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    Putin orders new budget rules to boost Russia's growth

    “Work has already started on the federal budget for the next three years. A fundamental issue here is the construction of budget rules that not only ensure the stability of public finances, but also contribute to increasing the growth rate of the Russian economy,” Putin said in a televised meeting.Russia has suspended a budget rule under which it was channeling extra oil and gas revenues into the National Wealth Fund (NWF) during the coronavirus pandemic two years ago. The finance ministry planned to reinstate the rule, under which it also was also buying foreign currency for the NWF, this year but decided against it after the imposition of Western sanctions that have prevented Moscow from accessing around half its gold and forex reserves. The sanctions were aimed at stopping what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine. Instead of boosting the NWF, additional oil and gas revenues can now be spent on any purpose government may choose. Putin did not provide details of new rules but said corporate and mortgage lending needed a boost, suggesting guidelines could be further relaxed to allow for more state funding to revive economic activity. The existing rule puts a limit on how and where Russia’s $198-billion NWF can be spent, as the government increasingly needs cash to meet Putin’s promises of higher pensions and social payments and support for large businesses. In May alone, the NWF spent $4 billion to buy preferred shares of Russian Railways, the country’s biggest employer. Other state entities, including the flagship airline Aeroflot, are awaiting cash support to cope with sanctions. More

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    Lira slide accelerates as Erdoğan vows to continue slashing rates

    Turkey’s lira continued its slide towards a record low after President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowed once again to cut interest rates despite spiralling inflation.The currency fell to 16.75 against the dollar on Tuesday after Erdoğan, a life-long opponent of high borrowing costs, launched an impassioned tirade against them.The Turkish president said that the country had “wasted years” with the misguided view that prices should be controlled by using higher borrowing costs to suppress consumption. Such policies, he said, only benefited “those living a charmed existence and filling their pockets with [the proceeds of] high interest”, including foreign investors.Erdoğan promised to further cut interest rates even though inflation reached a 23-year high of 73.5 per cent last month, saying: “This government will not raise interest rates. On the contrary, we will continue to cut rates.”The lira fell about 1.2 per cent on Tuesday, bringing its losses for the year to 20 per cent after falling almost 45 per cent in 2021. The currency’s steady decline in recent weeks has threatened to test the record lows hit in December, when the country was thrust into a currency crisis after Erdoğan ordered the central bank to announce a series of interest rates cuts despite rising inflation. Besides a fleeting decline past TL18 during last year’s rout, the currency has never consistently traded at such weak levels.

    Turkey has one of the world’s lowest interest rates in real terms, standing at minus 59.5 per cent once inflation is taken into account. Negative real interest rates have deterred Turkish citizens from keeping their savings in lira, and have tarnished the allure for foreign investors of holding Turkish assets compared with emerging market rivals.Erdoğan and senior Turkish officials justified last year’s aggressive rate cuts by arguing that they were pursuing a “new economic model”. They argued that they would be able to tame inflation by harnessing the weak currency to boost exports and investment and eliminate the country’s longstanding trade deficit.Even before Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, critics warned that the plan was a risky economic experiment that was in danger of causing a collapse in the value of the Turkish lira and runaway inflation.The conflict has compounded the challenges facing Turkey, which imports most of its energy, by pushing up global oil and gas prices and causing a widening current account deficit that has created extra demand for foreign currency. MUFG analysts Ehsan Khoman and Lee Hardman said in a note to clients this week that it was “unambiguously unsustainable” for Turkey to maintain this approach, warning that the pressure on the currency was “likely to continue in the absence of a policy U-turn”.The soaring inflation rate has also come with political ramifications for Erdoğan. While Turkey has enjoyed strong growth thanks to loose monetary policy, the escalating cost of living and the pressure on the lira have eroded public support for the Turkish president ahead of elections that must take place before June 2023.Erdoğan on Monday acknowledged that there was a “cost of living problem” in his country, but insisted that his economic model would soon pay dividends. He said: “We have cast aside the economic prescriptions imposed by imperialist financial institutions that make the rich richer and make the poor poorer by increasing the interest rate.” More

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    Charges against Slovak ECB policymaker dropped, up for review

    Last October, the euro zone country’s Special Prosecutor’s office charged Kazimir, a member of the European Central Bank’s Governing Council, with a “corruption-related crime”. Kazimir has denied any wrongdoing.First deputy of the Prosecutor General, Josef Kandera, told a televised news conference that charges against Kazimir were based on sole “crown witness.” Since that person was charged with crimes and seeking benefits form cooperating with police, it needed special attention, he said. Therefore the current charges were dropped but prosecutors will consider the case again, Kandera said. “The ruling of a prosecutor at the Special Prosecutor’s office was canceled and the prosecutor was ordered to consider the case again and rule,” Kandera told the news conference.A spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office was not immediately available for further comment.Kazimir’s office referred Reuters to his lawyer, Ondrej Mularcik, for comment on the decision. “Mr. governor accepted the decision with pleasure and humility. He did not and does not feel guilty of committing a crime,” Mularcik told Reuters.Kazimir was finance minister from 2012 until 2019, nominated by the leftist SMER party, before he assumed his six-year term at the helm of the central bank.Slovak news website aktuality.sk reported at the time when the charges were made public that Kazimir was accused of being a “courier” who brought an around 50,000 euro ($57,845) bribe to the then-chief of the country’s tax administration, who has been investigated for several crimes and has cooperated with police. More

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    Stock losses continue after Target warns on profit margins

    Stocks turned lower on Tuesday as disappointing news from retailer Target intensified concerns over a global growth outlook already dimmed by central bank rate rises.Futures contracts tracking Wall Street’s S&P 500 index built on earlier losses, falling 0.8 per cent after the broad gauge rose as much as 1.5 per cent in the previous session. Shares in Target dropped 9 per cent in pre-market trading after the company said its second-quarter operating margin would be in a range around 2 per cent. In May, it had pointed to a “wide range centred around first quarter’s operating margin rate of 5.3 per cent.” Rival retailer Walmart lost more than 3 per cent pre-market.Following a shortlived rally on Monday driven by China loosening some Covid-19 restrictions, Europe’s Stoxx 600 share index lost 0.7 per cent, while London’s FTSE 100 slipped 0.1 per cent. Retailers were among the biggest fallers in the region, with London-listed Kingfisher down 3.8 per cent and German company Zalando down 6 per cent.“Its possible that we’re getting a more negative growth outlook, with higher inflation, central banks having to do more and consumer spending and earnings coming under pressure,” said Joost van Leenders, equity strategist at Kempen Capital Management.Elsewhere, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 dropped 1.5 per cent following a decision by the country’s central bank to increase interest rates by half a percentage point, the largest amount in 22 years, sending the nation’s government bond prices tumbling.The yield on Australia’s 10-year bond rose 0.07 percentage points to 3.55 per cent as the price of the debt fell significantly. The two-year bond yield, which tracks monetary policy expectations, climbed 0.17 percentage points to 2.76 per cent.The FTSE All-World index of global stocks has dropped almost 14 per cent this year as central banks worldwide have lifted borrowing costs to battle inflationary trends that began with coronavirus-related supply chain glitches and were exacerbated by commodity price rises caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “We have priced what we know so far, and we need to be ready to price an improvement, or a lack of one,” said Marco Pirondini, head of US equities at Amundi. “By the end of the summer, if we are still in a regime of high inflation and [oil] sanctions against Russia, then the market has further to correct.” The RBA made its move ahead of the European Central Bank’s monetary policy meeting on Thursday. After eurozone inflation hit another record high in May, ECB policymakers signalled the bank would raise its main deposit rate — currently at minus 0.5 per cent — by at least a quarter-point in July and further in September.

    Germany’s 10-year Bund yield, a benchmark for borrowing costs in the eurozone, dropped 0.02 percentage points to 1.3 per cent.“We foresee significant volatility in bond markets around the ECB meeting this week as the communication challenge of the policy strategy is formidable,” said Andreas Billmeier, European economist at Western Asset. US inflation data on Friday are expected to show consumer prices in the world’s largest economy rose at an annual rate of 8.3 per cent in May, the same as the previous month. The 10-year US Treasury yield fell 0.01 percentage point to 3.03 per cent after climbing in the previous session as traders dialled up their bets of rate rises by the Federal Reserve. More

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    Class war > rate hikes

    As John Maynard Keynes noted, we are all beholden to the ideas of “some defunct economist”. But central bankers more than most. For all the talk of data-dependent decision making, monetary policy operates with a lag, forcing its practitioners to rely on theory to guide them on how to act in the here and now to quash inflation or protect jobs. One of the dominant theories central bankers rely on is that a credible commitment to control inflation will itself be enough to dampen it. Paul Volcker became an iconic Federal Reserve chair for his aggressive interest rate increases, which in the classical interpretation tamed inflation and led to the Great Moderation. But how powerful an influence do the actions of central banks actually have on inflation? A new paper — straight out of the radical confines of the Fed — suggests that the impact of the “Volcker shock” has been vastly overplayed, and that the inflation of the 1970s was solved through de facto class war and the degradation of the union movement rather than monetary policy. The paper itself — catchily titled Who Killed the Phillips curve? A Murder Mystery — can be found here, but its central point is this:. . . the assumed change in bargaining power, and the resulting flattening of the Phillips curve, reduces inflation volatility by 87 per cent without any changes in the monetary policy regime. This result casts doubt on the dominant view that the disinflation since the 1980s was due to Volcker’s monetary policy.Coming from deep inside the Fed this is near heresy. After all, central banks have naturally long been in thrall to theories that made them the heroes of the story. Central to this well-known tale is the idea that monetary authorities have kept inflation at bay through a credible pre-commitment that they will anchor the general price level. Knowing this, individuals have consistently behaved in a way so as to keep prices from spiralling upwards — in a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy.It’s from these ideas — which originate from economists such as Milton Friedman and Robert Lucas — that we can trace the current view that central banks need to talk tough and signal through aggressive interest rate increases that they are “serious about inflation”. Only then will individuals adjust their own behaviour in such a way so as to bring inflation back under control. And if inflation keeps going higher, then expect even more chatter about how central banks have “moved too slowly” and therefore lost the credibility on price stability. The paper by David Ratner and Jae Sim, two Fed economists, in practice tries to torch this argument. To be fair, the ideas that the authors have formalised into a model from which they draw their conclusions aren’t new. They are from two other economists who arguably represent the main competition to Lucas for the hearts and minds of central banks (though don’t expect anybody to admit it): Michael Kalecki and Joan Robinson.Both Kalecki and Robinson are founding members of “Post Keynesian economics”. (To give Kalecki his due, he is also a pre-Keynesian economist, having developed ideas contained in the General Theory before or at the same time as Keynes). Both explored the idea of class as a driving force in determining economic outcomes. On their understanding, inflation isn’t due to a lack of credible commitment from central banks to control inflation, but a power struggle between capital and labour. The spark for inflation may be hard to locate between commodity shocks and general economic malaise, but its engine is likely to be a battle between capital — who seeks to maintain its share of national income via mark-ups — and labour, who try and do the same through higher wages. In their paper, Ratner and Sim construct what they call a “Kaleckian Phillips curve”, to replace the traditional one and incorporate the bargaining power of workers. Here is what they find: The pre-Pandemic data since the 1990s suggests that the Phillips curve relationship, a central tenet of New Keynesian monetary economics, appears to have broken down. This paper develops a “Kaleckian Phillips curve”, the slope of which positively depends on the strength of worker bargaining power under the assumption that workers bargain with firms not only over match surplus (as in the standard search and matching literature) but also over production rents. Our comparative static and dynamic analyses show that the origin of the break down of the Phillips curve relationship may be found in the collapse of worker bargaining power since 1980s. The econometric evidence based on both time series and cross-sectional data renders robust support for this theoretical analysis.What does this mean for central banks? If sustained inflation derives from class war, then the chances of the current bout becoming entrenched again are extremely low. The working class as a cohesive social force no longer exists. Businesses can safely protect their margins and the burden of inflation will fall on labour as real wages fall. Sustained price rises will eventually subside as supply shocks from the pandemic and war fade and real spending power is eroded. Nobody in authority will be citing Kalecki or Robinson any time soon, but this theory may have some purchase with central bankers. Most remain obsessed with wages — the Bank of England’s Andrew Bailey has even called for pay restraint — and none are contemplating something on the scale of a Volcker shock. It may be that what central banks are counting on the most to guide their actions is a class-based theory of inflation, which tells them that ‘capital won and labour ain’t coming back’. In other words, inflation will subside, not because it’s necessarily transitory, but because workers don’t have the power to make it stick around. More

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    BOJ's Kuroda apologises for saying people are beginning to accept price rises

    TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s central bank chief Haruhiko Kuroda apologised on Tuesday for a remark a day earlier that households were becoming more accepting of price rises after drawing political heat on the issue, underscoring public sensitivity to rising living costs.The comment came at a sensitive time for the government of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, which faces growing calls to tackle rising costs of food and fuel ahead of an upper house election next month.”I’m sorry that the expression caused misunderstanding somewhat,” Kuroda told reporters, adding that it had been inappropriate for him to say households were becoming more accepting of price rises.Earlier, opposition lawmaker Kenji Katsube, one of several politicians who questioned Kuroda in parliament, said the Bank of Japan governor’s comment showed he “did not understand how the public feels” about price rises.News agency Kyodo quoted Trade Minister Koichi Hagiuda as saying, “It deviates somewhat from reality,” in response to questions from reporters about the comment.The remark also drew criticism on social media, with responses using the hashtag “We can’t accept price increases”. One user wrote, “We’re buying goods because they are daily necessities, not because we’re accepting” higher prices. “Everyone is suffering pain.”Another wrote, “Only wealthy people like you were able to save during the coronavirus pandemic.”While conceding his words may have been inappropriate, Kuroda said the remark was intended to help explain the need for more wage growth.”We aren’t just aiming to raise prices,” he said. “We instead want to create a positive cycle where prices rise in tandem with stronger wage growth and economic activity.”Japan’s core consumer prices were 2.1% higher in April than a year earlier, exceeding the BOJ’s inflation target for the first time in seven years, boosted chiefly by rising prices of food and fuel.BOJ officials have repeatedly said such cost-push inflation will be temporary and will not trigger a withdrawal of monetary stimulus. More

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    U.S. Treasury approves first state projects from $10 billion COVID broadband fund

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury on Tuesday announced the first state awards from a $10 billion COVID-19 aid program aimed at boosting broadband internet access in underserved communities, funding $583 million worth of projects in Virginia, West Virginia, Louisiana and New Hampshire.The Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund, a relatively unheralded portion of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act, provides money for broadband infrastructure and other projects that enable work, education and healthcare monitoring.The program differs from a separate, $65 billion initiative funded through the 2021 $1.2 trillion infrastructure law to boost access to the internet.”In the next three years there should not be any excuse while virtually every home in America, north of 98%, shouldn’t have full high-speed broadband connectivity at an affordable rate,” Democratic Senator Mark Warner told reporters. “We just have to make sure we implement it well.”Treasury said initial state plans approved were the first viable ones submitted and are designed to deliver reliable internet service that can meet or exceed speeds “needed for a household with multiple users to simultaneously access the internet.” Virginia will receive $219.8 million to expand “last mile” broadband access to 76,873 locations, Treasury said. West Virginia was approved for $136.3 million to connect 20,000 locations, including difficult-to-reach areas, while Louisiana was approved for $176.7 million to connect 88,500 homes and businesses – some 25% of state locations lacking high speed internet access.New Hampshire will receive $50 million to serve 15,000 homes and businesses in rural areas, about 50% of locations that the state estimates lack access to high-speed internet. Treasury separately awarded a total of $6 million to more than 30 tribal governments to enhance internet connectivity.Congress last year approved $42.5 billion for Commerce Department grants to expand physical broadband deployment and $14.2 billion for FCC vouchers for low-income families to use toward internet service plans. More than 12.2 million households are taking part. More

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    Russia CDS committee to meet on Wednesday after “credit event” call

    The Credit Derivatives Determinations Committee, as it is officially titled, decided last week that Russia had triggered a “credit event” after it neglected to pay nearly $1.9 million in interest on a sovereign bond that matured earlier this year.There are currently $2.38 billion of net notional CDS outstanding in relation to Russia, including $1.52 billion on the country itself and the remainder on the CDX.EM index, according to JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) calculations. More