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Inflation: Central Banks seem to have been slow in their response

With supply-chain disruptions driving up prices, we look at how policy rates have changed across countries over the last year to counter inflation

April 12, 2022 / 14:14 IST
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Fifteen out of 34 AEs and 78 out of 109 EMDEs experienced inflation above 5% in 12 months through December 2021, according to a World Bank blog. (Photo by Pixabay/Pexels)
Fifteen out of 34 AEs and 78 out of 109 EMDEs experienced inflation above 5% in 12 months through December 2021, according to a World Bank blog. (Photo by Pixabay/Pexels)

Prices are skyrocketing across the globe. According to a recent World Bank blog, 15 of the 34 advanced economies (classified by the International Monetary Fund) experienced inflation upwards of 5 percent for 12 months through December 2021.

Seventy-eight out of the 109 emerging markets developing economies also saw inflation above 5 percent, wrote Carmen Reinhart, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist at the World Bank Group, and Clemens Graf Von Luckner, an economist with the bank.

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With economies just recovering from Covid-19 and tackling supply chain disruptions and the Russia-Ukraine war, central banks are treading a fine line—between boosting growth and lowering inflation.

Also read: Repo rate to increase to 5.50% by FY24 end: Deutsche Bank