How the Bank of England can avoid stagflation
From our UK edition
The latest speech by the Bank of England’s chief economist Huw Pill contained an admission he probably did not quite mean to make. Speaking at an economic conference in North Macedonia on Tuesday, he warned: ‘Dealing with uncertainty is central to taking monetary policy decisions – perhaps now more than ever.’ This raises one key issue: if monetary policy is being set under conditions of ‘radical uncertainty’ and if the Bank accepts there are limits to what it can do about the inflationary effects of energy shocks, then why is it still clinging to a framework built around CPI inflation? The trouble is not that the Bank lacks flexibility or good intentions. It is that it has the wrong nominal anchor.