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How Central Banks Use Inflation Targeting Bands

How Central Banks Use Inflation Targeting Bands

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Most people think central banks target a single inflation number like 2 percent. In practice, many of the world's most influential central banks—including the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and the Bank of Japan—operate with an explicit or implicit inflation targeting band. This episode of Monetary Policy Explained with Fexingo dives into why bands matter more than a single point. Lucas and Luna walk through the Bank of Canada's symmetric 1-to-3-percent band and how it gives policymakers room to avoid overreacting to temporary shocks. They contrast this with the Bank of Japan's struggle to stay within its 0-to-2-percent band after decades of deflation. Along the way, they discuss the credibility risk when a band becomes a ceiling, and what the Reserve Bank of Australia learned from its 2-to-3-percent target. By the end, you will understand why the band is often the real policy guide, not the headline number. #InflationTargeting #CentralBanking #MonetaryPolicy #Economics #BankOfCanada #BankOfJapan #ReserveBankOfAustralia #FederalReserve #ECB #PolicyBands #PriceStability #Deflation #InflationShocks #ForwardGuidance #Credibility #MacroeconomicPolicy #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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