The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents

An idée fixe of Great Moderation economic policy was that central banks are only effective macroeconomic managers when they are segregated from electoral politics. That idea made a swift transition from radical heterodoxy to commonsensical orthodoxy during the 1980s and proved remarkably resistant t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Will Bateman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press
Series:Finance and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2059599924000268/type/journal_article
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850073649706434560
author Will Bateman
author_facet Will Bateman
author_sort Will Bateman
collection DOAJ
description An idée fixe of Great Moderation economic policy was that central banks are only effective macroeconomic managers when they are segregated from electoral politics. That idea made a swift transition from radical heterodoxy to commonsensical orthodoxy during the 1980s and proved remarkably resistant to reality during the 2008 financial crisis. After almost twenty years of ‘unconventional’ monetary policy, scholars, policymakers, and politicians are justifiably searching for more credible ways to conceptualise and use the nation-state’s monetary authority. Two recent books provide vital energy for that intellectual exercise. Éric Monnet’s Balance of Power is a bold re-conceptualisation of monetary authority as a welfare-state support in liberal democracies. In addition to dissipating the illusion that central banks are simply interest-rate-setting inflation-fighters, Monnet presents a systematic argument for integrating them into a web of deliberative institutions (including public development banks and economically empowered parliaments) to bolster the legitimacy and effectiveness of monetary policy. Relatedly, Manuella Moschella’s Unexpected Revolutionaries attacks the idea that central bankers are responsive only to technocratic doctrine and private-market behaviour, showing how monetary authorities sculpt policies to bolster their reputation with political actors. Paying close reference to private-market liquidity guarantees and quantitative easing, Moschella maps the fortunes of unconventional policy in alignment with political support for financial-market backstops and exceptional economic stimulus. Both books provoke readers to jettison the anodyne generalities of central banks’ own glossy pamphlets and think afresh about the possibilities of economic policy’s new normality.
format Article
id doaj-art-e23ff8869ca349e8a15ad1fc23de2f7b
institution DOAJ
issn 2059-5999
language English
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format Article
series Finance and Society
spelling doaj-art-e23ff8869ca349e8a15ad1fc23de2f7b2025-08-20T02:46:46ZengCambridge University PressFinance and Society2059-59991910.1017/fas.2024.26The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agentsWill Bateman0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4767-5139ANU Law School, Australian National University, Canberra, AustraliaAn idée fixe of Great Moderation economic policy was that central banks are only effective macroeconomic managers when they are segregated from electoral politics. That idea made a swift transition from radical heterodoxy to commonsensical orthodoxy during the 1980s and proved remarkably resistant to reality during the 2008 financial crisis. After almost twenty years of ‘unconventional’ monetary policy, scholars, policymakers, and politicians are justifiably searching for more credible ways to conceptualise and use the nation-state’s monetary authority. Two recent books provide vital energy for that intellectual exercise. Éric Monnet’s Balance of Power is a bold re-conceptualisation of monetary authority as a welfare-state support in liberal democracies. In addition to dissipating the illusion that central banks are simply interest-rate-setting inflation-fighters, Monnet presents a systematic argument for integrating them into a web of deliberative institutions (including public development banks and economically empowered parliaments) to bolster the legitimacy and effectiveness of monetary policy. Relatedly, Manuella Moschella’s Unexpected Revolutionaries attacks the idea that central bankers are responsive only to technocratic doctrine and private-market behaviour, showing how monetary authorities sculpt policies to bolster their reputation with political actors. Paying close reference to private-market liquidity guarantees and quantitative easing, Moschella maps the fortunes of unconventional policy in alignment with political support for financial-market backstops and exceptional economic stimulus. Both books provoke readers to jettison the anodyne generalities of central banks’ own glossy pamphlets and think afresh about the possibilities of economic policy’s new normality.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2059599924000268/type/journal_articleCentral bankingcrisismonetary policysocial insurancewelfare states
spellingShingle Will Bateman
The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
Finance and Society
Central banking
crisis
monetary policy
social insurance
welfare states
title The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
title_full The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
title_fullStr The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
title_full_unstemmed The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
title_short The new normal? Central banks as social insurers and reputation-protecting political agents
title_sort new normal central banks as social insurers and reputation protecting political agents
topic Central banking
crisis
monetary policy
social insurance
welfare states
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2059599924000268/type/journal_article
work_keys_str_mv AT willbateman thenewnormalcentralbanksassocialinsurersandreputationprotectingpoliticalagents
AT willbateman newnormalcentralbanksassocialinsurersandreputationprotectingpoliticalagents