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Inflation, financial crises and a new Cold War

Giuseppe Mastromatteo and Lorenzo Esposito

Chapter 4 in Central Banking, Monetary Policy and Financial In/Stability, 2025, pp 51-81 from Edward Elgar Publishing

Abstract: Since the stagflation of the 1970s and 1980s, central banks have been directed to only care about inflation. When, with the EMS collapse of 1992, financial markets started to be punctuated by crises, mainstream economics’ explanation was that the crisis had been caused by the fetters that public authorities have imposed on the markets, and, more generally, that crises were caused by the under-development of finance. After 2008, the more laissez-faire economists had also been forced to reevaluate the financial stability as a goal for central banks. In the subsequent decade the globalization process has paused, and then a pandemic, trade wars and the conflict in Ukraine have imposed a new turn: now the stability is crucially connected to geopolitical issues. After decades of hyperglobalization, the world is now on the brink of a fragmentation due to the struggle for global economic hegemony between the Western bloc led by the US and the eastern bloc with China as a leading player. However, the rise of the blocs shows their mutual weaknesses: each bloc needs the other, and only by bearing enormous and probably unsustainable costs in the medium to long term can they decouple. The rebalancing of global power hegemonies will inevitably lead to a national retrenchment of the strongest states, also taking advantage of the weakness of their own links in the chain of alliances. These trends will also continue when the military conflict in Ukraine ends, because the war was an effect more than the cause of the quarrels between the blocs. We try to provide an understanding of the fundamental dynamics of the new nature of financial stability. In particular, we discuss the second Cold War as the main determinant of financial stability in the coming years. To deepen this idea, we discuss how global supply chains have been transformed by deglobalization, we debate the outcome of the new situation in terms of inflation and income redistribution and what role will be given to fiscal and monetary policies. Finally, we analyze the connection between the new era and the speed of the green transition. In this analysis, we use the interwar period as an example of the total ineptitude of liberal democracies to deal with crucial political and economic issues, as was clear, for instance, with Weimar inflation and post-1929 unemployment, concluding that we should learn from the mistakes of the past with, additionally, a strong turn in the economic theories. Keynes’ reflections, for instance, on the Versailles Treaty, the international monetary order or on the gold standard, could be a fundamental starting point for this turn.

Keywords: Financial stability; Cold War; Keynes (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
ISBN: 9781035302147
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