Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Eurozone Inflation

extracted from Paul Krugman's blog
 
January 31, 2011, 8:38 am
 
...

Trying to keep German inflation low means imposing harsh deflation on the European periphery, as it tries to get costs and prices back in line.

I'd add that given what we know about price adjustment during persistent large output gaps (PLOGs), the reality is that keeping overall eurozone inflation at 2 percent would probably mean at best very slow deflation in the periphery — because prices really don't want to fall — but a prolonged period of very high unemployment.

The point, as Munchau says, is that a monetary union of imperfectly integrated economies really needed a higher inflation target than the United States; having what amounts to a low-inflation target, and a central bank that's always looking for reasons to worry about inflation, is really destructive.

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