Silver lining to the inflation curse

 | Sep 30, 2022 08:15

When members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) express vastly divergent views in their deliberations, it is quite a challenge for the chair to maintain consensus while making the right decision. The quandary of central banks is understandable. After three consecutive years of slowing economic growth since 2018, including a sharp contraction just a year ago, the global economy was amid a nascent rebound in 2021 when inflationary indications began to emerge. With much of trade and manufacturing affected by battered supply chains due to the pandemic and limping back to normalcy, allowing the evolving growth a reasonable runway seemed the obvious choice, particularly as variants of the pandemic kept popping up in one region or another. Hence, the initial reaction was to label inflation “transitory” and continue with loose monetary policies. However, after almost a decade of monetary slack, inflation had been more overdue than economic growth. By late 2021, while mulling over dropping the transitory tag, central bankers were well aware that they were likely to be either ahead of or well behind the curve. Aversion to disrupting the status quo implied the latter.