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Author Archives: Tony Yates
Lessons for macroeconomic policy after Brexit
A curt summary of my remarks – few of them new to those who read this blog – at this year’s Centre for European Reform conference at Ditchley Park, on the topic of ‘Brexit and the economics of populism’. In … Continue reading
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1 Comment
Japan’s temporary overshoot attempt
The Bank of Japan has been tinkering with its monetary policy, and one thing about it struck me as curious. There is now the determination to try to overshoot the inflation target. The idea is to try to raise the … Continue reading
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2 Comments
Barwell-Yates Times article on benefits of immigration
Paywalled access to article joint with Richard Barwell, BNP Paribas, here.
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1 Comment
John Kay on helicopter money
John Kay has written the first in a series of posts on monetary policy, and he starts by trashing helicopter money. I also disagree that HM should be contemplated, at least in any economy save Japan, but I think he … Continue reading
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15 Comments
One person’s enlightened stabiliser is another’s wrong-headed sop
In my previous post I identified the vortex caused by responding to perceived grievance with a policy sop that is wrong headed and subsequently gives ground for further grievance and another round of misdiagnosis by the electorate. Of course it … Continue reading
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1 Comment
The perceived-grievance-wrong-headed sop vortex
That title, strangely, does mean something. Post-Brexit, post-Trump, post-financial crisis, there’s a desire to respond to the perceived grievances of those who voted to give incumbent governments a kick. But in so far as these grievances are not genuine, responding … Continue reading
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14 Comments
Resetting the fiscal framework in the UK
Following on from my previous post…. Phillip Hammond has suggested a ‘reset’ of fiscal policy might be in order, which could be read as him recognising that monetary policy might not be able to offer an adequate response to the … Continue reading
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