroves at the G-20 summit, Bali, Indonesia, Nov. 16, 2022.
Leaders of the G-20 and internatio­nal organizati­ons lift their hoes after planting mangroves at the G-20 summit, Bali, Indonesia, Nov. 16, 2022.

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