The Fed and the ECB turn on a dime
The contradictions in policymakers’ goals are being exposed
The multi-trillion dollar world of central banking has just turned on a dime. A week ago the Fed was expected shortly to raise interest rates by half a percentage point. The European Central Bank (ecb) had just announced an end to its bond purchases. The Bank of Japan was unusual in its commitment to maintaining monetary stimulus despite growing disquiet about the plummeting yen. By the time our weekly edition was published, however, the Fed had raised rates by three-quarters of a point; the ecb had held an emergency meeting and said it was working on a new tool to intervene in bond markets; and the Bank of Japan, ahead of its meeting on June 16th-17th, had joined the government in lamenting the yen’s weakness.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The week central banks changed course”
Leaders June 18th 2022
- The tricky restructuring of global supply chains
- Latin America’s vicious circle is a warning to the West
- The Fed and the ECB turn on a dime
- The EU should declare Ukraine a candidate for membership
- The property industry has a huge carbon footprint. Here’s how to reduce it
- Britain’s bill to rip up the Northern Ireland protocol is a terrible idea
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