Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.

In this speech, Professor Stephen Nickell considers four issues. First, has the MPC exhibited a deflationary bias? The answer is no. Second, is the United Kingdom going to experience a surge in trend productivity growth in the near future for New Economy reasons? The answer is no. Third, there is an...

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Main Author: Nickell, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2002
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author Nickell, S
author_facet Nickell, S
author_sort Nickell, S
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description In this speech, Professor Stephen Nickell considers four issues. First, has the MPC exhibited a deflationary bias? The answer is no. Second, is the United Kingdom going to experience a surge in trend productivity growth in the near future for New Economy reasons? The answer is no. Third, there is an analysis of the "imbalances" that currently afflict the UK economy. The broad conclusion is that unsustainable imbalances do not require any special response from the MPC over and above its watching brief on inflationary pressures looking forward. Fourth, there is a discussion of the current prospect for monetary policy. This explains why, when the MPC central projection for inflation risks above target at the two-year forecast horizon, this should not automatically imply a rise in interest rates.
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spelling oxford-uuid:17da4836-df3d-4b44-b2dd-74fd357757542022-03-26T10:39:49ZMonetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:17da4836-df3d-4b44-b2dd-74fd35775754EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints2002Nickell, SIn this speech, Professor Stephen Nickell considers four issues. First, has the MPC exhibited a deflationary bias? The answer is no. Second, is the United Kingdom going to experience a surge in trend productivity growth in the near future for New Economy reasons? The answer is no. Third, there is an analysis of the "imbalances" that currently afflict the UK economy. The broad conclusion is that unsustainable imbalances do not require any special response from the MPC over and above its watching brief on inflationary pressures looking forward. Fourth, there is a discussion of the current prospect for monetary policy. This explains why, when the MPC central projection for inflation risks above target at the two-year forecast horizon, this should not automatically imply a rise in interest rates.
spellingShingle Nickell, S
Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title_full Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title_fullStr Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title_full_unstemmed Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title_short Monetary Policy Issues: Past, Present, Future.
title_sort monetary policy issues past present future
work_keys_str_mv AT nickells monetarypolicyissuespastpresentfuture