aussie-boy said:
why is it that the RBA is being urged to cut interest rates on Tuesday whilst inflation remains at an alarming high of 4.3%?
the newspaper suggests it is for "cushioning the economy," but what does this mean? surely encouraging spending rather than saving at this point will only add to inflationary pressures and lead to a more unstable economy
This is a very good question.
Ive discussed it before in a few threads so you might like to check those out.
But in a nutshell here is the answer:
Firstly, inflation targeting can be thought of as "inflation forecast targeting". So in other words the inflation rate that we have now is an inflation rate that reflects the state of the economy over the last 6 months, and monetary policy settings around 18 months ago. Subsequently the RBA is thinking approximately 18 months ahead. Given the recent global economic events there is expected to be a significant slowdown in economic growth, and we have already seen a fall in commodity prices which will lead into other prices into 2009. So there has been a modification in the projected path of inflation (the RBA essentially forecasts where it believes inflation will be each month over the next two years or so, although they do not publish this formally - sometimes they have forward projections in their bulletins). For this reason there is room to significantly reduce the cash rate (some are saying 50 basis points).
The second reason is because although inflation targeting needs to be a credible policy; it should never be thought of as a rule. Ben Bernanke often talks about inflation targeting as being more of a framework than a rule and this is apparant here. It is not a rule because if it was, it would not give policy makers sufficient flexibility to deal with output variations. Inflation targeting is a form of "constrained discretion" which simply means it allows policy makers to make judgement calls where they see fit. In this case the risk of pursuing a tight monetary policy is seen as having the possibility of doing more harm than good. It could unecessarily prolong a period of slow growth, or worse still put the economy into recession.
Of course providing a nominal anchor for prices is always the main goal of monetary policy, and there is no real place for output stabilisation in the medium term. However in the short term, where stability and confidence can be very important; the RBA has a role to play.