Currency War Feared After EU Cuts Rate – Central Bankers Worried About Deflation in Europe, The U.K., The U.S. And All Over The World
Central
banks and debt
“Central
banks have to avoid deflation at all costs and that’s really what
they’re worried about. They’re worried about it in Europe, the
U.K., the U.S. and all over the world. This would really make
the sovereign debt crisis far worse that what we saw in 2010 and
2011,” said Rickards, who is author of Currency
Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis.
But the euro’s fall has left many countries
worried about their exports.
The Czech central bank began selling its own
currency last week, forcing the koruna down by 4.4 per cent against
the euro.
Peru’s central bank cut borrowing costs on
Nov. 4 for the first time in four years, citing slow export growth.
New Zealand’s central bank has delayed
expected rate hikes and Australia’s Reserve Bank chairman says its
currency is overvalued and it may be forced to cut rates.
The Bank of Japan cut rates six months ago, but
is still struggling to meet its inflation targets. Rickards believes
the yen may sink as low as 110 to the US dollar.
Rickards said cutting rates is the wrong way to
boost export growth and stimulate economies.
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