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NatWest chair: Is central bank power getting out of control?

Current loose monetary policies in developed economies are likely to increase wealth inequality, and in the short term there is little that monetary and regulatory authorities can do about it

The European Central Bank headquarters beside the River Main in Frankfurt, Germany. Although central banks continue to buy bonds, fiscal policy has been the key response to the Covid-19 pandemic
The European Central Bank headquarters beside the River Main in Frankfurt, Germany. Although central banks continue to buy bonds, fiscal policy has been the key response to the Covid-19 pandemic Photo: Alex Kraus/Getty Images

In the Forbes list of the World’s Most Powerful People for 2012, Ben Bernanke, then the chair of the US Federal Reserve, held the sixth position, while Mario Draghi, then the president of the European Central Bank, came in at number eight. They were both ranked above Chinese President Xi Jinping.

As the global economy struggled with the aftermath of the global financial crisis that began in 2008, and its European cousin, the eurozone crisis, central banks were in the driving seat, easing quantitatively like there was no tomorrow. They were, it was often said, “the only game in town.” Even at the time, some thought there was an element of folie de grandeur in their elevation.

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