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Recent Posts
- The vicious circle impeding the entry of a new currency
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- Agreeing a central bank communication strategy
- Do monetary policy committees present an insuperable barrier to Odyssian forward guidance?
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Author Archives: Tony Yates
Why do markets not share MPC’s views about future interest rates?
Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, spoke yesterday to try to convince markets that interest rates will stay lower for longer than they expect. Assuming that was the intention, it wasn’t very succesful. Why don’t markets share the … Continue reading
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Paul Krugman vs Roger Farmer
Recently Roger Farmer published an open letter criticising Krugman’s commentary on modern macro. He points out that Krugman frequently alludes to the fact that the Great Recession is due to self-fulfilling prophecies, without citing Roger’s prior work. Krugman replied, explaining … Continue reading
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Why it’s harder to build new houses in the UK than France
This is a brief response to Allister Heath, of CityAM, who has been writing and tweeting about how desirable it would be to build more new houses in the UK, and how meagre new building is in the UK compared … Continue reading
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Krugman on history of recent macro thought
Increasingly, I find Paul Krugman’s [PK] forays into macroeconomics (or rather, the history and sociology of macroeonomic thought) bizarre, highly selective (selected in order to back his own view that unlimited stimulus obtained anyhow is great) and ridiculous. This post … Continue reading
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Fudged Guidance, and the guess
Two more thoughts on the Fudged Guidance, which I think more accurately describes the launch of the new framework than ‘Forward Guidance’. Both are repeats. The first rants about the ‘Fudge’, in the Guidance. The second is about the … Continue reading
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Forward guidance to make existing stimulus ‘more effective’, ie more powerful?
The key question at the heart of the revelation of the new framework for the implementation of monetary policy is whether it constitutes a loosening of monetary policy, relative to what was envisaged before. It seems inconceivable that there could … Continue reading
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Theory is dead; long live theory [Summer silly season]
In a typically entertaining and provocative recent blog post, Noah Smith pronounced ‘the death of theory’, and then proceeded to offer a post-mortem. Paul Krugman thought he had exaggerated a little, but still accepted the basic premise, and then offered … Continue reading
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