Latest Stories
Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
In Landmark Battle Over Free Speech, EFF Urges Supreme Court to Strike Down Texas and Florida Laws that Let States Dictate What Speech Social Media Sites Must Publish
December 07, 2023
-
Think Twice Before Giving Surveillance for the Holidays
December 07, 2023
-
EFF Reminds the Supreme Court That Copyright Trolls Are Still a Problem
December 07, 2023
-
Meta Announces End-to-End Encryption by Default in Messenger
December 07, 2023
The Intercept
-
Julian Assange Could Face Extradition to the U.S. by Early 2024
December 07, 2023
-
DeSantis Lawyer Can’t Name a Single Policy That Led to Reform Prosecutor’s Suspension
December 06, 2023
-
Centrist Ohio Democrat Quietly Removes Name From Letter Calling for Gaza Ceasefire
December 06, 2023
-
As U.S.-Funded Wars Rage in Israel and Ukraine, Pentagon Watchdog Warns of Military Failures
December 06, 2023
VTDigger
-
With Honoree Fleming’s killer still at large, community rallies to raise reward money
December 07, 2023
-
Corrections department asks judge to consider home detention for ailing 80-year-old double murder suspect
December 07, 2023
-
JetBlue CEO meets with Vermont delegation, may reinstate popular Burlington-JFK route
December 07, 2023
-
Vermont reports post-Thanksgiving Covid outbreaks in schools and long-term care facilities
December 07, 2023
Mountain Times -- Central Vermont
-
Mountain Times – Dec. 6-12, 2023
December 07, 2023
-
It shouldn’t have snowed
December 06, 2023
-
Senior Scene: Reflecting on the holiday season
December 06, 2023
-
Living the Dream: What’s in your car?
December 06, 2023
NEW YORK – The world economy is undergoing a radical regime shift. The decades-long Great Moderation is over.
Coming after the stagflation (high inflation and severe recessions) of the 1970s and early 1980s, the Great Moderation was characterized by low inflation in advanced economies; relatively stable and robust economic growth, with short and shallow recessions; low and falling bond yields (and thus positive returns on bonds), owing to the secular fall in inflation; and sharply rising values of risky assets such as U.S. and global equities.
This extended period of low inflation is usually explained by central banks’ move to credible inflation-targeting policies after the loose monetary policies of the 1970s, and governments’ adherence to relatively conservative fiscal policies (with meaningful stimulus coming only during recessions). But, more important than demand-side policies were the many positive supply shocks, which increased potential growth and reduced production costs, thus keeping inflation in check.
During the post-Cold War era of hyper-globalization, China, Russia, and other emerging-market economies became more integrated in the world economy, supplying it with low-cost goods, services, energy, and commodities. Large-scale migration from the Global South to the North kept a lid on wages in advanced economies, technological innovations reduced the costs of producing many goods and services, and relative geopolitical stability allowed for an efficient allocation of production to the least-costly locations without worries about investment security.
READ MORE: Project Syndicate