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The United States can simply recycle the financial capital inflows from China and re-export them back to China in the form of FDI. In so doing, the United States gains a substantially larger rate of return from FDI than China does from owning U.S. government bonds.
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Weak lending may still be the culprit behind low inflation, but monetary aggregates may no longer closely track credit conditions.
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Okun’s law can be a useful guide for monetary policy, but only if the natural rate of unemployment is properly measured.>
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Significant store-of-value demand for housing suggests a bubble that could burst, especially when both the household income growth rate and the savings rate start to decline and capital controls in China start to relax.
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Credit and M2 may be driven simultaneously as part of a broader financial intermediation process; a common underlying factor may be the interest rate
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Economic theory predicts that fast growth can lead to high saving rates if people lack financial institutions that allow them to borrow.
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Inflation is seldom caused by lump-sum transfers but is often caused by higher government spending programs.
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If oil prices continue to rise and the RMB continues to appreciate, the U.S. inflation rate may increase at a faster pace in the near future. And this would have an unwelcome impact on consumers’ wallets.
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009143924
Oil price shocks appear to have only transitory effects on headline inflation and virtually no impact on measures of underlying trend inflation.
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Permanent increases in the monetary base foreshadow eventual increases in inflation that can increase, rather than reduce, unemployment.
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