Central banks have massively broadened their remit in recent crisis-laden years, but the standard analytic framework – ‘flexible inflation targeting’ – has not changed. This column argues that it is time to properly flesh out an alternative framework. Financial stability should be an explicit mandate of central banks, and international coordination among central banks should be boosted by forming a small group of systemically significant central banks that regularly meets and issues reports to the G20 on their financial-stability policies.
Read the whole post by Barry Eichengreen, Eswar Prasad, Raghuram Rajan at VOXeu.
Financial Stability will occur when everyone has equal opportunity to manipulate the Financial System. This means that deficit/surplus levels are decided by popular average, the removal of any type of government debt. Spending/Taxation that is done in a decentralized manner. Until this happens there can not be lasting Financial Stability, and any article that does not touch upon these issues is respectfully a waste of time.
ReplyDeleteThe article I wrote earlier IMO strongly argues that a financial system that is constructed around the ethos of "Equal Manipulation of the Financial System" will result in the greatest human output.
Things like property rights, free markets, respect for the scientific method and the peer review process and the rule of law result in a more equal distribution of Societies resources. Such examples allow for equal manipulation of an aspect of Society and they all have unquestionably contributed to increasing the welfare of people.
If you want a stable financial system build one centered around the idea of equal manipulation. That way prices will truly reflect the supply and demand of society. That by definition is the pinnacle of financial stability.
Shaun Hingston
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ReplyDeleteEichengreen’s basic idea is to form a committee made up of the sort of people who failed to spot the housing bubble or credit crunch. And then have that committee try to forstall future housing bubbles and credit crunches. The man deserves Nobel Prize.
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