Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Mark M's avatar

So the explanation here seems to be that central bank creates and reports a measure, the core inflation rate, based on whether it can manipulate that rate through it's available monetary tools, then claims victory when that core inflation rate is manipulated in the way it expects. Where is the extrinsic value of this measure here? If this inflation rate does not actually impact food and fuel and rent, the things that literally everyone else cares about. This seems recursive - the bank is setting its own goalposts only on what it can actually achieve then patting itself on the back for achieving the goal.

Expand full comment
Tyro's avatar

It has never made sense to me that they leave out food and fuel. That they left it out because those elements are volatile makes me think of the fact that scientists traditionally left women out of medical trials because it was too hard to calculate the variables. Garbage in, garbage out. Separately, what I find missing from such discussions is that businesses put less of that money toward worker salaries (corporate profits at all time highs, stock buybacks, etc., instead of wages). Maybe the higher price of eggs wouldn't pinch so much if the wages matched.

Expand full comment
41 more comments...

No posts