GLOBAL INFLATION(CREDIT: IMF PHOTO) Central banks face increasingly complex challenges and economic growth may have to slow more before inflation is defeated, the IMF’s first deputy managing director told the European Central Bank’s annual conference in a speech on Monday. Spelling out three “uncomfortable truths” about inflation at the ECB’s conference in Sintra, Portugal, Gita Gopinath said that inflation is taking too long to get back to target. The second uncomfortable truth is that financial stresses could generate tensions between central banks’ price and financial-stability objectives, and the third is that central banks are likely to experience more upside inflation risks in the future, she said. Gopinath said that the fight against inflation wouldn’t be easy, and financial stresses may intensify and growth may have to slow more. “Even so, we know that we can’t have sustained economic growth without a return to price stability.” Alfred Kammer, the director of the IMF’s European Department, told the conference that large recent shocks have made economic forecasting even more challenging than usual. Kammer explained how the Fund had adapted its forecasting methods during volatile periods. Gita Gopinath sat down with the ECB's Katie Ranger to talk about the state of the global economy and the risks of a more fragmented world in a podcast. |