By Dragon's Rock, world's policymakers plot how to slay stagflation
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[May 19, 2022] By
Francesco Canepa
KOENIGSWINTER, Germany (Reuters) - The
world's top central bankers and finance ministers gathering near
Germany's Dragon's Rock on Thursday have their own beast to slay:
stagflation.
The Group of Seven financial leaders are meeting as the war in Ukraine
adds fuel to a surge in the cost of raw materials while new
pandemic-related restrictions in China have slowed down global trade,
raising the spectre of a sustained period of high inflation and economic
stagnation.
"We will have to discuss what we can do together in our respective areas
of responsibility to avoid stagflation scenarios," German finance
minister Christian Lindner told reporters as leaders arrived for the
two-day meeting.
The palatial hotel in Koenignswinter where the event is hosted overlooks
the Drachenfels, or Dragon's Rock, where the hero of the medieval
Nibelung legend, Siegfried, is supposed to have slain a dragon that
lived in a mountain cave.
Every bit as lethal and intractable as a mythological monster,
stagflation had no easy fix: stimulate the economy and prices will run
away even faster, close the money taps and you will choke off economic
growth.
After underestimating inflation for most of last year, most central
bankers from the United States to Europe and Australia were now
single-mindedly focused on curbing prices that have been rising at the
fastest pace in decades.
The Federal Reserve, the world's most influential central bank due to
the dollar's dominance on global financial markets, has pledged to raise
interest rates as high as needed even if that could end up costing some
people their jobs.
Even the European Central Bank, which had until recently all but ruled
out rate hikes, was now moving towards the first increase in more than a
decade - probably the first of several.
But finance ministers are worried that the economy would deteriorate
further as sanctions against Russia make importing raw materials from
oil to wheat more expensive - straining household budgets just as
borrowing costs also rise.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen poses for a family photo with
Germany's Finance Minister Christian Lindner and President of the
Deutsche Bundesbank Joachim Nagel as they welcome attendees of the
G7 Summit in Koenigswinter, near Bonn, Germany May 19, 2022.
REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen
"The economic outlook globally is challenging, and uncertain, and higher food
and energy prices are having stagflationary effects, namely, depressing output
and spending and raising inflation all around the world," U.S. Treasury
secretary Janet Yellen said in Bonn on Wednesday.
She has argued that the United States should remove tariffs of up to 25% on some
Chinese imports that are not strategic, such as bicycles, lawn mowers and
T-shirts - a move that would make them cheaper for U.S. consumers and offering
much-needed relief.
Other governments such as Italy's and Germany's have cut the tax on fuel while
France has capped the price of natural gas and electricity to soften the
economic impact of soaring energy costs.
Yellen had previously avoided mentioning "stagflation" - a term associated with
1970s inflation spikes and sluggish growth - when describing the U.S. economy,
which has strong momentum from the COVID-19 recovery and strong labour market.
A generation ago, it took Fed's chair Paul Volcker a brutal series of rate hikes
and a recession to break the back of inflation, ushering an era of stable prices
and steadier economic growth.
Legendary hero Siegfried was also said to have gained near immortality after
bathing in the dragon's blood.
But an economic bloodbath is what today's policymakers are still hoping to
avoid.
(Additional reporting by Paul Carrel and David Lawder; Editing by Tomasz
Janowski)
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